A Zimbabwe imprisoned by the past: I have suffered more under my brother's keep than I have suffered under the hands of the "enemy"
I am told by psychologists, that as we get older and become somewhat irrelevant or not as useful to society or important as before, there is a habitual response in our mind of trying to recreate the past.
This is because, the past affords us a false comfort, an illusion that we are still in control, needed and therefore important. We hide in it to avoid the truths that may face us. Anything that challenges that paradigm is therefore treated as a threat or an adversary, simply because it confirms our fears.
The grim truth is that, because the majority of our politicians are of the older generation, we continue to be imprisoned by the past in their imagination. To derive comfort, they must hide under the skirt of the liberation struggle lest they become exposed to the harsh reality of a new generation seeking an open and free society.
They must therefore do all they can to deny the existence of a reality they cannot fathom and resist the inevitability of change. Like a drunk holding on and scared to stagger on lest he falls, their minds refuse to accept a new reality and move ahead.
For me, that about sums up the root cause of our continued struggle in ushering a new democratic dispensation in Zimbabwe and the disagreements around our draft constitution. This is a clear indication that ZANU (PF) remains frozen in the past and refuses to acknowledge that the world has indeed moved on and that they must either move with it or be left behind.