We must reject victim mentality

As we aspire to change the social circumstances of black Africans, I think it is important that we understand those things that keep arresting our progress as a continent. The other day, I was fortunate enough to watch ZTV’s news hour. I say fortunate because, although the experience was thoroughly uninspiring, it triggered some interesting thoughts. I realized that, unless we Africans change our political narrative, we will continue to be limited by a victim mentality that our politicians

Vince Musewe
Vince Musewe

It was astounding to observe both the body language and the language used by our ministers. They all mimic President Mugabe and continually reinforce his dispositions on almost every issue, whether he is right or not. Despite the truth that their story about our reality has expired, they continue to hold onto the prejudice and struggles of the past in order to validate their current legitimacy. Their self-worth is deeply ingrained in a past that no longer exists. Their propaganda is relentless, and they have mastered the use of illusions to daily focus our attention on their vested interests, not the common good. Their forsaken egos cannot withstand scrutiny, so they protect them with lies, innuendo and half-truths.

I imagined the millions of people who have no alternative but to watch ZTV’s news hour. Every single day, they continue to be barraged with this same regressive political narrative. It is highly probable that they actually believe it to be the truth. After all, a lie repeated many times becomes a truth.

It has served our current political leadership to abuse our state media to relentlessly harp on how blacks were treated unjustly in the past, how they alone delivered the “freedom” that we enjoy today, and how the West continually connives to prejudice Zimbabweans at every instance. Now, I am not naïve enough to suppose that there are no international unconstructive forces that continue to handicap the development of Africa, especially when it comes to trade and investment.

However, the problem is continually framed as if there is some committee in the West that sits in a dark room and comes up with means and ways to punish Zimbabweans – through sanctions, spying via NGO’s, support of opposition parties and many other wicked accusations that are incessantly regurgitated in the state media.

It is important that we reject this somewhat clever reframing of why we are underdeveloped, because it continually dis-empowers us from taking the responsibility to address the socio economic problems that we have largely been responsible for creating. This victim mentality worked in the past to unite Africans against colonialism or apartheid. It worked well in order for African countries to access aid and assistance during the armed struggle days, especially during the cold war era. Unfortunately, it has also worked well to prolong dictatorships and entrench incompetent leaders.

I believe that our self-esteem as humans is strengthened when our self-worth is based on our personal or spiritual power to change our circumstances. As soon as we blame somebody or something else for our circumstances, we are, in fact, demeaning who we truly are. This, unfortunately, has been the impact of Zimbabwe’s political narrative, as articulated by Zanu (PF) over the last 33 years.

The resistance by Zanu (PF) to open up the media space, to allow freedom of association and free flow of information, the fight against new communications technologies and NGO’s are all attempts to stop the free dissemination of information perceived contrary to their moribund political narrative. If the truth be said; Zanu (PF)’s political narrative has become unpalatable to progressive Zimbabweans but they continue to insist on feeding us this garbage through the media. We even have supposedly learned and articulate men, including professors, using their intelligence to write unending columns to endorse this bizarre narrative that we are forever victims of the past and must therefore, be bound by their selfish interpretation and experience of history, and not by the unlimited potential of our future. I refuse to accept that.

I pray that we shall begin to see a widespread rejection of liberation struggle victim mentality throughout Africa. In fact, we are beginning to see black Africans realize that, it is they who must shape their own future and not the older generation politicians. We cannot be led by men who continually look in the rear view mirror to determine where we are going. We must change who we think we are and what our possibilities are.

Africa’s new political narrative must be based on self-affirmation, self-responsibility and the acceptance that we are more than our so-called liberators want us to believe. We must fight the mentality of scarcity that has resulted in the abuse of our resources and wide spread corruption. This must be replaced by a mentality of abundant possibility that accepts that Africa poses unimaginable opportunities for all of us to share. – Join the debate. Send your comments to: vtmusewe@gmail.com

Post published in: Analysis
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