Cape Argus

Black people spirituall­y mandated

Cleaning up the colonial mess without resorting to violence over ‘non-existent’ power struggles

- Lindiswa Jan

THERE are piercing truths about black people and the condition of blackness, ilif’ elimnyama, that leaves the heart necessaril­y vulnerable to the power and authority of the mind. This is a necessary condition in order for us, black people, to find our way out of the deplorable conditions of prolonged darkness. These truths have been brought to us through the births and lives of courageous figures of immeasurab­le statures that have often braced us with great humanity and humility towards the African cause.

At times, I even find myself unqualifie­d to write about them with the feeblemind­edness that often attacks me in the contempora­ry world of feeblemind­edness. But because I have a duty and responsibi­lity towards African people, my feeblemind­edness has to be corrected by reading and writing more on their texts as my friend puts it, “the skill of doing comes in the doing”.

As black people, we are all brought to this world for the purpose of advancing our ancestrall­y ordained wellbeing as a nation. It then becomes necessary to play our individual parts as revealed to us through our dreams, aspiration­s and desires. As spiritual beings, read Dr Marimba Ani’s To be

Afrikan and Let the Circle Be Unbroken, it is impossible for a black person to be born for a purpose that is exclusivel­y oriented towards the self. We all have a spiritual mandate to contribute to the spiritual developmen­t of our people as a nation, first, in order for us to develop individual­ly.

Such has been the role played by liberation Struggle icons that changed the history and trajectory of African people. The debts we claim today are benefits which were made possible by African people who came before us and made claims on the suffering of our ancestors. It was their persistent and enduring natures that made it possible for slavery and colonial crimes to be acknowledg­ed in order for the system to be completely destroyed out of African people’s lives.

It then becomes our generation­al duty to take the baton and continue with their work as they also inherited it from the generation­s that preceded them. Ours is a never-ending duty for as long as we live in the flesh. We have a duty and responsibi­lity to make sure that there exist no forms of injustices against our people, first, and others in the world. And most certainly, it is our duty and responsibi­lity to make sure that the world does not make a claim that we are the cause of injustices in the world.

The small opportunit­ies that have been opened-up for us to participat­e in the colonial system, through education, politics, and economics, are not enough to end the suffering by African people. It then becomes our duty and responsibi­lity to make sure we shift the gaze towards those who have not been given the opportunit­ies to access the system when we are in the positions of authority whether that being in education, economics, politics or law.

Without our active and intent engagement­s with the deplorable conditions of our people, we are equally guilty of maintainin­g the order that keeps them subjected to inhumane conditions of existence.

For too long we have been equally complicit in their plight for improved living conditions. When we graduate from universiti­es, we enjoy the status of our jobs and social elevation from our previous poor conditions.

Caught up in social media bragging about our individual economical­ly improved conditions, we forget that our audiences are our own people who are equally seeking opportunit­ies to be uplifted out of their poor living conditions. When they begin to attack us for the material comfort we splash in their faces, we cry foul.

Therefore, we must develop a love for our people first that surpasses the social media desire for individual recognitio­n in our consumptio­n patterns. We must use social media for a deliberate campaign to radically transform the lives of our people in all areas of life in order for them to economical­ly consume as well.

By doing this, we necessaril­y reduce the negative survival instincts that propels many young black men to commit crimes against us, their own people, all because we dangle our success in their faces in opposition to their apparent failures.

There can never be anything admirable about people who jump on social media just to show their frenemies or enemies “look what I got, sucker”. As black people, our responsibi­lity is first to our people no matter our previous disagreeme­nts or confrontat­ions. This is what makes us better people.

As much as I celebrate the success of all black people as published on social media and other platforms, I truly do not hold dear the culture of bragging about one’s success instead of creating empowering opportunit­ies that can elevate other black people to learn how to better themselves.

We have to go the extra mile and create the necessary conditions that will take our people out of the mass confusion and suffering they are systemical­ly subjected to.

In his time, even as he lay sick, Frantz Fanon, a great son of Africa, resolved to deliver his messages of liberation and liberating messages to African people for the purpose of liberating us from the yoke of colonial oppression.

As a descendant of the “wretched of the earth”, Fanon chose to be a messenger for the liberation of African people over the material comfort accruing from his career post. Even with his ailing condition, he did not stop from delivering his last message.

This is because Fanon, like WEB Du Boise, Marcus Garvey, OR Tambo, Robert Mangaliso Sobukwe, Malcom X, Steve Biko, Amos Wilson, Marimba Ani and Frances Cress-Welsing, used the power of their minds over his emotions and wrote us mentally empowering messages in order for us to understand that our condition is not by accident.

It was deliberate­ly designed to enslave and keep us in perpetual conditions of inhumanity.

I can never forget Dr Frances Cress-Welsing’s words when she says, “no one defends trash”. The trash she was talking about is the black masses languishin­g in filth and poverty.

As a student of these African scholars, I am aware that they wanted to show us the way out of our collective misery. It is then our collective duty and responsibi­lity to create our own programme and calendar for a country wide cleaning up exercise – for the purpose of ushering in a new social consciousn­ess in black people. As black people, we have to peacefully clean up the colonial mess without resolving to kill each other over non-existent power struggles.

In one of his teachings, Dr Amos Wilson warned Africans in America that if they do not change their behaviour, the 21st century will be the beginning of their exterminat­ion. Fast forward, 20 years after his death, African-Americans are marching on the streets of America shouting “Black Lives Matter”.

But Dr Amos Wilson gave them an instructio­nal warning that it was their duty and responsibi­lity to prepare the younger generation­s for the 21st century offence that awaited them. Now the Black Lives Matter movement is testimony that they never listened. South Africa is in a similar condition, only we are economical­ly exterminat­ed (and 30 million people at it).

Our first task is the unity of the mind and vision as a people regardless of our ideologica­l difference­s.

Jan is a Researcher and Master’s Candidate at the Department of Social Anthropolo­gy, University of Cape Town.

 ?? PICTURE: ELMOND JIYANE ?? MANDATED: President Jacob Zuma attends the unveiling of a life-size statue of one of the most celebrated liberation Struggle icons, Oliver Reginald Tambo, at the OR Tambo Internatio­nal Airport in Ekurhuleni, Gauteng. The ceremony forms part of the OR...
PICTURE: ELMOND JIYANE MANDATED: President Jacob Zuma attends the unveiling of a life-size statue of one of the most celebrated liberation Struggle icons, Oliver Reginald Tambo, at the OR Tambo Internatio­nal Airport in Ekurhuleni, Gauteng. The ceremony forms part of the OR...
 ??  ?? SERVE: Steve Biko
SERVE: Steve Biko

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