It began as a campaign at the
University of Cape Town to remove the statue of Cecil Rhodes that stood in the
campus. For the protesters, the statue represented everything that Rhodes
himself stood for: racism, colonialism, plunder, white supremacy, and the
oppression of black people. Last April, a month after the protests began, the
university authorities removed it. By then, the protests had moved to other
universities in South Africa, before travelling abroad. Now "Rhodes Must
Fall" has come to Oxford where, for the past two months, students at Oriel
College, led ironically by a South African Rhodes scholar, Ntokozo Qwabe, have
been campaigning to remove a statue of Rhodes that stands above the main
entrance
Rhodes was an alumni of Oriel,
and bequeathed £100,000 to the college in his will. The statue is small,
undistinguished, and often unnoticed. For the student protesters, however, it
represents the racism, imperialism and white privilege that, they argue, still
pervades the college.
Decolonisation, not diversity
"Our demand" according
to activists, "is for decolonisation, not diversity". Another
protester insisted: "Removing the statue… would address our colonial past
in an effort to decolonise our collective conscience." Rhodes was a brutal
racist and imperialist. His record is often whitewashed in Britain, as is the
reality of Empire. Yet there is something preposterous in describing a campaign
to take down Rhodes' statue as an act of decolonisation, or to present it as a
transformative act. Decolonisation was one of the defining transformations of
the 20th century. It was driven by the great social movements that swept
through Africa and Asia and challenged the might of European rule.
To compare a campaign to remove a
statue with the momentous global dismantling of Rhodes' legacy is to diminish
the very meaning of decolonisation...
To compare a campaign to remove a
statue with the momentous global dismantling of Rhodes' legacy is to diminish
the very meaning of decolonisation and to demean all those who gave their lives
to that transformative struggle. At the heart of decolonisation was an
insistence that the peoples of Africa and Asia could run own lives. In 1887,
Rhodes had told the House of Assembly in Cape Town that "the native is to
be treated as a child and denied the franchise".
The struggles for independence
shattered that view. They were assertions of the agency that had been denied to
non-Europeans in the age of Empire. For the great figures of the anticolonial
movement - from Toussaint L'Ouverture to Frantz Fanon, from Jawaharlal Nehru to
Kwame Nkrumah - there was a determination that history should not be a barrier
to creating a new world.
"When a black person looks
on Cecil Rhodes' statue, she sees a person who denied her basic moral worth,
and would have justified enslavement, ruthless autocratic rule, and the
sadistic treatment of her and her ancestors," wrote Omar Khan, director of
the Runnymede Trust, a leading British race equalities think-tank; this creates
"a deep wound that isn’t merely in people's heads nor in any way
irrational". Removing the statue is important to start a "conversation
about the past's continued effects on black and minority ethnic people".
British colonial statesman and
financier Cecil John Rhodes (1853-1902) [Getty]
Of course, the past shapes the
present. But the "Rhodes Must Fall" campaigners seem to believe that
black and ethnicity minorities are trapped by their history; and that history
is the cause of unending psychological trauma. This suggests not an assertion
but a diminishment of agency, a view of black and ethnic minorities as not so
much the shapers of history, as its victims. Whereas the real decolonisers
sought to throw off the yoke of history, "Rhodes Must Fall" campaigners
appear to have let the past recolonise them.
Statues have frequently been the
focus of struggle in defining the past. After the French Revolution, dozens of
statues of monarchs were defaced or demolished. In post-independence India,
many statues of Viceroys and British monarchs were removed and given a new home
in Delhi's Coronation Park. The fall of communism saw the destruction of
statues of Lenin and other Bolshevik leaders.nThe monuments that Saddam Hussein
and Muammar Gaddafi had built of themselves were publicly brought down after
they fell from power. In all these cases the toppling of statues came as part
of a great social upheaval or in the midst of a great change when the old
oppressive regime came tumbling down.
The Oxford "Rhodes Must
Fall" campaign is very different. It is not so much the product of a great
social movement as a substitute for one. It's a campaign that bears resemblance
not to the struggles for independence but to the current mania sweeping
campuses for getting rid of "microaggressions", imposing
"trigger warnings", creating "safe spaces" and "no
platforming" those whose views are deemed unacceptable. Such campaigns
present the human individual as vulnerable and damaged and in need of
protection. They seek not to transform the world but to shield people from
anything that they might find troubling or offensive or difficult.
There are, of course, major
issues of race and justice to be tackled both in universities and in wider
society. The lack of black and ethnic minority, and of working class, students
in universities such as Oxford needs tackling. So does the way that we look
upon empire and its legacies. But turning a statue of Cecil Rhodes into an
invented psychological trauma, or demanding that it be removed as an act of
decolonisation, will change neither the way that people look upon the past, nor
challenge the injustices of the present.
Once upon a time, student
activists used to demand that capitalism must fall, or that apartheid must be
crushed, or that colonialism must be swept away. Now, it seems, they just want
to take down statues.
Citation
Malik, Kenan. "The Cecil Rhodes Statue Is Not a Problem." Aljazeera.com. Aljazeera, 11 Jan. 2016. Web. 11 Jan. 2016. <http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/2016/01/cecil-rhodes-oxford-problem-160110061336569.html>.
Response:
The article is talking about the recent revolt for the removal of the Cecil Rhodes Statue in South Africa. A campaign started by students at the University of Cape town and is further bridging with other Universities, such as; Oxford University in the UK. Honestly, I don't know much about the history of Cecil Rhodes, but I do know that he was a racist and bought a lot of hatred, hurt and long lasting consequences to black South Africans, so I think they deserve the right to put him down. The whole argument of decolonisation doesn't appeal to me much, since they described Cecil as a "brutal racist and imperalist", if taking down the statue makes them redeem a bit of their dignity--i don't see why it should be a problem. Also, i believe the article is a bit biased towards the end, when the author mentions that taking down the statue won't change the past and the black South Africans are simply making themselves "victims" of "psychological trauma". Well, what happened in South Africa is still happening today and in some ways they are still victims of the history of their country.
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