“Dude,
you’re the Whitest Black man I’ve ever met.” by Khaya Maseko
What am I supposed to say to
that? There’re about 5 Black people in the club that aren’t staff. There’s some Death Metal playing in
the background. The gig is awesome. It’s crowded with men and women in all
kinds of edgy clothing. There are spikes, piercings, band T-shirts and leather
everywhere. This being South Africa, it is not the usual to find a Black man
who’s feeling right at home in this kind of environment.
But I do, sitting there in my Radiohead, Hail To the Thief T-shirt.
My in-depth knowledge of Metal has obviously shown this person that I must be
White inside. Words/names likeDecapitated,
Six FeetUnder, Hate Eternal and The
Haunted glide over my tongue as if I was raised listening to Death Metal.
But I am a product of autopoeisis,
self-made and self-actualizing.
Where do we draw the line at personal personality and
perceived personality? Who judges what the Black human is?
Throughout history, race has been a reflective
phenomenon. One is Black because they are not White. The opinion is thus built by attaching
cultural norms to a people and marking the differences to one’s own. I have
love for my Black fellow human. I am Black because the Black has faced what I
have faced. I have lived and written down what I know to be the Black in me.
But race is a temporary thing. The second this enlightenment came to me, I
became aware that being Black was as important as being anything. If the person
I made of my self was loving and productive, my Blackness would be a negligible
fact. We do not live in that future, as yet. The Black human only survives
because of its opposites, as light only survives because of the darkness it
antagonizes. We cannot build a future like that. On this road to the future, we
must note in bold type that race is only scaffolding for what the human
eventually will be. It must come down, sooner or later.
One need not forget, that hundreds upon thousands have
died and disappeared because they had thick lips and knotty hair. One must not
forget ukubhala ngolimi lwakubo(to
write in their own tongue). One, especially the Black one, must not forget
hundreds of years of institutionalized hatred. One must not forget that there
is a difference in people and the spaces that form and inform said people. One
must be vigilant in studying their history so that they may purport the good
and educate about the harms of evil-doing.Societies and cultures die because of
forgetting. This is why the King Leopold burned records for almost 7 days
before he finally left what was known as The Belgian Congo. Records of any type inform and an informed
‘enemy’ is the most dangerous kind. An
informed slave populous will fight better than one with no intelligence on its
oppressors. But being Black isn’t about being oppressed.
Making moves from the reactive position has more cons
than pros. The Black human should only respond to the human, not the White human.
This Africa of ours is filed with Black human killing
Black human. This is no Auschwitz. This is Congo, Rwanda, Somalia, Nigeria,
Zimbabwe, South Africa and too many other places of bloodshed. The capabilities
of self-punishment and self-torture are stupefying.These atrocities tend to come from the place of forgetting. The
French are the least of the problem in Africa, now. Too many Francophone Blacks
are killing each other for too many ridiculous reasons, which often points to
lack of reason.
So, in fact, I should be proud that this man in front of
me thinks I’m so White. Ah, forget his reasons, as long as he doesn’t link me
to the gang-raping, drug-peddling, granny-mugging, starving, corrupt,
belligerent people that I come from. Because what else do people have to
remember about the Black?
History is written by winners, it is often said. Well
what has the black won? Do we have claims to fame that will move Black
supremacy to Reich heights? Do we even want to go there? The word ‘superpower’
hasn’t even sat next to ‘Africa’ on a train. The paradigm of the African
Renaissance has been crawling on its belly for one too many decades. If we do not make our selves, we will surely
die. Surely. We have enough academic data, from Anthropology to Zoology to be proud
of our selves as Africans, the diaspora firmly included. The Black will not be killed by a
jaded White teenager in a Heavy Metal club. It will be killed by the self. The
Black dies when he forgets. The Black lives when he remembers. The
Black dies when he sees nothing to be proud of. The Black lives when he
manufactures pride from the universe we all have. The powers of creation and
creativity aren’t a racially exclusive thing. We have as much influence on
personal image as the next human. But who is writing our history? Answer and
act. Who is studying your language? Answer. Act.
We are not any better for having more White friends than
Black ones. We are not any closer to ‘civilisation’ by studying German over
Swahili. We are not any thing until this thing that is the Black human is
self-actualizing and fulfilled by it. Be, have, do.
A Black people must
be their Blackness without the White man, and they must not forget that being
Black is not a race. In fact, I propose the dissolution of all racial lines,
but this is a dream and the pipe is long. I my self, have never ever felt
anything other than Black. The future of my family and offspring is loaded with
Memories of our past Black people. How they helped shape the polity of our
South Africa and the world. How they made music from the brightest pit of their
Blackness
1 comment:
I really did this short but punchy essay. My brother Khaya is definitely an excellent writer! WE look forward to more from his fertile mind!
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