By Takura Zhangazha*
The number of years since our national independence may
increase but its historic meaning is never lost. And that is as it should be. No matter one’s political or religious views,
our national independence, coming as it did after years of revolutionary
struggle is definitive, liberatory and organic to our national consciousness.
That the person who became the first Prime Minister of the republic,
Robert Mugabe, was violently ousted by the
still ruling Zanu Pf party does not make independence any less significant. It never belonged to him nor to his
party. Independence will always belong
to the people of Zimbabwe in their diversity and in their progressive political
consciousness.
And the people have been through a lot. From Gukurahundi, through to Economic Structural
Adjustment (ESAP), repression of opposition politics, a populist fast track
land reform programme (FTLRP) and a sanitized
military coup, Zimbabweans remain exemplary on the African continent. Specifically in relation to their ability to
still try and etch out an organic path to economic and political freedom. All the while retaining a peculiar
consciousness of history and our generic struggles against repression. From the periods of colonialism, through to
the attempts at a one party state and further attempts at suppressing a workers
movement led opposition.
In the 39 years we have been somewhat free of settler colonialism
we have almost seen it all. Our national
responses to the calamities that have befallen us could have led to worse situations
but they did not. We did not go to
war. We did not ask for liberal
intervention from a benevolent but rapaciously predatory West. Indeed we lost lives needlessly under Zanu Pf’s
rule and watch for political reasons. We
also lost livelihoods at the behest of the neoliberal direction of the same
ruling Zanu Pf party.
In some instances we have been referred to as ‘resilient’
for expedient, comparative and convenient journalistic purposes. What
is more reflective of our reality is that we suffer but we continue. Not necessarily on a revolutionary path but
taking all lessons learnt to heart. By default
we are no longer as organically political but we seek new ways to better our
existence. Most times with great impatience
and less with an understanding of posterity as a political function and value. And regrettably sometimes we seek more political
saviours than we seek pragmatism in dealing with our contemporary challenges.
What is probably required is the Cabralist concept
of a ‘return to thesource’ of national consciousness in relation to our independence. Not in a dogmatic manner but more to
understand what those that came before us, those that waged liberation
struggles in one form or the other intended for our country to become. And how to link the same with contemporary
developments not only in Southern Africa but also the African continent and
eventually the world.
This essentially entails that we reflect more ideologically on
our current national state of affairs outside of the populist personality hue
that was bequeathed us by Robert Mugabe and his ruling party.
So, for example, we should query the role of the state in
relation to its ability and capacity to deliver social welfare of its citizens
regardless of class, race or ethnicity.
This entails a review of how the state engages global (colonial) capital
in order to better the lives of the people.
The current template being used by the Zanu Pf government is a negation
of the anticipated liberatory role of the state mainly because it seeks to make
the state subservient to global (colonial) capital and the global (colonial) free
market.
Moreover we should work toward a state that guarantees
equality not just on the basis of civil rights, but economic ones. And these economic rights are not just the
rights to jobs and a narcissist individual culture of consumption. Instead these should be economic rights to
access health, water, transport, education and general social welfare support.
Even more importantly is the perpetual question of ‘generational
praxis.’ It is one that cannot be solved via ‘schools of ideology’ or religious
political proclamations. We need to
ensure that we pass on the knowledge of struggle to younger generations not as dictat but as an organic understanding of our history. In this, we need to understand that dogma no
longer works. Young Zimbabweans want
solutions that they not only understand but consider directly relevant to their
personal and collective experiences. So
passing on struggle knowledge is not a lesson in history, it is a lesson in the
past, present and future. A lesson that ensures that despite the conformity
that is sought by social media, we do not lose ourselves in a global community
that largely still ‘others’ Africans.
Indeed it has been 39 years of national independence. The
passage of time and occurrence of negative events does not however take away
from the significance of national liberation.
Warts and all. Again, we suffer,
but we continue. Consciously.
Takura Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity
(takura-zhangazha.blogpsot.com)
Lucid and intellectually stimulating as ever. These voices should have been in the lecture rooms as the contemporary academics after nature took the likes of Masipula, Makumbe etc.
ReplyDeleteWell articulated! Especially on the issue of the younger generation, we want solutions and want them now. That means the neoliberal gospel by Mthuli Ncube has no place in our hearts and minds!
ReplyDeleteThank you cde for the piece. It remains important that we go back to the source and question the government's policies and action, particularly in social services that should be granted to all irrespective of our economic stations. Thank you for the consciousness.
ReplyDelete