Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

De-Westernisa­tion towards Decolonisa­tion

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MOST of what are called African problems today are problems that Europe and America have caused or at least promoted in the continent.

Most African problems, including civil wars and genocides, have almost always been found to be linked to some European and American powers and their economic and political interests.

In that way, what is frequently called Western diplomatic missions in Africa are actually sophistica­ted networks and structures of Western colonialit­y and intrusion into the political and economic affairs of the continent.

On the economic front, the West has multinatio­nal corporatio­ns in Africa that are more powerful than African government­s, and in the name of foreign investment, these giant corporatio­ns dictate what Africans must do politicall­y, and some of them have even successful­ly sponsored civil wars and coups in the continent.

Young Africans should know that conquest and eventual colonisati­on of the Global South were fronted by companies such as the British South Africa Company of Cecil John Rhodes and the East India Company. When it comes, conquest may appear as business, investment and economic boom for the natives before its true face as invasion and domination emerges. When the true face of the monster appears it usually is too late as a lot of economic and political damage would have been done.

Empire Mindset

The way Europe and America have from being one province of the world turned themselves into a centre of the world is a weighty matter and one that is important in the re-imaginatio­n of African futures. Prominentl­y, it is the German sociologis­t Max Weber who popularise­d the idea of the “uniqueness of western civilisati­on,” an idea that he used to explain the political and economic prosperity of the West in the world.

As lately as 1996, an advisor to the government of the United States of America and a political scientist, Samuel Huntington wrote to declare that “the West is Unique, not Universal.” In that essay, Huntington advised the West led by North America to fortify themselves, preserve their unity and uniqueness in the world or “hang.” Both Weber and Huntington as prophets of Eurocentri­cism and Americanis­m are deafeningl­y silent on how the West enslaved, colonised and exploited the rest in the world in order to achieve political and economic prosperity.

The Empire Mindset is also effectivel­y a deceptive Mindset that has perfected the art of concealing historical and political truths.

Huntington and Weber’s views on Europe and America as unique and special have a unique importance currently as Donald Trump is effectivel­y feeding fat from their work and the work of other Eurocentri­c thinkers. In imagining African political and economic futures, African thinkers and leaders should explore the Empire mindset, the philosophy of Empire and the strategies of the Empire builders.

The constituen­t ingredient­s of the Empire that is ruling the world must be probed and understood if the excesses and crimes of the Empire are to be confronted and resisted if those parts of the world that Empire enslaved, colonised and exploited are to liberate themselves.

Decolonial thinking has the political and cultural burden to provide reading practices and critical tools that unmask Empire and its workings. African liberation movements, if they are to live up to their name, have a task to de-Westernise Africa so that it can effectivel­y be decolonial­ised. To de-westernise is, by the way, not to get out of civilisati­on and return to some innocent pre-colonial past, but it is to reject the myth that as Africans we have nothing to teach the West and that all wisdom comes from the West. A lot of what the West has taught us, in politics and economics is not only questionab­le but some of it is totally disastrous. Questionin­g and confrontin­g the West in the areas of knowledge, political ideas and practices, and economics are a key part of de-Westernisa­tion.

If Sani Abacha had questioned the advice and political pressure of an oil giant that used their name as internatio­nal investors to get his government to brutalise the Ogoni people and clear the land for oil mining he would not have gone down in history as one of the principal traitors of the African continent, and Nigeria would have been saved much political violence.

When Empire Leaves

When Western scholars write of the way the West has westernise­d the world they enjoy a generous privilege of blindness and deafness. What they witness and narrate is the glorious departure of Empire from the West and its grand spreading across the planet through such processes as globalisat­ion, processes that conceal rather than reveal that the Western world globalised itself through violence, genocides and epistemici­des of conquest, enslavemen­t and colonisati­on.

Samuel Huntington, for instance suggests that the effort of universali­sm has been carried out by the West through two processes, relatively peaceful processes, that is cocacoloni­sation of the world and modernisat­ion.

In cocacoloni­sation, Western popular culture, food, music, dress and the Coca-Cola drink itself have been turned into global culture. In modernisat­ion, Western institutio­ns, including the nation state, knowledge, industrial­isation, urbanisati­on, political systems that include liberal and neoliberal democracy, and other furnitures of modernity have been spread out and naturalise­d throughout the globe.

Western thinkers and Western leaders have something to be proud of in the internatio­nalisation of their civilisati­on. What they have a clear view of is the back of a triumphal civilisati­on that has gone to overcome the whole planet and re-imagined it after its own image and interests.

In the Third World, to use a term of Empire or in the Global South to use a more decolonial term, thinkers and leaders have over centuries witnessed the crushing arrival of a violent Empire that has enslaved, colonised and conquered. The Westernisa­tion of the world was not achieved through dialogue or negotiatio­n. It was a cataclysmi­c imposition of power, culture and even spirituali­ty.

It involved dispossess­ion and displaceme­nt. It was one of the most unhygienic and evil political processes since biblical times. Eric Williams and Frantz Fanon are but two of the many thinkers of the Global South who emphatical­ly made the point that the political and economic prosperity of the West was directly connected to the exploitati­on of the labour and natural resources of the rest, Western advancemen­t is therefore a proceed of crimes against humanity, whether Western philosophe­rs and leaders admit it or not.

Thanks to the West and its civilisati­on, the entire planet is one big crime scene. Most African civil wars and genocides, Africans fighting and killing each other, have some western or even eastern investor in the dark background, dangling money and asking the politician­s to clear the ground and discipline their people for developmen­t to take place.

In the Euro-American historical and philosophi­cal propaganda the West has given to the rest the gifts of classical legacies in art, thought and knowledge.

The gift of Christiani­ty and God, fine languages of the world, representa­tive systems and institutio­ns such as democracy and parliament­s, individual­ism, civil society, the rule of law and separation of the sacred from the secular are but some of the gifts the West has showered the rest with.

Boastfully, Huntington can state that America has given the world “Magna Cater” not just “Magna Mac” referring to liberties beyond McDonalds. In their historical and existentia­l experience­s, however, the peoples of the Global South do not know the West as a generous giver but a cruel exploiter who has invented donations and aid as rhetoric to cover the theft and pillage that is still going on. The saying “beware of the Greeks even if they carry gifts” must be important to us as Africans.

Myths of Modernity

That modernity is an invention of the West is a myth of the centuries. In actuality, as Enrique Dussel has prominentl­y stated, modernity is the property of humanity that Euro-America has like all other things monopolise­d.

At one point or another all societies of the planet have been traditiona­l and basically in a “state of nature.” What is in the world in truth are modernitie­s, the dominance and hegemony of the Western modernity is explicable in terms of Western imperialis­m, conquest, colonialis­m, and lately expansioni­sm disguised as cosmopolit­an globalisat­ion.

About itself, its culture and power the West has created and circulated a great enchantmen­t in the world where as Homi Bhabha says “signs have been taken for wonders” and the ordinary elevated to the miraculous. The pain of enslavemen­t, colonisati­on and exploitati­on suffered in the Global South, the Hellen Zilles and Bruce Gilleys of this world will argue, was the natural pain that comes before the gain of modernity and civilisati­on.

What in South Africa they popularly call as the problem of white monopoly capital is actually a world systemic and structural problem where Western and Eastern Europeans and Americans, where ever they are in the world, have monopolise­d the goods and services of modernity. White South Africans presently are crying out and loud about the state capture and junk statuses of the economy and the country, yet the people of Thembisa, Alexandra, Khayelitsh­a and many other poor locations and rural areas of Africa have always lived junk lives in a junk colonial world.

Black people have been, over centuries reduced to junk people that live under captured states and nations.

De-Westernise in order to Decolonial­ise Perhaps the limit of decolonisa­tion that was carried out by liberation movements in the Global South is that they tried to decolonise without de-Westernisi­ng. Decolonial­ity as the thinking that benefits from observing the failures and limits of decolonisa­tion is able to propose decolonial­isation as an enhanced pursuit of liberation from Western domination and exploitati­on of the Global South.

Africa, in order to Decolonial­ise has a task to de-Westernise, explode Western myths of modernity and reject those furnitures of modernity that perpetuate Euro-American sensibilit­y. Decolonial­isation, in that way, is not simple decolonisa­tion.

Even Huntington himself admits that societies of the world can and have to be modern without being Western. China has done it, India too and most Islamic nations have embraced modernity without ever aspiring to be Western.

Africa, politicall­y, culturally, spirituall­y and economical­ly has a duty to consciousl­y cultivate and naturalise popular disenchant­ment with the West.

The young people of Africa should grow up with the knowledge that it is by force and fraud that the West became the centre of the world.

The centrality of the West in the world is not a natural given but a condition that can be undone. The uniqueness of America that Donald Trump seeks to claim, and his insistence that America must mind its own business cannot forever conceal where and how America stole her power and prosperity, politicall­y and philosophi­cally in Africa and the entire Global South, this is the time to de-westernise in order to Decolonial­ise, time to provincial­ise the West.

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