Thursday, March 28, 2024

Hunt for Successor 52: Forty-nine toasts to intellectual idleness

Share

A group of 25 Ugandan students from Makerere University’s College of Engineering, Art and Design have built Uganda’s first electric car, the Kiira EV. Initially designed in 2009, the fabricated car was taken for a public test drive last week. Most of the parts of the two-seater, including the core body and combustion system, were designed and built locally Read more: Uganda’s First Electric Car Built by Makerere Students | Inhabitat - Sustainable Design Innovation, Eco Architecture, Green Building
A group of 25 Ugandan students from Makerere University’s College of Engineering, Art and Design have built Uganda’s first electric car, the Kiira EV. Initially designed in 2009, the fabricated car was taken for a public test drive last week. Most of the parts of the two-seater, including the core body and combustion system, were designed and built locally

Still at the bottom of the totem pole

Forty-nine years later, we are contented with mediocrity; with poverty; with disease; and with an idle mind. We have failed to turn our country into a paradise. Yes, this country, endowed with minerals and precious stones is for the Chinese, Indians, and others to exploit; this fertile undulating picturesque country, flowing with abundant water has eluded our intelligentsia—engineers, doctors, scientists, lawyers, and dodged even our most gifted. In annual languid unison we drink, dance and toast to dismal achievement.

Yes, I hear incensed academics hauling invectives in counterblasts and calling me unpatriotic for attempting to dampen our self-sufficiency spirit. Do not secure my head and arms in a pillory, place a gag on my mouth, and throw me into the ring of fire, no, not until you show me what you are worth. Do something spectacular and show the world you are the genius we have been waiting for; that you are the Zambian with unprecedented insight, exceptional talent, intellectual ability, creativity, and originality; that you are the one who can retrieve us from the bottom of the totem pole at which we have dwelt for forty-nine years.

Rome can be built in a day

There you go again with your “Rome was not built in a day” poppycock, you lazy intellectual. We are approaching half a century and you keep saying stuff like “It took hundreds of years for Caucasians to be where they are today.” It is utterances such as these that have kept Zambia in a prostate state. You have dragged us into the gutter in which even our most intelligent young men are being irresistibly drained.

Georg Hegel sums up your forty-nine years of scapegoating: “For [Zambia] is no historical part of the World; it has no movement or development to exhibit. Historical movements in it…belong to the European World…what we properly understand by [Zambia], is the Unhistorical, Undeveloped Spirit, still involved in the conditions of mere nature…” These words uttered 138 years ago in reference to Africa by the German Philosopher have stood the test of time. They reflect our failure; they are the reason we are called lazy, unintelligent, uncreative, disorganized, docile, and other derogatory terms. It is these words that separate us from the “White” world.

Go ahead, pick up your pen and write like you always do in lazy ink: I find it obnoxious and shocking that Ruwe should invoke the name of Hegel to advance his point. Those of us who have studied Hegel’s Philosophy of History identify him as a Eurocentric bigot; a racist who failed to value the contributions of Africans to human development. Ruwe should not be quoting a man who “places blacks in the lowest category of development and precludes them from any possibility of progress.” To do so is to insult the black race…

Put that pen down! You’ve got the most in you, and you use it for whining. You’ve a ton of intelligence and you use an ounce. What will it take to make you think; to make you take up the challenge and make yourself great in life and in death? You trained your mind for intellectual equality. You buried yourself in books by candlelight; you graduated with highest honors. How can you fail to be our guiding light and give us full value of life? For forty-nine years you have failed to create a spirit of intellectualism and make us become stakeholders in the building of automobiles, telephones, radios, televisions, and computers. You still lack the ability to be curious and think outside the box.

Don’t blame President Michael Sata for your ineptitude. He is a politician. You went to school and fully understand that politics is for both saints and imps; that it is in politics you find pickpockets, armed robbers, hit men, inept megalomaniacs, and also seraphs, and saviors. Sata saw you were asleep in the hallowed halls of academia. He picked up the mantle of leadership and left you to your slumber. He now wields unquestionable power over you. He treats you like a preschooler. He appoints and disappoints you.

A special appeal to the young intellectuals

I leave you lazy intellectuals to your own failed devices. Let me turn my attention to our young Zambians with prolific minds and those with the best talent. Please do not emulate our torpor. We have dismally failed you. We have abdicated our role as thinkers and denied you modernization. Instead we have given you poverty and placed you in a tragic position. As you can see we have become a desperate people with a distressing addiction to corruption. We don’t invest in your future; we steal from your coffers and enrich ourselves with no regard for the 14 million hungry mouths.

Our inability to join the inventive and innovative global community has severely dented our image. We are hardly respected. Wherever we go, the UN, Commonwealth, IMF, World Bank, we represent smallness, and defend not our innovation-worth, but our sense of self-worthlessness and under-achievement. Our spectators know it; they know we carry with us a bowl of alms and treat the West, and now China, as the proverbial provider of milk and honey. I am sure you have seen how whites, Asians, Arabs, and Latinos feel each time we come in contact with them. Even in our tailor made suits, they treat us like ignoramuses—like trash.

Please do not fall asleep in the hallowed halls of academia the next fifty years. You will mirror us at your own peril. You will be extinct. Just look at the rate we are dying from hunger and disease. Figures of the dead will break your heart. Let me tell you about us. Our past has been “education for under-development.” Our elders above the age of 65 grew up in an era of scientific racism. Theirs was education of low expectations; of vocational training. White settlers feared that too much “black” education would threaten their supremacy. In the 1950s, a psychological phenomenon was rooted in our elders that they were intellectually challenged; that the Sciences—math, physics, biology, and chemistry, were not for their brain. They bought into it and passed on to us a sense of self-doubt and low esteem.

2014 Golden Jubilee

As we head for the 2014 Golden Jubilee, you, our young intelligent minds must collectively begin to undo this perception. You must rise and help to stop the idleness. Embark on a “Revolt of our Elders.” Scrap their archaic ideas and put our nation on a new track, a track more suitable for your future. Set a new chapter in the history of our country by creating your own Zambian Dream. It is the only way you can save yourselves from the impending calamity.

The Zambian Dream with the motto “ours is a future of innovation” must be enshrined in your hearts and must be used as a weapon in the fight against intellectual inertia. You must express the dream not by word of mouth, but with your minds and hands. You must make the dream omnipresent and declaim it after every success—after you have created irrigation pumps, ploughs, and kilns for your retired parents in the villages.

Ignore skeptic politicians and identify among yourselves pathfinders with a keen eye for intellectual excellence. Allow them to lead you into a world ruled by technology. Invest heavily in technology and the sciences. Become strong mentors and pontificate about math and science at public fora and at dinner tables, and encourage your children to become mathematicians, engineers, chemists, and computer scientists. You must start now to call for a leader who can influence, to a larger extent, your thinking, and develop a system of education founded upon invention and innovation.

You must find among yourselves intellectuals who will be preoccupied with issues of advancement and become a dominant source of your effort in the building of a new Zambia. Such intellectuals must be physicians, engineers, scientists, and other technocrats—physical builders who can master our crisis intellectually and scientifically and lead the way out of this quagmire.

This is the right time for you to shine; to develop your full potential. Challenge the Ugandan students at Makerere University’s College of Engineering, Design, Art and Technology who have built an electric car; embrace young Zambian inventors who are developing useful technological devices and help to improve their designs. I know of several young men and women in Zambia with great ideas. Give them a chance. Help them to prove Hegel and other supremacists, chauvinists, and xenophobes around the world wrong. Please.

By Field Ruwe

Field Ruwe is a US-based Zambian media practitioner, historian, and author. He is a PhD candidate at George Fox University and serves as an adjunct professor (lecturer) in Boston. ©Ruwe2012

20 COMMENTS

  1. I am definitely not an intellectual but remain stunned by an intellectual who states the obvious without the additional depth of discussion readily available at the non intellectual level (excuse my sarcasm) throughout Zambia.

    People are just placeholders in your writing. The same approach of tarring all with one swift movement of the brush. I reckon a day sitting still in one of many places in Zed will help you see the nation has individuals who both share your view or have alternative views that are just as relevant. I didn’t meet anyone at any level who is simply waiting to be rescued. A fine bunch of people who deserve more.

    How well do you reckon Cecil Rhodes would have done without the ‘helpful’ map, unlimited supply of guns and whitewashing? Keep writing though…

    • Ruwe has left a bad taste in mouth today…he should indeed come back home and be part of the solution…its no help to Zambia to just an observer and throw rocks…

    • There goes our “key board warrior again”, writing very god english but very little substance. We already know that we are poor but please do a bit of analysis; how did we end up in this situation and what, in your view should the coming generations do to get the country out of this mess? Certainly not running to America and telling them to be innovative. Dr. Ruwe, a journalist can organise resources and with the young design and build our first Indigenous car! I bet bambo Ruwe is one of those who was educated free of charge by KK with the hope that he’ll help to develop the country in future, but he is now drinking milk and honey in the US and busy pointing fingers that our local engineers have failed to build even a ka small car.

  2. A fantastic article, in terms of insight and logic. I agree with just about everything you have said, Mr Ruwe. I have been thinking about the issues you have raised over the past few years myself. It appears to me talking is the biggest industry in Zambia, from the politicians to the ordinary guy in the street. It seems to define who a “real” Zambian must be: the louder your mouth the more “patriotic” you are. It has been turned into an art, at the expense of reasoned thinking, planning (no, fikaisova), and implementation of programmes for the benefit of the country. Take for instance, the large quantities of sweet potatoes that go to waste each year, because everybody, including our scientists, is busy arguing over who should occupy state house in three years time.

  3. Ruwe keep on hammering. A lot of people in zambia need that woke up call. Politicians are the biggest hindrance though.

  4. Your articles are always relevant to our times and inspirational. My humble advise is let us now move from away from hunting for a success as we already have one in our midst. At the moment the only relevant person to Zambia’s problems is Hichilema. You may not like him, but if you truly believe in Zambia moving a step forward I do not see any other leader better than him today. Though I must admit he has to do more than he is by taking advantage of the many missteps the current government is making. By that I mean he should not just end by being critical but also say what he would do differently if where in government. I hope someone in his advisory team is reading this. It is not good enough to just criticise but offer alternatives.

    • My old classmate Ruwe, your article points out insipration without indicating innovative solutions. Mulena above indicates HH – UPND president as possible solution. But HH is the richest politician in Zambia without national popularity because he lacks the humility and fiery honest character of Old Harry Mwaanga Nkumbula, Mungoni Liso, Mathias Mainza Chona, Elijah Mudenda and even his predecessor Anderson Mazoka, it is unfortunate that he does not even smile whenever he speaks but always wears wrinkles of bitterness. HH denies young people like Mulena above inspiring leadership Field Ruwe is espousing from the safety of distant USA. Meanwhile we enter the jubilee year with our incumbent President born and bred in the colonial era ruling to the best of his ability needing everyone’s…

    • My moderation agrees with Mulena above that HH has lots of personality and interpersonal/human/public relations skills to acquire to become more appealling and likeable to the electorate and should reduce on criticism but indicate alternatives to inspire the electorate to deem him electable for the presidency.

  5. A very good piece of writing.But the use of too many unnecessary terms and jargon’s have ended up diluting the goodness in it.Learn how to summarize your work ba Ruwe.This is semi-mumble jumble.

    • How does it become a great piece and semi-mumble jumble? It can’t be both. English is sometimes metaphorical, abstract, and at times floral. Ardent readers and majors of English may disagree with you. I think it boils down to the level of understanding the language.

    • Miss Sauliso is semi-literate, and so is her kin. We know who Sauliso is. Next time we will expose you, so people can see why you blog PF. Miss Sauliso and Sauliso are the same person.

    • Lusaka Times you must censor lunatics like this blogger or you risk intelligent constributions. This person is sick his/her utterances must not be allowed on your site.

  6. This reminds me of the game of chess. If there is anything it teaches, its the fact that the one watching by the side appears to have the solutions than the one playing the game. Theory is good…practice is a diffrent ball game.

    • In a community you have to have a motivator and a doer. The motivator feeds the doer with ideas. Chase players take time to master their game by reading and getting ideas from friends who understand the game. What Ruwe is providing is food for thought to the learned and the talented. There is nothing wrong with that. We need someone to tap on our shoulders and say “hey, have you thought of this ?”

  7. Ruwe is a failure, what has he done for Zambia? Pointing fingers at other people when you have failed even to accomplish anything in the country which you can point at and say I did that! Author? What books has he written? We need Zambian historians to write Zambian history not those who quote racist American writers of 1900’s and Hitler sanctioned writings meant to promote white supremacy! Someone should tell Ruwe what entrepreneurship mean, you don’t need the whole country to be behind you to sell your invention! A good product sells itself and financial backers comes in because they see what good the product can do and that people will be willing and able to pay for it. I.C engine technology was patented a long time ago, the cost of assembly plants is the hindrance even for Uganda!

Comments are closed.

Read more

Local News

Discover more from Lusaka Times-Zambia's Leading Online News Site - LusakaTimes.com

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading