Friday, March 15, 2013
Dissent as a
Higher Form of Patriotism: Reflections
Peter Wuteh
Vakunta, Ph.D
In the second quarter of the nineteenth century a Russian
aristocrat named Peter Chaadayev was portrayed as insane by order of Czar
Nicholas I for publicly describing his country as a backward nation caught up
in a narrow and boastful nationalism. Chaadayev subsequently defended his
patriotism—and the views which had incurred the Czar’s displeasure—in an essay
entitled “Apology of a Madman” (1837). “Believe me,” he wrote in the concluding
paragraph of the essay,
I cherish my country more than any of you… But it is also true
that the patriotic feeling which animates me is not exactly the same as the one
whose shouts have upset my quiet existence… I have not learned to love my
country with my eyes closed, my head bowed, and my mouth shut. I think that one
can be useful to one’s country only if one sees it clearly; I believe that the
age of blind love has passed, and that nowadays one owes one’s country the truth.
I confess that I do not feel that smug patriotism, that lazy patriotism, which
manages to make everything beautiful, which falls asleep on its illusions and
with which unfortunately many of our good souls are afflicted today (cited in Giffin
and Smith, 1971, p.316)
In
the essay that follows, I deplore what I regard as a growing tendency among
Cameroonians to equate expression of dissent with lack of patriotism. I insist that to
criticize one’s country is in itself an act of patriotism. To criticize Cameroon
is to do it a service and pay it a compliment. It is
service because it may spur the country’s leaders to perform better than it is
doing; it is a compliment because it evidences a belief that the country can do
better. In a genuine democracy, dissent is an act of faith; it creates room for
checks and balances. Like medication, the test of its efficacy does not reside
in its taste but in its effects. The test of its value is not how it makes
people feel at the moment, but how it inspires them to act together in the long
term. Criticism may embarrass the folks
at the helm in Cameroon in the short run but it will strengthen their hands in
the long run; it may destroy a consensus on policy while expressing a consensus
of values. There lies the ambivalence of the term ‘patriotism.’ Woodrow Wilson
once said that there was “such a thing as being too proud to fight;”[i] there is also, or ought to
be, such a thing as being too confident to conform, too strong to be silent in
the face of apparent error. In sum, criticism is more than a right; it is an
act of patriotism, a higher form of patriotism that may elude the feeble-minded.
Criticism connotes a higher degree of patriotism than the familiar rituals of
national adulation.
I may shock some of my readers by insisting that it is not a
pejorative term but a tribute to say that Cameroon is worthy of criticism.
Nonetheless, if I am charged with lack of patriotism on account of my conviction,
I would respond with words borrowed from Albert Camus: “No, I didn’t love my country,
if pointing out what is unjust in what we love amounts to not loving, if
insisting that what we love should measure up to the finest image we have of
her amounts to not loving…”(1974).The root causes of Cameroon’s pitiful
performance on the international scene are not a mystery to any keen observer
of the political circus that the country has become— tribalism, corruption,
impunity, myopia, mutual distrust, constitutional rape and blind allegiance to
inept leaders. My question is not whether or not Cameroon can overcome all the
fatalities associated with arrogance of incumbency. My concern is the modus
operandi needed for this beautiful but misdirected country to get out of the
quagmire.
I believe that Cameroon
has all it takes to be a great nation; I also believe that it is falling short
of its priced ideals—good governance, accountability to citizens, fair play and
sustainable development. Gradually but unmistakably, we are succumbing to the
epidemic of power abuse perpetrated by the Beti[ii] oligarchy in Yaoundé. In
doing so Cameroon is not living up to her capacity and promises to its
citizenry. The measure of the shortcomings of our leaders is the measure of the
patriot’s duty of dissent. The intellectual has a critical role to play in
blowing the whistle on the failings of our leaders. The role of the
intellectual in enlightening the rank and file and setting records straight for
posterity is crucial. In doing so, the genuine intellectual must strive to
distinguish himself/herself from "okrika" or "kokobioko"
intellectuals.[iii]
In the work referenced above, Said examines the ever-changing role of the bona
fide intellectual in the task of nation-building. He suggests a recasting of
the intellectual's vision to resist the lures of power and money. Said
concludes that it is the role of the intellectual to be the voice of integrity
and courage, able to speak out against those in power.
The discharge of this vital duty is seriously handicapped
by an unworthy tendency to fear serious criticism of our government. In the
abstract we celebrate the freedom of expression that was won at a great price
in the 1990s following the launch of John Fru Ndi’s Social Democratic Front
(SDF) party.[iv]
Prior to this era, intolerance of dissent had been a well noted feature of
Cameroonian national character. Joseph Richard (1978) attributes this state of
affairs to the reign of terror for which the Ahmadou Ahidjo regime was
notorious. Cameroon lived with a hangover of this period until the Ntarikon
watershed event.[v]
Profound changes have occurred in the wake of the Ahidjo regime yet it remains
to be proven whether or not the recognition of the right of dissent has gained
substantially in practice as well as in theory. I believe that our school
system can be indicted in this respect. It seems to me that our universities
are churning out products that are lacking in rigorous independent thinking.
Universities have a special obligation to train potential public servants in
strategic thinking and equip them with the wherewithal to dissociate loyalty to
an organization from blind allegiance to personality cult. It is an extremely
important service for the universities to perform because the most valuable
public servant, like the true patriot, is one who gives a higher loyalty to his
country’s ideals than to its current policy and who, therefore, is willing to
criticize as well as to comply.
In a nutshell, suffice it to say that we must nurse
the germ of dissent that lies in gestation in all of us. We must come to terms
with the fact that patriotism can be interpreted in two ways. If it is
interpreted to mean unquestioning support of existing policies, its effects can
only be pernicious and undemocratic, serving to accentuate differences rather
than reconcile them. If, on the other hand, patriotism is understood to mean
love for one’s country that pushes one to always
demand the highest standards of one’s country, and to accept nothing but the
best from one’s leaders, then and only then does it become a lasting basis of
national strength. Or as Mark Twain would have it, “It were not best that we
should all think alike; it is difference of opinion that makes horse-races” (Giffin
and Smith, 320). Like Chaadayev, I do not believe in smug patriotism; I abhor
that lazy patriotism which manages to make everything seem beautiful— patriotism
that falls asleep on its illusions. I was raised to question authority and will
continue to hold leaders of the country that I love the
most—Cameroon—accountable. I have done so in A Nation at Risk: A Personal Narrative of the Cameroonian Crisis (2012)
and will continue to do so until the powers-that-be in Cameroon regain their
sanity.
About the author
Dr. Peter Wuteh Vakunta is a professor at the United States Department of Defense Language Institute in California, USA.
Notes
[ii] Ethnic group of the incumbent
[iv]The Social Democratic (SDF) Front is the main opposition party in
Cameroon. It is led by Ni John Fru Ndi and receives significant support from
the Anglophone regions of the country. The SDF was launched in Bamenda on May
26, 1990 in opposition to the ruling Cameroon People's Democratic
Movement. Following the launching rally, six people were killed by security
forces.
[v]
This author has fictionalized this episode in his book of poems titled Ntarikon: Poetry for the downtrodden (2008).
Works
cited
Achebe, Chinua. An Image of Africa and the Trouble with Nigeria. London: Penguin
Books,
1983.
Camus, Albert. Resistance, Rebellion and Death (Translated from the French by Justin
Obrien).New York:
Vintage Books, 1974.
Chomsky, Noam. The Common Good. Tuscon: Odonian Press, 1996.
Giffin C. Frederick and Ronald D. Smith.
Against the Grainst: An Anthology of
Dissent, Past
and
Present. New York: New American Library, 19701.
Joseph, Richard. Gaullist Africa: Cameroon under Ahmadou Ahidjo. Enugu: Fourth
Dimension
Publishers, 1978.
Said, W. Edward. Representations
of the Intellectual. New York: Pantheon Books, 1994.
Vakunta, W. Peter W. A Nation at Risk: A Personal Narrative of
the Cameroonian Crisis.
Bloomington:
I-Universe, 2012.
_______________. Ntarikon: Poetry for the Downtrodden. Bloomington: AuthorHouse,
2008.
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