Why Africa’s youth should rob graves
By a fortuitous but nonetheless rewarding providential whim
, I sat in on a very intimate script-reading
at the Uganda National Centre for Culture (National Theatre), during the
just concluded but very illustrious week-long
Kampala Theatre Festival, 2015.
The reading was of a play, authored by a very genial Ugandan
playwright named Kaya Kagimu Mukasa (http://kampalainternationaltheatrefestival.com/kaya-kagimu-mukasa); who roundly
succeeded in riveting the attention of the mostly non-Ugandan audience, for
close to two hours, in which five young performers admirably vocalized her
script – whose characters were remarkably brought to life by the readers’ masterful
intoning and consummate dramatic poise.
This play – curiously but almost tritely titled The Grave Robbers, was in my view, the
playwright’s attempt at addressing the disturbing question of economic inequality
plaguing the country; which she sought to couch in ‘ethnic’ terms, or blame on
the incumbent government’s sponsorship, or at least countenancing of entrenched
nepotism.
In a peek – the narrative follows the journey of two young
men, recently graduated, who grapple with the acute burden of unemployment in
the Ugandan economy, blaming their failure to secure jobs on their ethnic
extraction i.e. that they are from the wrong enclave of the state.
Their perennial joblessness leads them to moral dejection,
alcohol dependency, debt accumulation and rejection by fiancés, friends and
family alike.
They are eventually
compelled to partner in the illicit
business of grave snatching; so they found the notorious Grave Robber Services – a ‘company’ whose core occupation involves
breaking into crypts and divesting corpses of clothes and caskets, which are
later sold for a fee.
The two ‘business partners’ profit from the trade for a
while – managing to pay off previously accumulated debts and win back the
erstwhile-lost affections of wives and relations; before they make the
‘tactical blunder’ of raiding the grave of a former government bigwig, who the
playwright blandly, (she surely could’ve been more creative), refers to as ‘‘Big Loud Boss’’.
Well – this blunder eventually sets the police on their
trail, forcing them to flee the country and abandon their (literally)
overnight-accumulated wealth.
As they escape, the two fugitives confide in a priest who
promises them safe passage, but prevails upon them to hold a press conference
and defend themselves, by explaining to the nation that their crimes were
inspired by a desperation stemming from a lack of jobs – which befell them
because they were from the ‘wrong corner of the country’.
I’m sure many Ugandans are familiar and actually strongly
concur with this narrative, because this is a charge we have all leveled at Yoweri Museveni’s government at one
point or the other – that of locking significant portions of the country’s
citizenry out of social, economic and
political opportunity on the basis of ethnicity.
Indeed – at the end of the reading, the audience heartily
applauded the cast; which I’m sure was partly on account of their admirable
theatrical skill, but majorly owing to the resonance of the ‘moral’ in the
play.
The commentary from the audience, that followed, vindicated
this – with Miss Kaya receiving
praise for her bravery and intrepid stance in writing about these ‘painful but
grave’ matters afflicting our beloved country.
While I unquestionably agree with the general view that our
government and society is nepotistic and deeply sectarian – I think that most
of us are reacting the wrong way towards it; by succumbing to a reactionary
ethnicity; and are thus not offering meaningful solutions.
A clear example of this failure of solutions is how the
playwright above portrays the problem.
In a nutshell, her play explains it this way –
That ‘tribalism’ is responsible for lack of opportunity in
Uganda.
And this is what most of us think – yet nothing could be
more wrong!
Firstly – there is the immediate and elementary mistake of ‘localizing’ our situation, and losing
sight of the broader scheme of things.
Unemployment, as a social phenomenon, is global. Even the
most industrialized economies struggle with an element of joblessness – but of
course it’s more pronounced in the third world.
Indeed, just like unemployment, most other human problems –
disease, crime, mortality, illiteracy - are more pronounced in Africa, Latin
America and South East Asia than in the developed world.
This means that not only is Uganda not isolated in its
unemployment crisis, but also that unemployment as a phenomenon is not isolated
from other failings of society.
This is how I’d propose we look at it, if we hope to find
sustainable solutions for it:
Unemployment, like disease and crime, is a function of
social poverty – which poverty is a function of what has been termed International Capitalism.
In short, we have to understand that it is poverty that
causes unemployment - and not unemployment that causes poverty.
Similarly – it is not ‘tribalism’ that causes unemployment,
but unemployment that facilitates tribalism.
To illustrate this point further, let me offer a quote;
‘’In
the case of tribalism, traditional treatments have failed to grasp it fully,
because they regard it merely as consciousness and fail to situate it in
material conditions. They miss the obvious and important fact that tribalism
mainly flourishes because it is ‘useful’, especially in the economic sense. It
provides ‘access’ to important people for villagers and the unemployed seeking
jobs in the city; it fills to a considerable extent the gap left by the lack of
a social security system in Africa …’’
Claude
Ake – A Political Economy of Africa (1981)
While I do not in any way wish to downplay the real and
harrowing experiences of fellow young Ugandans who have been denied a job, or
healthcare or any other government and private service because they carry the
‘‘wrong’’ surname – I seriously want to discredit the popular and misleading theory
that Museveni’s government is
deliberately orchestrating some form of systematic ethnic discrimination
against and amongst Ugandans.
For this theory to hold water; from the deductive correlation we’ve drawn
above on unemployment and general social poverty - it would have to be true
that Museveni is actually
deliberately keeping the country poor, so that ethnicism, corruption, disease
and the other adverse direct consequences of poverty can take a stranglehold of
the country.
This is just not true. No credible argument can support it;
yet a number of countrymen with whom I’ve discoursed seem to nurse the thought
very religiously.
While I am intractably opposed to Museveni’s despotism, greed and outright incompetence – I refuse
to concede that the man is a cold-blooded sadist.
By and large, even his most rabid critics must admit that
he does harbor a modicum of good intentions, but lacks the will and moral
authority to effect them.
Like most Third World leaders, Museveni’s failures are largely failures of omission, and not
necessarily of commission.
A logical assessment of the matter would help matters here;
As we know – Museveni
is power-hungry, and interested in ruling the country till he drops dead.
But actually, it would be in interests, especially the selfish ones like tenure
longevity, to ensure that the Ugandan economy prospers.
For if the economy prospers, then he has all the more
reason to demand an extension of his term – since he’ll consider himself
qualified to rule, owing to past successes.
This is just in the same way that a man
courting a woman cumulatively wins her heart by undertaking feat upon feat,
until he has a sizable precedent on which to eventually convince her that he’s
worth her lifelong love, or at least one extra ‘night’ (ekisanja)!
So then - you should ask the question, why doesn't Museveni preside over a progressive economy if that would 'logically' be in his selfish interests?
It could be, like some folks have concluded, that the fellow is a masochist who enjoys the suffering of Ugandans.
But a more reasonable theory is that Museveni, like all other Third-World presidents - are basically 'hostages' of the International Capitalist system they affiliated themselves to initially.
Our strongmen don't really call the shots - but are being played like puppets on a string show.
They fell for the cheap promises of soft loans and grants from the IMF and World Bank in their earlier years, and are now so deeply entangled in the intricate labyrinth of MNC monopoly that an attempt to sever ties with the system would result in either their deposition or assassination, or both.
Any attempt to expel foreign investors from their states, stop plunder of the countries' natural resources, or hedge their fledgling economies against merciless exposure to global competition through protectionist policies - will only earn them the same fate as Thomas Sankara, Patrice Lumumba, Robert Mugabe or Muamar Gaddafi - dead and gone, or dying and soon gone.
So then - you should ask the question, why doesn't Museveni preside over a progressive economy if that would 'logically' be in his selfish interests?
It could be, like some folks have concluded, that the fellow is a masochist who enjoys the suffering of Ugandans.
But a more reasonable theory is that Museveni, like all other Third-World presidents - are basically 'hostages' of the International Capitalist system they affiliated themselves to initially.
Our strongmen don't really call the shots - but are being played like puppets on a string show.
They fell for the cheap promises of soft loans and grants from the IMF and World Bank in their earlier years, and are now so deeply entangled in the intricate labyrinth of MNC monopoly that an attempt to sever ties with the system would result in either their deposition or assassination, or both.
Any attempt to expel foreign investors from their states, stop plunder of the countries' natural resources, or hedge their fledgling economies against merciless exposure to global competition through protectionist policies - will only earn them the same fate as Thomas Sankara, Patrice Lumumba, Robert Mugabe or Muamar Gaddafi - dead and gone, or dying and soon gone.
At the end of the day, this is what we can reasonably
conclude;
Museveni has
essentially failed to be a good President – but not quite succeeded at being an
evil president.
This brings me back to the issue of youth unemployment we
were discussing.
Unemployment – as we have seen, is not just a Ugandan
problem, but an African problem, and to an extent a global problem.
The reason for this is that the world is now run (or
overrun!) by International Capitalism
– which essentially thrives on, and makes its profit off crisis.
Essentially, if you have more crises in the world – more
unemployment, more wars, more disease, and more death – then you have more
opportunities for business!
It means you can make more medicines, start more factories
and manufacture more weapons. This is why the Pharmaceutical and Arms
industries are so powerful.
In short, International
Capitalism thrives on crisis – which is why it has a vested interest in
keeping people sick and jobless, through encouraging poor dieting,
manufacturing pathogens and killing family subsistence economic models in most traditional societies around the world, from ancient Europe to Africa.
If there was no unemployment in Uganda for instance, do you
think foreign investors would come here?
No! There would be no cheap labor to exploit, and thus no
profit for them to make.
Unemployment and other social crises are therefore
necessities for this system to work well; they are the life-blood that courses
through its vessels.
The Musevenis of
this world therefore are just pawns in a bigger game.
This is why most African states are ‘unified in suffering’,
despite varying ‘democratic’ conditions; e.g. the Uganda peasant whose country has
had one dictator for thirty years and the Ghanaian peasant whose country changes
presidents every five years, tend to be equally neglected and depived.
Africa’s strongmen are just ‘‘fore-men’’ in a global
political-economic ‘company’ that seeks to make the entire world a sweatshop of
slaves running after money - where we have no time to raise our children,
dream, meditate on thought, look at the stars or pursue transcendent culture.
While our leaders cannot be fully exonerated of their
complicity in this crime – having assigned themselves the role of ‘middlemen’
who permit the exploitation of their people and countries by big
Multi-Nationals and foreign business interests, in exchange for petty
commissions hidden in Swiss Banks which they hope to enjoy once overthrown, we
must not take our eyes off the bigger picture.
Ethnicity is therefore not the cause of unemployment, like
that playwright and many who think like her propose; but is simply used as an
‘illusion’ to hide the actual cause.
For that matter,
ethnicity, religion or any other superficial tags are not the cause of any of
our social problems – they are simply symptoms of the actual problem, namely –
poverty deliberately orchestrated by International
Capitalism.
KFC,
Shell, Mukwano, pwc, Standard Chartered – are just some of the
names of the chief exploiters of the human population, both in the developed
and developing world, by the way.
These firms represent not just an economic system, but a
life system – one bent on hooking us to the money economy and debt slavery; and
keeping us perpetually focused on the red herrings of race, tribe, religion,
profession, language etc, etc.
So - perhaps Africa’s youth should rob more graves!
Interesting way to put it. I think in you, we have ourselves a John Perkins.Sorry for the comparison that seems to suggest you're only a copy of him but it's just that he came first. I think this write-up is very good for reflection. I always tell people that in the world today, parents will see their children once every month for a day or two in the name of looking for money. It is no wonder we are getting "troubled" people shooting up people everyday and yet that is the life we seem to adore and consequently work so hard towards.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the read and feedback, Albert. Yes - that issue of remiss parenthood cuts to the core of behavioral dynamics. If children can't be raised right - there is just no way they will become responsible adults. It really calls to question the crux of our value-systems.
DeleteYou are definately the smartest man I have ever known on a personal basis.
ReplyDeleteComrade Tony - that is too generous an observation. Nonetheless, I'll thank you heartily for it. I think the intellectual war is fought endlessly from man's birth - in my view, it is the only war man should ever fight!
DeleteGlad I can secure the camaraderie of like-minded equals like yourself.
Aluta! :-)