Column: Black World
November 1999
Julius Nyerere, African socialist
I have turned "Black World" over to Kevin Anderson this month for the
following in memoriam to former Tanzanian President Julius Nyerere who died
in October.-Lou Turner
by Kevin Anderson
With the death of Julius Nyerere, the world has lost one of the foremost
proponents of African Socialism. Nyerere's humanist vision known as UJAMAA
influenced several generations of Africans as well as many throughout the
world concerned with African liberation.
In the 1960s, as president of Tanzania, a federation of the former colonies
Tanganyika and Zanzibar, Nyerere developed a creative view of African
Socialism: "In socialist Tanzania, our agricultural organization would be
predominantly that of co-operative living and working for the good of all.
This means that most of our farming would be done by groups of people who
live as a community and work as a community. A nation of such village
communities would be a socialist nation" (UJAMAA: ESSAYS ON SOCIALISM
[1968], p. 124).
This was the basis of what was called the ujamaa village. In so doing,
Nyerere attempted to build upon pre-colonial communal traditions: "All land
now belongs to the nation. But this was not an affront to our people;
communal ownership of land is traditional in our country-it was the concept
of freehold which had been foreign to them. In tribal tradition an
individual or family secured rights in land for as long as they were using
it. It became the family land when it was cleared and planted; for the rest
of the time it was tribal land, and it reverted to tribal land if the
family stopped working it" (UJAMAA, pp. 84-85).
Nyerere's UJAMAA represented the hopes of many in the 1960s who wished to
carve out an independent socialist pathway sharply different not only from
the acquisitiveness of Western capitalism, but also from the totalitarian
forms of Communism in Russia and China. Rather than rapid
industrialization, Nyerere aimed for a form of democratic socialism rooted
in the village.
CONFRONTATION WITH SELF-DEVELOPMENT
Raya Dunayevskaya pointed to these developments in her PHILOSOPHY AND
REVOLUTION (1973), terming them "a confrontation, not only with the
economic realities of Africa, but with the self-development of Africans
theoretically" (p. 244).
As these villages developed, Tanzania achieved the highest literacy rate in
Africa (83%) and also experienced major advances in health care. The single
party system Nyerere founded under the Tanzania African National Union
(TANU) was hardly undemocratic, since open debate and competitive
candidacies were permitted. Nor did Tanzania experience the pervasive
corruption of so many post-independence African states.
Nyerere also took strong and principled international stands. Tanzania was
in the forefront of the Frontline African States which supported the
liberation struggle against apartheid South Africa, white settler-ruled
Zimbabwe (then Rhodesia), and Portuguese-ruled Mozambique and Angola. From
early on, Tanzania also supported Congolese revolutionaries seeking to
dislodge CIA-installed dictator Mobutu Sese Seko.
Tanzania welcomed Black revolutionaries from the world over, who debated
various forms of Marxism and Pan-Africanism. One venue for these
discussions was the Sixth Pan-African Congress, held in Dar es Salaam in
1974.
Nyerere did not hesitate to take stands against other African leaders and
regimes. A recent in memoriam statement by the U.S.-based Black Radical
Congress singled out his principled humanism and internationalism: "Nyerere
demonstrated that killing Africans in any part of Africa should be of
concern to all human beings, especially African leaders" (Condolence
Message of Oct. 19, 1999).
INDEPENDENT INTERNATIONALIST
In 1967, Nyerere supported Biafra's war for independence from Nigeria. In
1979, he sent troops to help Ugandans to liberate their country from the
murderous Idi Amin dictatorship. More recently, and from retirement, he
spoke out forcefully against the genocide in Rwanda and supported Congolese
rebels, first in the overthrow of Mobutu, and then in their efforts to oust
their authoritarian and corrupt post-Mobutu ruler, Laurent Kabila.
By the late 1970s, Nyerere came into sharp conflict with the International
Monetary Fund and other global capitalist institutions, which wanted
Tanzania to adopt "free market" economic policies. Eventually, Tanzania was
forced to give up many of its socialist-oriented policies. Earlier than
this, however, Nyerere's turn to forced villagization, which he claimed was
necessary for education and other forms of modernization, had begun to
alienate many peasants, undermining from within the concept of UJAMAA.
As news of his death spread, tens of thousands of Tanzanians converged on
the capital, Dar es Salaam, to pay tribute to one of the outstanding
leaders of modern Africa. We too mourn the passing and celebrate the life
of this unique African thinker and leader, who in his theory of UJAMAA
developed an African version of socialist humanism.
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