By Takura Zhangazha*
There are
many internal and internationalized conflicts currently going on in the
world. They are “internationalized” mainly
because there are global powers interests in them. The latter can be for historical, economic or
holistic geo-political reasons.
In the last
twenty years global conflicts have allegedly been linked to mineral wealth
(oil, lithium, platinum, uranium, gold) of geographical locations by mainstream
and alternative professional media. With accusations of sponsoring one form of
terrorism or the other by global superpower nations to poor or former vassal
state ones. Easy examples of this include
Iraq, Afghanistan, Sudan and Venezuela (in part).
The key
issue for me as a Zimbabwean has always been an understanding that war is
always a final resort. Especially war
between countries that can be considered by any measure ‘unequal’.
With the
coming into existence of the United Nations in 1945, there was also a global general
acceptance of the dictum ‘never again’ would we allow wars on as colossal a
scale as the Second World war. In
subsequent years, the UN was also an important multilateral organization for
the liberation of Africa from the 1950s through to 1994. Even though it still has the outstanding
matter of the freedom of the Saharawi people to continuously attend to.
But here we
are in 2024 faced with multiple global conflicts on scales that should be
unimaginable. We have a war in Gaza,
Palestine. One in Sudan. Another in Ukraine. Ongoing ones in Syria, Iraq and in
part Afghanistan where the Americans abruptly withdrew their formal troops.
And we also
have threats of a second Cold War between the United States of America and
China with added discourse around what are referred to as space and
technological wars.
As an
African and in particular a Zimbabwean, there is a general assumption that
first of all, I am probably not expected to have an opinion on the global state
of war that we are in. Not least because
of my skin colour or my geographical placement in what is still referred to as
the “third world”. But also because of
an assumed powerlessness that we as Africans are supposed to have in
international relations. As derived from the colonial and imperialistic legacy
of our being ‘othered’ as ‘inferior’ human beings.
There is
however a particular matter that torches (not touches) my personal
consciousness. This is the one of the Palestine- Israel conflict. For at least
two reasons.
The first
being that I became aware of the dispossession of Palestinians of their land by
way of reading on their history, interacting with both Palestinian and Israeli
cdes in university and also by way of my own personal curiosity about the role
of Palestine in broader struggles for African liberation.
On the
latter point, it turns out that even in Zimbabwe’s own liberation struggle
among other Southern African states, we either fought or were trained together
with Palestine cdes about the struggle for liberation. Both militarily and ideologically. And that after we had already attained our
own independence, the legendary Yasser Arafat was and is still revered by progressive
cdes across the globe. And the late Palestinian
ambassador to Zimbabwe Ali Halimeh who regularly reminded of his peoples
struggles on mainstream local media. So we have known about the people of
Palestine’s struggles for liberation even before 07 October 2023. We also know of the 1948 Nakba.
The catch
however is the assumed Christian religious complexity that we as Zimbabweans
have had with Israel and the biblical ‘Israelites’. And how we have a false popular perception that
Israel is some sort of religiously promised land.
This is far
from the truth. The Israel you read in
the bible is not the Israel of our contemporary reality. It is a settler state
that with the help of the British government colonized land that belonged to
the people of Palestine after the Balfour Declaration of 1917.
But because
most of us Zimbabweans are of the Christian religion we tend to assume our
faith is the same as our realities and in the process believe every other
mistruth we are told, we become political cannon fodder that regrettably
ignores the rights of the people of Palestine.
Yes we may
sing songs about ‘Jerusalem being our home’ at funerals and other religious
related functions but Jerusalem originally and in historical reality belongs to
the people of Palestine. And we should always support their historical struggle
for freedom from oppression and occupation. This will not change your faith or
beliefs.
As a final
point, I have many profoundly Christian friends who will probably not be happy
with this write up. As abstract as their religious views are, I have no doubt that
the death toll of 30000 Palestinians since October 2023 must have a bearing on
their religious Christian consciences.
I also have
a number of friends that will ask why I am arguing for the freeing of Palestine
from occupation and in support of the UN backed two-state solution. My reply is that the people of Zimbabwe will always
have a symbiotic relationship with the people of Palestine. As determined by our shared struggle history
and common human equality values.
*Takura
Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity
(takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com)
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