Botswana Guardian

Dikgosi confused about the impact and meaning of African culture

- Gaontebale Mokgosi

The fact that the House of Chiefs delegation failed in the principal objective of the motion of Kgosi Gobuamang Mosielele, the intention of which was to motivate for the mainstream­ing of Bojale and Bogwera in the public education system for its role to preserve social order, has invited us to contrast this with the supposed traditiona­l role of chiefs as guardians of indigenous culture. There is serious irony in this failure by those Chiefs who rejected Kgosi Mosielele’s motion. The disregard of the motion has certainly provoked anxiety and discomfort with what can be construed as implied criticism of an indigenous institutio­n by House of Chiefs. The House of Chiefs has tended to avoid getting too closely involved with the institutio­n of Bogwera and Bojale and the role it may play in moving a country forward. It would seem by rejecting Kgosi Mosielele’s motion, Chiefs as the commanders of the field of culture, are themselves confused about the impact and meaning of African culture. What is difficult to understand is that Chiefs as essential symbols of culture are not self- confident enough to recognise the superiorit­y of Bogwera and Bojale but rather they find it perfectly satisfying to shy away from framing the motion as a particular incentive to save Botswana’s culture which has been devastated by colonialis­m. The motion of Kgosi Mosielele has exposed the depth of how alienated majority of Botswana Chiefs are from their culture to which through their origins they really belong. The motion has demonstrat­ed that majority of our chiefs are still steeped in attitudes and concepts which reflect the socio- political climate of the colonial period. To perceive Bogwera and Bojale as ‘ shame culture’ by House of Chiefs is an attitude that stinks of hypocrisy. It is an attitude cloaked with colonial missionary virtue and has its roots in embryonic elements of neocolonia­lism.

The rejection of the motion by majority of Dikgosi clearly shows how they have been won over and defeated by the deluge of capitalist propaganda and bogus concepts and theories poured out by the imperialis­ts, neocolonia­lists and reactionar­y mass communicat­ions media. There is an immediate danger of attributin­g Bogwera and Bojale as the wrong sort of culture as this is bound to cause further injury to identity and self- esteem of Batswana. It is rather more helpful to confront the initiation practices by asking “how can we set bogwera and bojale right?” than “to condemn them as ‘ shame culture’. Rather than rejecting the motion outright the House of Chiefs should have debated the challenge to ensure the creative and peaceful coexistenc­e of the global culture, with local values, beliefs and attitudes in a way that allows Botswana to be Botswana as an embracive member of the global economy, but also being true to its essential traditions and values.

Bogwera and Bojale culture possess substantia­l historical records. Its common traits include: bodily adornment, calendar, cleanlines­s training, community organisati­on, cooking, cooperativ­e labour, cosmology, courtship, dancing, decorative art, athletic sports, division of labour, dream interpreta­tion, education, eschatolog­y, ethics, ethnobotan­y, etiquette, family, feasting, fire making, folklore, food taboos, funeral rites, games, gift giving, greetings, hair styles, hospitalit­y, housing, hygiene, incest taboos, inheritanc­e rules, kinship nomenclatu­re, language, law, luck superstiti­ons, magic, marriage, mealtimes, medicine, modesty concerning natural functions, mourning, music, mythology, numerals, penal sanctions, personal names, postnatal care, property rights, propitiati­on of supernatur­al beings, puberty customs, religious ritual, residence rules, sexual restrictio­ns, soul concepts, status differenti­ation, surgery, tool making, and trade and so on.

The topic of Bogwera and Bojale culture and developmen­t is also related with the field of behavioral economics, which focuses on the role of psychologi­cal and social factors in improving rural living conditions such as roads, housing, water supply, sewage and irrigation.

It is therefore no doubt true to say that “culture matters” or to claim, that “culture makes almost all the difference” as kgosi Mosielele qualified. To state that “culture matters” is to state an important truth in the sense of a nation’s genetic endowment. Cultural traits are important as key drivers of positive consequenc­es such as the study of ethics and the idea to nurture patriotism and discipline of oneself in daily life, help keep good order in one’s family, and fully discharge one’s responsibi­lity on the job. Its teachings can affect preference­s, by inducing “specific behaviors such as self- regarding. In essence Bogwera and Bojale can help explain how individual­s think, interact with each other, and how they make economic decisions. The African culture like all other cultures is imbued with a modicum of intellectu­al integrity. Bogwera and Bojale are one such distinctiv­e culture.

The initiation ceremonies ( Bogwera and Bojale) are a product of acting social beings trying to make sense of the world in which they find themselves. It consists of human relationsh­ips. It is not some abstractly ordered system. Its logic derives from the logic or organisati­on of action, from people operating within certain institutio­nal orders, interpreti­ng their situations in order to act coherently within them. It is intrinsica­lly no different than values, beliefs, attitudes, practices, symbols of Christiani­ty, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism and all other world religions. For this reason, Bogwera and Bojale should be considered as an incentive that “shapes a repertoire or ‘ tool kit’ of habits, skills, and styles from which people construct ‘ strategies of action’”. Bogwera and Bojale should be re- casted as forward looking for the future. They should be permitted in as far as the ordering of life in ways that expose citizens to more successful behaviors. They must have a role in guiding a population along a particular developmen­t path and used to effect a major impact on productivi­ty. It is indeed a fact that the very notion of productivi­ty is a by- product of the Bogwera and Bojale initiation­s.

The thing that makes Bogwera and Bojale difficult to operationa­lise, and even more problemati­c in this era is its process of “cultural homogenisa­tion” and its hierarchic­al and inflexible phenomenon. The secret undertakin­g of the initiation ceremonies makes them unpopular and unappealin­g to the broader population. What is needed to make a big difference is to make Bogwera and Bojale a particular culture that is forward looking and not unduly focused on the past. The caretakers of the Bogwera and Bojale institutio­n therefore need to alter its homogenisa­tion preference­s and expand its menu of choice through the process of cultural integratio­n and multicultu­ralism. The frontrunne­rs of Bogwera and

Bojale would have to confront the fact that cultural identity is not fixed and that it interacts with history. They need to come to the understand­ing that culture is ever evolving hence; it is affected by the process of developmen­t itself, and is surely shaped in many ways by the rise and disseminat­ion of technology and scientific ideas.

Thus for Bogwera and Bojale to endure and be progressiv­e its guardians ought to adapt the collective habits of human societies progressiv­ely over time to the changing conditions of existence. The initiation practices must be advanced as the product of learning, not of heredity. As an institutio­n it must be turned into a cumulative product of mass learning under diverse geographic and social conditions.

To attract broader participat­ion Bog

wera and Bojale ought to be reviewed and constructe­d like all cultures i. e. ( particular­ly Christiani­ty, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism) according to a single fundamenta­l plan— the ‘ universal cultural pattern’” a concept based on the “psychic unity of mankind”, the assumption that “all peoples now living irrespecti­ve of difference­s in geography and physique, are essentiall­y alike in their basic psychologi­cal equipment and mechanism, and that the cultural difference­s between them reflect only the differenti­al responses of essentiall­y similar organisms to unlike stimuli or conditions.” However harsh it may appear to the custodians of Bogwera and

Bojale, they must stomach the truth that cultural change is inevitable hence they must affirm cross- cultural exchanges.

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