"Kingdoms without justice are like criminal gangs --- remove justice, and what are kingdoms but gangs of criminals on a large scale?" St. Augustine, "City of God"
Reading this epic work by Martin Meredith, this quote echoed in my mind since it sadly rings too true with respect to so much of African history since independence.
This work is one of the finest histories I've ever read. Meredith manages successfully to tell the story of Africa since independence from the European powers in a way that captures in the import and humanity within each chapter --- but without getting inside baseball such that the reader gets lost.
While I am a history buff and have been since childhood, Africa has not been much in my reading. I grew up in the 70s and 80s --- the stories of Africa during that time: war, genocide, pestilence, famine. To my mind, if the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse owned an entire continent, then surely it would be Africa. The challenges and bottomless abyss of woe and suffering stunned my mind into insensibility. Like an aviation colleague of mine who served in Iraq, and describing its dysfunctionality, he'd just say "It's Iraq". And that has been my reaction on reading, most often in the back page of too many newspapers, "It's Africa".
But I think it's worth digging deeper than that, and Meredith fills that need. He goes in detail over Africa's history from World War 2 to 2010, covering the major crisis points with skill and objectivity.
If you asked the average person, why does Africa have so many problems, most might well answer, "Colonialism". And to some extent, colonialism has profoundly effected African nations. For one thing, most of what little infrastructure existed at independence was designed by colonial rulers with the purpose of transporting the colony's raw materials from the interior to the ports. This gave a new nation something, but not much to work with at independence. Another problem was the low level of education in Africa in the aftermath of colonialism ---- in a continent of 200 million, there were only 8,000 African college graduates ---- this in a continent that would have taxed the best of the best of the world's best academic institutions, so formidable the challenges faced by these newly independent African countries.
Another problem facing these newly independent countries was the lack of stable, universally accepted institutions --- there seems in most little common notion of rule of law, respect for property rights, pluralism, etc.
As one reads this chronicle, one keeps thinking, "Well, why don't they just try this" ---- only to find that something like it had been tried, only for it to fail. It's a humbling intellectual exercise ---- that nation building is very, very difficult --- and with respect to some of these nations, virtually impossible.
The most damaging feature of post-independence Africa, as Meredith relates, is the "Big Man" phenomenon --- where some demagogue, fanatic, rebel leader, or military general seizes power and, with their entourage, proceeds to pillage the nation. For every story you may have heard in Africa about this --- trust me --- it's just the tip of the iceberg. In most of Africa, it's done shamelessly and flagrantly --- the wealth of generations of Africans and the amazing raw material wealth in crops , diamonds, gold, oil --- wasted in corruption and theft.
But I found myself asking "Why" on this. And Meredith alludes to some answers: the lack of institutions that provide checks and balances -- and a standard by which their society can say "no"; the division of most countries along tribal lines, and exploitation of such weaknesses by both the "Big Men" and by outside powers (in some cases).
There are many shocking stories in this book. The Rwandan Holocaust was horrifying --- imagine if your neighbors turned on you without warning because of whatever ethnic or racial group you are in --- and went after you with lawn instruments, axes, machetes, clubs to kill you and your family --- no safe place to flee to -- not churches, not hospitals, not the police. I can't describe better than Meredith does in this book.
The account of the Congo Civil War also breathtaking. More people have died in that war than any war since WW2. I'll wager most don't know a thing about it. I knew little if anything. Until now.
Sadly, most African countries seem never to have had a Cincinnatus, George Washington, or Gandhi who could see beyond their own enrichment or empowerment to building a nation that could last with strength and a future.
There was one bright spot --- South Africa. That's not to say this nation is a paradise by any means.....but Nelson Mandela did build something there --- managing to keep corruption under control, build the economy, and avoid white flight of that nation's professional class.
I could go on, but I've said enough. This is book is an epic work. I do think it one of the finest histories I've read. Very thought provoking --- very, very interesting. And I do have hope for Africa --- that Africans are and will find their own way, on their own terms building societies that have learned from the bloody past, that will be stronger and better by the end of this century.