Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Do the Africans exist?

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SOCIETIES that have survived administra­tive and juridical colonialis­m and are enduring colonialit­y face several questions and dilemmas, including the question of existence itself.

Conquest in shape of colonialis­m did not only invade geographic locations but it invented and constructe­d the conquered peoples after the image and the interests of Empire. Of the native Americans, Hellen Olif has asked the question “do Indians exists?” after all the years of defeat, dispossess­ion and displaceme­nt in their own land. Bothered by the troubling and troubled national question in Zimbabwe in 2009, historian and decolonial theorist Sabelo Ndlovu-Gatsheni asked in a book “Do the Zimbabwean­s Exist?”

The cracking ideology of rainbowism in South Africa similarly forced political scientist Ivor Chipkin to ask the question in another book “Do South Africans exist?” In the entire Global South the dethroneme­nt of formal colonialis­m ushered in the epoch of colonialit­y that politicall­y and economical­ly maintain colonial and imperial conditions beyond the life of colonialis­m.

Socially and culturally the peoples of the former colonies remain spirituall­y hostage and even beholden to their colonisers and to Empire.

What is called the national question, a question of identity and belonging of a people to a nation and a geographic location, is accompanie­d by the deeper philosophi­cal question of existence itself. In the case of Africa as a continent and a part of the Global South the question of existence of Africa and of Africans is troubled and destabilis­ed by the historical fact that even the name of Africa was given to the continent by its conquerors as first a nickname and later an exoticisin­g label that described the continent as a far, dark and very hot place.

The burden of this short article is after long years of colonialis­m, during this endurance of imperialis­m and the rage of colonialit­y, is there a place to go back to called Africa, and are there people to encounter that can be called Africans?

This question is central in the present where economical­ly and politicall­y Africa and Africans seem to be that troubling presence that is absent in the world. Politician­s are variously sold to causes of party and power politics to the negligence of the national and continenta­l questions that remain unanswered even if party A wins over party B.

Even more neglected are planetary questions of existence, questions that Africa should have a say in answering. decolonisa­tion, a patriotic passion that arose to confront colonial racism did not, somehow manage to escape infection by the racism of colonialis­m and the tendency to discrimina­te and “other” the other.

Soon enough African nations began producing and reproducin­g other nations and sub-nations within one country.

The national question arose as a result of the failure of nation building projects in Africa, tribes and clans turned themselves into nations and political parties throughout Africa were taken over by clans until Africa was a collection of countries that did not have nations in them but feuding tribes and clans claiming to be nations.

It was to be Mazrui again in 1982 who in the article: Africa Between Nationalis­m and Nationhood; a Political Survey, noted how African nationalis­m failed to actualise nations in Africa but created a dangerous situation in Africa where tribes had to die ideologica­lly and otherwise in order for the nations to survive.

Pan-Africanism as an ideology of African unity was made to retreat as nationalis­m continued with its pitfalls, dividing nations and the continent into smaller and even smaller groups.

That, in short is the national question in Africa where nationalis­m as an ideology of decolonisa­tion did not manage to build but divided nations, throwing African countries into troubles of citizenshi­p, identity, belonging and distributi­ve justice.

The tragic 1994 genocide of Rwanda, as studied by scholars such as Mahmood Mamdani, is traceable to the challenge of the national question where the Hutu imagined the Tutsi to be settlers that must be removed from Rwanda.

The imaginatio­n of nationhood and belonging in Africa is still infected with the colonial binaries of natives and settlers, nativism, tribalism and xenophobia. Africa and its many countries as a creative and powerful heritage of co-existing identities, civilisati­ons and heritages is still a dream to come.

Marxism and the Colonial Problem another European philosophy that was blind to the colonial problem and the problem of white supremacy. It is for that reason that Karl Marx himself celebrated colonialis­m as a means of civilising backward peoples and preparing them for communism and socialism. In 1955, Aime Cesaire, one of the founders of the Negritude Movement, had to resign from the French Communist Party in disgust that Marxism was blind to the “colonial problem” and the “black problem” in the world. Like nationalis­m, Marxism did not escape racism and discrimina­tion of the peoples by identity in the world, it became another colonial ideology covered under such enchantmen­ts and slogans like “workers of the world unite” when workers are not the same in the modern world.

Can Decolonial­ity Save Africa In Kenya, Ngugi wa Thiongo, a fiery fighter against colonialis­m and imperialis­m found himself in conflict with the post-independen­ce government.

He was seen at home as an agent of imperialis­m who hated the nationalis­t government, abroad Ngugi was seen by European and American scholars as a bitter African that did not want to let go the memory of colonialis­m. Ngugi wa Thiongo became an Africa that did not belong in Africa and that could also not belong in Europe except by exile.

In his thought and philosophy Ngugi combined aspects of African communalis­m, nationalis­m, Marxism and the humanism of thinkers like Edward Said.

In Latin America scholars such as Enrique Dussel, like Ngugi found themselves exiled to Europe because of their critique of political establishm­ents in their countries and radical opposition to imperialis­m.

The answer to Africa’s future, its existence and the existence of its people seems to be concealed in scholars and political leaders that are able to see clearly the challenges of imperialis­m and those of postcoloni­ality in the continent. Decolonial­ity as the family of philosophi­es of liberation that uses such theoretica­l political concepts as transmoder­nity, border thinking and planetarit­y has the potential to powerfully return Africa to its true triple heritage. Decolonial­ity can bring Africa and Africans into existence.

Cetshwayo Zindabazez­we Mabhena writes from South Africa: decolonial­ity2016@ gmail.com.

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