By Takura Zhangazha*
Zimbabweans are familiar with the historical question that
relates to “What made us?” In most cases the historical answer is the first and
second liberation struggles against colonialism. The other answer is the fact
of our economic suffering after the first eight years of independence when we
underwent rapid economic liberalisation at the behest of global financialised
capital which we refer to as the ESAP period that took at least another ten
years to take hold.
Where we take it take it a step further a number of us post
ESAP children ask a key question “What made ‘me’?”, and how should we remember
or reflect this question’s importance for a perceived contemporary ‘individuality?’ As assumedly
conscious adults and with the baggage of our own personal experiences as
informing our attitudes to our contemporary lives and its attendant materialist,
comparatively competitive demands.
This can come in many forms.
But it can be generally assumed to initially and in most cases
sequentially stem from our sense of belonging to family, cultural
practices/language/religion, geographical location, history and contemporary
political/economic placement in the society(ies) that we live in.
The key point however would still remain that a majority of
us assume we are somewhat societally ‘created’ to have a sense of being and
belonging for some of the reasons cited above.
But even more importantly based on what we not only experience but also
what we desire. Be it in the form of
recognition from family, the church you attend or in more cases now, the work
and company you keep. Or the
comparative, competitive wealth that you are in adulation recognised by your
immediate close and personal society to have made.
These senses of ‘belonging’ and ‘being’ in Zimbabwe are
however no longer static. It appears
that they depend on the fluidity of one’s individual economic or material
circumstances.
One day you can be a firm believer in orthodox religion as
it relates to your everyday work/employment or tomorrow you can wake up in an
African Apostolic Faith church understanding of your existential circumstances.
Or you can find yourself as a rabid or even moderate political activist on
behalf of one party or the other for many years only to make an
abrupt u-turn for in most cases what can be mainly a livelihood reason. And in some rare cases, you can decide to be
a neutral and cynic about many things and functioning on an abstract
philosophical basis that each day brings what it will. So long you follow the
money.
The essence of this argument being that however as we seek to
personally identify or deem we are authentically socially created, we also
have, in the contemporary, what can be considered “political personas”. These being a combination of our personal political
experiences (painful or placated), our preferred political beliefs and our more
realistic material ones.
In our contemporary political elections we appear to be seeking more a
reflection of ourselves and the language of what we personally consider our
political and economic realities. And
this is completely understandable given the general direction our political
processes are taking. Zimbabwe is
enthralled in what can be considered populist electoral politics. Even when there is no immediate pending
election which is made to seem closer than it legally is. (We are due for a constitutional one in 2028.)
And this is where the argument around ‘politically created personas’ emerges. It is a straight-jacketed approach to our national politics based on the fact of who we think we are individually and finding others on social and other mediums like-minded persons. Or alternatively people who believe what we as friends believe until the next electoral defeat or the next ‘democratic angst’ at some sort of electoral defeat of the political side we chose. As based on societal influences that either relate to our personal wealth, religious affiliation or general historical stature as sons/daughters of revered nationalists/ opposition activists or religious pastors. In the past or in the present.
In this, we get lost to the fact that for all of our emotive
conundrums and angst about what a future progressive Zimbabwe can or should
look like, for the moment, it is not necessarily or progressively designed by us.
Mainly because we are all over the place ideologically, emotionally and
economically. And there are many jackals ready to take advantage to shape our thinking of the way forward. Both in our politics and our economics'.
We take what we are given by others and accept it into our
own intrinsic cultural fabric to the point of personalised argument. Even if we do not control the narrative.
So those that create for us, in our own popular
imaginations, those that they think should lead us, will always have tea and a
hearty laugh at the fact that they can create not only celebrity style leaders
for us. But also determine what we can
consider as our political personas. Or who we can be politically. That is, who
we can think we are and who we can be. As sophisticated as that may appear.
*Takura Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity
(takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com)