All-embracing nationalism is being challenged by narrow nations: Can 2024 birth South African Nationalism.
Published in the Sunday Times on 18 June 2024
The less discussed and often debated matter about African liberation movements is the intricate nature of their nationalism post-liberation. In the case of South Africa, the struggle against apartheid was a pivotal moment in the nation's history, and the significance of post-liberation nation-building is widely acknowledged. However, there remains a lack of consensus on the definition and attributes of this nationalism. While there is a shared understanding of what is not African Nationalism during the struggle, significant challenges arise when the opportunity to shape it arises. This is simply because it quickly becomes a bottom-of-the-tray issue as the trough rises to the top.
It is only when the
post-liberation order is put under strain that the issues of nationalism are
foregrounded. These issues are often exacerbated by the rise of ethnic
nationalist reactions, which challenge the perceived hollowness of
post-liberation as a promised better life reality. The answer to who or what is
national is yet to be given in South Africa. During those moments when the
relative strength and influence of dominant ethnicities (numerically,
culturally, resourcefully, hegemonic, or otherwise) start crafting a narrative
of national imagination, nation-states begin paying attention. This tension
escalates when an ethnic-nationalist resolve finds expression as an outcome of
national elections.
As an expression of
power, nationalism can be a catalyst for dealing with the dynamic issues of
land restitution, economic inclusion, authentic definition of national
interests, and social capital management. In the context of South Africa,
nationalism in its purest form rules in the name of a nationally defined
people; it assumes a context where political power is centralised and managed
by a patriotic bureaucracy. The basic principle of nationalism is that those
governing, depending on preferred arrangements those ruling, enter into a
compact that they govern or rule in the population or people's interest. In
return, those ruled or governed reciprocate with loyalty to what is agreed are
national interests and symbolisms associated with being part of the 'nation'.
In societies ‘united in their diversity', the arrangements with which society
agrees to govern itself, written in the Constitution, reflect and justify the
compact. Depending on the context instructing the finalisation of the compact,
such as 'shared historical origins' and 'common future political destiny', some
make the Constitution the supreme law and thus subject themselves to the rule
of law, some make the lawmakers supreme and subject themselves to the rule by
law. In the latter, political elites easily mutate into dynasties defined by
interests as the currency of their political movement. In the former, the
judiciary can easily become a cognitive legal elite, which might mutate into a
dynasty held together by a jurisprudential orientation instructed by property
and power relations.
Nationalism as a
substrate of statehood assumed a context. Supreme in this context is
nationalism's ability to give those who volunteer membership to the 'nation' a
better exchange relationship with those governing or ruling. In other
parlances, a context of the government of, by, and for the nation. By simply
embracing the idea of membership to a nation, the nation is obliged to graduate
rights to the human of all individuals, and not social or otherwise status.
Nationalism promises equality before the law, recognition of human talent,
promotion and protection of the common good, membership to the nation as a
source of sovereignty, and positions 'we, the people' as the centre of
nationhood and, by default, statehood.
In societies marked by
past conflicts, prejudice, and chauvinistic tendencies emanating from the
dominant body politic, the concept of being a nation to which membership could
be sought or earned by domicile or otherwise is challenging. Diversities of
religion, tribal affiliation, ethnicity, race, and class have always been what
being a nation in a sovereign space must find ways of superseding. Who you
include or exclude in defining a nation will make nationalism and democracy
work together. This is a condition upon which any notion of national unity
government should be based. To the extent that there are distinct areas where
others are excluded in activities that define a nation, such as economic order,
national unity will be compromised once the excluded find reasons to be members
of something other than the 'nation'.
The conceptual migration
or departure from African Claims to the Freedom Charter was a seismic
redefinition of the African nationalist character of the South African
anti-colonial struggle's outcome. The conception of South Africa, which belongs
to all who live in it, as an ideal end state of one united, non-racial,
non-sexist, and democratic country has privileged any template of dominance
which preceded the moment it legally started to belong to all who live in it.
The Constitution drafters, instructed by the basic structure of the context in
which they found themselves, created a constitutional order with which a
democratic and political order could be built into the future. The inextricable
relationship these orders had with the economic order was left for the 'market'
to find degrees of equilibrium without upending the templates that created the
inequalities in the order. The economic order relations that
followed the political order relations became a recipe to institutionalise new
ethnicities and thus attract membership of the economically or otherwise
excluded towards new nationalisms.
The 2024 National and
Provincial elections have defined South Africa into distinct political
constituencies. The country needs to pay attention to the voices that are
represented. There are clear African Nationalists, ethno-nationalists,
race-defined nationalists, religion and class-defined constituencies. Within
these constituencies are a layer of people and acutely elites that understand
the significance of building one South African nationalism. Some believe it
should recognise the need for exclusivity defined by diversity, including race
and language exclusion. The risk of including or excluding based on diversity,
especially those elements of diversity that are dominant in a society's
tormented history, is that loyalty to narrowly defined 'nations' can lead to
demonising others, even if they are a numerical majority. The race to capture
state power by the dominant has always been the reason for higher-order
nationalism's failure. As South Africa retreads its nationalism to justify its
nation-state claim through a GNU, which, if carelessly handled, might be
rhetoric those who command a majority can ignore when genuine conversation
about the economy is not in sight, the agenda must be correct. The election
outcome has fractured the 'consensus'; a new one must be threaded; it can only
have the economics of post-1994 as the central agenda. CUT!!!
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