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Africa
And Politics Of Contradictions: The United States, France
And the UK Terrible History Of Murderous Slavery
05 May 2011 By Reason Wafawarova
THERE is an unexplained wonder of political history
where the people with a track record of going to war,
who are ready to go to war, and have gone to war and
destroyed millions of lives, are the most vocal in
talking about peace, human rights and the protection
of civilians from military attacks.
The United States, France and the UK have a
terrible history of murderous slavery, cruel
colonisation of other peoples, and despicable modern
day imperialistic tendencies.
This history is indelible and cannot be denied or
wished away.
But Amos Wilson noted: "If accepting the truth
about the situation of African peoples and other
people in the world today means exposing the European
to himself, of course he is going to ignore that
expose."
When writers expose the real motives of Westerners
for the unjust war they are currently launching on
Libya, what Western powers can only do is ignore that
expose, while pushing a propaganda line that says the
war is about protecting Libyans from their monstrous
leadership.
It is people without love who talk about love most
often. It is people without grassroots participation
in the decision making process of their own countries
who preach about democracy the most. It is people with
atomic bombs and earth shattering nuclear weapons who
preach loudest about international peace.
It is people with lethal bombs and sophisticated
military aircraft who preach most about the protection
of Libyan civilians while spraying Libyan cities with
deadly bombs - of course in the name of benefitting
the very civilians whose lives and infrastructure they
are destroying.
What we must always recognise is that Africans do
have a huge stake in ensuring the continuation of the
failure of large segments of our own population, and
Libya is no exception.
There are numerous contradictions in the African
society and these are issues of great importance in
determining the problems bedevilling the continent.
Many of our people have an amazing excuse that says
the circumstances determining our lives today are
beyond our control. So there is a belief that other
people are totally responsible for the state of Africa
today and therefore we have neither say nor control
over these issues.
There is an extent to which this might be true when
one looks at colonial history and what slavery did to
the people of Africa. But when post-colonial
influences end up creating psychological problems for
the African individual it becomes time for
self-reflection.
One has to see the apathy Africa is expressing over
the military aggression in Libya today. The African
leadership is apathetic if and when not complicit.
They have given up and most have resigned from the
African life, leaving the fate of their countries to
the dictates of Western aid and to the will of Western
political elites and their NGO arms.
When a whole president of a country becomes a
victim of psychological problems to the extent of
giving up effort and acknowledging that Africa is
powerless and cannot do without handholding from
Westerners, then we have to be alive to the reality
that our hope as a continent is right in the abyss.
It is the apathy and resignation on the part of our
African leadership that helps a great deal in
maintaining the post-colonial imperial system that
subjugates Africa today.
There is a fear of uniting and trusting each other,
the inexplicable fear of coming together and solving
our problems together. This explains a lot the great
deal of political polarisation within our body
politic.
Political parties in Africa are like armies going
to war against each other, as opposed to mental bodies
competing in the battle of ideas. We threaten our
political rivals with sloganeering, violence,
financial muscle, and the eventuality is often
intolerance and armed confrontation.
It is probably only in Africa where singing,
shouting, dancing, eating and drinking are integral
components of structuring a successful political
party.
Not only are we convinced that it is just not in us
to unite and solve our problems together as a people,
but many of us are so much awed by the might of white
imperialism that there is this belief that the
dominance of imperial powers is in itself indomitable.
In fact, imperialism maintains itself largely on
the effect of the apathy and hopelessness of its
victims. It is purely the apathy and ignorance of
Africans that is maintaining the Western aggression in
Libya today.
It is quite unthinkable that a coalition of the
willing from Africa could decide to go and bomb a
European country, banking on the apathy and ignorance
of Europeans.
As Libya is burning, Africa is busy fearing who
could be next and our own people are heard bragging
that Zimbabwe could be next, Uganda is next, Ethiopia
is next and so on.
Cheering the monster in the house is quite
understandable when it is coming from individuals with
psychological problems emanating from the effects of
slavery and colonisation. It is a socially constructed
mental disorder.
We are witnessing a period when a section of our
people is drowned in the fear of the white man,
resigned from life and hope, incapable of
self-initiative, and absolutely mesmerised by the
glitter of Western civilisation.
There are those among us who try to deal with the
discrepancy between what the imperial system dictates
Africa can achieve, and our failure to achieve even
that.
One easy way out has always been the lowering of
the African aspiration, fitting the African story into
a lesser place that will not tamper with Western
interests within our own continent.
So, South Africa battles to lower the aspiration of
blacks in repossessing their colonially stolen lands;
to lower the aspiration of the black person in having
control over the mineral resources of that country,
and to lower the aspiration of the African to become
an employer and not an employee, as is defined by
colonial tradition.
The moment Julius Malema talks land redistribution
or nationalisation of mines, there are always those
among us who are quick to remind the rest of Africa
that such aspirations must be lowered so that white
investors are not scared.
The irony of protecting one's own chains is exactly
what perpetuated slavery and colonialism.
And, Africa is openly threatened that the West will
do a Zimbabwe on anyone that dares threaten
post-colonial imperial economic interests on the
continent. Of course Zimbabwe embarked on an ambitious
land redistribution programme that resulted in the
strangulation of its economy through a murderous
sanctions regime illegally imposed by the US, the EU
and other Western outposts.
Then there are other African leaders who try to
inflate their achievements, to inflate their
personalities. They gloat and brag about economic
growth that is based on over 70 percent Western donor
aid. They gloat about rising to political power as
puppets funded and directed by Western elites. They
look around pompously as they show-case what they
describe as "our friends from the international
community".
We see the average African middle class citizen
being very boastful, being so egocentric, bragging a
great deal about personal achievements, pumping
themselves up, and pumping even smallest of
achievements up into gigantic exploits.
This is just a measure of the destruction that has
occurred to the self-esteem of the African - the
effect of colonial hegemony over the African life. A
family car is to an average African middle class
citizen what Virgin is to Richard Branson.
We have an entire country to build in Zimbabwe and
the challenges in doing so are massive. Yet we have a
nationalist community that buries itself in the great
history of our liberation struggle. Yes I am speaking
of the kind of historicism that has developed in this
community as a means of avoiding reality.
I am talking of people who live their lives in
history, and dig among the glory of fallen heroes, dig
among the many lives so sadly lost for the cause of
our liberty, and a people who build themselves a false
pride, and pump themselves up about the achievements
of our glorious history - of course without facing the
perils of the current reality and preparing for the
future.
We have some within the nationalist community whose
definition of the future is limited to the future of
their own political careers. These have no vision for
posterity, no vision for a Zanu-PF after their own
lives, no vision for a Zimbabwe inhabited by
generations to follow in fifty years time.
President Robert Mugabe has been quite explicit
with his vision for a Zimbabwe after him. He seeks the
empowerment of the indigenous Zimbabwean so that
control of the means of production is in local hands
from now and forever more.
Some of our nationalists, for lack of a better term
in most cases; pride themselves in making the youth
feel good - pumping them up and making them gloat and
glow about our great past. But they avoid dealing with
the present, and they do not educate the youth in
terms of coping with the future.
Who will adequately equip our youth to defeat
imperial hegemony and to remove Eurocentric power from
dominating African affairs? Who will help Africa to
remove these insane people who are about to destroy
Libya and its wonderful infrastructural developments?
We have a leadership that function in the interest of
the status quo.
Then we have those among us who holler about the
devilishness of white imperialism, the evilness of the
white elite, and they leave it at that.
Deriding Westerners and shouting against
imperialism does not necessarily perform a full
service for our people. There must be a lot of other
things involved. For example there is really no point
deriding the Westerner from the comfort of wealth
acquired by corrupt means.
It is like the devil preaching against evil. We
cannot have a leadership that fears to take risk and
are only happy to be opportunistic and vulturistic.
Africa cannot develop for as long as our political
culture still accommodates such political boofheads.
In fact the biggest risk a country can ever take is
never to take any risks. We see many of our African
politicians blowing up their minor political
achievements as a means of ignoring the real
challenges facing the people they represent.
We have a system in Africa which, after teaching
our youths the continent's political history, the only
notable achievement we get is that the young people
are left with a greater sense frustration and
inferiority. In fact some of our elderly Africans have
argued that teaching such history is not good for
African youths - arguing that it is tantamount to
brainwashing the young minds.
We did see a lot of political opposition to the
Zimbabwe National Youth Service's national orientation
programme a few years back. The argument was that
teaching the youth about the country's liberation
struggle was tantamount to brainwashing the same
youths, that teaching them about the evils of
pre-independence white domination was tantamount to
hate speech.
Julius Malema is currently before the South African
courts being charged with hate speech, simply for
singing a liberation war song. Some black people
actually believe that Malema has a case to answer -
not because they fail to understand that there once
was an armed struggle for independence in South
Africa, but because they are awed by the colour
supremacy of those who are sponsoring the prosecution
of Julius Malema.
They believe these superior people never take
anyone to court unless that person has done something
wrong. We have Africans wailing against the exhumation
of the bones at Chibondo in Mount Darwin because they
argue that the site of the bones is traumatising and
may upset some of our children.
It is like the white sponsored doctrine that says
teaching slave history to black Americans will only
make the taught a bunch of criminals. It is a very
convenient way of running away from history - a
history so full of evil that some would rather it were
never mentioned.
Now we have European writers leading in creating
opinion over what is happening in Ivory Coast and in
Libya. Again this is like a white teacher teaching
black history or slave history.
Teaching this history in its objective and correct
form would be to condemn the very people who today are
in control of the global society in which we live.
While it has happened many times, and good on those
whites that have done it in the past - what this means
is that the white teacher will have to condemn his or
her own people, in reality himself or herself.
So those who tell us about Libya cannot be expected
to condemn themselves. But it really needs no
explanation to figure out that the invasion of a
sovereign state for the sake of removing its political
leadership is illegal and unacceptable.
So what is discussed in the media today is the
nature and conditions of the politics of Libya, not
the nature and condition of the invading Western
forces.
What is discussed in white written slave history is
the nature and condition of slavery, not the nature
and condition of the slave master.
The same goes for colonialism. White written
colonialism discusses the nature and condition of
colonialism itself, not the nature and condition of
the colonial master.
And today we are made to discuss the nature and
condition of democracy and human rights, not the
nature and condition of the democratisation masters
pushing all nationalities into compliance with the
West's dictates.
The questions dealt with in the history that shapes
our lives today are not questions about the mental
stability and characteristics of those who enslaved
and colonised us, those who continue to dominate us
today, and we never get to ask if these same people
should continue to be influential over our lives.
This is why some among us believe that the same
people are fighting on behalf of civilian Libyans
today - even by bombing the same civilians in whose
name they fly their murderous planes over Libyan air
space, of course with the full blessing of Ban Ki
Moon's United Nations.
We have been made to see an imaginary genocide
"averted" by real Western firepower and the world is
being coerced to imagine that Gaddafi was about to
commit genocide in Benghazi just before the messianic
West came with the love and mercy of Arch-angel
Michael.
Africa we are one and together we will overcome. It
is homeland or death!
Reason Wafawarova is a political writer and can
be contacted on
reason@rwafawarova.com or
wafawarova@yahoo.co.uk or visit
www.rwafawarova.com
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