By Takura Zhangazha*
A friend recently asked me about what I meant many years ago
about “generational praxis”. I will come back to this concept/issue later. But
if you want to crosscheck Antonio Gramsci on Google, please go ahead.
He asked me this in
an awkward context wherein we had listened to the new music that is now very
popular with the youth of Zimbabwe and also somewhat over-similar in its instrumentation
and lyrics. This music is either called dancehall or hip hop as motivated by
social media.
We were in Dzivaresekwa high density suburb where I partly
grew up. (I also grew up in Chitungwiza and Waterfalls)
The music was blaring at the braai spot and it was not what we
were used to when we used to watch Mvengemvenge /Ezomgido. Or go to watch Pengaudzoke
or Somandla Ndebele live in concert at Nyaguwa nightclub. Or get over-inspired
by Thomas Mapfumo and the Blacks Unlimited’s Chimurenga Music.
The music we were listening to was more brazenly individualistic,
self-celebratory and somewhat abstract. But it suited the moment and also helped
with memory and nostalgia of belonging. Both to the proverbial ghetto but more significantly
of meeting with friends from long back.
In the conversations we had with my friend, I still looked
around at the evident poverty of the neighborhood and its contradictory pride.
Almost as though, in our dancing and inebriation, the cdes were saying, as in
the songs they were dancing to, “ This is who we are! We were born here”
Lyrics that are also derived from popular musician “Killer T”
who represents an iconic figure of both recognition of origin from the ghetto but
also departure from it. Only to return in pride to prove that things worked out
well elsewhere.
This is not a new comparative argument for many Zimbabweans. We all encounter it at church, work and in
social spaces. Sometimes with individual
pride and competitive work experience.
Or in some cases with individual envy and competitive desire to be
better than the ‘other’. Be they from high school, college or university.
It is a very interesting paradox. That is, to want both life
experiences in post-independent Zimbabwe.
You were born, grew up and educated in either a rural enclave or urban
ghetto and now you can argue about your successful point at arrival in the
leafy suburbs of Harare, Bulawayo, Gweru, Masvingo or Mutare among many other
towns and cities.
This is a very realistic and emotional point to make because
the majority of colleagues who went to high school, college or university
between the late 1980s to the new millennium have this mindset. The ones that were the first to get colonial
education before independence are probably more embedded in specific lifestyles and habits that are too ingrained in them to be challenged
intellectually or socially.
But lets get back to “generational praxis” by asking the question of how do we now construct an understanding of a global progressive human existence. Regardless of race, colour, origin or class?
Within an African context.
The reality of the matter is that this has not yet
happened. Mainly because of our own African
materialism and regrettable simplicity over our lifestyles. As we interact with global capitalism via money,
movies and the attendant re-objectification of the female body (black, brown or
white).
In this, we are not learning from history. We are entrapped
in a neoliberal cycle of assuming that the world is our oyster. Even as we Africans from all regions die going
to the global north in the Mediterranean sea.
Or as we clamour to be recognized as equal human beings via
various United Nations conventions that we fought hard for in the past and in
the contemporary.
The question that however hangs over our heads is “What do we now teach our children?” And also one
about, “Who teaches them?”
We all know from an African perspective that mothers are the
best teachers of children. Especially in
their infancy. Your first song, sense of understanding of reality always stems
from your mother.
Though with the passage of time, depending on your gender,
this can be ahistorically disputable.
But we need to look at the bigger picture. We need to get ourselves
to quite literally believe in our being.
As Africans and beyond what we see on television, Netflix, the pastors
pulpit or on other social media platforms.
Even if wanted or willed it, we are not all main actors or
survivors. We are a people that should
treat each other with equality and fairness.
In as democratic a ways as is possible beyond the bright lights syndrome but an
organic understanding that progressive change belongs to everyone.
Indeed the global political economy sets out the standard for
that house, car, trophy husband or wife, but it will never change the reality
that life must be lived as honestly and obejctively as possible. Beyond what you see on television and social media.
Materialism is not a ‘life standard’. It helps with how an individual or individuals
can be perceived in a given society but it doesn’t change much. Unless you find
yourself in a church organization. Or political party with ambitions for both
local or national power. Or your remember the Nkrumah maxim, “Educate a Woman,
You Liberate a Nation”
The major question however is what are we teaching our
children? Is the praxis of whatever we
are teaching them going to make them better Zimbabweans? At this rate, it is least likely.
*Takura Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity (takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com)
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