Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Greetings Friends, Comrades,
Been a long time, but I am still here. As actors and activists in the International Community prepare for the Durban Review Conference in Geneva,later this month.I would like to reflect on the possible meaning of WCAR for the ongoing tragedy in the DRC, one among many tragedies on the continent. In my opinion, the major implication is that the dehumanization of African people has been the most profound legacy, of the crime against humanity that is called slavery. I agree that the roots of the Trans Atlantic Slave Trade and other forms of slavery are economic. But the fruits of slavery has been the dehumanization of African people everywhere. This history lives in the prevailing global structure, that allows the denial of human rights to individual sons and daughters of Africa, much as larger communities and states of Africa are subject to abuse, that would not and should not be tolerated anywhere else. This signals to me that the legacy of the crime of slavery is to define human worth, a categorization of humanity that buries the African today so deep, that we can be slaughtered and arouse as much concern as the culling of wild animals.
The death of almost six million souls, and counting, in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, is a profound and obscene expression of that legacy, in which the worth of African life is reduced to a spectacle, horrific but still a side-show. The terror of rape as part of the war on African people, makes the point that,that most essential human right to life, to dream of, or to contribute the future by being able to bear children for one's own self determination does not apply. The paradigm is rooted in the terror of slavery and it's associated institutions that built the global economy, with Africans, being sacrificed on the altar of the global economy.
Hence my conclusion that the situation in the DRC, should fall squarely on the agenda in Geneva, as an appreciation of that ongoing legacy of slavery. We understand the shrill cries of those found guilty, that there should be no suggestion of "linkage" of slavery to the current conditions, as it would further indite and lay bare the lies about the roots of their economic and military dominance. The crimes against humanity, evident not only in the Trans-Atlantic Slave trade, but also in the so called Congo Free State of Leopold, these crimes continue today for the same reasons, to advance the economic interests of the dominant global cultures at the expense of the humanity of African people. Reparations must not be hush money or some cynical attempt at sympathy for "lesser" people. The goal of reparations has to be that of restoration. The restoration of the human rights and dignity of all people, in essence changing their relationship to power, power wrought at the expense of Africans and their ancestors. Reparations must facilitate the empowerment of the everyday people to access and exercise their human rights, well being and dignity and full confessions by the perpetrators of these crimes against humanity

Saturday, January 17, 2009

Some Brief Thoughts on the Rise of Obama

"Each generation must out of relative obscurity discover its mission, fulfill it, or betray it," Franz Fanon

Too soon to judge Mr Obama but.........

This event marks the culmination of a journey to achieve the American dream, to fulfill the quest to show that we are just as capable or competent as other folks.
I can salute those travelers for proving that a Black Man can occupy the highest office in the land and I respect their convictions.
But for me the dream of America, rises on a sordid history and is sustained in a current reality which is much more a nightmare than a dream.
But putting a brilliant black man in the office and a beautiful Black Family in the White House, could only amount to something short of victory for African People or humanity.
Because the cost, the price to achieve that dream would demand something that Brother Obama and his team, in my opinion, do not appear to possess.
That requirement is, the commitment to bring into reality a world that upholds the irreducible worth and dignity of humanity at all costs. A commitment that the likes of Dr King was prepared to fight for, to serve the people with and when necessary died for.
Being black, being African in my humble opinion, is about a way of constantly honoring life with the integrity of all our thoughts and actions. I would like to briefly refer to another of our brethren who rose to lead his people in even more dread and challenging times and did have to be principled in understanding his historic mission. Black as redefined by Jean Jacques Dessalines means lover of liberty and black is the color and texture of liberty.
Obama may well bring some of that to the Whitehouse, although I propose that he has already had to deny, disconnect from and disavow significant parts of himself, to get pass the guards.
Yes I am sure that Brother Obama, from his soul, may even be moved to pull out the harpoon fired into lives of the wretched of the earth by global imperialism.But like Brother Malcolm offered pulling out the blade halfway" as pragmatic as it might be, is not justice.
One of many examples of this conundrum is the planned redeployment of the hapless servants, dying and killing in Iraq, to do the same thing in Afghanistan.Obama must have been advised that the technology and skill, the art of war of the American military, was now advanced enough to totality obliterate the grim history. The fate of failure, of multiple imperial invasions into the lives of the Afghan people in that land that has suffered so much and for too long.
Obama, a student of history, should learn it's lessons and try something else, to win the peace, with the wisdom and maturity of peace, not with the brutal ignorance of death and destruction as the only solution. Unfortunately it strikes me that he, Obama, could be suffering from the same fever, that led so many to create more misery and ultimately fail in their imperial enterprise.
Dr King's legacy is, as is our other freedom fighters, to change the nature of this beast, these arrogant ways of thinking, resident in the highest corridors and houses of power in the land. If he could not, then he was willing to die trying to keep his pledge.
But King's vision extended beyond the beast. It was a vision of the Beloved Community, brought into reality by a revolution of values, yet aware of the threat of the triple evils. This beloved ancestor was looking for a better world at the mountain top. I doubt that it was about,being enstooled in the Oval Office. That would be sterling, only if the office itself was used to change the nature of the dominant culture, to one true to the principles of universal human rights and dignity for all.
This may be presumptuous and is in effect somewhat unfair to the brother, to suggest that he does not have "it". I can acknowledge that he can and probably is committed to softening the blows of oppression that fall on "his people", maybe even to help us "progress" in this current national and global order. I am sure that few of us wanted another 4 years of the abuse, the assault on humanity that came out of Washington.
I can salute him for that and my expectations are therein, guarded.
Obama's promises to address the ills of society, are laudatory but only valid within the tortured confines of the neo-liberal, agenda of integration.
I cannot give undue credit or expect him to fulfill an agenda, a sojourn for liberation and human dignity that he has not really claimed or been defined by. It would in many ways be unfair to judge him for failing to achieve those objectives.
I also must note that Obama the human and President Obama-the office, are not necessarily organic and my critique is sensitive to this reality.
So what does Obama mean to me. Well, I feel good, real nice to see a brother up there, sincerely, I get the same chills as when looking at the Williams Sisters, Tiger Woods, Muhammed Ali, trounce their opponents. Yes we can, we can win, but are we sure that the game we are in,is really about us and that the prize will be worthy of our investment. I feel that our dream, the promise we are reaching for, is way beyond the capacity and imagination of the White House, even with a black man in it.
But I do expect things to be a little less painful and maybe, brother might even slow down the rate at which the Titanic is going under.
I hope that the brother proves me very wrong and that the ceremonial spear his grandmother brings inspires him to rise and met Fanon's challenge, noted above.

Sizwe

Monday, January 5, 2009

Doom and Gloom or Opportunity for Change?

Greetings Fellow Travelers,

Hope that this New Year, brings the well deserved blessings to you all. The way forward seems littered with awesome economic obstacles, which threaten to redefine the essential structure and nature, not only of markets, but of the societies that therein exist. Indeed a glacial shift in the global economies, the real New World Order, may be coming forth with relentless force. Though much of the attention has been focused on those actors at the commanding heights of industry, finance, etc, in the most economically developed societies, the impact of this meltdown actually falls with violent force, on those at the lower levels of the economic structure.
It is to us who work to live, those whose life and not classic profit margins, stock portfolios, etc, are dependent on the health of the economies. The ironic question, is about the viability of such dependence on the traditional economic models. Should workers who toil day to day, to feed, house and clothe our families, entrust their investments to the judgment of the likes of those responsible for the current economic crisis. Indeed the added question is, whether or not this was a error made by a system that works, or if this was the inevitable outcome of a model based on the exploitation of humanity and nature, consumerism, ever expanding profit and greed, that time and time again has shown that its essential rhythm is "boom and bust". The result is crisis, scramble for survival, vulture like preying on fellow competitors and historically violent conflict, that escalates to global warfare.
If these reflections present a picture of doom and gloom, it is only the partial message, what I really feel, is that the opportunity for significant and substantial change is present. That the recognition of the need to do the work of detoxifying, cleansing from the wanton excesses, overindulgence and pathological dependency of the current era is finally in effect. For those of us who work to live, this could well be our opportunity to redefine our way of being, our way of living in a more sterling and nourishing way.