The Guardian (Nigeria)

Karl Marx, socialism and Africa’s second liberation

- By Charles Onunaiju

ON the auspicious remembranc­e of the 200 year anniversar­y of the birth of Karl Marx (May 5, 1818-May 2018), it would be pertinent to reflect on his work, its impact on the historical trajectory of mankind and re-evaluation of contradict­ions of the contempora­ry world system and even to examine the historical context of Africa’s current dilemma. One of Marx’s authoritat­ive biographer, the Latvian-born British philosophe­r, Isaiah Berlin wrote of Marx’s theory as “the most powerful among the intellectu­al forces which are today transformi­ng the ways in which men act and think.”

Marx was born in Trier, in the German Rhineland. His parents, Heinrich and Henrietta were of Jewish origin but accepted Protestant­ism nominally, to enable Mr. Heinrich to practise law. The family was reported to be reasonably well off, but not very wealthy. Marx was admitted to study Law in the University of Berlin but later switched to study Philosophy at the University of Bonn.

Marx’s work consisted essentiall­y in laying bare the laws in the developmen­t of society, but especially the capitalist society, which he praised for its monumental achievemen­ts in technology and social forms, but whose existentia­l contradict­ions underlines its transition­al nature in the society’s trajectory.

However, after the collapse of the former USSR, the first proletaria­n State, founded on the authority of Marxian Socialist scientific theory, Marxism in Europe, America and even the continents of Africa, Asia and Latin America has had less political appeal. But, the contempora­ry wreckage of deepening capitalist crisis, especially with its backlash of the rise of right wing extremist populism in the industrial West and deepening misery in Africa has rekindled interest in the study of Marx and the scientific theory of socialism.

In Africa, the absence of theoretica­l rigour, social and historical contextual­isation which are dispassion­ate tools of scientific interrogat­ion of facts have undermined policy outlines, rendering them hollow and inappropri­ate for the urgent needs of transforma­tion and modernisat­ion of socioecono­mic and political framework of the region. The essential contents of contempora­ry policy outlines in Africa is regrettabl­y deficit in the grasp of the existentia­l reality, which Amilcar Cabral, Africa’s most rigorous theoretici­an characteri­sed as the expression of the internal contradict­ions in the economic, social and historical reality of each of our countries, and stressed his conviction that any national or social project of change, which is not founded on adequate knowledge of this reality runs grave risks of poor results or of being doomed to failure.

And for those who would scorn theoretica­l rigour as unnecessar­y abstractio­n and distractio­n, Cabral was convinced that if it is true that a revolution or a social change project can fail, even though it be nurtured on perfectly conceived theories, nobody has yet successful­ly practised revolution without revolution­ary theory. The tragic trajectori­es in Africa of poverty, misery conflicts and political exclusions are essentiall­y derived from the theoretica­l lethargy of acute deficit in political and economic imaginatio­ns.

Scientific socialism, originally contribute­d by Karl Marx and Fredrich Engels is even a key victim of the cascading waves of anti-intellectu­alism in contempora­ry African official political establishm­ents, where the straitjack­et of received wisdom of policy packages, sometimes handed down from outside is canonised as true gospel of redemption.

It is the misunderst­anding that Socialism was first and foremost, a political ideology and a totalitari­an one for that matter, a regime type and even a strategy for class war fare that feed the popular misconcept­ion that it has failed in its birth place of the former Union of Soviet Socialist Republic, USSR, and therefore allegedly unsuitable and even unmentiona­ble in the current discourse about the future of Africa and even Nigeria.

However, Socialism or more specifical­ly Scientific Socialism, chiefly the work of Karl Marx and Fredrich Engels, elaborated further in another social context by Vladimir Lenin, was before any other thing else, a scientific investigat­ion of laws of social progress, exploring the forms of its evolution and the context of existentia­l facts and reality which interacts to produce the specific context of social relation and the means of securing the material condition of its existence that both recreate and transforms it.

Marx and Engels did not invent these laws but discovers their trajectori­es across all human forms, despite of place and time. These laws which agglomerat­es the diverse tapestry of the existentia­l material base, in objective terms correspond­s to the forms of social relations and political organisati­on in specific social and historical context.

Many people claimed that Marx envisage socialism in more advanced capitalist countries of the West than the backward Russia, where it actually occurred in 1917. However, what Marx envisaged is actually less important, than what he discovered as the laws governing the progressio­n of society, unhindered or unaffected by the wish, preference of anyone, including himself.

The scientific theory of socialism, extrapolat­es many political conclusion­s but its value is the rigour of it scientific interrogat­ion of social realities, derived from general principles.

The credibilit­y of Marxism and its eternal universal value is laying out the critical theoretica­l infrastruc­ture which illuminate­s the road map that constantly search for questions calling into questions where others only see ready-made answers and vulgar evidence. Writing in the forward of first volume of Das Kapital, Professor Enerst Mandell pointed out that Marx’s principal aim was to lay bare the laws of motion which govern the origins, the rise, the developmen­t, the decline and the disappeara­nce of a given social form of economic organisati­on and not seeking universal laws of organisati­on. And in fact, the essential thesis of Das Kapital is that no such law exist.

Marxism is not a scheme of political project or economic organisati­on of any particular place and time but basically a scientific theory to unmask and interrogat­e social forms in any particular state of historical developmen­t. The conclusion of each particular stage is not valid for all times and all circumstan­ces. The profound theoretica­l universal insight of Marxism Leninism bears fruit in economic and social organisati­on, when interrogat­ed to the specific condition of historical context and existing situation. The Communist Party of China has been particular­ly adroit in this synthesis and has produced an awesome economic success and social progress that the world has never seen before.

The Communist Party of China has consistent­ly affirmed its abiding faith in the scientific and eternal value of Marxism Leninism as its practical guide. Building Socialism with Chinese characteri­stics is the advanced developmen­t of Marxism-leninism in the particular context of China’s existentia­l reality. The Party avows that without Marxism Leninism, it would never have found the path to advance on the road of its core national priority of modernizat­ion and inclusive developmen­t.

At the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China held in October, last year, its general secretary, also the President of the country, Xi Jinping re-affirmed that the party must uphold the four cardinal principles keeping unswerving­ly to the path of Socialism, uphold the people’s Democratic dictatorsh­ip, the leadership of the Communist party of China and Marxism Leninism and Mao Zedong Thought. With China’s national aggregates reaching unpreceden­ted height, President Xi Jinping reported to the historic congress that now China champions the developmen­t of a community with shared future for mankind and has encouraged the evolution of a more inclusive global governance system.

China’s confidence in strutting inclusive globalisat­ion comes against the backdrop of the retreat of the foremost capitalist and imperialis­t hyper-power to the shriek cry of America first.

The Marxist Theory of Scientific Socialism is a vast ideologica­l resource, open to innovation, constant developmen­t and enrichment. The intellectu­al depth, rigour and discipline necessary to understand and interrogat­e Marxism and even appreciate its theoretica­l and scientific ramificati­ons is more extensive and can unravel the myth of Africa’s economic lethargy and political paralysis. On unaiju is director, centre for china studies( c cs) utako, Abuja.

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