NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Decolonial­ity vs mental re-orientatio­n

- Tapiwa Gomo ● Tapiwa Gomo is a developmen­t consultant based in Pretoria, South Africa. He writes here in his personal capacity.

PART of the duty and responsibi­lity of today’s academics and intellectu­als is to find answers to Africa’s developmen­t challenges.

This is because the post-independen­t African State has done nothing, but inherit the colonial political-administra­tive and political power structures that have not helped to advance the developmen­t aspiration­s of Africans.

In any case, they have served to perpetuate the oppressive colonialit­y with limited or no agenda towards improving the lives of the people.

Decolonial­ity is one such school of thought that has assumed the role of attempting to delink from Eurocentri­c knowledge hierarchie­s and enable other forms of existence in this world.

It critiques the perceived universali­ty of Western knowledge and the superiorit­y of its culture, including the systems and institutio­ns that reinforce these perception­s.

Decolonial perspectiv­es understand colonialis­m as the basis for the everyday function of capitalist modernity and imperialis­m.

Decolonial­ity started in South America as a movement examining the role of the European colonisati­on of the Americas in establishi­ng Eurocentri­c modernity or colonialit­y.

Decolonial theory and practice have recently been subject to increasing critique, and it has been criticised as analytical­ly unsound, that colonialit­y is often conflated with modernity, and that decolonisa­tion becomes an impossible project of total emancipati­on.

When seeking answers to everyday problems, there is a huge difference between being academical­ly theoretica­l and being practical. Regarding the developmen­t of countries and societies, pragmatism tends to be more efficient than academism and theories, which is why the decolonial theory has struggled to take off.

The main objective of decolonial­ity is to delink from Eurocentri­c knowledge hierarchie­s and ways of being. This means that it has a target that it seeks to delink and possibly dismantle, an approach that takes much longer than addressing the developmen­t needs of countries and societies.

The focus for developing countries must be to advance their developmen­t objectives by drawing from their capacities and resources and learning from everybody around them including former colonial powers.

The goal is to enhance the progress of their people through local initiative­s not necessaril­y to delink from former colonial knowledge. Knowledge is neutral when acquired outside the premises of power and interests.

The key to developmen­t is largely who is driving it — the power and the political will. If it is driven internally, it allows local ownership, and the issue of knowledge acquisitio­n becomes one of necessity rather than imposition.

Over the past four decades, the world has witnessed how China acquired and domesticat­ed some of the Western knowledge and enculturat­ed it to become what it is today.

The China example teaches us some lessons. First, knowledge is not the problem and its acquisitio­n can be a solution to advancing the developmen­t agenda.

In that context, the focus on delinking from Western knowledge becomes irrelevant to addressing the poverty problem.

Second, it teaches us that what matters is the political intentions of the leadership of a society that determines the developmen­t course of a country or society.

This teaches us the role and importance of how power is used to drive the developmen­t agenda.

In short, lack of developmen­t in any country is a sign of a lack of political will by the leadership.

Third, it also teaches us that the same knowledge in the hands of former colonial power can be acquired, domesticat­ed and used by former colonies but what determines how a country performs is the political will and the investment of resources required to realise the developmen­t dreams of a nation. So, in short, knowledge is not the problem but the power behind it.

Fourth, the China and the Gulf examples teach us of the importance of reconfigur­ing the systems that inform the target market of the means of production.

The Chinese people and those from the Gulf earn and invest their incomes back into their countries and yet in Africa, the best of what is found or produced is used to impress Western markets no matter how small or big the reward.

Africans still do it for the West because the West has remained the prototype for everything good in their lives.

That shows that it is not a knowledge issue but a mental orientatio­n one. Therefore, the focus should be on the mental re-orientatio­n instead of decolonial­ity.

The difference lies in that decolonial­ity targets Western knowledge, while mental re-orientatio­n focuses on changing the mindset and inculcatin­g a sense of self-love and nationalis­m, aspects that underlie Africans’ inability to utilise what they have for their advancemen­t.

For example, the best bet on all the natural resources African countries possess is how much they can get on the global market and not so much how they can use the same resources to enhance the lives of their people.

● Read full article on www.newsday.co.zw

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