I’ve often been fascinated by the world’s obsession with and reverence for the British monarchy and how people often see them as living the fairy-tale life of storybooks. For me, however, there is no warm, fuzzy glow that is induced by memories of the Queen or seeing the royal family and their inane shenanigans unfold in the news.
No tear will be shed for Queen Elizabeth by me. She was no benevolent, grandmotherly figure, merely a beneficiary and furtherer of colonial conquest that plunged millions of people on my continent and the Global South into the slavery, displacement and misery that still persists today.
This is what Queen Elizabeth and her forebears imposed on our country: a people who have been disenfranchised and generationally brutalised by colonialism and the conquest of empire. For me as a South African there is nothing to be revered about the British monarchy, as it symbolises the destruction of lives, the impact of which has left African people with constant anxiety as a result of being forced to live under foreign rule, which resulted in the deaths of many.
The pursuits of empire robbed us of self-determination and forced us into a system that only recognised us as human if we aspired to be perfect English gentlemen and ladies. So powerful was this imposed aspiration that Africans were forced to forsake their “barbaric” culture and be “civilised” by the British. This, in fact, was the premise of British novelist and poet Rudyard Kipling’s poem, The White Man’s Burden, in which he writes, “Your new-caught sullen peoples, Half devil and half child”, meaning that the British did not quite see Africans as humans but as heathens who lived a savage life. This was, of course, used as justification for colonialism and the inhumane treatment of Africans.
Read more in Daily Maverick: “The horror! The horror! The long colonial hangover”
The crown is also the reason we face such contention over land and displacement of people, because when the British arrived to colonise South Africa they declared that the land belonged to the Crown (Queen of England), someone who was not even of this continent.
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The death of the British Queen should provide a moment of reflection on monarchical rule, its real legacy and relevance in the present day. In my mind the idea of the rule of monarchy is anachronistic and at odds with my beliefs, as I ascribe to the values of constitutional and democratic governance. In other words, I don’t believe a person should govern based purely on lineage rather than demonstrable leadership and principled values that centre the needs of a country’s people.
We too have our monarchs in Africa, and they too should be examined to determine what tangible function they serve, be it as guardians of culture and traditions or the fostering of social cohesion and identity. Either way, a more nuanced discussion is required to determine each one’s role in the world today.
Read more in Daily Maverick: “UK welcomes open debate about its colonial past, says High Commissioner to SA”
I harbour no ill will towards the Queen on her death, merely an indifference, much the same as I felt on the death of apartheid’s last president, Frederik Willem de Klerk, in 2021. I will always remember what they represented. The passage of time and regimes will not erase that. DM168
This story first appeared in our weekly Daily Maverick 168 newspaper, which is available countrywide for R25.
Comments (7)
Oh please! I got to the second paragraph and fell asleep. It's the same old, same old. Just stop it already. I don't think the monarchy or the Brits care whether or not you shed a tear. It happened. It was dreadful. It can never change. Stop looking at the past. Look ahead, move on and succeed. But it's because of people like you that Africa will never ever succeed! Yaaaawn!
I wish the day will come that the People of Africa will stop hiding behind the skirts of colonisation and admit to their own failures, corrupt governments, looting, destruction of infrastructure and total disregard for the wellbeing of their own people. Its been over a hundred years…how many more do you need? Spend your energy on improving the future and not on flogging a dead horse.
Yawn. You take so long to say so little and predictably so.
I do not know what Zukiswa Pikoli thinks and her views. There is nobody who cares whether she sheds a tear or not for the Queen but those who held her in reverence and respected her have mourned her properly without needing her unsolicited opinion. The problem of Zukiswa Pikoli is illiteracy about the history of colonialism, the struggle for national liberation and how it was conducted and the role of the Commonwealth. The ANC and PAC had without fail attended the CHOGM meetings headed by the Queen and lobbied for sanctions leading to the appointment of the Eminent Person Group. In addition, the ANC and the PAC received assistance through educational and cultural exchange. The Commonwealth Trade Union Council gave assistance to COSATU and NACTU in terms of worker education through training and development of materials. Now whether the British should have a monarch is their choice because it works for them. To educate her further, Liz Truss as a student of the Liberal Party, she railed against the monarchy but she has changed her views as a member of the Conservative Party. Her vitriol must be tampered with reality that I have personally learnt as a freedom fighter. I personally watched the funeral that was watched by 4 billion people across the world. The outpouring of grief by Britons of all classes and the display of unity was amazing. I have not forgotten the colonial past that weighs on this country but we have a responsibility to our people not to have a lavatory mouth.
Agree completely. A journalist worth his or her salt should at least have a grasp of history before penning an article of this nature. I suggest a compulsory sabbatical organised by Daily Maverick. Possibly involving a critical reading of Martin Meredith's excellent "the state of Africa: a history of fifty years of independence". The book coincidentally shows a smiling Queen Elizabeth dancing with Kwame Nkrumah in 1961 and if he was still alive he may well have mourned her passing.
I agree with your rejection of "being born into status". However you cannot just single out Britain. No Kings, Queens, Chiefs, etc. Get rid of the lot, world wide that is.
Great column as always Zukiswa. You always give us food for thought, sometimes uncomfortable, but lots to chew on. More power to your pen!
You should be happy here in South Africa. We have been destroying the remnants of colonialism for almost 3 decades so successfully, you are most likely waking up this morning with one less bad "anti Zille" colonialist thing. "Electricity". Don't be fooled. I doubt the world is obsessed with British Monarchy except the British themselves. My feeling is that you have 2 chips on your shoulder. Firstly you have an issue with your own skin color and secondly you have an issue with a closet you crawled out of. Try to dust your chips off your shoulder and get your mind out of the gutter. Be more positive and try to write something positive for a change. Yesterday happened. We can do nothing about it. Tomorrow is another day and we can collectively start doing something about it today.