By arguing in Harare last weekend that the African National Congress in South Africa should follow the lead of ZANU-PF in Zimbabwe, Julius Malema, the president of the ANC Youth League, has sabotaged the best values in the history of Africa's premier liberation movement and disgraced it.
In two years' time, the ANC and South Africa will celebrate the centenary of a political organisation which - despite serious tensions at different times - truly earned the title 'national' by which the Native National Congress described itself at its founding convention in 1912, as the organiser, advocate and champion of black emancipation and advancement.
The ANC deserved its title of being 'national', awarded nearly a century ago, since, as Pixley ka Isaka Seme pointed out in a major preparatory article, the feud between Xhosa and Mfengu was an aberration, while the animosity between Zulu and Tonga, and between Sotho and other black people in the country, needed to be buried and forgotten. "We are one people," Seme insisted. "These divisions, these jealousies, are the cause of all our woes and of all our backwardness and ignorance today". (Imvo Zabantsundu, 24 October 1911)
In four major steps - the Doctors' Pact in 1947 between Dr AB Xuma (president of the ANC), Dr GM Naicker (president of the Natal Indian Congress) and Dr Yusuf Dadoo (president of the Transvaal Indian Congress); the formation of Umkhonto we Sizwe in 1961 as a body of armed struggle open to all races; the Mororgoro conference of the ANC in 1969, by which general membership of the ANC was opened up to all races; and the Kabwe conference of 1985, by which the National Executive Committee of the ANC was made open to all races - the ANC further prepared itself as a party fit for national government, in terms of its founding ethic. Each step involved a further elaboration of the founding doctrine, elaborated by Seme: "We are one people".
Zimbabwe has never achieved a political organisation that could make a truth of this ethic.
Instead, under Robert Mugabe and the securocrats and military brutalists he represents, ZANU-PF was guilty of the biggest genocidal massacre in southern Africa since the Vernichtungsbefehl (or Extermination Order) of General Adrian Dietrich Lothar von Trotha against the Herero people in Namibia in 1904, an act that set the scene for the European Holocaust under Adolf Hitler.