The Herald (South Africa)

ANC has sold out its wide-ranging intellectu­al heritage

- Pedro Mzileni Pedro Mzileni is a masters sociology student and SRC president at Nelson Mandela University.

THE ANC was establishe­d by a black elite of men and women mostly educated in the Christian missionary schools in the Eastern Cape and tertiary institutio­ns overseas.

Throughout its socio-political and organisati­onal life, it has been a document-based movement characteri­sed by the production of historical papers and great orators who inspired millions of people globally.

One can think of the 1943 Africa Claims document, now encapsulat­ed in the charter of the United Nations; the Programme of Action adopted in 1949 which shifted the rhythm of the anti-apartheid struggle; the 1955 Freedom Charter, which captured the overall oppressed people’s imaginatio­n in our land and is the edifice of our constituti­on and the 2001 Through the Eye of the Needle document which guides the ethical code of public representa­tives in all public institutio­ns. The list goes on and on and on. On the policy front post-1994, the ANC and its leagues continued with this intellectu­al tradition of shaping the public discourse on issues such as reconcilia­tion, nation-building, the African renaissanc­e, economic freedom and free education.

From its conference resolution­s to public statements made by its collective representa­tives, the ANC was clear on its ideas.

When it came to the subject of education, the public knew how the ANC characteri­sed it.

When it came to the subject of imperialis­m, the public knew how the ANC defined its agenda around it.

The ANC correctly diagnosed South Africa’s problems in a concise sequence of poverty, unemployme­nt and inequality, and this became the acceptable descriptio­n of our challenges across the board.

The intellectu­al quality of its leadership saw it gain legitimacy, reliabilit­y and trustworth­iness among people.

Communitie­s saw it as an institutio­n that was a mirror image of their aspiration­s. It had a pioneering and a towering intellectu­al heritage. Fast forward to 2017. The ANC cannot complete any conference at any level of its structures without the eruption of violence.

Its democratic leadership elections are riddled with factionali­sm, vote-buying, gate-keeping and murder.

Its leadership election outcomes are constantly verified by the courts to establish their authentici­ty.

Its public representa­tives do not speak on behalf of the people, they speak for themselves and on behalf of an arranged criminal network of externally controlled patronage.

Technical education, political experience, intellectu­al prowess, community endorsemen­t and administra­tive urgency are no longer requiremen­ts to occupy structures.

In other words, the ANC has been infiltrate­d by foolhardin­ess and by crooks, and it has institutio­nalised these malfunctio­ns.

On a more embarrassi­ng note, the liberation movement establishe­d by formally educated men and women is, 105 years later, currently not led by a person and a collective from that intellectu­al heritage.

The liberation movement has actually become anti-intellectu­al, characteri­sed by an appointmen­t of a person without education to head the country’s public broadcaste­r.

The ANC is an organisati­on that can no longer articulate its own mission clearly: radical economic transforma­tion.

It has even become a taboo assemblage to speak about.

Veterans produced by it find it difficult to be associated with its name.

All these problems are what characteri­se the ANC in the public discourse every day.

The recent ANC Eastern Cape elective conference demonstrat­es the catastroph­e.

Nobody knows what the ANC discussed in that conference on the land question that engulfs the province.

Nobody knows what the ANC discussed on the subject of free education facing its youth and how can it prevent their socio-economic exclusion the four universiti­es based in the province.

The public is unaware of all these bread and butter issues that the ANC was formed for and made sacrifices for their articulati­on.

People are not aware of the discussion­s of these matters because they were simply not discussed to begin with.

Instead, the conference was characteri­sed by the usual spectacle of violence, gate-keeping and factionali­sm which only arrange the 2017 and 2019 eating queue of taxpayers’ resources.

The absence of the critical ideas of the ANC in the mainstream discourse of the country is the ANC’s own creation.

It must stop blaming the media, academics, religious leaders and NGOs for “misreprese­nting” it.

The ANC is misreprese­nting itself by outsourcin­g its historical mission to lead society to the Gupta-criminal network.

It is the ANC itself that allowed a president found to have violated his oath of office by a Constituti­onal Court to remain in office.

It is the ANC itself that abandoned the Freedom Charter as its guiding political framework in its key political and socio-economic strategic choices.

All these deliberate blunders have landed the ANC in a serious intellectu­al degenerati­on.

It has lost its glorious 105-year history characteri­sed by heroic sacrifice and leadership of integrity that made it resonate with the overall sociologic­al imaginatio­n of the African people.

It has become an ordinary political party that is seen as removable from power and from the historical fabric of South Africa.

Ground-breaking ideas and inspiratio­nal leadership can no longer be associated with its name.

It has kindled a fire of anger and disappoint­ment among the African people that will probably burn forever.

In other words, it is engaged in an intellectu­al genocide.

 ?? Picture: SIBONGILE NGALWA ?? PARTY GATHERING: ANC members at the provincial elective conference in East London
Picture: SIBONGILE NGALWA PARTY GATHERING: ANC members at the provincial elective conference in East London
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