New Age2.png

 

 

Please, let's stop lionising Fort Hare

 

It produced ZK Matthews - and also a self-serving black middle class

 

 

Sandile Memela, The New Age, Johannesburg, 12 February 2016

 

The celebration of University of Fort Hare's 100th anniversary has, indeed,
revealed historical revisionism to portray the university as a hotbed of
revolutionaries.

 

This is a predictable political revision as the desire is to create the
impression that former students were trained and destined for revolutionary
roles in society. But one ZK Matthews does not make an army of
revolutionaries. We need to highlight the fact that the university
degenerated into a conservative institution characterised by complicity and
collusion in producing largely apolitical graduates. In fact, most products
were trained to be integrated into a history they should have fought
against.

 

The promotion of Fort Hare as this bastion of radical African politics is
nothing but a romantic look at an institution that betrayed its historical
mission. The university was at the forefront of softening the minds of black
youth to look forward to being members of the elite that would work within
the apartheid system.

 

The university has produced more dissenters than principled men and women
who were selfless and self-sacrificing servants of the people of the African
continent. When it was taken over by the apartheid regime in 1959 the
purpose was for it to produce Bantu Education graduates who would fit into
the agenda of creating a black middle class that would serve as a buffer
between the oppressed and the oppressor.

 

Meaningless

 

The results of this apartheid strategy are to be witnessed today, where
black graduates have integrated into previous apartheid and whites-only
institutions without playing any meaningful role to transform them in any
significant way.

 

But the promotion of Fort Hare as a politically radical institution is not
new. The last 22 years of democracy and freedom have witnessed intellectual
and leadership energy focused on a rose-coloured look at the legacy of
colonialism and apartheid. The perspective is to be proactive and
self-serving.

 

The prevalent conservative view glosses over and thus ignores the lack of
any meaningful and constructive role that products of the institution have
played in lifting the African struggle for self-determination to the highest
level. Most of its products are legendary men who have played a pivotal role
in making sure that genuine African freedom is undermined by simply joining
the unjust economic system they have failed to beat.

 

But the preeminent men who studied there and went on to be architects of the
Africa we know and live in today should not be judged by Matthew's vision
but the practical realisation thereof. It is an open secret that 100 years
after its founding, Fort Hare is neither one of the top-class universities
in the country nor a centre of learning on the continent and the world. It
has not produced the calibre of African leadership that has reversed
colonialism and apartheid nor delivered economic justice and equality.

 

The fact that it houses important historical documents of the struggle
should not be used to hide the fact that most of its products lack political
consciousness and commitment. Housing relevant history and spreading
indigenous knowledge to all are two different things.

 

There has not been a time in the history of the institution when it has
produced a great number of graduates yet far fewer of them emerge as world
class leaders now who serve "their people" and country, so to speak.

 

After it produced a man of the calibre of ZK Matthews - who drafted the
strategic thinking behind the Congress of the People - one would have
expected the much-vaunted Fort Hare to produce more men and women who would
be implementing the ideals and principles in the Freedom Charter today. But
there is an absence of men who think like Matthews or Robert Sobukwe, for
instance, among its products of the last 60 years.

 

Not yet uhuru

 

If truth be told, men like Nelson Mandela, Oliver Tambo, Julius Nyerere, Sir
Seretse Khama and Robert Mugabe have not delivered the Africa we all desire.

 

How do we account for the absence of men like Matthews, particularly when
Fort Hare is portrayed as this nucleus of the African revolution through
education?

 

This is the question that should be raised rather than glorify a dead past.

 

We cannot witness and experience the emergence of the self-serving black
middle class without linking it to the products of Fort Hare.

 

This is the institution that, among others, has shaped the content and
character, aspirations and anxieties and political attitude of men and women
who should be leading our society.

 

It is as a result of Fort Hare and other similar institutions that today we
are confronted by a leadership crisis.

 

The apartheid-designed curriculum of Fort Hare, which has not been radically
transformed, was aimed at getting many graduates of "bush colleges" to
benefit from the unjust economic status quo.

 

Juicy pie

 

Many were content to get a small yet juicy piece of the pie. Most of those
who had access to this privilege lack the guts and political courage to
question the system.

 

Thus, to retain their privileged position and gain peace of mind, they
turned their back to political activism - except for very few - to indulge
in the pleasures of a middle class lifestyle.

 

It is the products of Fort Hare and other similar institutions that have
served as midwives to legitimising an unjust economic system that has failed
to eradicate prejudice and inequality, among other challenges.

 

It is an open secret that university graduates no longer go to school to
serve "their people". Fort Hare now produces graduates who pursue their own
individual interests to gain access to opportunity and power.

 

It is about gaining status, position, money and everything that it can buy.

 

On the other hand, we cannot take anything away from men of the calibre of
Matthews and Sobukwe, among others. They were a rare breed. They did what
they had to do.

 

Glory days gone

 

Rather, we must leave the past in the past to focus on the products of Fort
Hare in the last 50 years. After all, a tree will only be known by its
fruits.

 

It cannot be said with certainty and pride that today's graduates come from
a deeply bred tradition of committed political consciousness and learning
institutions that promote an equal and just society.

 

Without a direct link between what Matthews and Sobukwe represented, among
others, and what today's products of the university are doing to serve the
people, there is no need to overglorify institutions like Fort Hare.

 

What I know is that there is no vibrant political tradition of political
resistance that has been passed on from studying at Fort Hare today.

 

Much as it did so in the past, the institution still has to prove to greater
society that it has reclaimed its position and role to nurture a new
generation for collective and critical consciousness.

 

.    Sandile Memela is a 1984 Fort Hare graduate with a BA in communications

 

 

From:
<http://tnaepaper.co.za/DRIVE/main%20edition/12022016/epaperpdf/19.pdf>
http://tnaepaper.co.za/DRIVE/main%20edition/12022016/epaperpdf/19.pdf

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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