By Nick Mangwana
We have
always argued that being patriotic is not being Zanu PF. You
also don’t have to be Zanu PF to be patriotic. But if you are
Zanu PF (like me) you don’t owe anyone an apology for it. The biggest
asset Zimbabwe has is its resilient and educated people. It
can also be its greatest liability; a double edged sword. It is sad when those
very articulate and intelligible people use their eloquence to speak and write
negatively about their own country.
How heart-breaking is it when they prowl the internet looking for anything unflattering written about their country with so much poise and persuasive fluency they spin all this as evidence of Zanu PF’s ineptitude. We argue that this is just self-loathing and self-defeating. You can also use your good diction to sell your country and its virtues. Talking good about your country is not propaganda.
Rich Zimbabwean culture and tradition. Be proud of your roots and your country |
We are not asking for self-censorship. We are
asking for self-awareness. We are only asking for honesty soul-searching.
Is it that there is nothing good happening in Zimbabwe at all? Is it possible
that Zanu PF has done no good for those 34 years that we are always reminded
of? All those 16 Universities opened in the past 34 years count for
nothing? That extraordinary literacy rate, the best in Africa,
was that a small achievement?
We now brood in our self-pity
highlighting the mistakes and masking the achievements, to what
end? Mistakes were made of course. That comes with the territory. But when
nobody wants to talk about the fact that most residential parts of
urban areas inhabitated by black people had no electricity and were
known as Cherimas. When they don’t mention that
there was no tarred road between Gweru
and Chiredzi through Chivi you sense hypocrisy. When they
ignore that there was no road
linking Chinhoyi and Chegutu and it happened in those 34
years you also sense an agenda.
They forget to mention that part of the
electricity challenges we face today are because the Cherimas
and rural areas are now electrified. The supply designed as a preserve of an
elite few is now reaching so many..
No apologies for being Zimbabwean. It is our land. |
This also makes you sense hypocritical selective amnesia. You are
almost lynched when these positives roll off your tongue. You are called a
Zanu PF apologist. They give you imaginary farms and say you are singing for
your supper! Well, Cdes some of us make our own supper. We don't have to sing for it. Let us not
call each names. Why don’t we talk facts and issues whilst our children
call each other names in the playground (for which we chastise them).
Saying positive things about your country is not propagating a
partisan agenda.
Zimbabwe successfully held UNTWO despite the tough economic conditions and negative vibes from the perennial prophets of doom |
We cannot enumerate the positives as they are an
umpteen. And it is not the idea of this opinion piece to do that. It’s only
asking questions such as why we are not talking about our successful hosting of
the UNWTO and other legacies from the last 34 years of nationhood? We
cannot stop accentuating our national progress because it coincides with Zanu
PF successes. Let us learn from others.
Jamaica is a very small country. It has a
population of less than 3 million. Zimbabwe has a population of more than 13
million. How come they have had such an impact on the
international cultural scene? One only needs to go to the Red Fox aka
KumaRasta or spend some time with our own “Ghetto Youths” to
understand the impact of the Jamaican Culture on the world and our own
Zimbabwe. Jamaicans love their country and are willing to defend it
to the death. It does not mean that it all positive there. No. There are
probably much more negatives than positives actually. From the above small
population, they record 1,193 murders, 1,227 shootings, 580
aggravated assaults, 792 rapes, 2,631 robberies, and 2,443 break-ins, all
in one year. They are in the premier league of violent crimes.
Yes, this
is blight on their nationhood. But that is not what they project to
our young people, is it? This is not the side that make people play pretend
Jamaicans and speak in pretend Patois (Patwa) some which is quite
ridiculous or too rude to repeat. It will be a death wish to mention these
negatives to a Jamaican. We all know how they reacted when our own President
mentioned the relationship between Jamaican men and education! Their children
born in the Diaspora are the same. They defend their nation to the hilt. We can’t say they were fed on propaganda. They
were fed patriotism.
There is so much to celebrate and be proud of as a Zimbabwean |
We accept it’s refreshing to be
self-deprecating.But sometimes some of the writings we read and see on social
media are quite seditious. Granted patriotism is NOT blind
loyalty to one’s rulers or leaders even when they are overtly wrong. It is
however loyalty to one’s country. You may not like your
brother but love your family and don’t go about denigrating
everything about it from the patriarchs to the totem to the rest
of your siblings so that it proves your father wrong.
You can’t go about
apologising for being who you are. I had the misfortune of hearing a Zimbabwean
being asked where they were from and their answer was,
“I am from Zimbabwe but
…eermmm .. You know our country...eermmm...”
I didn’t wait to hear the rest. I
didn’t feel there were any ifs or buts about being a Zimbabwean. There was
nothing to be invoking this self-loathing mentality. And one didn’t have to be
Zanu PF to feel the way I did.
It is not an attempt at proselytization to
say Zimbabwe has more positives than negatives. It just needs its citizens to
propagate these than have all its virtues undermined just because one hates
Zanu PF. Nationhood is not an obsolete notion. It is a concept we postulate
because it makes us a people.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Nick Mangwana is the Chairman of the Steering Committee of Zanu PF –UK.
No comments:
Post a Comment