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AFRICAN SOCIALISM REVISITED 


DR. KWAME NKRUMAH 


Paper read at the Africa Seminar held in Cairo at the invitation of the
two organs At-Talia and Problems of Peace and Socialism. 

Published by Peace and Socialism Publishers, Prague, 1967, in a volume
titled "Africa: National and Social Revolution". 


  The term "socialism" has become a necessity in the platform diction
and political writings of African leaders. It is a term which unites us
in the recognition that the restoration of Africa's humanist and
egalitarian principles of society calls for socialism. All of us,
therefore, even though pursuing widely contrasting policies in the task
of reconstructing our various nation-states, still use "socialism" to
describe our respective efforts. The question must therefore be faced:
What real meaning does the term retain in the context of contemporary
African politics? I warned about this in my book Consciencism (London
and New York, 1964, p. 105). 


  And yet, socialism in Africa today tends to lose its objective content
in favour of a distracting terminology and in favour of a general
confusion. Discussion centres more on the various conceivable types of
socialism than upon the need for socialist development. 


  Some African political leaders and thinkers certainly use the term
"socialism" as it should in my opinion be used: to describe a complex of
social purposes and the consequential social and economic policies,
organisational patterns, state structure, and ideologies which can lead
to the attainment of those purposes. For such leaders, the aim is to
remold African society in the socialist direction; to reconsider African
society in such a manner that the humanism of traditional African life
re-asserts itself in a modern technical community. 


  Consequently, socialism in Africa introduces a new social synthesis in
which modern technology is reconciled with human values, in which the
advanced technical society is realised without the staggering social
malefactions and deep schisms of capitalist industrial society. For true
economic and social development cannot be promoted without the real
socialisation of productive and distributive processes. Those African
leaders who believe these principles are the socialists in Africa. 


  There are, however, other African political leaders and thinkers who
use the term "socialism" because they believe that socialism would, in
the words of Chandler Morse, "smooth the road to economic development".
It becomes necessary for them to employ the term in a "charismatic
effort to rally support" for policies that do not really promote
economic and social development. Those African leaders who believe these
principles are supposed to be the "African socialists". 


  It is interesting to recall that before the split in the Second
International, Marxism was almost indistinguishable from social
democracy. Indeed, the German Social Democratic Party was more or less
the guardian of the doctrine of Marxism, and both Marx and Engels
supported that Party. Lenin, too, became a member of the Social
Democratic Party. After the breakup of the Second International,
however, the meaning of the term "social democracy" altered, and it
became possible to draw a real distinction between socialism and social
democracy. A similar situation has arisen in Africa. Some years ago,
African political leaders and writers used the term "African socialism"
in order to label the concrete forms that socialism might assume in
Africa. But the realities of the diverse and irreconcilable social,
political, and economic policies being pursued by African states today
have made the term "African socialism" meaningless and irrelevant.  It
appears to be much more closely associated with anthropology than with
political economy. "African socialism" has now come to acquire some of
its greatest publicists in Europe and North America precisely because of
its predominant anthropological charm. Its foreign publicists include
not only the surviving social democrats of Europe and North America, but
other intellectuals and liberals who themselves are steeped in the
ideology of social democracy. 


  It was no accident, let me add, that the 1962 Dakar Colloquium made
such capital of "African socialism"' but the uncertainties concerning
the meaning and specific policies of "African socialism" have led some
of us to abandon the term because it fails to express its original
meaning and because it tends to obscure our fundamental socialist
commitment. 


  Today, the phrase "African socialism" seems to espouse the view that
the traditional African society was a classless society imbued with the
spirit of humanism and to express a nostalgia for that spirit. Such a
conception of socialism makes a fetish of the communal African society.
But an idyllic, African classless society (in which there were no rich
and no poor) enjoying a drugged serenity is certainly a facile
simplification; there is no historical or even anthropological evidence
for any such society. I am afraid the realities of African society were
somewhat more sordid. 


  All available evidence from the history of Africa up to the eve of the
European colonisation, shows that African society was neither classless
nor devoid of a social hierarchy. Feudalism existed in some parts of
Africa before colonisation; and feudalism involves a deep and
exploitative social stratification, founded on the ownership of land. It
must also be noted that slavery existed in Africa before European
colonisation, although the earlier European contact gave slavery in
Africa some of its most vicious characteristics. The truth remains,
however, that before colonisation, which became widespread in Africa
only in the nineteenth century, Africans were prepared to sell, often
for no more than thirty pieces of silver, fellow tribesmen and even
members of the same "extended family" and clan. Colonialism deserves to
be blamed for many evils in Africa, but surely it was not preceded by an
African Golden Age or paradise. A return to the pre-colonial African
society is evidently not worthy of the ingenuity and efforts of our
people. 


  All this notwithstanding, one could still argue that the basic
organisation of many African societies in different periods of history
manifested a certain communalism and that the philosophy and humanist
purposes behind that organisation are worthy of recapture. A community
in which each saw his well-being in the welfare of the group certainly
was praiseworthy, even if the manner in which the well-being of the
group was pursued makes no contribution to our purposes. Thus, what
socialist thought in Africa must recapture is not the structure of the
"traditional African society" but its spirit, for the spirit of
communalism is crystallised in its humanism and in its reconciliation of
individual advancement with group welfare. Even If there is incomplete
anthropological evidence to reconstruct the "traditional African
society" with accuracy, we can still recapture the rich human values of
that society. In short, an anthropological approach to the " traditional
African society" is too much unproven; but a philosophical approach
stands on much firmer ground and makes generalisation feasible. 


  One predicament in the anthropological approach is that there is some
disparity of views concerning the manifestations of the "classlessness"
of the "traditional African society". While some hold that the society
was based on the equality of its members, others hold that it contained
a hierarchy and division of labour in which the hierarchy - and
therefore power - was founded on spiritual and democratic values.. Of
course, no society can be founded on the equality of its members
although societies are founded on egalitarianism, which is something
quite different. Similarly, a classless society that at the same time
rejoices in a hierarchy of power (as distinct from authority) must be
accounted a marvel of socio-political finesse. 


  We know that the "traditional African society" was founded on
principles of egalitarianism. In its actual workings, however, it had
various shortcomings. Its humanist impulse, nevertheless, is something
that continues to urge us towards our all-African socialist
reconstruction. We postulate each man to be an end in himself, not
merely a means; and we accept the necessity of guaranteeing each man
equal opportunities for his development. The implications of this for
socio-political practice have to be worked out scientifically, and the
necessary social and economic policies pursued with resolution. Any
meaningful humanism must begin from egalitarianism and must lead to
objectively chosen policies for safeguarding and sustaining
egalitarianism. Hence, socialism. Hence, also, scientific socialism. 


  A further difficulty that arises from the anthropological approach to
socialism, or "African socialism", is the glaring division between
existing African societies and the communalistic society that was. I
warned in my book Consciencism that "our society is not the old society,
but a new society enlarged by Islamic and Euro-Christian influences".
This is a fact that any socio-economic policies must recognise and take
into account. Yet the literature of "African socialism" comes close to
suggesting that today's African societies are communalistic. The two
societies are not coterminous; and such an equation cannot be supported
by any attentive observation. It is true that this disparity is
acknowledged in some of the literature of "African socialism"; thus, my
friend and colleague Julius Nyerere, in acknowledging the disequilibrium
between what was and what is in terms of African societies, attributes
the differences to the importations of European colonialism. 


  We know, of course, that the defeat of colonialism and even
neo-colonialism will not result in the automatic disappearance of the
imported patterns of thought and social organisation. For those patterns
have taken root, and are in varying degree sociological features of our
contemporary society. Nor will a simple return to the communalistic
society of ancient Africa offer a solution either. To advocate a return,
as it were, to the rock from which we were hewn is a charming thought,
but we are faced with contemporary problems, which have arisen from
political subjugation, economic  exploitation, educational and social
backwardness, increases in population, familiarity with the methods and
products of industrialisation, modern agricultural techniques. These -
as well as a host of other complexities - can be resolved by no mere
communalistic society, however sophisticated, and anyone who so
advocates must be caught in insoluble dilemmas of the most excruciating
kind. All available evidence from socio-political history discloses that
such a return to a status quo ante is quite unexampled in the evolution
of societies. There is, indeed, no theoretical or historical reason to
indicate that it is at all possible. 


  When one society meets another, the observed historical trend is that
acculturation results in a balance of forward movement, a movement in
which each society assimilates certain useful attributes of the other.
Social evolution is a dialectical process; it has ups and downs, but, on
balance, it always represents an upward trend. 


  Islamic civilisation and European colonialism are both historical
experiences of the traditional African society, profound experiences
that have permanently changed the complexion of the traditional African
society. They have introduced new values and a social, cultural, and
economic organisation into African life. Modern African societies are
not traditional, even if backward, and they are clearly in a state of
socio-economic disequilibrium. They are in this state because they are
not anchored to a steadying ideology. 


  The way out is certainly not to regurgitate all Islamic or
Euro-colonial influences in a futile attempt to recreate a past that
cannot be resurrected. The way out is only forward, forward to a higher
and reconciled form of society, in which the quintessence of the human
purposes of traditional African society reasserts itself in a modern
context-forward, in short, to socialism, through policies that are
scientifically devised and correctly applied. The inevitability of a
forward way out is felt by all; thus, Leopold Sedor Senghor, although
favouring some kind of return to African communalism, insists that the
refashioned African society must accommodate the "positive contribution"
of colonial rule, "such as the economic and technical infrastructure and
the French educational system". The economic and technical
infrastructure of even French colonialism and the French educational
system must be assumed, though this can be shown to be imbued with a
particular socio-political philosophy. This philosophy, as should be
known, is not compatible with the philosophy underlying communalism, and
the desired accommodation would prove only a socio-political mirage. 


  Senghor has, indeed, given an account of the nature of the return to
Africa. His account is highlighted by statements using some of his own
words: that the African is "a field of pure sensation"; that he does not
measure or observe, but "lives" a situation; and that this way of
acquiring "knowledge" by confrontation and intuition is "negro-African";
the acquisition of knowledge by reason, "Hellenic". In African Socialism
(London and New York, 1964, pp.72-3], he proposes "that we consider the
Negro-African as he faces the Other: God, man, animal, tree or pebble,
natural or social phenomenon. In contrast to the classic European, the
Negro-African does not draw a line between himself and the object, he
does not hold. it at a distance, nor does he merely look at it and
analyse it. After holding it at a distance, after scanning it without
analysing it, he takes it vibrant in his hands, careful not to kill or
fix it. He touches it, feels it, smells it. The Negro-African is like
one of those Third. Day Worms, a pure field of sensations... Thus the
Negro-African sympathises, abandons h[s personality to become identified
with the Other, dies to be reborn in the Other. He does not assimilate;
he is assimilated. He lives a common life with the Other; he lives in a
symbiosis." 


  It is clear that socialism cannot be founded on this kind of
metaphysics of knowledge. 


  To be sure, there is a connection between communalism and socialism.
Socialism stands to communalism as capitalism stands to slavery. In
socialism, the principles underlying communalism are given expression in
modern circumstances. Thus, whereas communalism in a non-technical
society can be laissez-faire, in a technical society where sophisticated
means of production are at hand, the situation is different; for if the
underlying principles of communalism are not given correlated
expression, class cleavages will arise, which are connected with
economic disparities and thereby with political inequalities; Socialism,
therefore, can be, and is, the defence of the principles of communalism
in a modern setting; it is a form of social organisation that, guided by
the principles underlying communalism, adopts procedures and measures
made necessary by demographic and technological developments. Only under
socialism can we reliably accumulate the capital we need for our
development and also ensure that the gains of investment are applied for
the general welfare. 


  Socialism is not spontaneous. It does not arise of itself. It has
abiding principles according to which the major means of production and
distribution ought to be socialised if exploitation of the many by the
few is to be prevented; if, that is to say, egalitarianism in the
economy is to be protected. Socialist countries in Africa may differ in
this or that detail of their policies, but such differences themselves
ought not to be arbitrary or subject to vagaries of taste. They must be
scientifically explained, as necessities arising from differences in the
particular circumstances of the countries themselves. 


  There is only one way of achieving socialism; by the devising of
policies aimed at the general socialist goals, each of which takes its
particular form from the specific circumstances of a particular state at
a definite historical period. Socialism depends on dialectical and
historical materialism, upon the view that there is only one nature,
subject in all its manifestations to natural laws and that human society
is, in this sense, part of nature and subject to its own laws of
development. 


  It is the elimination of fancifulness from socialist action that makes
socialism scientific. To suppose that there are tribal, national, or
racial socialisms is to abandon objectivity in favour of chauvinism.

 
 
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