The drama of the ICC’s determination to arrest Sudan’s president
Omar Al Bashir played itself out exactly three weeks after the commemoration of
this year’s Africa Day. That fact epitomises the thorny, rocky road Africa’s
renewal will have to go through. Six weeks later, I am still basking in the
after-glow of this year’s Africa Day commemorations, which was my first time to
actually actively participate.
On May 25th I attended an Africa Day Expo at the
Kara Heritage Research Institute, in Tshwane, South Africa, where African pride
and determination were in full display. In the evening, I attended the 6th
Annual Thabo Mbeki Africa Day lecture at the University of South Africa
(Unisa), delivered by Nobel Peace Laureate and former Director General of the
International Atomic Energy Agency, Dr. Mohamed ElBaradei.
Young Africans performing at the Africa Day Expo, 25th May 2015, Kara Heritage Institute, Tshwane, South Africa |
The day was observed and commemorated in several African
countries. In South Africa, several cities and towns put on celebrations. The
day set alight social media and the hashtag #AfricaDay2015 was trending in the
African twitter-sphere. Across the continent, several conferences preceded the
day, focusing on all things Pan-African. The watch words, in many of those
conferences and commemorations, were Pan-Africanism, the African Renaissance,
and Agenda 2063.
Taken together, these three ideas represent the conceptual
landmarks guiding the path to the future Africa we want. I attempt to share, in
this article, my reflections on what lies ahead in the gargantuan endeavour to
shape an educational agenda for the kind of future that Africans are currently
working on. This year’s Africa Day commemorations, and the conferences held in
the lead up to 25th May, provide much of the impetus for my
reflections.
One such conference was the 5th African Unity for
Renaissance (AUFR), held on two campuses of the University of Johannesburg (UJ),
Kingsway and Soweto, in South Africa. The conference’s theme was “2015 and
Beyond: Engaging Agenda 2063”. I went to the conference looking to network with
fellow educators on bringing the three concepts of Pan-Africanism, the African
Renaissance and Agenda 2063 into classrooms in the Pan-African world. That
means on the continent and in the diaspora.
I came back from the conference, and the Africa Day
celebrations, with a zest and determination to play a role in making Agenda
2063 successful. Africa’s future is too important to be left to the African
Union alone. The AU has ostensibly engaged high gear in taking on the enormous
challenges the continent faces, but much more work needs to be done for
ordinary Africans to own the process of Africa’s renewal and work side by side
with the Pan-African body. For this to happen, it means every African has to
decide what they are best able to contribute, and identify others with similar
convictions. The bottom line is that the renewal of Africa, as expressed and
articulated in the African Union’s Agenda 2063, must be driven by the people.
The opening night of the 5th AUFR provided a
catchphrase that remained on the lips of everyone for the rest of the
conference. Dr Elizabeth Rasekoala, founder and co-chair of the Pan-African Solidarity Education Network,
argued that calling the new African Union’s vision “Agenda 2063” sounded as if the continent would have to wait
until that date. That was too far away. “We need Agenda Now Now!” she declared,
to loud applause from the audience. To be clear, Dr. Rasekoala was not dismissing
the idea of a 50-year plan. She was just stressing the urgent need to get
started with the agenda and use every single day to work toward it. The AU
itself is not waiting until 2063.
Although it was Al Bashir who dominated the news at the 25th
African Union Heads of State summit in Sandton, Johannesburg, South Africa, the
actual agenda of the summit was women’s empowerment. The AU has designated 2015
as the “Year of Women’s Empowerment and Development Towards Africa’s Agenda
2063.” A significant part of the summit was expected to get started with
developing the first ten-year agenda toward 2063, and placing women’s
empowerment as a pillar for the agenda.
The role of women as being at the heart of Africa’s renewal
is what Dr. Rasekoala says is the single most important thing for the
continent. She confirmed this in the opening plenary session of the 5th
AUFR. As the session was drawing to a close, director of ceremonies for much of
the conference, Professor Chris Landsberg, UJ’s SARCHi Chair in African
Diplomacy and Foreign Policy, had one question for all the three speakers on
the plenary. “Is there one thing you think the AU needs to do as the single
most important thing for the continent?”
In addition to Dr. Rasekoala, an engineer, the other two
speakers were Professor Mammo Muchie, SARCHi Chair in Innovation and
Development at Tshwane University of Technology (TUT); and Professor Adebayo
Olukoshi, Director of the United Nations African Institute for Economic
Development and Planning in Senegal.
Dr. Rasekoala did not hesitate to mention gender as the
single most important thing. She said it was of pivotal importance to enhance
women’s participation at the highest levels of public service, politics and
business. For Professor Muchie, the most important thing was to stop the
negative narrative about the continent. He said it was time to start focusing
on the historical greatness of the continent, on what is working today, and on the
Africa we want for the future. For Professor Olukoshi, it was to “open the
borders. Let Africans move freely.” He added that he had been consistent on
this for a long time.
The call to open up African borders seems to be growing in
intensity. Speaking to South African youth on Tuesday 16th June,
which is celebrated as Youth Day in South Africa, President Jacob Zuma singled
out the borders issue as one of the major things discussed at the 25th
AU Heads of State Summit. He tied the idea to the importance of South African
youth learning about the rest of the continent and being proud of their African
heritage. Following the continental outrage in the wake of the Afro-xenophobic
attacks in South Africa in April, the country seems to be galvanising a new
resolve and reconsidering its place and influence on the continent.
This was evident at the 5th AUFR conference as
well. In his welcoming remarks, UJ’s Deputy Vice Chancellor Professor Tshilidzi
Marwala evoked Pan-Africanism’s ancestry when he spoke of the importance of
teaching young Africans what Kwame Nkrumah used to say that Africa was one
people and one nation. That meant, said Professor Marwala, no African was a
foreigner on African soil. And those sentiments were repeated by South Africa’s
Minister of Home Affairs, Malusi Gigaba, who gave the conference’s opening
keynote address. In a wide-ranging and frank accounting of the complexities of
South Africa’s place on the continent, Hon. Gigaba said South Africans needed
to respect all immigrants, including those in the country illegally.
Although xenophobia has openly manifested itself in South
Africa, anti-foreigner sentiments are evident not only across the continent,
but across the globe. The onus falls on every African country to deal with this
problem and promote an African identity before a national one, as Professor
Mammo repeatedly pointed out. Much of this work lies in school curricula and
classroom pedagogy. It means teaching a different type of African history, one
that digs deep into the contexts that have created the kind of Africa we have
today.
This is what was on the mind of Professor Adebayo Olukoshi
on the opening night of the 5th AUFR. Professor Olukoshi situated
his remarks in the opening plenary in Walter Rodney’s pioneering work, How Europe Underdeveloped Africa.
Olukoshi argued that Rodney had provided empirical proof that before the
Trans-Atlantic slave trade, Africa’s socio-economic status was at par with the
rest of the world.
Not only did the slave trade depopulate the continent and
set its economic progress back, it also robbed Africans of their dignity and
self-worth. Africa was the only continent, observed Professor Olukoshi, where
the world felt it had a God-given right to demand a seat at the table and
dictate to Africans how to solve their problems. The argument being that
Pan-Africanism is too important to be left to the Africans alone. And the
ironies of Africa’s situation today are startling. In one perplexing anecdote,
Professor Olukoshi noted how African leaders go to Europe and America for
medical treatment, only to find that the doctor attending to them is a citizen
of their own country.
What all this means is that knowing where Africa is today
and the history that made the present is an inescapable part of the charge to
chart the continent’s future. “We must begin with the children,” said Professor
Mammo Muchie. But beginning with the children means changing the way the
African Union’s Pan-African University idea is being implemented, an argument
made by Professor David Horne, Chair of Africana Studies at California State
University at Northridge in the USA. The focus needs to start with African
children from their earliest education and be sustained all the way up to
university education.
And young Africans must not be shielded from this history, a
lesson shared on the second day of the conference, by Professor Sabelo
Ndlovu-Gatsheni. He is Executive Director of the Archie
Mafeje Research Institute at the University of South Africa. Professor
Ndlovu-Gatsheni was responding to a question as to whether this type of African
history does not entrench an inferiority complex and prevent young Africans
from actively participating in global discussions. Knowing who you are and
being grounded in your history is what builds a foundation for the future, said
Professor Ndlovu-Gatsheni. He added that he grew up in an African village, but
he does not feel inferior.
For educators, the issue of what type of African history to
teach is of central importance. Scholars such as Paul Tiyambe Zeleza and Pitika
Ntuli have argued over the years that the history taught in African schools
does not reflect the scholarship generated by African historians. The thrust of
the curriculum remains Eurocentric, this in spite of the available knowledge of
Africa’s history going back several millennia.
A compelling example of the kind of African history that is
not reflected in the curriculum came from Dr. Diran Soumonni. A senior lecturer
from the Wits Business School, Dr. Soumonni presented on Africa’s history and
philosophy of science and technology, digging deep into Africa’s intellectual past,
going to 4,000 years BC to when the Egyptians are known to have used a 30-day
calendar. Dr Soumonni’s research demonstrates the feasibility of developing an
education agenda at the heart of Africa’s renewal.
Which brings me to what I
see as the most urgent steps that those of us working in education, and those
interested in the future of the continent broadly, must provide direction with.
A survey conducted by Jean Chawapiwa, Founder and Managing
Director of Win Win Solutions 4 Africa consultancy firm, and presented at the
conference, found that very few people have heard about Agenda 2063. Out of 327
respondents across the continent and beyond, 63 percent had never heard about
Agenda 2063. Chawapiwa’s suggestions for how the AU can spread the word about
the initiative need serious consideration.
Reaching out to as many Africans as possible will enable
ownership of the agenda by ordinary Africans. It will enable grassroots
participation, and will address the deeply felt grievance that the African Union
is a dictators’ club out of touch with the needs of African people. It should
be emphasised that there can be no grassroots ownership and participation if
there is no translation of Agenda 2063 into local African languages. The respondents in Chawapiwa’s survey made
this clear.
African intellectuals have been unequivocal about this.
Ngugi
wa Thiong’o has spent more than three decades making this argument. Ngugi has
said “African intellectuals must do for their languages and cultures what all
other intellectuals in history have done for theirs. This is still the
challenge of our history. Let’s take up the challenge.” The educational
implications of such an ambitious agenda are, no doubt, enormous. It requires
educators, teacher educators in particular, to participate at every stage. And
this is why I argue that Agenda 2063 is too important to be left to the African
Union alone, the one occasion when it is legitimate to say this. It is also why
I suggest that African educators need to consider making Agenda 2063 required
reading in their courses.
Al Bashir is not the only hot coal gnawing away at the AU’s
cauldron. The very concepts of Pan-Africanism, the African Renaissance and
African Unity arouse intense debate amongst Africans and Africa watchers. There
are multi-layered historical and contemporary grievances, internal and
external. There are intricate webs of elitism, exclusion, collusion with
Western capital and global influence, deep inequalities, and simmering
injustices. It requires a spirit of hope, optimism and determination to see the
problems as surmountable rather than intractable and impossible. Education is a
good place to start.
Governments on the continent and in the African diaspora
need to adopt Agenda 2063 into their national plans, as the African Union has already
pointed out. In addition to the agenda, contemporary Pan-Africanism and the
African renaissance need to be integrated into national educational policies,
and into school curricula and classroom pedagogy from primary to university.
The
three concepts also need to become part of teacher education programmes for new
teachers, and continuous professional development programmes for practising
teachers. The AU needs a unit specifically dedicated to education. If there are
deans of schools or faculties of education on the continent or in the diaspora,
who feel a passionate sense of urgency about this, there begins Agenda Now Now.
Note: A version of this article first appeared in Pambazuka News on 19th June, 2015
Note: A version of this article first appeared in Pambazuka News on 19th June, 2015
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