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In the mid nineteen-forties, back in the Republic
of Panama, I saw a movie called “Gunga Din” In one of its final
scenes, “Gunga Din” a native “water carrier” for the British,
is seen perched on the golden dome of a temple in his native land,
furiously blowing his bugle attempting to warn the British of
the trap set for them by his fellow natives, As he does so, he
is being riddled with bullets from their rifles.
I remember, as a boy, applauding the bravery of
his death - a simple Bhisti, a water boy- and his unflinching
support for the British. I would shed a tear when, in another
scene, over his grave, a British soldier read the line from Kipling’s
poem:
“Tho’
I have belted you and flayed you
By the livin’ Gawd
that made you
You’re a better
man that I am Gunga Din”
President Obama’s speech in Ghana
troubled me. It troubled me so much that mid way through it, I
turned it off. Although
intellectually I understood what he was attempting to do; emotionally
and as a political Diasporic African, I had great difficulty with
his primary message which, for me, was: “clean up your houses,
take responsibility for the state in which you now tread, stop
blaming others for the dirt on the floor upon which you are presently
walking and America will help you…” Obviously, that is a simplification
of his remarks but, I believe, it accurately sums up the essence
of his remarks. As I think about it, I was reminded, in part,
of Bill Cosby’s admonition to Black America. Somehow I can hear,
I think it was Cab Calloway, singing “Straighten up and fly right”
ringing in my head. That refrain, if we think about it objectively
it is one that places the onus of the recuperation of power over
self and - in Obama’s case, the African nation - squarely on the
existing and undeniable reality of the dysfunctionality of those
who were made so - dysfunctional - by those who robed and raped
the African of his/her sense of self and resources as they transformed
the world to satisfy their greed and avarice, but who are not
taken to task for their actions nor made to compensate for those
dastardly deeds. This statement, like it or not, is also irrefutable.
There is no denying what Obama said about the state
of affairs in Africa. There is corruption,
- social, economic and political and the lack of transparency.
There is greed and avarice and, equally odious and odorous, the
lingering stench of Rwanda,
Sierra Leone, Congo,
and yes, Darfur. Here in the U.S.A., Bill Cosby’s description
of the social behavior and his castigation of many of our Black
families and communities is equally painful and undeniable. Still,
if one is objective and honest, one is forced to ask how this
behavior became operative. Is
it part of the cultural DNA of Diasporan Africans? Or is it the
result of the inhuman and oppressive treatment imposed by colonization,
enslavement, and Jim Crow laws? For the President – an African
- to weave a speech primarily around this sordid aspect of contemporary
African history and seemingly downplay the historic role the Europeans
played and continue to play in the development of the existing
reality of our Diaspora is totally, to use one of his favorite
phrases, “unacceptable.”
As I sat on my sofa listening to the President,
I shook my head and said to myself “that speech could have been
given by Bill Clinton” The only difference would have been Clinton’s
hue. Yet, had he made that speech, I am almost certain that he
would have been accused by many as being “patronizing and extolling
the superiority of European and American values and political
perspectives and concepts over those of the Africans.
Two points before I continue:
- I am not now, nor have I ever been a “Clintonian”.
His politics, for me, were essentially too centrist and too
inclined to accommodate and/or sacrifice/align his “expressed”
ideological principles with the non-progressive elements of
this nation .Sadly, there are many who are presently accusing
President Obama of the same malady.
-
I have been and I still am an “Obamakin”
- meaning that, in general, I am supportive of his expressed
policies and recognize the almost insurmountable odds that
he faces both as an African with the trappings of power
- he is no Gunga Din- and as the perceived “point person”
in the global struggle for social, political and economic
transformation of the planet Earth. However, I retain the
right to challenge and question - as now do - those political
positions that I deem contrary to the needs of our people
in our quest for Dr. King’s “Beloved Community” where “Agape”
and “Social Justice” are its primary pillars.
Presidents
Obama’s African speech served to underscore a still unresolved
and perhaps irresolvable dilemma that afflicts and affects Africans
in the Diaspora, namely “just who are we?” Frenchmen, Americans,
British, Russian, Brazilian, Peruvian, Iraqi, Saudi., Panamanian
- just who are we? What, in our psychological and emotional make-up
takes center stage “nationality or ethnicity/race?” With whom
do we intrinsically identify ourselves? The answer to that question,
as I see it, will determine the socio- political and economic
strategies we might collectively design. President Obama’s speech
in Ghana was that of being an American first - nationality
trumps race. Yes, it is true that he is the President of the U.S.
but he is also an African who was addressing Africans.
I find no fault with the mentioning of our existing
problems. This could have been a “sub-text,” one that indicated
an understanding of the existing destructive elements within those
societies. What I found unacceptable and politically disturbing
was the absence of any call for self sufficiency, reduction of
dependency on the so-called west, the need for economic, political
and cultural African solidarity for the purpose of acquiring parity
with the “west”. Further, as I recall, there was no mention, in
his speech of Africa’s glorious past, prior to the advent of the European. And, in
the same manner that in Cairo he saw fit to
rightfully remind the world of the role of the U.S. in Iran
and the overthrow of Mossadegh he could have mentioned the Berlin
Conference of 1994-85 that resulted in the “balkanization” of
Africa, which is a prime contributor to the
“genocide” he and we deplore. In short, for me, in Ghana Obama
displayed that other side of his “self,” that which the media
so often highlights - his being bi-racial. Honestly, given what
I have read about his mother, I am not certain that had she given
that speech, her emphasis would have been that of her son. Why
do I say that? Think about it! She married an African in a time
when it was unthinkable. That could serve to give us a clue as
to her make up and perhaps the nature of her speech.
As I listened to him speak I wondered, what would
Kwame Nkrumah, Marcus Garvey and yes, Simon Bolivar have said
to a gathering of their brothers and sisters in today’s world?
I do not know. I would guess that Nkrumah would still argue for
a United States of Africa and Garvey would do likewise - one nation,
one race, one destiny. Simon Bolivar would also continue his arguments
for the creation of a United States of Latin America in the same
manner that Hugo Chavez is attempting today to do. Bolivar excluded
the U.S. from his paradigm of power for Latin American...
I am reminded that Dr. John H. Clarke once told
a conference at City College in New
York City - and I paraphrase- that the role of the African academician/intellectual
is to see that the African remains on the planet How can we accomplish
that task if we are reluctant or afraid to be Africans and place
primacy on “nationality.” Are we now living in a “post racial”
world? I think not!
Some may argue that I am among a very small cadre
of political dinosaurs who have not accepted the facts that the
world has changed and who are still functioning on yesterday’s
rules of engagement. There may be some truth to that. While I
accept that there have been some changes in the world in which
we live, I am not convinced that it has changed in such a way
that we should forget who we are and deny the reality that there
has been no significant change in the governing rules between
the powerful and powerless and neither has the nature of the struggle
of the prevailing values system.
It is my considered judgment that the Obama generation
- the generation of my children - have been duped by the incremental
gains offered and promoted by the society - all won through the
blood and tears of previous generations - that although all is
not well with the world, it is much better by far than, as a “Bajan”
friend jokingly would often say, “better than what it use to was.”
The
existing changes, I would argue, are all part of what is being
done to forestall, if not prevent, social disruption. Change is
inevitable. As Sam Cooke sang, “Change is gonna’ come” Hopefully
and desirably it will come without too much unrest, upheaval or
disruption.
From my perspective, the generation of my children,
believing that “change” has already come, is more apt to embrace
“nationality” over “race” and is unwilling to wage a continued
struggle for retention of their African identity. Africa is, at best, their ancestral home. However, they are no longer
connected emotionally, spiritually, psychologically, or existentially
to our “motherland.” Thus, it is possible to suggest that we should
stop “casting blame” and “move on,” meaning, I believe, that we
should become like the “West” who, for them, represents the direction
the contemporary developing societies should take.
I would further argue that they fail to see the
continued existence of the “Gunga Din” syndrome: “An unrealistic
self-deprecating fixation and identification with values, strength
might, values, modus operandi, world vision of the colonialist
- historical and contemporary - at the expense of our African
self.”
The soldier in the film, in eulogizing “Gunga Din,”
said that, Gunga was a better man that he. The question remains,
at least for me, does being a “better man” connote the willingness
to sacrifice oneself in pursuit of the “superiority” of the values
of those who colonized and enslaved us to the extent that we now
refrain from “calling them out?” I
would hope not! The concept of a better man should never be on
the table.
Finally, I emphatically and vehemently take
issue with the focus of President Barack Hussein Obama’s African
speech. It fueled the tank of those who suggested that he was
not “Black enough.” - whatever that means. While I disagree with
that perception, for me, he is part of the generation duped into
believing that the struggle is over. I am hopeful, that with his
great intellectual acumen he will rethink his remarks in Ghana and perhaps, at a future date, place Africa in its greater historical and political contextual reality.
In a just world, there is no “Gunga Din.”
BlackCommentator.com Guest Commentator, Carlos E. Russell, PhD is Professor Emeritus C.U.N.Y. - Brooklyn College. In the sixties, he served as an Associate Editor of the Liberator magazine. As such, he was one of the first to interview Malcolm X after he left the Nation. He is best remembered as the founder of Black Solidarity Day in New York in 1969 and as the Chair of the Black Caucus of the Conference on New Politics in 1967. In addition, he was a consultant to Dr.Martin Luther King Jr. during the planning for the Poor Peoples March. Excerpts of his participation can be seen in Citizen King
and Eyes on the Prize (PBS Mini Series Boxed Set). Born in the Republic of Panama he has served as that country's representative to the U.N and the O.A.S. with the rank of Ambassador. He has also served as the nightly host of "Thinking it Through" a talk show that was aired on WLIB in New York. He is a playwright and poet as well. Click
here to
contact Dr.
Russell.
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July
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Issue 333 |
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