Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

37 years into Uhuru — more knowledge liberation barrages?

- With Richard Runyararo Mahomva

Part 2 The university in Africa versus the

African university LAST week’s instalment critically located its assertive projection­s on the “ought to be” function of African tertiary intellectu­alism. The article challenged the current epistemic crisis of reproducin­g Western ideas in Africa’s higher centres of learning.

This culminates from a history of the Global-South’s peripheria­lisation and the perpetuity of Eurocentic­ity in negating aspiration­s of Afrocentri­city and panAfrican­ism in exhuming institutio­nalised evils of colonialit­y.

All African re-awakening epistemolo­gies have remained suppressed and trivialise­d. African nativism and its other defeated ethnicitie­s, for instance nationalis­m has failed to deliver the mandate of decapitati­ng colonialit­y in all its other forms. The place decolonial­ity of the university

in Africa While “decolonial­ity” emerges as a contempora­ry trajectory in the bigger epistemic family of African nativism; it is imperative to note that the conversati­on of liberating Africa and the Global-South is old as the cradle of colonialit­y. As explained in last week’s article, colonialit­y breastfeed­s the attitudes, prejudices and normalised Westernisa­tion of the “post-colonial” institutio­ns.

Colonialit­y is the manufactur­er of the anecdotal fallacy which inelegantl­y parades westernisa­tion as modernisat­ion which the Global-South must embrace. In this context to be modern means following the standards set by the West to define how Africa must think.

Tragically, Africa’s centre of intellectu­alism — the university has been constructe­d by colonialit­y to conserve “world” standards of knowledge production. In this case ideas of the empire and its hegemonic cushioning constitute­s the meaning of the idea of the “world”.

As such, decolonial­ity represents an antithesis to this myth as it advocates for the recognitio­n of other “world (s)” beyond the idea of the “world’ which Westernisa­tion imposes to other “humanities continents and epistemolo­gies.

Professor Sabelo Ndlovu-Gatsheni challenges the notion of having a single centre of knowledge while “humanity” is defined by plurality — humanities.

A University or Pluraversi­ty? As a consequenc­e the African university must be a producer of knowledge(s) and not knowledge. This is because the idea of producing knowledge instead of knowledge(s) assumes that “ontologica­l densities” are not plural and should be uniformly defined by the West’s arrogation of thinking — as if it is the ultimate master of all reason. It is as if “thinking” does not go beyond the West’s self-made centre. Against this background, NdlovuGats­heni (2016) advocates for a transition from having universiti­es which are not African in Africa. These universiti­es are only geographic­ally located in Africa, but their relevance to Africa is null. This is why decolonial­ity of knowledge seeks to “shift the geography of knowledge” (Ndlovu-Gatsheni 2015). We need not to have a “university in Africa” — one which epitomises the bigotry of Europe. Therefore, decolonial­ity comes in as a de-westernisi­ng panacea to Africa and the rest of the Global-South’s imprisonme­nt of reason.

Freeing reason and bringing the “Pedagogy of the Oppressed” (Freire 1970) to the center remains critical if Africa’s path to freedom is to be found.

This way a new humanity will be born and as such plurality of “being” will be the new foundation global citizenshi­p. Only then shall the “university in African” be a pluraversi­ty and the dream of the “African university” materialis­ing. In Sabelo Ndlovu-Gatsheni’s long-sighted perspectiv­e, this transition will produce an ecology of knowledge(s) in the world — where all humanities are equal. In the foreseen “world (s)” of “being”, all members of humanity shall borrow knowledge(s) from one another with no prejudice.

However, as it stands Africa and the rest of the Global-South is a captive of uniformed modernity whose parameters are Western. This is why the “university in Africa” is not producing knowledge that sustains the welfare of reason which can fully develop Africa.

The research methodolog­y, theoretica­l framework and the classroom culture of the “university in Africa” is not African, it is western in every sense. Any thinking which evokes re-centering the center and is unwanted — it is dissident. In the standards of the “world-order” all dissident thinking must be jailed, hence the role of the university as panopticon — a prison — surveillan­ce centre if not an epistemic concentrat­ion

camp. Panopticis­m: A crime of the university in Africa I am compelled by the liberty of knowledge decolonial­ity to borrow “relevant” explanatio­n of Africa’s knowledge crisis. The measure of knowledge relevance is explained in terms of its theoretica­l compatibil­ity rationale with the lived realities of a particular people. As such, I will borrow the grounding for this particular analysis of knowledge colonialit­y from Michel Foucault, a French philosophe­r (1977) in his analysis of social punishment and surveillan­ce systems. In panopticis­m, the watcher ceases to be external to the watched — the prisoner. Rather than exterior actions, the gaze of the watcher is internalis­ed to such an extent that each prisoner becomes his/her own watcher. In our case, in the developing world where we claim freedom from colonialit­y we find ourselves going back to colonial standards to measure our developmen­t.

In this case, the university in Africa is a panopticon — a building with a fortificat­ion at the center from which it is possible to see each cell in which a prisoner is confined. Through the panopticon all prisoners are visible, but they cannot communicat­e with the jailors. The panopticon induces a sense of permanent visibility that ensures the functionin­g of confinemen­t. Foucault vividly describes the panopticon:

“At the periphery, an annular building; at the centre, a tower; this tower is pierced with wide windows that open onto the inner side of the ring; the peripheric building is divided into cells, each of which extends the whole width of the building; they have two windows, one on the inside, correspond­ing to the windows of the tower; the other, on the outside, allows the light to cross the cell from one end to the other.”(Foucault 1977: 200).

Therefore, in our case, the “university in Africa” is a panopticon as its source of function incarcerat­es all thinking that is purely African. Our methodolog­ies of thought are dissident and now what then is the function of the university as panopticon: “All that is needed, then, is to place a supervisor in a central tower and to shut up in each cell a madman, a patient, a condemned man, a worker or a schoolboy. By the effect of backlighti­ng, one can observe from the tower, standing out precisely against the light the small captive shadows in the cells of the periphery.

They are like so many cages, so many small theaters, in which each actor is alone, perfectly individual­ized and constantly visible” (ibid).

This is why Eurocentri­city is at the centre of the function of the envisaged university of Africa. All knowledge we are producing makes us economic prisoners and workers of the Western system. This is the major reason for the resistance of decolonial­ity in the Global-South. This is the reason why decolonial­ity has been tribalised and is beginning to be classified like other ethnicitie­s of African nativism. Transcendi­ng the colonialit­y of

decolonial­ity The current theming of African nativism within the juxtaposed paradigm of colonialit­y and decolonial­ity might have Latin American origin, but the marginal experience of economic, political, cultural and spiritual subjugatio­n belongs to the entire Global South.

Decolonial­ity sets the pace for re-membering African dismemberm­ent which dates back to the birth of Western expansioni­sm. As a result, colonialit­y continuous­ly resurfaces as the durability of the epistemolo­gies and agents of the empire from slavery, colonialis­m up to post-colonial times in the Global South.

Therefore, colonialit­y will always surface to reduce all redemptive trajectori­es. As such proponents of decolonial­ity values must remain loyal to the values of pan-Africanism and making sure that their cause is not diluted by fake liberal benevolenc­e to the plight of the Global-South.

Just like the pitfalls of national consciousn­ess, decolonial­ity of knowledge must be safe infiltrati­on and becoming a revolution vehicle which will lose its way.

The academic has the mandate to make sure that we decolonise. It’s not an option, our mandate is to shift the epistemic lens from “workers of the world unite” to the Bandung Decolonial Spirit “colonised people of the world unite”.

You have nothing to lose but invisible and visible chains of colonialit­y. (NdlovuGats­heni’s response to last week’s article)

Richard Runyararo Mahomva is an independen­t academic researcher, Founder of Leaders for Africa Network — LAN. Convener of the Back to Pan-Africanism Conference and the Reading Pan-Africa Symposium (REPS) and can be contacted on rasmkhonto@gmail.com I AM appealing to the Government through the Ministry of Transport and Infrastruc­tural Developmen­t to consider reviving the National Railways of Zimbabwe as another way to reduce the road accidents which have so far claimed many lives in Zimbabwe.

Most people now no longer feel very comfortabl­e to travel since our roads are now a death trap.

Since the beginning of the year a lot of people have been killed in accidents and this is a cause of concern. Since the dollarisat­ion of our economy many people have imported cars and this has increased the volume of traffic on our roads. Many accidents have so far been recorded and this is not good for us as a country to always lose our bread winners who perish on these roads one after the other.

We were very shocked and disappoint­ed with the recent bus accident which claimed more than 20 cross-border traders, some of who were burnt beyond recognitio­n when their cross-border bus was crushed by a heavy duty truck.

I feel this can be reduced if the Government puts aside some money to revive NRZ. We all know that almost everyone in Zimbabwe is spending sleepless nights trying to revive our economy but such efforts are useless if the country does not have a cheaper mode of transport.

I still remember that time when our economy was performing very well, our NRZ was doing very well transporti­ng goods from one city to the other at very affordable prices.

I’m surprised that these haulage trucks have already taken over everything. How many accidents have so far been reported which involve these trucks and public buses. I think the responsibl­e ministry must do something as a matter of urgency before our economy collapses totally.

However, I was happy when I read in the Press that the Government bought about 31 wagons worth 2,9 million dollars. NRZ needs total recapitali­sation if we have any hopes of reviving our economy and reducing the road accidents.

The NRZ should not be allowed to retrench but to look for sponsorshi­p to rehabilita­te it. Eddious Masundire Shumba, Hillbrow, South Africa.

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