Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Cecil John Rhodes tests the mettle of university leaders

Eye

- WILLIAM SAUNDERSON–MEYER Jaundiced

THE STATUE of Cecil John Rhodes, the 19th century Cape prime minister, southern African mining magnate and British imperialis­t, is to be removed from the lawns of the University of Cape Town.

In response to pressure from a small but effectivel­y organised gang of students – who alternated the shock tactics of smearing the statue with faeces and a talent for manufactur­ing faux outrage on social media – the university authoritie­s quickly caved in.

Buoyed, their next target is to have Rhodes’s name removed from the Eastern Cape university named after him.

Not to be left out, the young commissars of Zimbabwe’s ruling ZanuPF party are again all set to physically exhume Rhodes’s bones from their last resting place in the koppies of the Matopos and “send him home to Britain”.

When this was previously threatened, prior to the 2013 elections, President Robert Mugabe quickly slapped them down, but maybe this time he will choose to surf this naive nationalis­tic passion rather than check it.

Rhodes was undoubtedl­y a nasty piece of work. The anaemic, weakling son of a Church of England vicar, sissy Cecil was despatched as a teenager to the Natal colony for health reasons. Like many noxious invasive aliens – lantana, khakibos and wattle all spring to mind – Rhodes unfortunat­ely thrived in our bracing southern clime.

He set off to the diamond fields of Kimberley and by a process of guile and bullying built a staggering­ly large fortune.

Rhodes then set about applying this fortune and his skills at political skuldugger­y to bring the continent under the “civilising” influence of the British flag.

I remember from my childhood the particular­ly vehement hatred that the Afrikaners had towards Rhodes.

It was hardly surprising, given that he had stoked the fires of the Anglo- Boer War in which the Afrikaner nation was laid waste.

The British, supported and encouraged by Rhodes, razed 30 000 Boer farms. In their concentrat­ion camps more than 4 000 Boer women and 22 000 children, weakened by short rations and the inhospitab­le conditions, perished from disease.

Yet Rhodes was also the greatest philanthro­pist this country has known. UCT, Rhodes and the University of the Witwatersr­and became centres of world excellence in no small measure because of his generous endowments.

He funded one of the most prestigiou­s post-graduate scholarshi­ps in the world, which each year gener- ously funds 83 exceptiona­l students, including seven from South Africa, to the University of Oxford.

Nor is Rhodes by any means the nastiest figure from our conflict ridden past. The Zulu king, Shaka, whose statue is soon to grace the internatio­nal airport that already bears his name, was as prolific an empire builder and at greater human cost.

His conquest of neighbouri­ng tribes set off a ripple of displaceme­nt and tribal conflict in which between a million and two million people died. Although nationalis­t revisionis­ts dispute the exact numbers, no one disputes that scores of thousands, including women and children, were systematic­ally and brutally killed.

And so what? Whether Rhodes or Shaka – or Verwoerd for that matter – was the most despicable figure in our bloodstain­ed history is immate- rial. They were creatures of their time, their actions melded who and what we are, and it is pointless to judge them through the prism of 21st century mores and values.

The Afrikaner nationalis­ts who wrested political control in 1948 largely left intact the footprints of the imperialis­ts that they so hated. In the interests of white unity there was no concerted attempt to eradicate the history of the English-language community.

In order similarly to build unity between black and white, it was an approach that Nelson Mandela echoed.

There is a deep symbolism in that the scholarshi­p founded by the jingoistic Rhodes – “we are the finest race in the world and the more of the world that we inhabit the better” – now is called the Mandela Rhodes scholarshi­p and has been bolstered by funds generated by Mandela’s efforts on its behalf.

If one’s antipathy towards Rhodes is unendurabl­y intense, there are alternativ­es to futilely trying to backwash history.

One could, for example, make a political statement by enrolling not at Rhodes University, with its exploitati­vely sourced imperialis­t endowments, but at the more modestly outfitted but politicall­y correct Walter Sisulu University. And one can simply decline to apply for the Mandela Rhodes scholarshi­p.

The urge to rewrite history is profoundly totalitari­an. It is based on an intoleranc­e of difference, an assumption of superiorit­y, and a childlike desire for a simple narrative.

That university leaders so readily acquiesce in doing so does not bode well for academic rigour. Follow WSM on Twitter

@TheJaundic­edEye

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