Around here, I generally do not engage in "dialogue", I say my piece and move on. My time is precious, I find that people are holding on to ideologies, prejudices and opinions that have atrophied and calcified their minds. It is too late for them to learn new tricks. I am finding also that age does that to you.
It is intellectual dishonesty or supreme deftness to suggest that anyone that says that Nigerians were better off during colonial times is calling for the return of the white man. That's silly. If you free me from a bad marriage, marry me, and you then proceed to treat me worse than the previous marriage, I have every right to tell you that I was better off in my previous marriage. That does not mean I want to go back to my old hell. There are other options and I should keep looking. The new black on black colonialism, apartheid, slavery that poor blacks are enduring in the hands of black rulers and their intellectual sidekicks is especially painful. From South Africa to Nigeria, some of the worst atrocities to happen to our people have been under black rule. The data is right there. I was born on the eve of our independence, come to my village, the only things standing outside of ugly mansions er country homes built by the new thieves are relics of colonialism, broken roads and water taps that have been dry since the sixties. How is talking about that yearning for colonialism or apartheid? It is at the very least a stinging rebuke of our collective failure as thinkers and leaders. Let us just admit it from the comfort of the white institutions we live eat and breathe in- we have failed Africa. There is no need parsing my words. The truth stares us in the face.
You sit here in the West and get defensive all day about your humanity; in the process you have elevated yourself beyond the limits of your competence. You are in bondage and even those back home are in bondage, everything is mimicry of the West, no ideological core, nothing. You don't believe me? Take your white plumber to Nigeria. The gates of Aso Rock will open for you as soon as they see his whiteness! Be there forming superior. Nonsense.
And for the record, this is what I said earlier about all of us. We should accept responsibility for our mess. The white man is the least of our problems; we are the problem! It is time to star thinking and acting differently. Right now we are the caricature we dread.
- Ikhide
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Visiting South Africa's Johannesburg in 2005 left me confused. I expected a joyful place, ringing with the bountiful fruits of freedom from the horror that was apartheid. Instead, I saw in the eyes of the poor, fear and despair and one wondered if they knew the difference between the past and the present - or if there indeed was any difference. At this conference, poor blacks served the participants with a certain deference and trepidation that stayed with me all through. The Black and White conference participants seemed fine with it. What seemed obvious was that the black ruling class had merely mounted the saddle of the former oppressors and were now using the same state-sanctioned instruments of oppression to oppress the poor - and amass power and wealth. I looked around me and it just seemed that white on black oppression had been replaced with black on black oppression. No compassion.
This horrific dysfunction is repeated in virtually all black African nations. The poor in my village are blissfully unaware that they were freed from colonialism; huge swathes of the village look like a place time forgot. Take those nations freed from colonialism; not much in terms of the culture and structure has changed. All over the land, the intellectual and ruling elite swagger like drunks, armed with pie charts and PowerPoint slides, mouthing bullshit as the poor ferry them from broken hovel to broken hovel on their backs. No one holds them accountable because they own the bully pulpit.
It is as if the warriors merely took over from the white man, shoved the poor into "boys' quarters" and ghettoes and continued the looting and brigandage. In the case of apartheid South Africa, the oppressors came to stay with their families and so they built robust structures and institutions for their enjoyment and use. The colonialists came, ruled as if from afar, built temporary structures - which was fine since their families were back home attending real schools and being taken care of by real hospitals. Each time they got sick, they would fly back home to have their rashes treated. Today's post colonial African ruler is exactly the same as his white ancestor. His families are abroad and each time he has a cough, he flies home to the West to be taken care of in real hospitals. There is no investment in his society - because he does not believe in his society.
The dysfunction is now being aggravated by the uncritical adoption of a form of crippling governance, what I call democracy without accountability, an aping of what happens in the West. Outside of slavery and AIDS, nothing has hurt African nations more than decades of looting in the name of democracy. Why are things the way they are? Why are we like this? Until we confront our challenges with real honesty and rigor, African nations will continue to be the butt of jokes in the international community of nations.
We are headed in the wrong direction. That much is obvious, let's not lie about things. Our intellectual elite must stop bleating inanities and admit that there has been a rank failure to lead from their end. Our intellectuals have become the problem; lazy and loud parrots of lies and obfuscation all so they can feed their mouths. All I see is mimicry, and loud parroting of stolen ideas. In the absence of a robust infrastructure; of home-grown accountability, in the absence of a real willingness to work, our nations will remain caricature nations. We must think about these things.
And no, I do not agree with Jean-Pierre Bekolo Obama. A return to colonialism would be silly. But read his interview; he has thought hard about these things.
http://chimurengachronic.co.za/in-over-our-heads/
- Ikhide
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