Tuesday, December 9, 2014

USA Africa Dialogue Series - Mwalimu Ali A. Mazrui, 1933-2104: Celebration of an Ubiquitous Life

Mwalimu Ali A. Mazrui, 1933-2104: Celebration of an Ubiquitous Life

By 

Toyin Falola

 

On December 4, 2014, a memorial service was held in honor of Professor Ali A. Mazrui at the Library of Congress, Washington D.C. Two days after this magnificent event, a bigger celebration was held at Binghamton University in the State of New York that attracted over 200 people, including my humble self. The diverse audience came from far and near, including representatives from universities and colleges in Syracuse (NY), College Station (Pennsylvania), Rutgers (NJ), Ithaca, (NY) and New York City, while two scholars traveled all the way from Makerere University in Uganda where Mazrui cut his intellectual teeth as a scholar and professor. The crowded program included speeches by the Dean and Provost of the University, as well as a dozen scholars, five of Mazrui's children and Ali Al'Amin Mazrui, his grandson named after him. The Master of Ceremonies was Ricardo René Larémont, Professor of Political Science/Sociology, Binghamton University. A tasty reception concluded the evening.

 

In a testimonial fashion, one speaker after another attested to the scholarship, humanity, and overall greatness of Mwalimu Ali A. Mazrui, a public intellectual of great vision and courage. He was never shy of defending Africa, offering great ideas, and challenging orthodoxy. In my own presentation, I said in part:

 

Ali Mazrui is a scholar whose intellectual inheritances are immense, who then built on those inheritances to create a stadium of ideas, and legacies that will remain with us for a long time to come, if not perpetually.  The inheritances include the European conquest and its consequences; the rising politics of ethnicities instigated by the colonial policies of divide and rule; development issues; emerging political systems, ideologies, party systems and military regimes.

 

Mazrui, who earned his academic titles and honorific ones like Mwalimu and Ghana's Nana,  created an impressive knowledge system that includes the analysis and the instrumentalization of cultures, religion (notably Islam); Africanity (which he theorizes as triple heritage of the Indigenous, Western, and Islamic), political sociology and political philosophy. His cumulative impact on African studies is to reveal and rethink the "African condition", a template that allows discussions on identity politics, political thought, and political behavior. He generated debates around colonial and post colonial histories, thus exposing various ideas on colonial conquest and colonization, resistance and nationalism. He highlighted Western knowledge of domination and inventions which his generation had to combat. Mazrui's scholarship engaged a variety of lines: color line, religious line, gender line and much more, that attracted vigorous debates which he equally engaged. Those lines led to contested knowledge systems, as in the Eurocentric denials of African humanity which was countered by new ideas such as Pan Africanism.

 

As a scholar of rare breed, Mazrui developed methodologies appropriate to the "African condition", generally eclectic and encyclopedic. Personal observations combined with autobiography to supply cogent analyses that tear down boundaries, and multiple suggestions that bring various disciplines into conversation. His comparative inquires spoke to state systems, political thought, and institutions. He could particularize in one essay and conceptualize in the next.

 

Knowledge generation, to him, had an objective: the search for solutions to problems.

 

His intellectual legacies are bound to endure, as he offered many ideas on the received ideological models, knowledge systems, and the complexities of interactions among and between people, states, countries, religions and races. Mazruina—a brand that embodies plural knowledges—will continue to aid us in the understanding of value and ideology of knowledge, contents of knowledge, inter-religious and inter-ethnic peaceful relations. Mazruiana is a path to a global flow of peace without hierarchies and domination. Africa will surely get to its destination point of attaining development, stability and leadership in global politics.

 

            Other immortalizing activities are being planned, including the creation of an Ali A. Mazrui Foundation and an Ali A. Mazrui Endowed Chair to be based in Uganda, which was his adopted beloved home, although he was born a Kenyan.

.

Toyin Falola
Department of History
The University of Texas at Austin
104 Inner Campus Drive
Austin, TX 78712-0220
USA
512 475 7224
512 475 7222 (fax)

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