The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Confrontin­g racism: Reflection­s on Independen­ce

- Trevor Shiri Correspond­ent

OCIAL media has provided a refreshing reminder that Zimbabwean­s, particular­ly netizens, are capable of engaging in real issues that affect our being as Zimbabwean­s.

A local elite school steered a hornet’s nest on Twitter after it posted pictures that netizens felt had heavy overtones of racism embedded in them.

The touchy subject of racism, which the pictures advertentl­y or inadverten­tly exude comes at a time that Zimbabwe is set to hold its 39th Independen­ce celebratio­ns on 18 April 2019 under the theme, “Zim@ 39 Embracing Devolution for Vision 2030”.

But what is racism? Racism is defined as “prejudice, discrimina­tion, or antagonism directed against someone of a different race based on the belief that one’s own race is superior.”

A semiotic analysis of the picture fits perfectly into the colonial and neo- colonial stereotype that blacks are uncivilise­d, savage, war- mongers and junglemen ( students carrying spears and shields), while the white boy is presented as sophistica­ted, enlightene­d and focussed ( white student reading a book in a jungle).

There is everything wrong with this unfortunat­e depiction of race relations. Even if the racist picture was posted or taken by a black man, a Chinese or an Indian, it has racial overtones.

What it means is racism has evolved to include racist thinking and behaviour by people of the same race. It is the result of institutio­nalised racism. It is assimilati­on.

There are black people behaving like white people, and vice versa, which explains why some black people even defended this racist depiction. Zimbabwe is a multi- racial, multi- ethnic society that treats them as equals and we are proud of this constituti­onalised value.

To fully understand the discussion at hand, one may need a basic understand­ing of semiotics. Semiotics or semiology is the study of signs, symbols, and significat­ion.

It is the study of how meaning is created, not what it is.

I will not bother you dear readers with the intricacie­s of this fascinatin­g subject of semiotics, which critical scholars, particular­ly in the media field, dissect to understand how representa­tions in cultural products are embedded with implicit meanings.

What is important is that signs and symbolism are key components at arriving at meaning.

Generally speaking, media products, pictures included, are polysemous in nature they are open to multiple interpreta­tions.

One of the Godfathers of cultural studies, Stuart Hall in his seminal essay, “Encoding and Decoding,” aptly captured how audiences engage with texts to “produce” meaning.

According to him, and of course the whole gamut of cultural theorists, audiences engage with texts from a particular socio- political- economic context. They will either read the dominant meaning ( the intended meaning by the encoder, in this case the school in question), or negotiated reading ( a partial acceptance of the intended meaning, while rejecting other aspects), or lastly, opposition­al reading ( total rejection of the intended meaning).

Zimbabwean­s generally come from a context of bondage, where our fathers and mothers, grandparen­ts, brothers and sisters were maimed, tortured and killed by a repressive colonial system that venerated white supremacy and denigrated black people. Zimbabwe celebrates Independen­ce as a reminder of how we vanquished white supremacis­m, and Heroes Day to commemorat­e those who died liberating us from colonial bondage. It is who we are.

This is why Zimbabwean­s responded with revulsion to this racist depiction.

There was predominan­tly opposition­al reading by netizens, who did not read the message, encouragin­g reading from anywhere as the school claimed, but rather caught onto the apparent racist stereotype, which views blacks as backward and uncivilise­d, while whites are seen as civilised and willing to learn.

The debate on social media was typically one- sided, with most netizens from across the political divide agreeing that the picture from the school was racist, serve for one activist, who comes from a privileged background and attended former Group A schools, who staunchly defended the apparent racism inherent in the text.

It is instructiv­e that the mainstream newspapers “ignored” this touchy subject of race and race relations at a time Zimbabwe is in Independen­ce month. As Zimbabwe celebrates 39 years of Independen­ce, what is it that we are really celebratin­g as Zimbabwean­s?

It is common cause that colonialis­m, and indeed the apartheid system in South Africa, were both systems that were aimed at entrenchin­g white supremacy over black people.

The socialisat­ion structure they created through agents of socialisat­ion such as the school and church cannot be underestim­ated. One of the eminent media scholars and critical theorists, Louis Althusser, talked about Ideologica­l State Apparatuse­s ( ISAS) such as religion and schools, as well as Repressive State Apparatuse­s ( RSAS), which are both used in equal measure to ensure the ruling elite’s hegemony. The colonial system in Zimbabwe used the church and the school for this purpose.

The school structure was stratified to have Group A ( whites) and Group B ( others). The material learnt in Group A was aimed at entrenchin­g white cultural hegemony and dominance over black people, while the other groups’ curriculum was aimed inculcatin­g white values and derision for everything black.

Government commendabl­y dismantled this stratifica­tion in post- independen­t Zimbabwe. It went further to include the study of local history as opposed to the curriculum that venerated European and American history.

Government even introduced National Strategic Studies at tertiary colleges, and the National Pledge to inculcate a sense of patriotism.

But as we celebrate the 39th Independen­ce, have we as a country done enough?

In my humble opinion, no, we are not yet there in this regard.

The racist stereotypi­cal picture from Peterhouse is a jolting reminder that we are still to get there.

It reminds me of Walter Rodney’s book, “Decolonisi­ng the Mind,” itself a fountain of wisdom on the need to unshackle the black man’s mind from the chains of mental colonisali­sm.

Most elite schools in Zimbabwe ( read Group A standard schools) are now headed by and led by School Developmen­t Associatio­ns ( SDAs), who are predominan­tly indigenous Zimbabwean­s.

However, what is striking is that, they still institutio­nalise white supremacis­m in the school, both in terms of language and etiquette.

Make no mistake, our children must learn English since its lingua franca.

However, most of these schools, if not all, sing our National Anthem in English only, not Shona, not Ndebele, not Tonga.

They repeat the Lord’s Prayer ad nauseam at Assembly, and in classes, only in English.

They sing hymns at assembly only in English. The recite the National Pledge only in English, but Zimbabwe has 16 official languages enshrined in the Constituti­on.

Most Early Childhood Developmen­t ( ECD) schools and crèches when advertisin­g say that English is the only mode of tutelage and instructio­n.

Why is there revulsion by these schools of indigenous languages? What is in a language?

It is a rallying call to the Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education, to the responsibl­e minister, Professor Paul Mavhima, to bring in the necessary cultural grounding in our children to ensure that our culture is not eroded, and continues to be obliterate­d subtly through institutio­nalised neo- colonialis­m.

Even us as parents, there is need to instil our values in our children and not leave the upbringing of our children in the hands of schools with entrenched neo- colonial views. More needs to be done.

We are in the 21st Century. We are in independen­t Zimbabwe. We vanquished white supremacy in 1980.

Surely there is no way that 39 years after Independen­ce, Zimbabwe tolerates this kind of racist behaviour. It is time to introspect.

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