Obama, Mandela and dangerous mythology

Margaret Kimberley


2013-07-10, Issue 638 <http://www.pambazuka.org/en/issue/638> 


Obama’s recent visit to South Africa when the 94-year-old Mandela was
hospitalized created a golden opportunity for analysis and a questioning of
long held assumptions about both men. The personal triumphs of these two
individuals have not translated into success for black people in either of
their countries.

The Obamas' visit to South Africa, for people of colour on both sides of the
Atlantic, is heavy on symbolism and photo-ops, but devoid of any substance
for those who hunger and thirst for justice. The ANC won the flag at the end
of apartheid, but South Africa's white elite kept the land and the money,
after allowing a few well-connected black faces into high places.

Centuries of oppression have made black people particularly susceptible to
the tempting siren song which comes with the image of black success. It is
harmless to want a black person to win some coveted acclaim like a Pulitzer
prize or even an Oscar, but quite another to be rendered stupid by the
sight. Our history teaches us that we must be wary lest we be carried away
by emotion that is without substance.

Barack Obama is the most obvious example of this phenomenon and its
pernicious influence. A black man being elected as president of the United
States was long hoped for but seemingly impossible. The realization of what
had long been imagined and the often racist attacks against this dream
create common cause with Obama and intense personal happiness on his behalf.
Yet what seems inspirational is in fact anything but. The feelings of
affection for Obama have been a negative force which impede rational thought
and political common sense. The people who most epitomized the American
search for true democracy have given it up completely because they love
seeing a black man wearing a POTUS jacket and get angry when white people
don’t like seeing it.

That history of struggle and the group identity it creates have not been
limited to the American experience. The decades long fight against the
racist apartheid system in South Africa was supported by millions of people
in this country too. Jim Crow was America’s own apartheid. It is only
logical that the sight of black people being treated cruelly in the name of
white supremacy would elicit feelings of affinity in this country and around
the world.

Nelson Mandela’s release from 27 years of imprisonment and his subsequent
election as president created a surge of pride and joy among black people
everywhere. Unfortunately we did not truly understand what we were
witnessing. These events came about as a result of forces unacknowledged in
America and they also came with a very high price.

The name of the Angolan town Cuito Cuanavale [5] means little to all but a
handful of Americans but it lies at the heart of the story of apartheid’s
end. At Cuito Cuanavale in 1988 Cuban troops defeated the South African army
and in so doing sealed apartheid’s fate.

It is important to know how apartheid ended, lest useless stories about a
miraculously changed system and a peaceful grandfatherly figure confuse us
and warp our consciousness. Mandela was freed because of armed struggle and
not out of benevolence. He was also freed because the African National
Congress miscalculated and made concessions which have since resulted in
terrible poverty and powerlessness for black people in South Africa. By
their own admission, some of his comrades [6] concede that they were
unprepared for the determination of the white majority to hold the purse
strings even as they gave up political power.

Now the masses of black South Africans are as poor as they were during the
time of political terror. The Sharpeville massacre [7] of 1960 which
galvanized the world against South Africa was repeated in 2012 when 34
striking miners were killed by police at Marikana. The Marikana massacre [8]
made a mockery of the hope which millions of people had for the ANC and its
political success.

Obama’s recent visit to South Africa when the 94-year-old Mandela was
hospitalized created a golden opportunity for analysis and a questioning of
long held assumptions about both men but the irrefutable fact is this. The
personal triumphs of these two individuals have not translated into success
for black people in either of their countries.

The victory of international finance capital wreaks havoc on both sides of
the Atlantic ocean. In the U.S. black people have reached their political
and economic low point during the Obama years. The gains won 50 years ago
have been reversed while unemployment, mass incarceration, and Obama
supported austerity measures have all conspired to undo the progress which
was so dearly paid for.

Obama’s visit to Africa as Mandela lay critically ill brought very sincere
but very deeply misled people to remember all of the wrong things. It isn’t
true that black people benefit from the political success of certain
individuals. It isn’t true that role models undo systemic cruelty or that
racism ends because of their presence or that white people see or treat the
masses of black people any differently when one black person reaches a high
office.

The maudlin sentiment was all built on lies. Mandela fought the good fight
for many years and is worthy of respect for that reason alone. But his
passing should be a moment to reflect on his mistakes and on how they can be
avoided by people struggling to break free from injustice. Obama’s career is
a story of ambition and high cynicism which met opportunity. There is little
to learn from his story except how to spot the next evil doer following in
his footsteps.

It is high time that myths were called what they are. They are stories which
may help explain our feelings but they are stories nonetheless and they do
us no good.

* Margaret Kimberley's Freedom Rider column appears weekly in Black Agenda
Reprot
<http://www.blackagendareport.com/print/content/freedom-rider-obama-mandela-
and-dangerous-mythology> , and is widely reprinted elsewhere. She maintains
a frequently updated blog as well as athttp://freedomrider.blogspot.com.

 

           Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni and Dr. Kiiza Besigye Uganda is in anarchy"
           Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni na Dk. Kiiza Besigye Uganda ni katika machafuko"

 

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