By Takura Zhangazha*
In the numerous sites of African struggles in the then newly
established settler state of Southern Rhodesia, there is the little
remembered
story about a coming into
political consciousness
of Hwange Colliery
‘native’ (as we were called then) mineworkers
in the 1920s.
It is a story about an 'evangelist' mineworkers
inspired strike and semi-strikes via
an end time or
‘millenarian’ message to
the largely migrant workers in their deplorable
living quarters. It all stemmed from a group of charismatic African Watchtower preachers who promised that the end time would occur by 1924.
Their primary message was the biblical promise of the ‘reversal of fortunes’
wherein the ‘first would be last and the last would be first’.
It was a message that appealed to the thousands of workers
and it eventually led to a new consciousness, though religious in large part,
among the workers . Issues such as
unfair treatment of workers and low wages were central lexicons of the worker
resistance debates and the millenarian message was made more clear with a declaration that the white manager had
to go by the beginning of 1924 (as part of the ‘end time’ narrative).
Thus began a short lived euphoric period of hope and change
among the mineworkers that was quickly thwarted via the removal of the charismatic
preachers from the mine back to either then then Nyasaland or Northern
Rhodesia. While it was the repression
that ended the euphoria of change for the workers, it was also divisions within their 'millenarian-cum-unionist' movement and the inability of
its leaders to reach across their narrow interests to expand their nascent half
religious, half labour movement into a long term and continually worker-centered one. In essence, they misconstrued their
popularity for the actual ‘revolutionary’ or ‘change’ moment so long they promised a reversal of the fortunes for their working colleagues. However and even though it was limited to the colliery
and is a somewhat microcosmic but complicated example, the case of the Hwange Watchtower
twelve and their leadership style is
instructive to those that wish to understand contemporary Zimbabwean politics.
This is because our contemporary Zimbabwean society has been
structured around declarations and intentions of hope and change that have been
definitive in their occurrence but to the greater extent unrealized in their aftermath. This in similar and charismatic
leadership fashion to the religious
unionism of the Hwange African mineworkers in the 1920s.
To expand further, there have been three definitive epochs
of change in post independent Zimbabwe that rode high on the charismatic
leadership of euphoria of hope and change. The first being that of our national
independence itself with its attendant
sacrifice and euphoria, the second being the establishment of the Unity Accord
which managed to stop both the war in the South and reduce the national political
persecution of Pf Zapu supporters. The third phase is that which relates to our
contemporary times and essentially begins with the constitutional referendum of
2000, where we now had a more politically assertive populace.
In the first phase, we indeed had a popular and charismatic leadership, a characteristic that was seen
amongst the leaders at Hwange Colliery with the Watchtower evangelists. They
promised hope and change in the name of democracy, socialism (gutsaruzhinji)
but before the decade was over, they had begun to implement both the infamous
one party state, the Executive Presidency and initiated the disastrous phase of neo-liberal
economic policies. The sloganeering and the narratives of liberation were
extremely important in their occurrence and were to all intents and purposes
meant to be definitive. Like the workers at Hwange Colliery, we took to the new
slogans like ducks to water and expected eagerly.
What we did not realize
was that while we accepted the promises of the new leaders, we did not adequately
query their pragmatism nor how organic their links with our collective national
aspirations were. Instead we left all of the decisions on the future of our society
to those that led us, or alternatively, we trusted them too much primarily out
of their awe and charisma as opposed to the principled and democratic national agenda.
And we arrived with these same dispostions to the second phase, that of the signing
of the
1987 Unity Accord. Our charismatic leaders told us that there would now be peace, yet
the peace was underpinned by continued suspicion of everything oppositional.
When it came to the unity government’s
policy was informed by a new mimicry of the
new Western hegemony (after the Cold War) that was devoid of the historical
trajectory of the initial phase’s promises of hope and change.
Again as with the first phase of change, we were somewhat
euphoric about the promises of new changes under the false sophistry of
charisma and personality cults. The only ‘changes’ that we came to observe were more in the offices and profligacy of government than they were evident even in any wishful democratic reality.
Our leaders of that time, like the Hwange religious-cum-unionist activists, used the
language of redemptive finality and promise as bait for us to follow their lead. Indeed we wanted to have this told to us because
it was not only liberatory language but it held out an absolute promise for the
betterment of our lives (whether it was apocalyptic or not).
It is in this same period that we were to be righteously preached to about bracing ourselves for economic structural adjustment and accept the ‘wisdom’
of the market. We also learnt to accept our leaders mimicry of the knowledge
and cultural productive systems of the west to the extent that we were more
interested in the acted out World Wrestling Federation (WWF) than the fact that
the state had disinvested in our own children’s education and health. The promise again, had been popular but like
that of ‘Wankie Kolia’ it turned out to
be false and short lived, even if it suited the ‘consciousness’ of that time.
Our third post independence ‘hope and change’ phase came in
the late 1990s. We were to find leaders whom we tasked with the social democratic revolutionary
task of not only re-imagining the future on our behalf but making it a reality. Against the backdrop of the betrayals of the first and
second phases of the national dream, we again supported those that would have
the country back on the path to the change that we have required across decades
of struggle and variegated leadership.
Our new political ‘evangelists’ promised
us that they were there to struggle for our human rights (which was/is a good
thing) but like the 1920s Watchtower comrades of Hwange Colliery, they appear
to have mistaken the popular support for their moment and movement for the
endgame in and of itself. They have ignored the reactionary nature of the ‘colliery
management’ as it were, and we find ourselves celebrating more their ephemeral
popularity than that of seeking organic progress.
And by this I mean that there
has been a failure to understand that within the popular moment, as in 1980 and
in 1989, and with 2000 to present, comes the responsibility of organic (and
therefore consistently principled commitment thereto) societal transformation. And this is yet to be realized even four years
after a valiant but violently repressed attempt at seeking to acquire a new and
social democratic society as ideologically enunciated by the leaders of the
third phase of hope and change.
In relation to contemporary times, these third phase leaders
have now had an interaction with the first and second phase leaders (most of
whom have remained the same) in what has been called an inclusive
government.
It is also a phase that has
been referred to as the ‘transition’ in line with the general definitions of
what has also come to be known as the
Non-Profit Industrial Complex (NPIC).
Unfortunately for us, all of our contemporary 'political evangelist' leaders have now come to a default
arrangement where they see themselves as the only main players of Zimbabwe’s
political future and this, not necessarily in tandem with a national
dream. Instead it is for the purposes of
maintaining a new found status quo wherein it is more their own rivalry that
becomes the political mainstay and not a nationally shared future for all
Zimbabweans.
It is this unspoken attitude and reality that brings to an
end of this third post independence phase of our struggles to be a country that
respects the full aspirations of its own people. In 2013 we will enter another
phase that will either consolidate the return to a structured neo-liberalism
shrouded in erratic nationalism and inorganic elitist discourses of
democratization. Alternatively we can use 2013 to ensure the return to the path of the true national
aspirations of the people of Zimbabwe. And that would begin with a return to
the initial hope and change for a social democratic state and society.
*Takura Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity
(takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com)