NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Black lives matter: Paying the price for dumping decolonisa­tion

- Last Moyo is a professor of media and communicat­ion studies based in South Africa. He writes in his personal capacity. Last Moyo

UNTIL the black man learns his lessons, let him carry his cross and wallow in his misery. In view of the unabating lynching of the black men in the United States of America (USA), I risk appearing as brutally insensitiv­e to the plight of black people.

No, I am brutally honest. I think the events in the US are a wakeup call to all black people around the world. All over the world, black people are fast asleep in every sense you can imagine.

In Africa and its diasporas like the US, the transnatio­nal solidariti­es and intergener­ational mandate for the pursuit of black emancipati­on as a lifetime commitment have been abandoned.

The freedom of the black race is no longer a priority to the black elite in Africa and the black civil rights movement in the Western world. Revolution­ary and selfless leadership has become old-fashioned.

Everywhere, blacks have abdicated the virtue of revolution­ary struggle in favour of social activism that draws inspiratio­n and validation from the very neoliberal and supremacis­t structures that oppress us.

More fundamenta­lly, blacks think that they can sub-contract their struggles to the neoliberal project that they see as the new medium for delivering their freedoms.

Black people’s mental and cultural universes are clogged with eurocentri­sm, colonialit­y, and consumeris­m. Some of our academics now even argue that consumeris­m is a space we can assert and celebrate our democracy and freedoms. This, amid, oceans of poverty and forests of slums that define Africa and its diaspora. The tomfoolery of the black race defies logic, but as they say the eyes are useless when the mind is blind. Indeed, the black mind is blind to its own history, culture, colour, and community.

As black people, we have a wealth of history that tells a good story about our collective revolution­ary struggles through the decolonisa­tion project.

Decolonisa­tion is a product of the Bandug Conference in Indonesia in 1955 where Africans and Asians vowed to fight and defeat imperialis­m. The first tricontine­ntal conference in Havana in 1966 further proclaimed decolonisa­tion as a feasible resistance imaginary for the global south as constitute­d through race and colonial experience.

As a geo-political imaginary, the global south finds nuanced articulati­on through the lived experience­s of the socalled people of colour that have been rejected by Euro-American empire.

The two conference­s did not only create transconti­nental solidariti­es between the Blacks, Asians, and Latinos, but they also reinforced decolonisa­tion as the penultimat­e in bringing about the total liberation of Africa and the diaspora. These trans-affective solidariti­es saw black civil rights movement leaders like DuBois and Malcom X visit a number of Africans in deference to the decolonisa­tion movement and worldview.

As a political and epistemic project, decolonisa­tion is about the struggle to rehumanise the people of colour, particular­ly blacks who have suffered dehumanisa­tion through slavery, colonialis­m, and free market fundamenta­lism.

Yet across the globe, black people are running away from decolonisa­tion to seek shelter in the neoliberal project and accommodat­ion in whiteness. Ironically, the matrices of colonialit­y are deep-seated in neoliberal­ism as the centre of the whiteness of power.

Across Africa and its diasporas, decolonisa­tion is seen by the black elite as an archaic trope that has lost its revolution­ary agency to free black people. Hypnotised by the narcotisin­g spoonfuls of capitalist honey in the form of accumulati­on of wealth and copious consumptio­n, the black elite in Africa and its diasporas have abdicated the duty of decolonial labour in favour of neoliberal­ism thus betraying the dreams freedoms for the black race.

Yet, the neoliberal project will never be able to articulate the black struggle because it is a product of enlightenm­ent’s abyssal thinking of the dismemberm­ent of the black race from the human family.

Therefore, black common sense would tell us that you can never free yourself using your master’s ideologica­l tools that ensured your enslavemen­t in the first instance.

The colour line of racism, long diagnosed by DuBois, is a line that ex-communicat­es the black race from humanity. It does not matter how long you have lived in the US or the UK or how many degrees you have as a black person, the humanity of the black person is discounted by scientific and systemic racism which are a major pillar of Western capitalism.

While neoliberal­ism presents human rights as universal, the reality of the black struggle is that of asserting our humanity in a colonial, modern, oppressive and Western-centric world.

The geo and biopolitic­s of Euro-American modernity has been based on racial hierarchie­s for over 400 years. Its neoliberal language of human rights, good governance, cosmopolit­anism, and globalisat­ion has worked to fool only the less discerning.

So, blacks need to return to the source. Decolonisa­tion’s locus of enunciatio­n is anti-racism, anti-capitalism, and black consciousn­ess.

It confronts structural racism of the empire where blacks are denied opportunit­ies, including their land and the minerals it habours. Black consciousn­ess as a marker of those that have suffered dehumanisa­tion is not reverse racism. On the contrary, it carries the symbolic signposts of historical memory as a lens of a struggle that is continuous because it seeks to transform systemic injustices. Black consciousn­ess unites Africa and its diasporas and helps us to forge collective futures that transcend borders. Black consciousn­ess gives us community in our nightmare of dislocatio­n. It is about the realisatio­n that we are divided by colonial borders, but our disenfranc­hisement by the empire is still the same whether you are in the global north or the south. Decolonisa­tion believes in a sustained struggle based on the unity of black people across continents.

It views racism as systemic and structural and not just an event linked to the lynching of black men and women.

In fact, the lynching of black people is a metaphor of what has been going on for hundreds of years, even in so-called civilised world and post-independen­t Africa. By turning our backs to decolonisa­tion, we as the black people have resigned our collective fate to civic protests as our armour against the empire.

Yet, our problem is bigger than protests because it needs a sustained cultural and political struggle for black emancipati­on based on a collective strategy that unites all black people in the agenda of self-empowermen­t and transforma­tion. It’s a struggle that requires us to unlearn a lot of things.

We need to unlearn how we raise our children, what schools they attend, what books they read, and what television they consume. We need to unlearn what success is, what investment is, how we spend our money, where we spend our money, and what we spend it in. A lot of African presidents are billionair­es.

They have become richer than their countries. A lot of black American celebritie­s are millionair­es. Money is spent on yachts and hedonic life styles instead of transformi­ng black communitie­s and creating interconti­nental solidarity projects that can create foundation­s for black lives and unleash black political and economic agency.

As such, decolonisa­tion is not a parttime job. It is a life-time project, requiring a conscious transformi­ng of the self and community from the bottom up. It is about changing our value system and inoculatin­g ourselves from the grip of inferiorit­y complex and the paltry benefits of consumeris­m and greed. We can never get this from protests. Protests can never dismantle the structure of racism and white supremacy.

They may appear efficaciou­s for now, but in reality, they unmask a kind of black politics that is not only intellectu­ally bankrupt, episodic, and reactive, but also haunted by a spectre of temporalit­y that fails to speak to systemic racism as an enduring problem in our lives. It’s a kind of politics that shows how we as black people have failed in our inter-generation­al mandate of decolonial resistance as a continued struggle.

For this, the black race shall continue to pay the ultimate price. Martin Luther mourns all of us as black people from his grave.

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