Cain Mathema: Co-locating memory, being and becoming

16 Jun, 2019 - 00:06 0 Views
Cain Mathema: Co-locating memory, being and becoming Cain Mathema

The Sunday News

Richard Mahomva

The imperial monolithic predisposition to power, knowledge and being confronts dissent and diversity through exclusionary terms. As such, various arms and institutions have been created the world-over to promote systemic conformity to the dictates of the colonial. 

Consequently, this has generated a normalised weak-will to unpack logics of epistemology, as well as the relationship between power and the society. Generally, this castrates the possibilities of re-imagining the world outside the “Pedagogy of the Oppressed”. In the process, ignorance and self-hate is decorated. 

The memory of our past has been curated through the divisive penchant of the colonial reproduction of being and thus limiting the utmost potential to national belonging and becoming. To this end, the being of the African is defined along the limited and primordial characteristics of the tribe, savage, bloody and doomed. This is the reason why regionalism remains a pivot of marginalisation, patrimonialism and blood-shed all over the Global-South. Self-hate and the failure to grow out of imagined superficial inferiority complexes and imagined boundaries continue to embargo the epistemic freedom, self-realisation and self-actualisation of Africa and her people. 

The will to unearth the barricade of pedagogies, myths and legends which repress the ontological expressions and actualisation of Africa and the future of Africans is critical. This calls for far-reaching commitments in revolutionary-organic intellectualism to decide Africa’s future. The recent publication by Ambassador Cain Mathema,  I Worship King Mzilikazi is a timely deposit to the body  of knowledge at a time collating the past in a bid to characterise the evolution of Zimbabwe’s socio-political modernity is critical. This follows the exigent need for Zimbabwe and Africa to rise above dismemberment. The evolution narrative explored in the text supplies the reader with the centrifugal role of pre-colonial traditional political ordering of society. This social strata embedded on the values of our ancient political acumen has conceived the present day ethnic plural realities in Zimbabwe. As a result, the book memorialises Mzilikazi the nation builder. It carries an emphatic message on his political stewardship which brought to life the co-habitation of the Nguni, Sotho, Tswana and other ethnic groups which Mzilikazi found here in Madzimbabwe. Through the iconic attributes of Mzilikazi a nation in unity is epitomised. Respect to dissent and social cohesion is broadly illustrated. This book demystifies the popularised violence(s) of our pre-colonial kingdoms. 

Memory

In this publication, Ambassador Mathema projects a significant pan-Africanist dimension to how the modern African nation “became” and how in the process a people of Africa are naturally consolidated to unity by diversity. Basing on Matshazi (2008)’s account, the key point of departure is Mathema’s highlight of Mzilikazi’s historical background which has a strong rooting from the South of the Limpompo: 

“King Mzilikazi was born in 1790 in Zululand, South Africa, in to­day’s KwaZulu Natal province in that country. King Shaka Zulu of the Zulu nation where Mzilikazi was born was born in 17871 in Zululand too. Shaka belonged to the Zulu clan. The clan was made up of descendants of Zulu, one of the four sons of Mnguni, “the great forefather of the Nguni people, who had four sons: Xhosa, Luzumane (Zulu), Swazi and Ndebele”. Therefore, Mzilikazi and Shaka were born and grew up at the same time really, Shaka being just three years older than Mzilikazi (Mathema 2018:1).”

According to Mathema (2018:2), the newly found state was purely military in terms of its leadership currency. The sections of occupational domain of the Ndebele Kingdom were purely military:

“Mzilikazi was Zulu, and so were his comrades with whom he founded the Ndebele nation of Zimbabwe. These included General Somhlolo Math­ema, (the commander of the Inqama Regiment, a great great grandfa­ther of mine as well as, in fact more so, that of today’s Chief Mathema of Enqameni in Gwanda); General Mhabahaba Mkhwananzi, whose great great grandson is Senator Chief Ngungumbana of Mberengwa, Gen­eral Mhabahaba was a cousin to General Somhlolo because the Mathe­mas are Mkhwananzis as well; General Maqhekeni Sithole, great great grandfather of today’s Senator Chief Gampu of Tsholotsho and parts of Bulilima near Plumtree Town; General Mkhithika Thebe; General Mbungwana Matshazi . . . ”

In essence, the military characterisation of the Ndebele nation places clear prominence on the need to rethink the link between military densities of power and democracy. The Western-centric dichotomy of military power and nationhood posits a problematic synergy of the two.  This is the reason why the post-colonial military transitions have been narrowly defined as arbitrary and synonymous to bad governance. Through this British school of thought, the role of the military has been confined to the defensive rather than the administrative. 

On the contrary, the above account renders the reader a broad appreciation of how the military was significant in organising society towards integration. It is on the backdrop of this reality that the nationalist movement produced the present-day state. The military was at the centre of mobilising the civilians into the core pillars of the African revolutionary processes. This is why at the centre of the pan-African nationalistic memory one finds combatant revolutionaries like Fidel Castro, Che Guvera, Thomas Sankara, Jason Ziyaphapha, Josiah Tongogara among many of our national and continental revolutionary luminaries.

On the other hand, the progression from Garveyism — which was largely philosophical to the rise of African nationalism is an elaborate expression of how our struggle for African liberation  — home and abroad — had to take a pragmatic shape in the form of military intervention. Therefore, the military element to the birth, advancement and longevity of national memory remains a traditional emblem to what makes us a sovereign people with the will to defend and consolidate the enduring values that bind. This is why it was not amiss that the bedrock of the Ndebele nation was internal military influence. The extensive merit of the military-craft of our people is best displayed through our decorated fight against imperialism through the Anglo-Ndebele War of 1893 and later the 1896-97 Chimurengas/Umvulelas. During the First Chimurenga the amalgamated strength of our people’s military dexterity was executed and colonial power was utterly demolished in 1980. Today, we continue to organise ourselves in the broad terms of the armed liberation struggle which emanate from the founding legacy of our grand political stalwarts, hence the befitting incline by Mathema to pay homage to Mzilikazi. 

Being  

The book exposes the thematic assertion of human-hood/ontological subjugation roots of the African. This publication, like any other relevant African philosophy text depicts the cruelties of the imperial repression and how it created a colonial being. Through religion, a mission to disable to function of redemptive logic of the African has been successfully accomplished: 

“I take ‘worship’ to mean ‘to love and admire someone or something very much’. But then, Christianity, Islam and other religions have tak­en the meaning of ‘worship’ for only their religious believes and prac­tices, and they arrogantly try to ban any other meaning of the word ‘worship’, they have removed it from the day to day real activities of real people to the world of dreams — but then all dreams are based on the day to day lives of people, not the other way round (Mathema 2018:33)”

The mischievously monolithic character of the colonial religion is presented as the major reason to the demise of African spirituality. Mathema  (2018) calls for freedom of conscience; which in his view has been under colonial incarceration at the agency of Christianity and Orientalism: “Freedom of conscience is the best solution, and no one has a right to impose their religion on others.” (Mathema 2018: 33).

To Mathema (2018), monotheism represents the static character of colonial religion which has been successfully imported to the conscience of the African. Mathema (2018) invites the reader to his subscription to the cosmos beyond the experience of spirituality to scriptures: 

“For me, I worship nature, something that creates other things. All of us, individually and as groups, are nature because we create children and new things and environments to enrich our lives. Therefore, I worship everything natural, everything that creates, but then everything that is created by natural things or beings is also natural. At the end of the day, therefore, everything is natural because every new thing we create can only be created by us following the laws and substances of nature. Nature therefore creates itself, that is why we as human beings are a phenomenon that is natural, but conscious of its surroundings, even to the extent of creating god or gods when we do not understand the causes of one phenomenon or the other.”

Becoming

Having been ravished by the divisive tonics of imperialism, Africa’s quest to de-provincialise power remains a critical part of confronting the realities of our time. The first phase of decolonising Africa was achieved, now it’s the time to decapitate the rationale and institutional dynamics of the colonial heritage entrenched in our institutions. One of which is the institution of political power which has been extensively polarised such that we cannot imagine the past outside the divisive realms of regionalism. For that reason, the submission by Mathema (2018) issues a liberating perspective which contradicts the regionalisation of our national heroes  — especially those linked to the land which the colonialists called Matabeleland. Through the legacy of King Mzilikazi, Mathema (2018) illustrates how a nation rose from infancy to highest levels of actualisation. It is from this premise that the aspect of celebrating diversity and the oneness of our people is encouraged. We have an agenda for the future and our destiny lies in the lessons from the past. This is why Mathema (2018) calls us to seek lessons for the present from the past, least our “becoming” never arrives.

Richard Mahomva is a political-scientist with avid interest in classic and modern political theory. He also has a distinct passion around the architecture of governance in Africa and is a literary aficionado.

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