Wednesday, 11 June 2025

The Re-Emergence of Racism in Global Relations: Africa and Mimicry

By Takura Zhangazha*

It is getting harder to explain to younger and older Zimbabweans or even Africans about the way the world is now working retrogressively against us. 

There is now limited room to talk about ideals and values given the fact of a re-alignment of global power dynamics.  I use the term re-alignment because indeed there is a return of a new ‘Cold War’ pitting the global West against Russia and China, the global East.

And then there are also proxy wars that are occurring across multiple continents including our own African one in Libya, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Sudan, South Sudan and in the broader West African region incorporating Burkina Faso, Mali and Guinea. 

Proxy wars that also include the Israeli genocidal one against the struggling people of Palestine who we must always, as Africans, be in solidarity with. Mainly because of our common anti-colonial struggle solidarity and its attendant history.   

The key question that I have raised earlier is around the fact of trying to explain a progressive worldview to young and older Africans in light of various high level global impact events.

These include for example the election of Donald Trump as the president of the USA, the war between Ukraine and Russia and its global impact.  Or even as mentioned prior the proxy wars we are seeing in various continents and regions of the world.

Gone are they days where we could take our time to not only understand these emerging conflicts as we used to do in the 1990s and wait for the next quarterly journal to give us the details of the matter.

Now its basically what you see, what you prefer is what you get on social media.

We used to for example anxiously wait on a United Nations report to understand the conflict in the DRC.   Or an investigative journalism long duree analysis of what was happening in either Palestine, Iraq or Afghanistan.  Or even the amazing whistleblowing work done by Wikileaks and Julian Assange on the now clearly false premise of the ‘Global War on Terror’ as led by western superpowers.

In these years we were more reflective of global international relations.   It may have been predicated on an assumption of the universality of human equality as espoused by the United Nations (UN). As also accompanied by a Barack Obama ‘black’ presidency of the then only world global superpower, the USA. 

As Africans we made and are probably still making many wrong assumptions on issues of universality of human equality in todays’ global political dynamics and international relations.

As they relate not only to race but also global capitalism and its main financialised neoliberal global banking and shareholding systems. 

Hence the emergent challenges around new racist tropes in the global north where immigration is a major electoral issue and the colour of your skin is a shockingly new dehumanization tool in what were previously considered legacy democratic countries.  

This is even before we bring in the other key global question of religion and how it has come to affect again global consciousness and what can be accepted culturally.   Where the latter concept, culture, becomes one of global mimicry of the west or the east.  With conversations all ringing around the repressive and elitist dynamics of global capital and its new found energy around ‘trickle-down economics’. 

So its getting harder to explain progressive ideals to young and older black Africans.  Mainly because of the same said cultural/lifestyle mimicry understandings of what can be human success and what can be human regression.  

The idealistic days of Kwame Nkrumah, Nyerere, Cabral, Machel and others and neither looking to the west or the east but ‘forward’ appear to be lost in the annals of history.  Or even more recently argumentations around what would be considered an ‘African Renaissance’ as led by Mbeki, Abdel Aziz Bouteflika, Abdoulaye Wade and Olusegun Obasanjo  seem to be now be behind us.

All of this was compounded (made worse) by the terribly racist treatment that Cyril Ramaphosa received from Donald Trump at the white house.

But we have to recover and see new global realities as Africans.   The world as we know it today has gone “nuclearly” neoliberal and racist. And this is not a rumour.  It is evident not only in the proxy wars that are currently being fought but also in the evidently racist and exclusionary attitudes of citizens of global superpowers.

Mbeki et al were wrong about assuming an acceptance of an African Renaissance by global superpowers.  As noble an idea as that was.  

We need to dig deeper into our African consciousness and history to begin to re-think how we interact with the rest of the world beyond post colonial capitalism and neo-liberalism.   Even as we learn from our own histories and liberation struggles. 

For now it is self-evident that being African is looked down upon.  Not by just those that see us as that.  But also by ourselves.

Perhaps what is required is a broader balancing of ‘generational praxis’.  An admission that those who led liberation struggles and also countries on the African continent have failed to think outside of the postcolonial and neoliberal boxes that they were and are hemmed in.  Or even the shallow populism that links religion and political arrival at power with the approval of the ‘white gaze’ as fundamentally important to our African futures.

I know we cannot all read Nkrumah, Fanon, Nyerere or Cabral.  But we still need to see and understand that the global perceptions of Africa have come back full circle to us being ‘othered’. Not only by way of racism but also by way of assumptions of dependency.  The question becomes whether we can bridge mimicry and contextual reality. 

I prefer contextual reality first before we assume we can all be Donald Trumps. 

*Takura Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity (takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com) 

 

 

 

 

No comments:

Post a Comment