By Takura Zhangazha*
Some leaders within the mainstream Movement for Democratic Change
(MDC-T) party in Zimbabwe have a tendency to reclaim direct and organic
links with Zimbabwe's grassroots when under sustained criticism over
their policies or their performance in the inclusive
government. In doing so they make reference to a person/character whom
they refer to as 'Mai Ezra' and (most of the time) claim that she is
based in the North Eastern Zimbabwean rural backwater of Dotito. This
somewhat metaphorical reference to the image of a poor rural woman with
whom the leaders have a direct link or at least with whom they have
special political rapport with makes for impressive political grandstanding. Especially if one's policies or performance as a leader is being
questioned on the basis of fact or democratic principle.
What is also
interesting is how the characterization of 'Mai Ezra' is intended to put
paid to any criticism because it demonstrates a leadership that is in
touch with people of similar socio-economic and political background. But because
no one foisted 'Mai Ezra' on MDC leaders, it would also be important to
analyze whether the 'Mai Ezra' that these leaders initially referred to
at the beginning of their tenure in the inclusive government is the same
one today and if any event, she has not been betrayed by her erstwhile
admirers.
Initially and on the basis of a popular but thwarted victory, the
pronouncements of her existence by the MDC-T leaders would have made 'Mai
Ezra' blush at the unsolicited recognition accorded her. It may have heralded a new
style to political leadership. One that spoke directly to her
interests and one that would be significantly different from what she
may perhaps have viewed as lethargic and insensitive Zanu Pf leadership.
It has however probably not turned out as she expected or was made to
believe it would. And this is probably with respect to politics, the
economy and her own station in life.
Where we analyse her expectations of the politics, 'Mai Ezra', in her assumed naivety
probably anticipated that the inclusive government would demonstrate and
set a new path toward participatory democracy. As it turns out, this
has not been realised and instead, the political parties in the inclusive
government have demonstrated a tenacious commitment to elitist politics
that consult more their own political elites than 'rural backwater' citizens
like 'Mai Ezra'. This is whether one looks at the disastrous
constitutional reform process or where one considers the reported and
rumored cases of corruption within all levels of government.
Moreover
it would be apparent to Mai Ezra that the initial sensitivity to her
interests and her problems has significantly subsided, with government
leaders showing a rather reckless addiction to profligacy either by way
of super luxury vehicles, unscrupulous use of constituency development
funds and the sudden movement of leaders from simple houses closer to
the people to astounding mansions. She may have thought that perhaps
they deserve the luxury if she too was at least in relative and modest
comfort were water, electricity and access to medicines (for her high
blood pressure and her son's asthma) not so expensive or even just readily available. Alas
she has come to accept that the disparity in lifestyles between herself
and her once fawning leadership as something that she didn't expect but now has to live with.
Where it comes to the economy, it may have been the introduction of
the dollar that got 'Mai Ezra's' economic hopes up, especially so after
the MDC-T took over the Finance and also some other key economic
portfolios in cabinet. With each passing month (or even year) the dollar
remains elusive for 'Mai Ezra'. She has now turned to cross-border trading
which sometimes involves stomaching ambiguous ministerial statements
and imposition of duty on imported women's undergarments that are key to
her trade. She has also now had to master the art of negotiating with
School Development Committees/Associations and the local clinic to at
least pay in modest installments the school and medical fees for her son 'Ezra' because the
government will not subsidize access to basic education and health
services.
She has also now learnt that she must hide her maize grain or else still get a party card for the other party
because, with the regular recurrence of droughts she and her son would be naive to wait for
government to de-politicise drought relief. Or alternatively to avoid
upsetting the field officer of one international food relief
organisation or the other. And she has to teach her son Ezra things that
her mother never taught her, things like not being too generous and
becoming more cutthroat and cold even where a neighbour is asking for
assistance that has minimal financial implications.
As for her
societal standing, where in the beginning she was proud to be
associated, by way of reference, with what the leaders were saying about
her, now she is somewhat shy or reluctant to lay claim to being the
real 'Mai Ezra'. There would be too many questions to answer about why
leaders were doing so many things that some of her friends and relatives
do not approve of. Yes, she still occasionally attends the rally, more
for entertainment and the passage of time in her dreary backwater. Where
she participates in political debates she knows not to raise issues of
policy and livelihood substance because she does not want to have to
deal with animosity from more than one party, especially
the one that once spoke glowingly on intending to address her every
political need. At least she can still go to church and even sometimes
hazard a visit to the newer ones with their glitz and glamour and promise of
a rich life with or without the politics.
*Takura Zhangazha writes in his personal capacity (takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com)
Wednesday, 24 October 2012
Wednesday, 17 October 2012
Waiting for the new Samora Machels
By Takura Zhangazha*
Most regions in what is generally referred to as the Global
South have iconic political heroes whose legacies straddle across borders and varying
nationalisms. Latin America has its fair share and among the historical luminaries of that
region is Simon Bolivar, while the Caribbean region has Toussaint Louverture. Not that these key figures in the histories of their respective regions were
without fault, but it is a fact that they are held in high esteem by significant majorities in the regions they lived in and beyond. Southern Africa
also has key historical figures particularly in our 20th century's struggles against colonialism. Among the most exceptional of these figures is
Samora Moises Machel, the former president of the Republic of Mozambique and a
key player in the successes of the liberation struggles of not only his own country, but also of Zimbabwe, South
Africa and Namibia.
His exceptionalism as a leader is in the same league as that
of the late Julius Nyerere of Tanzania. The notable difference between the two is that Machel had fought a liberation war and also had to shoulder the burden of having a hostile apartheid state as his
immediate neighbour while at the same time offering solidarity and support to liberation
movements from at least three Southern African countries. Against all odds,
Machel held firm even where and when the Rhodesian and South African minority
governments bombed not only Zimbabwean and South African refugees and leaders,
but also citizens of his own country, Mozambique.
This is a narrative that is well known in Zimbabwe and perhaps more appreciated by those that were involved in the liberation
struggle as well as those that are old enough to remember his tragic death in a suspicious plane crash on October 19 1986. But the issue
here is not about his untimely death. Instead, in remembering Machel, we are
remembering our own history. He may have been larger than life and one of the most
popular regional leaders of his time, but what is most emblematic about him is his deliberate and active intention to see the whole of Southerrn Africa free from
colonialism and for the region’s population to directly benefit from the resultant
independence.
It was also his ability to provide leadership in the most
dire of circumstances and his ability to understand a ‘revolutionary’ moment
when it has arrived that separated him from the rest of the Southern African
leadership. Whether one looks at
his decision to allow the main Zimbabwean liberation movements to operate from
Mozambican soil, through to his insistence on negotiations with the British,
and even where he signed the somewhat controversial Nkomati Agreement with apartheid South Africa, when
only at least five years later, even the ANC would begin direct but secret talks with the
same. All of these characteristics and examples point to a leader who was both
visionary and pragmatic.
While some have argued that Machel’s domestic socialist
experiment was doomed to fail, within the context of the global Cold War, a
hostile apartheid South Africa and a foreign sponsored civil war, it is
important to observe that Machel remained a principled leader. This is the sense that he neither succumbed to
either cold war camp (he even met Ronald Reagan) nor departed from the values
that informed his country and the region’s liberation.
Where we fast forward to contemporary times,one is struck by
the unfortunate realisation that there are fewer and fewer leaders of Machel’s
ilk that are left in the Southern African region. Not that they must all be
veterans of one liberation struggle or the other, let alone be as charismatic
as was Machel. Neither are they expected to be socialists nor even as
revolutionary. All that would be expected is that they follow Machel’s
principled and selfelss leadership example.
This is particularly so in the wake of aggressive liberal
interventionism in Africa by the West as well as the equally aggressive and
publicly unaccountable pursuit of African raw materials by the East. Simultaneously, these two processes have led in part to the fortification of
elitist leadership styles by our contemporary heads of state and government which
is motivated by the pursuit of unbridled personal wealth via proximity to
international capital at the expense of the majority poor.
For all his faults and unlike our contemporary leaders, Machel
kept in touch with the people. In our time and across the Southern African
region, leaders are seeking more and
more to stay in touch with the next big mining or oil company for personal
aggrandizement as well as gatekeeping the commonwealth for personal benefit. In
essence our regional and national politics has come to be characterised by
politics that is bereft of principle and democratic purpose unlike the politics
that defined Machel.
So as it is, we remain grateful to the people of Mozambique primarily for
their solidarity with the people of Zimbabwe during our liberation struggle but
also for giving Southern Africa Samora Machel, a regional revolutionary.
And we can only hope for new Samoras not only from Mozambique but from the entirety
of Southern Africa. Also not only by way
of names given to newborns but by way of people-centered, principled and
democratic leadership.
*Takura Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity (takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com)
Tuesday, 9 October 2012
A Brief Reflection on Contemporary African Leadership
By Takura Zhangazha*
Reading Nelson Mandela's autobiography in late 1997, I remember being struck by one particular paragraph that somewhat shocked me out of my messianic deification of the African icon. In it, he writes as if to make sure that the readers of his life story would understand that his decision to join the liberation struggle of South Africa was one based on pragmatism and necessity. The specific paragraph reads, 'I had no epiphany, no singular revelation, no moment of truth, but a steady accumulation of a thousand slights, a thousand indignities, and a thousand unremembered moments provoked in me an anger, a rebelliousness, a desire to fight the system that imprisoned my people.' He also makes sure to insist, 'there was no particular day on which I said, 'Henceforth I will pursue the liberation of my people,instead, I simply found myself doing so, and could not do otherwise'.
It was a bit of a dampener because my then eager mind had been expecting a messianic narrative, even a 'Saul on the road to Damascus' moment for Mandela to make that 'final' decision to 'join' the struggle. Well it turns out he did not have that singular moment, a development that seems to be true for most African liberation movement leaders. Their leadership and participation in liberation struggles seems to have been driven by the sum total of their complete and repressive encounter with the inhumane apparatus that was the settler/colonial state at both personal and societal levels. Add to this the fact that the repression also had a Manichean character to it, then it is easier to fathom how and why not only the leaders but also thousands of Africans chose to join various liberation struggles across the continent. It was the 'age of resistance' by necessity and by the dictate of the common desire for equality and human dignity.
It is however the aftermath of these same said struggles and the decisions made by our liberators that is now problematic. Contemporary leaders of not only Zimbabwe but also in most parts of Africa no longer understand the primary challenges of leadership and why they choose or are chosen to lead. This is because most of our leaders, even if they admire the courage needed to have undertaken the liberation struggle, have tended to be lost on why they are now in leadership proper. They do not see the thousand slights that the Mandela's and others experienced because they think that sort of leadership was only suited to era of anti-colonial movements and therefore assume the same leadership rules don't apply. This is probably a direct result of the fact that they believe the era of 'revolutionary Africa' is definitively over and as a direct result thereof, tend to apply themselves less in leadership roles and styles.
They no longer take time out to understand the societies and countries they lead, opting instead for prescriptions from international experts or transnational corporations who will promise temporary investments both into a specific corner of the countries they lead as well as an investment in their personal welfare. In other words, African leadership is now increasingly for sale. There are fewer and fewer leaders that find themselves pursuing the liberation of their people for lack of an option and as a fundamental necessity. Not that we expect them to be Mandelas or Cabrals but it would help if they demonstrated the requisite consciousness of the historic task of democratically pursuing the continuing socio-economic liberation of African peoples. And this beyond their politics of the belly.
At the risk of being accused of being nostalgic or even naive about former leaders, the key issue is that leaders like Mandela make it clear that they knew what they were doing in their time, and seriously so. Their vision was apparent but not easy even though analyzing their challenges was much more straightforward; they had to dismantle the apartheid/settler state and establish sovereign and democratic ones. After that, they had to pass on the leadership baton not necessarily to leaders that would mimic them, but those that would understand the revolutionary and founding vision of the people's struggles for emancipation. And it is in this regard that our contemporary leaders have failed dismally (inclusive of those that participated in liberation struggles and still hold on to power). A number have gotten into or close to power on phenomenally popular waves, only to betray majorities in favour of mimicry of the West or East and in the process undermining historical opportunities for progressive and people centered democratic change.
As it is, we might need to have a contemporary African leadership that has a singular epiphany, one that remembers who we are and where we intend to go without falling prey to the easy and nefarious path of the politics of aggrandizement or unashamed neo-colonialism ( be it from the East or West). And like Mandela, in his heyday, this singular epiphany will be on the basis that, while there is no particular day in which they will say 'Henceforth I will pursue the liberation of my people,' they will simply find themselves doing so because they cannot do otherwise.
*Takura Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity (takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com)
Reading Nelson Mandela's autobiography in late 1997, I remember being struck by one particular paragraph that somewhat shocked me out of my messianic deification of the African icon. In it, he writes as if to make sure that the readers of his life story would understand that his decision to join the liberation struggle of South Africa was one based on pragmatism and necessity. The specific paragraph reads, 'I had no epiphany, no singular revelation, no moment of truth, but a steady accumulation of a thousand slights, a thousand indignities, and a thousand unremembered moments provoked in me an anger, a rebelliousness, a desire to fight the system that imprisoned my people.' He also makes sure to insist, 'there was no particular day on which I said, 'Henceforth I will pursue the liberation of my people,instead, I simply found myself doing so, and could not do otherwise'.
It was a bit of a dampener because my then eager mind had been expecting a messianic narrative, even a 'Saul on the road to Damascus' moment for Mandela to make that 'final' decision to 'join' the struggle. Well it turns out he did not have that singular moment, a development that seems to be true for most African liberation movement leaders. Their leadership and participation in liberation struggles seems to have been driven by the sum total of their complete and repressive encounter with the inhumane apparatus that was the settler/colonial state at both personal and societal levels. Add to this the fact that the repression also had a Manichean character to it, then it is easier to fathom how and why not only the leaders but also thousands of Africans chose to join various liberation struggles across the continent. It was the 'age of resistance' by necessity and by the dictate of the common desire for equality and human dignity.
It is however the aftermath of these same said struggles and the decisions made by our liberators that is now problematic. Contemporary leaders of not only Zimbabwe but also in most parts of Africa no longer understand the primary challenges of leadership and why they choose or are chosen to lead. This is because most of our leaders, even if they admire the courage needed to have undertaken the liberation struggle, have tended to be lost on why they are now in leadership proper. They do not see the thousand slights that the Mandela's and others experienced because they think that sort of leadership was only suited to era of anti-colonial movements and therefore assume the same leadership rules don't apply. This is probably a direct result of the fact that they believe the era of 'revolutionary Africa' is definitively over and as a direct result thereof, tend to apply themselves less in leadership roles and styles.
They no longer take time out to understand the societies and countries they lead, opting instead for prescriptions from international experts or transnational corporations who will promise temporary investments both into a specific corner of the countries they lead as well as an investment in their personal welfare. In other words, African leadership is now increasingly for sale. There are fewer and fewer leaders that find themselves pursuing the liberation of their people for lack of an option and as a fundamental necessity. Not that we expect them to be Mandelas or Cabrals but it would help if they demonstrated the requisite consciousness of the historic task of democratically pursuing the continuing socio-economic liberation of African peoples. And this beyond their politics of the belly.
At the risk of being accused of being nostalgic or even naive about former leaders, the key issue is that leaders like Mandela make it clear that they knew what they were doing in their time, and seriously so. Their vision was apparent but not easy even though analyzing their challenges was much more straightforward; they had to dismantle the apartheid/settler state and establish sovereign and democratic ones. After that, they had to pass on the leadership baton not necessarily to leaders that would mimic them, but those that would understand the revolutionary and founding vision of the people's struggles for emancipation. And it is in this regard that our contemporary leaders have failed dismally (inclusive of those that participated in liberation struggles and still hold on to power). A number have gotten into or close to power on phenomenally popular waves, only to betray majorities in favour of mimicry of the West or East and in the process undermining historical opportunities for progressive and people centered democratic change.
As it is, we might need to have a contemporary African leadership that has a singular epiphany, one that remembers who we are and where we intend to go without falling prey to the easy and nefarious path of the politics of aggrandizement or unashamed neo-colonialism ( be it from the East or West). And like Mandela, in his heyday, this singular epiphany will be on the basis that, while there is no particular day in which they will say 'Henceforth I will pursue the liberation of my people,' they will simply find themselves doing so because they cannot do otherwise.
*Takura Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity (takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com)
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