Tuesday, 25 October 2011

Morgan Tsvangirai, At the Deep End: A narrative of an historical arrival?


Morgan Tsvangirai, At the Deep End: A narrative of an historical arrival?
By Takura Zhangazha.*

Morgan Tsvangirai, At the Deep End is a very brave and somewhat surprising book. It is brave in the sense that the Prime Minister of Zimbabwe, who is also the president of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC-T) decided to give a very personal account of his life and experience in Zimbabwean politics. This is a rare phenomenon in Zimbabwe given the fact that seldom do incumbent leaders in government write memoirs, let alone while they are still in office. The last prominent Zimbabwean leader to do so was Joshua Nkomo whose memoirs, ‘The Story of My Life’ were published while he was President of Zimbabwe African Peoples Union in the aftermath of our national independence.
Preview of Tsvangirai book: At the Deep End The surprise components of the book are to be found in the revelations that the Prime Minister makes in reference to his party’s history and his interactions with other leaders. He also surprisingly refers to the ‘no vote’ in the constitutional referendum as a mistake ‘with the benefit of hindsight’  a point that is controversial on its own.   Some of these revelations have already been published locally and on the internet in the print and electronic media.  
In reading Mr. Tsvangirai’s account of his political experiences there is an evident sense of arrival in the tone and language of the book. The narration of his life history interspersed with historical data is essentially one that seems to reflect the author’s intention to tell the story of a journey travelled against many odds, but with a successful outcome.  In part, the success of the journey is metaphorically hinted to as being ‘the mountain has finally accepted that it needs to have a bath in a tiny pond down the river’[1].  This is made with reference to Mugabe’s capitulation and agreement to talk with Tsvangirai after the disputed June 2008 presidential election run-off.
Furthermore, the sense of arrival and achievement is augmented by the writer’s general confession to being ordinary in relation to what other heads of states and government and parties would normally be like. This is illustrated vividly in the sections of the book where Mr. Tsvangirai describes his mistrust and despair at members of his party’s national executive who were proposing together with the Zimbabwe African National Union, Patriotic Front (Zanu Pf) negotiators that there be a degree requirement for presidential aspirants. This together with his character judgment of now Deputy Prime Minister Arthur Mutambara  where he writes, ‘ the narrow technical traits our universities prize as higher learning can easily block our access to wisdom, deform our morals and deplete our intuitive gifts  to a point where common sense ceases to be common’[2]. In this it is fairly apparent that the author is aware of the judgment call that has been made on his levels of education, and he feels somewhat vindicated that for all the education of his colleagues in the inclusive government, he seems to be grounded in a better understanding of politics.
In the book it is also apparent that the author has some disdain for some non-governmental organizations as well as those he refers to as ‘desk-top revolutionaries’ who were being impatient with the ‘struggle’. He also accuses some civil society organizations of being motivated more by seeking to secure donor funding than they were to the struggle. It’s a harsh judgement call on non-state actors, and perhaps some of them will respond, given the fact that they too were party to the National Working Peoples Convention (NWPC) that he vividly describes.
Moreover, in relation to civil society organizations, Mr. Tsvangirai makes the bold, and in my view thoroughly wrong assertion that 'the no vote’ in the constitutional referendum of 14 February 2000 was a ‘strategic mistake’.  While his opinion echoes that of his rival Professor Welshman Ncube, it is an opinion that is more conjectural than it is based on a full understanding of the importance of the ‘no vote’ to his own party’s interests. The assumption given in the book is that had the draft constitution been passed at the referendum, President Mugabe’s succession would have been easier is not necessarily true for speculation. The ‘no vote’ being the first national defeat for the incumbent ZANU PF in a national plebiscite had deeper political meaning than Mugabe’s succession. It was the coming into a new consciousness of the people of Zimbabwe and was therefore a necessary historical event and outcome.
In relation to the media, the book praises in part the arrival of the Daily News and other media for helping spread access to information and Mr. Tsvangirai also expresses his sympathy for the harsh treatment meted out on the paper. He expresses his commitment, in part, to a free media, but this may not be as apparent in the aftermath of the formation of the inclusive government in which he is the Prime Minister. Media freedom remains a  challenge that he must evidently address in contemporary Zimbabwe, particularly by pushing for the repeal of the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA).
The most telling narrative however is that of ‘victory’ over his political rivals as it were. Where he gives accounts of the leadership styles of other leaders he has interacted or worked with, he seeks to emerge as the eventual winner, regardless of what they may have thought of his leadership style or education. And this is a key point of the book. It is basically to say, that regardless of the odds put out against him, the personal grief, the political challenges set by ZANU PF, SADC and some of his own members, he, Morgan Tsvangirai overcame them, and is not going anywhere soon.

 *Takura Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity If you would like to use this article in any other publication or forum please use the entire version. Where you edit it please acknowledge that you found it on takurazhangazha.blogspot.com  .


[1] Page 499
[2] Page 467

6 comments:

  1. We need more and more such critical perspectives. We are sick and tired of perenial bootlicking

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  2. Thank you for the comment, Earnest. Much appreciated. But in this article/review, I was not trying to be critical, but to be honest about the book and its contents, from a personal perspective. I would however not know any instances of as you put it, 'bootlicking'. And I did not read Morgan's book to critique it, but to seek to know what he wants us to know via his book and give an honest personal perspective of what I read.

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  3. Good article chief, the NO VOTE issue is interesting for me because Morgan holds everything constant and then says what if the referendum was a YES. And correctly so he then misses its real significance to where Zimbabwe is today and what it would have mean for pro-democracy forces to then have taken that position at that. But I also see a Morgan who writes that section of the book with the impending referendum in mind. In my opinion he deliberately set the tone for a YES vote. I finally got a copy and I must say I am enjoying it. In my opinion most parts of the book he tries to be very honest and personal and in most of those cases he reveals his value on key issues like education. But I think the book besides being about a fruitful journey against all odds tells us more about the personal IFs of his political life.

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  4. thank you www.eolm.org. Much appreciated.

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  5. It appears to me Zheng that Morgan doth protest too much on not being a puppet of the west

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  6. Ah, but he acknowledges the perception..

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