In August 2023, I took up the place of director of the Centre for African Research (CAS) on the College of Cape City. One of many vital commitments I inherited was that CAS would host the inaugural launch assembly of the African Humanities Affiliation in December of that 12 months.
This was a big improvement, constructing on the legacy of the formation of the Council for the Improvement of Social Science Analysis in Africa (CODESRIA) in 1973, and within the many years since, just a few different pan-African tutorial and scholarly establishments dedicated to intervening in recognising globally the work that African students primarily based on the continent are doing.
By the point we reached the launch assembly in December, the world was preoccupied with the results of the October 7 Hamas assault. Apart from the already alarming loss of life toll ensuing from Israel’s relentless bombing, we had already seen and browse accounts of the destruction of academic establishments and the killing of college deans and students within the Gaza Strip.
Forward of the occasion, a senior member of the brand new African Humanities Affiliation organising committee approached quite a few colleagues with the proposal to desk a movement of solidarity with students in Gaza that condemned the size of killings and destruction.
Nonetheless, the proposal by no means moved past the dialogue within the govt committee since there have been objections raised. As a substitute, the scholar who had proposed the movement learn out an announcement in his private capability in the course of the plenary session and within the dialogue that adopted, it grew to become clear that there wouldn’t be majority assist for an meeting assertion of solidarity.
As a substitute, one other compromise was supplied: the assertion of the colleague who spoke can be positioned on the affiliation’s web site and anybody who wished to signal it may accomplish that.
For quite a few students, together with the famend Tanzanian mental Issa Shivji, this was a troubling choice on the a part of the affiliation. Shivji himself had given one of many keynote addresses and recalled the robust decolonising and anti-imperial impulses that motivated his technology to reply positively to the initiative of the unconventional Egyptian economist Samir Amin within the early Seventies to type what would grow to be CODESRIA. Amin and others noticed the necessity for Africans to jot down their very own accounts of Africa as a part of postcolonial efforts in direction of decolonising societies typically restricted by neocolonial dependencies.
However to return to the African Humanities Affiliation plenary, what had been the explanations for the objections? That is my preoccupation right here.
To be clear, the articulated objections weren’t expressed when it comes to assist for Israel. Some particular person African students might have Christian-Zionist-motivated solidarity with Israel, however this was not articulated loudly.
Quite, there have been two objections most strongly voiced. The primary was that it was a divisive problem and {that a} assertion would weaken efforts to construct coherency and consensus in a fledgling affiliation and due to this fact shouldn’t be mentioned.
The second, extra strongly voiced objection, was a “whatabout” concern: why deal with Gaza when there are a selection of troubling conflicts in Africa that require consideration, starting from the longstanding conflicts within the japanese Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) to southern Cameroon, Sudan, and extra just lately to Ethiopia and northern Mozambique?
Was issuing an announcement on Gaza not a continuation of a longstanding racialised trope to easily underplay loss of life and destruction in some African nations? Why did the students campaigning for solidarity statements with Gaza not train the identical verve and vigour with regard to different Africans and our conflicts?
These had been official considerations which accurately pointed to a centuries-long dehumanisation of African life and its modern resonances even amongst Africans about different Africans.
Provided that an affiliation just like the African Humanities Affiliation was shaped exactly to problem the invisibilisation of African voices, it was pure that the requires solidarity with Gaza raised these questions. They’ve additionally been raised in different venues and contexts amongst African students and activists.
Because of this, I’ve seen, some Gaza solidarity occasions in South Africa have began reflecting sensitivity to those criticisms by selecting extra “inclusive” slogans. One occasion banner I noticed learn “Free Congo, Free Sudan, Free Palestine”. One other occasion declared to be “In solidarity with Gaza and Congo”.
Whereas it’s commendable to be aware of criticism motivated by a official concern, my fear with these sorts of responses is that they use a problematic conflation. The conflicts in Gaza and in Sudan and the DRC, for instance, share one apparent function: the huge killing of civilians. However they differ essentially when it comes to the character of the issues resulting in the lack of life, and due to this fact, require completely different responses.
Palestinians are shedding their lives as a result of they’re concerned in an anticolonial battle towards an occupying settler-colonial state. Therefore it makes political sense to name for a “Free Palestine”. However, the Sudanese and the Congolese are shedding their lives due to unresolved postcolonial predicaments, issues of decolonisation, issues arising out of advanced questions of who belongs within the nation-state, who’s the dominant majority or who feels they’re a subjugated minority.
On this context, the logic of calling for a “Free Palestine” and a “Free Sudan and Free Congo” as commensurate political calls for that title the identical sort of battle or trigger isn’t totally helpful to fixing the battle in Sudan and the DRC within the current conjuncture.
Anticolonialism includes a battle towards a colonising and occupying energy or group. Postcolonial decolonisation is much less a battle towards a overseas occupying group and extra a battle that unfolds as soon as the occupying group cedes sovereignty to the colonised peoples.
The work of decolonisation begins when the coloniser bodily leaves, when anticolonial resistance turns into the mission to create postcolonial freedom. This implies addressing colonial legacies within the financial system, within the concepts of a society, within the political and institutional lifetime of the group, and within the conception of citizenship.
If we conflate solidarity with Palestinians of their anticolonial battle with conflicts that ought to have extra consideration and urgency on the African continent, similar to Sudan and the DRC within the type of whataboutism, we find yourself providing a problematic reply to a official query.
Africans’ solidarity with Palestinians is predicated not solely on concern for human rights abuses, however on an anticolonial solidarity. That is encapsulated in Nelson Mandela’s injunction, that as South Africans who defeated apartheid as a type of colonialism, “we’re not free till Palestinians are free”.
The query to ask ourselves as Africans is, after we say we’re in solidarity with Palestinians, however we also needs to be in solidarity, for instance with the Congolese, are we not perpetuating a problematic lack of knowledge and a spotlight to conflicts in Africa by framing our name to motion as a have to be “in solidarity with”? If solidarity implies to face with, to face in assist of, who’re we in solidarity with in fractious, shifting partisan traces between Africans in these conflicts?
There’s a have to make seen the lack of African life as a part of efforts to humanise and elevate the visibility of African challenges as world challenges. Nonetheless, that effort to deal with the invisibilisation of African conflicts on account of the historic dehumanisation of Africans isn’t essentially addressed by the motion of being “in solidarity” with one explicit battle or one other on the continent.
As African students, we ought to be significantly delicate to this problem, since that is typically the second when African conflicts are topic to caricature by outsiders. They typically grow to be flattened out into the simplistic universalised classes of human rights frameworks, as a matter of excellent and evil, dangerous leaders versus victimised civilians, and so forth.
Recall the time when there was heady strain to assist a “Free Darfur” or a “Free South Sudan”? Now as we witness the unravelling of South Sudan, the lesson is: watch out what you want for.
Right now, if we’re to be “in solidarity” with DRC, assuming that this refers back to the longstanding battle in Kivu, it will be extra significant if it implies that we’re encouraging extra folks to make an effort to grasp the complexities of the 2 Kivus, the historic legacy of citizenship claims, and the regional histories and world arteries that run by means of the guts of the battle, together with the Rwandan civil wars and the displacement of numerous folks past Congolese borders. This continuity has pitted varied teams towards one another on the premise of belonging and citizenship claims and counterclaims to territory.
If Gaza requires our anticolonial solidarity, conflicts similar to these within the DRC may require extra rigorous efforts on our half to higher perceive the issue, extra vociferous voices to face up and mobilise political motion; and a scholarly push to decolonise the options in order that completely different types of political group can emerge.
We will stand in solidarity with Palestinians, as an act of anticolonial solidarity of a folks subjected to many years of settler-colonial displacement and rule, pushed by that shared historical past of being colonised. And we are able to problem the invisibilisation of African conflicts and the lack of life in Africa, which require the humanisation of African life by means of extra examine, rigorous and delicate analysis, and understanding and excited about how we are able to realise the largely failed emancipatory goals of anticolonial generations who got here to energy within the Fifties and 60s.
From our current vantage level on historical past, we’re higher positioned to agree with Frantz Fanon that anticolonial actions typically didn’t “dare to invent” the long run by absolutely decolonising societies. There are legacies of colonialism that proceed to form political establishments, and understandings of citizenship and belonging that perpetuate conflicts in postcolonial societies.
What we should always keep away from is popping our official concern with the invisibilisation of postcolonial African conflicts, a results of the dehumanisation of African life basically, right into a competing calculus that determines who we categorical solidarity with.
The views expressed on this article are the creator’s personal and don’t essentially mirror Al Jazeera’s editorial stance.