Kwarne Nkrumah - 'African Socialist'
...when the time comes and the history of international socialism and
the revolution to overthrow capitalism is written at the head of course will be names like
Marx, there will be names like Engels, there will be the name of Lenin. But a place will
have to be found for Kwame Nkrumah...
CL.R. James, Accra, 1960.
This declaration by CL.R. James, one-time associate of Leon Trotsky,
was remarkable. Not since the panegyrics to Stalin had individuals been greeted with such
extravagant language. Even more amazing was the elevation of a man whose
'contribution'; to socialism was nationalist, traditional and communalist, and whose
message to other African leaders was:
Aim for the attainment of the Political Kingdom that is to say, the complete
independence and self-determination of your territories. When you have achieved the
Political Kingdom all else will follow...But this power which you will achieve is not in
itself the end...Coupled with this will to independence is an equal desire for some form
of African union...within the milieu of a social system suited to the traditions, history,
environment, and communalistic pattern of African society.
(Hands off Africa!, Accra, 1961)
James soon tired of Nkrumah and his eccentricities, and sought new
African leaders to place on the pedestal alongside Marx and Engels. Yet it was the career
of Nkrumah, who caught the imagination of socialists throughout Europe, that needs
discussion if there is to be an understanding of this crucial phase in the life of C.L.R.
On 6 March 1957, Kwame Nkrumah, founder and leader of the Convention
Peoples Party (CPP), became Prime Minister in the newly named state of Ghana. On the same
day the book,
Ghana: the Autobiography of Kwame Nkrumah, was published and, whether
intended or not, for the next ten years the names of Ghana and Nkrumah were always coupled
together. Then, in 1966, Nkrumah was toppled in a bloodless coup and went into exile.
Whether his name will be added to that of Marx, Engels, Lenin , … must be doubted.
James was reflecting the adulation shown the man in 1960, when African news figured
prominently in the left-wing press and the career of Kwame Nkrumah was followed avidly,
not only because of events in that small corner of west Africa, but because commentators
believed that something new always comes of Africa, and this was the newest of all the new
things to shake the world.
Nkrumah's political aims could be found in his many publications, all
carrying the same message. Ghana was to be a socialist state based on social justice and
democracy. Not the socialism of Marx, he said, but a socialism with a strong moral base to
bring real justice to the people of Africa. All this would be achieved through the
assertion of the 'African Personality` which will allow us in the future to play a
positive
role and speak with a concerted voice in the cause of peace and for the liberation of
dependent Africa and in defense of our national independence, sovereignty, and territorial
integrity' (quoted in Woddis, 1963, p.119).
Socialists in Europe and America who applauded the way in which he had
campaigned since 1951, when the CPP won its first electoral success, were fulsome in their
praise of the first socialist state in Africa. There were some reservations, but most
commentators were prepared to give him the benefit of the doubt. There was further
optimism in socialist quarters 18 months later when Sékou Touré, an 'African Socialist'
and former trade union leader persuaded the people of Guinea to vote against entry to the
proposed French Community. Touré who had once had connections with the French communist
Confédération Génerale des Travailleurs, rejected the class struggle - which only
divided the people in the struggle against colonialism. In line with Franz Fanon, he
declared that the most exploited sectors of society were the peasants and women, and not
the workers. As for the latter, Touré announced in 1958 that he would institute forced
labour...for the benefit of those who are going to work themselves' (quoted in Andrain, p.
172).
There was nothing in what Touré said that fitted with Marx’s
thoughts, but here too the voice of critics was stilled. In fact, so great was the
sympathy for Guinea, where the departing French administrators had destroyed every
available amenity, from telephones to toilets, that Touré 's stance came to symbolize the
forces of anti-colonialism. Then, when he turned to Moscow for aid and secured the
co-operation of Nkrumah, his standing among western socialists rose. The signing of an
agreement on 1 May 1959 to unite Ghana and Guinea brought paeans of praise from socialist
writers.
There might have been some doubts when the terms of the agreement
between these states became known. There was no statement on social policy, and no sign of
socialism in the new union. That was not all. Six weeks later, President Tubman of Liberia
- known more for the tyranny of his regime and his rejection of socialism -joined
Presidents Nkrumah and Touré in setting up a loose federation of West African states
under the terms of the Sanniquellie Declaration.
If there were reservations about some of Nkrumah's activities there was
consolation for the defenders of African Socialism, as the new ideology was named. In
April 1958 Nkrumah convened a conference of the eight independent African states at which
there was a declaration of loyalty to the UN, to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
and to the Afro-Asian Conference at Bandung. Resolutions were affirmed condemning
colonialism, calling for a just end to the war in Algeria, for the granting of
independence to all trusteeship territories, for an end to racism in South Africa, Kenya,
the Central African Federation and so on. This was followed by the All-Africa Peoples
Conference in December attended by governments and non-governmental bodies from across the
continent. There were calls for the liberation of the Continent, the building of a
Commonwealth of Free African States and the use of all means short of violence to secure
these aims. 'The slogan 'Africa for the Africans' became the battle cry of the gathering.
Most of the known African personalities were present and many made their first public
appearance. One delegate who achieved prominence in the months to come was Patrice Lumumba
who returned home to Leopoldville (Belgian Congo) to address an ecstatic crowd. The
enthusiasm with which socialists greeted these leaders makes strange reading today.
However, it would be wrong to ignore the mood of the time. History was being made, they
all declared: Africa was on the march, new centres of socialist struggle were opening up
which would take up the fading spark in Europe and light up the world.
Nkrumah was never out of the news for long. Modiba Keita of Mali joined
with Ghana and Guinea in a new union of supposedly socialist states which formed the
nucleus of the Casablanca group. This 'vanguard' for progress in Africa, which gave full
support to Lumumba, included Morocco, Egypt, Libya (under King Idris) and the National
Liberation Front of Algeria. Lumurnba, whose martyrdom excludes any possibility of knowing
what he might have achieved, was the adoptive darling of the left and an additional name
for the champions of socialism in Africa to revere.
In a period just short of five years the enthusiasm for African
Socialism spread among radical groups. Those that raised critical voices were sectarian,
dogmatic, scholastic, or just foolish. How could anyone dare to question the credentials
of Nkrurnah, Touré, Keita, Ben Bella, Lumumba or Felix Moumié of the Cameroons? Had they
not gone into the countryside and won mass support, organised their fellow countrymen into
mass movements (or a revolutionary army in Algeria), had they not embarked on campaigns
that humbled the imperialist powers? Were they not champions of world peace and opponents
of the atom bomb. Did they not condemn apartheid, revile the Belgians, support the
Algerians in their battles? Even Nasser joined the ranks of the near-socialists. He had
rid Egypt of a corrupt monarchy, nationalized the Suez Canal, withstood the assault of
Britain France and Israel, and joined the Casablanca group. Why, he even turned to Moscow
for aid and assistance in building the Aswan dam, and that alone qualified him for the
appellation: socialist.
What if these erstwhile socialists imprisoned opponents, shackled trade
unions, banned strikes, outlawed communist parties? These had to be accepted as part of
the price of liberation, as the necessary consequence of the struggle against imperialism.
Had the masters not said that 'freedom was the understanding of necessity.' Idris Cox of
the British Communist Party could not find praise enough for Nkrumah. He described his
book
Consciencisin as a 'creative contribution in the field of philosophy, in the
application of Marxism to the specific conditions of Africa.' His considered opinion was
that:
Because Nkrumah sought to translate Marxism into African terms it gave
the African peoples something which
belonged to them, a
scientific outlook
which can guide them on the march towards socialism. Not only was it an enrichment of
Marxism. It also served to demonstrate that Marxism is not a rigid dogma, but a guide to
action, and a beacon light which illuminates the path to socialism (Cox, p.88).
Publications from Moscow were only slightly less enthusiastic.
Academician I. Ia. Potekhin, as quoted by D. Morrison, declared that the CPP programme
included not only the demand for the elimination of imperialism
and oppression, but
also the liquidation of capitalist exploitation and the building of a socialist society
(p.89). In a final accolade, when Potekhin met Nkrumah in December 1962 he said of him,
and of Keita, that they were `scientific socialists'.
There were several features copied from the USSR that appealed to
Stalinists. The new 'socialist' societies were all one-party states presided over by
dominant leaders, all claimed to exercise democratic centralism, all co-opted trade unions
into the state structure and outlawed strikes, and several introduced five- or seven-year
plans and state farms in imitation of the USSR. Furthermore, they condemned colonialism
and imperialism, welcomed aid from and tended to side with the USSR on cold-war issues,
and supported the causes approved by Moscow: for the FLN, for Lumumba, for Nasser, against
apartheid and against the regimes in East Africa and the Rhodesias.
Significantly, none of the Stalinist writers mentioned the influence on
Nkrumah of George Padmore (see
Searchlight South Africa No.2) or of C.L.R. James,
who had become a close associate of Padmore and was a champion of pan-Africanism. They
were not only present in Accra, speaking, advising, exhorting. their activities and
opinions played an important part in establishing Nkrumah's place in Africa.
James and the African'Revolution'
CL.R. James, born on 4 January 1901 in Trinidad, was an early
protagonist of West Indian self-government. In 1932 he moved to Britain and was profoundly
affected by his reading of
Trotsky’s History of the Russian Revolution. He
joined a Trotskyist group in the British Independent Labour Party in 1933/4 and proposed
at this stage that the black people could only achieve freedom by revolutionary means.
Angered by the Italian invasion of Ethiopia in 1935 he joined with Padmore and others in
forming a propaganda group, the International African Friends of Ethiopia. The Ethiopian
army was faced with might of a technologically superior army and was forced to surrender;
but black opinion had been aroused. The led to the formation of the International African
Bureau [IAB] to supply information on affairs in Africa and agitate for
self-determination. George Padmore was President of the IAB and James, who was editor of
the IAB journal, remained in Trotskyist groups and states that he 'worked on the
application of Marxist and Leninist ideas to the coming African revolution' (James, 1977,
p.64.) Remarkably, the `Marxism' that James offered Africa was devoid of the
internationalism that he demanded for the European revolution.
Within a decade ideas propounded by Padmore, and the black
intellectual, WEB. DuBois inside the Pan-African movement, led to changed orientations on
Africa. James now said that the leading role of the proletariat in effecting change was
scrapped as was the need for armed struggle to effect change (ibid, pp.74-5). Precisely
when James 'saw the light' is not certain. In his writings before the war he concentrated
on the history of the slave revolt in San Domingo, and what he wrote about Africa
consisted of gobbets, some true, many erroneous, on local uprisings in African colonies.
At no point did he stop to place these events in their social setting, and although he
said it was not his aim to show that Africans were capable of revolt, this was precisely
what he seemed to be doing (James, 1939).
James straddled two political philosophies: that of nationalism in his
African writings, and that of Marxism in his writings on Europe. His statements in
discussion with Trotsky in 1940 indicates that he did not manage to reconcile them. He
wanted Trotskyist support for the IBA journal, but without mention of socialism; he sought
a black organization in the USA which included all classes and agitated for the
advancement of all blacks (James, 1980). Trotsky disagreed with James on these points, but
he did stress again, as he had done in earlier discussions with members of the American
left opposition, that American blacks should be given full support if they expressed a
desire for their own independent state. Eventually James accepted this and it could only
have reinforced his own nationalist inclinations.
James eventually left the Trotskyist movement in 1950, by which time he
had extended the views developed in the Pan-African movement. There was no need for
revolution anywhere in the world. The masses had demonstrated their ability for
self-organization and this would come to permeate all society. All that was needed was for
organizers to spread the word. The new proponent of this philosophy, in James's view, was
Kwame Nkrumah. Thus it was, that in July 1960 James could deliver his tribute, an extract
from which heads this article. But it was also a speech of self-glorification. If Nkrumah
was to be raised to the Gods, there was to be no uncertainty about who had placed him
there. I quote:
My friends, I want to tell you: I have written, and there are people here who know it,
a history of the Communist International. It begins with the study of Marx. It went on to
the study of the Second International which originated and was inspired by Engels, and it
went on to make a close study of the Third international which was established by Lenin. I
want to say here and I want to say it most emphatically that when the time comes and the
history of international socialism and the revolution to overthrow capitalism is written
at the head of course will be names like Marx, there will be names like Engeh, there will
be the name of Lenin. But a place will have to be found for Kwame Nkrumah...[drowned by
applause and shouts]. I state, as one who has studied the history of the revolutionary
movement, that at the present time those policies that I have enunciated for you, those
policies that you know spring from here are fundamental policies for the emancipation of
all classes and all oppressed people in the world. And that today- I don't say yesterday,
I don't say tomorrow, but I say today, the centre of the world revolutionary struggle is
here in Accra, Ghana ... [Loud applause]
Although James was to change his mind about Nkrumah - for whom a place
would apparently not have to be found alongside Marx, Engels and Lenin; he nonetheless had
the essay reprinted in the collection of essays in 1962, which went through four printings
by 1977. The tone of the passage, and much more in the essay, is distasteful; but if the
boasting is put aside, it is not easy to reconcile James's elevation of personalities with
his claims to Marxist analysis. This 'cult of the individual' (If that phrase has any
meaning) is more befitting to the Stalin cult that James had once condemned. Nor did James
expand on the ideas that Nkrumah was supposed to have contributed (alongside Marx, Engels
and Lenin), and he did not indicate how the new state of Ghana had become the 'centre of
world revolutionary struggle; whatever revolutionary struggle meant for him.
James began to have his doubts about Nkrumah's policies in the early
1960s: views he communicated in letters to the President, but Nkrumah did not deign to
reply. The book on Ghana, says James, was concluded at a time when he 'feared for the
future of Africa under African auspices, a fear which was immediately justified by the
fall of Nkrumah' (James, 1977, p.24). Another God had faded and in James's favour it must
be said that he distanced himself from the coming downfall where others continued in their
praise of this failed leader. But for some unstated reason James does not discuss the
roles played by Touré, or Keita, or any of the other 'socialist' leaders in Africa. The
dream had been shattered and James only wanted to distance himself from what had happened.
But aid was at hand. James continued:
My bewilderment, however, was almost immediately soothed by the
appearance of the Arusha declaration of Dr Nyerere. Before very long, on my way to lecture
at Makerere, I was able to pass into Tanzania and read, hear and see for myself what was
going on. I remain now, as I was then, more than ever convinced that something new has
come out of Africa,
Step up Comrade Nyerere and take your place alongside Marx, Engels,
Lenin ... and Nkrumah?
The Roots of Ideology
These writings of James on Africa, muddled and wrong, are all the more
objectionable for their concentration on individuals who come to personify the state.
Nkrumah had claimed that the CPP was Ghana and Ghana was the CPP. James equated Nkrumah
with the CPP and when the leader failed to build the new society, James found a new leader
for Africa in east Africa. The same personification was found elsewhere. Discussions of
Guinea were converted into appraisals of Touré ; Mali into a sketch of Keita; Algeria
into a backdrop of Ben Bella. It was the ideas of these men that were quoted ad
nauseam:
plans for their countries, the meaning of socialism, their conception of
democracy, the role of the trade unions, the attitude to peace, to neutralism, to African
unity. This substitution of the party for the people and the leader for the party was a
phenomenon that had taken root under Stalinism. It had taken hold in ever wider circles of
writers who chose to ignore the social setting in which events occurred and ascribed
success to charisma. As if a God-like favour was all that was needed to explain the
emergence of particular leaders.(2)
The one factor common to colonial Africa was the predominance of the
rural population. There were regions of these territories in which the colonial
administration had been largely absent and where control was maintained through indirect
rule. There were other districts in which the heavy hand of Commissioners was always
apparent. But few regions were insulated from the needs and demands of the cash market,
and there was widespread discontent in almost every colony. It is not always clear whether
the aspiring leaders set out to capture the rural constituencies, or whether the process
was reversed. In at least one well researched area, in the Kwilu district of what was the
Belgian Congo, it is obvious that it was the radicalized rural population that forced the
urban based leaders to advance ever more radical slogans. (Weiss, passim).
To attract this vast constituency national leaders adopted tribal
dress, used ceremonial libations, shook fly whisks, sang tribal songs, adopted tribal
titles. They preached the virtues of the rural communalism: Nyerere extolled the mutual
security of the rich and the poor, in which the community ensured the welfare of its
members. This was supposed to have pre-existed colonialism and he called it the
communitary society. Touré spoke of the communaucratic society with a 'unique
humanism...in collective living and social solidarity. 'In regions 'contaminated by
colonialism, personal egoism abounded, but otherwise 'an individual in Africa cannot
conceive of the organization of his life outside that of the family, village or clan. The
voice of the African is faceless and nameless' (quoted in Cowan, p.193). Nkrumah harked on
the same theme. Communalism, he wrote, involved the African:
as primarily a spiritual being, a being endowed originally with a
certain inward dignity, integrity and value...[Socialism] includes the restitution of the
egalitarian and humanist principles of traditional African life within the context of a
modem technological society serving the welfare needs of its people (Mohan, p.232).
The worker was viewed differently. Fanon, Senghor, Mboya, Touré and
others inveighed against a 'privileged minority, a 'selfish privileged group', who played
little part in overthrowing colonialism. Nyerere said of them that after independence they
'displayed a capitalist attitude of mind' demanding a greater share in the general income
because of the contribution they made. (Mohan, p245) Attitudes differed, but African
leaders were agreed that socialism did not involve working class control of production:
some because they said the working class was minute (and in this they were often factually
correct) or because they claimed that the workers were selfish. Behind much of this
rhetoric came the claim that there were no class divisions in Africa, and no class
struggle. Touré claimed that his party had 'adapted from Marxism everything that is true
for Africa' and had 'excised' the class struggle 'to permit all Africans regardless of
class to engage in the anti-colonial struggle’. (Cowan, p.189). Elsewhere he said
that the party had 'formally rejected the principle of the class struggle...' as a
European inspired doctrine that was not relevant to Africa (ibid).
These arguments were repeated by leaders in east and in central Africa.
I have not been concerned with the truth or falsity of the claims for `traditional
society', but with the fact that African leaders rested their cases on such statements and
that James did not refute them. This is remarkable: James knew full well that Engels had
said of the utopian socialists that their theories were constructed during the 'immature
phase of capitalist production' when class positions were correspondingly inchoate. Their
answers were utopian and 'the more their details are elaborated, the more they necessarily
recede into pure fantasy (Engels, pp23,285).
Such fantasy led Nkrumah to the conclusion that capitalism was `too
complicated a system for a newly independent nation. Hence the need for a socialist
society.' Others were more cavalier in their discussion of economic problems: 'You cannot
be a capitalist when you have no capital' said Sedou Kouyate, Mali’s Minister of
Planning and Rural Development - without explaining how planning or rural development was
possible without capital. Other Ministers used the arguments once advanced by the
Narodniki in Czarist Russia: Capitalism led to fratricidal struggle, to degradation and
social injustice, to personal enrichment. It was in this tradition that Nkrumah was to
write in
Consciencism that 'the presuppositions and purposes of capitalism are
contrary to those of African society. Capitalism would be a betrayal of the personality
and conscience of Africa' (see also Mohan, pp.221-2).
This word spinning circumvented the need to confront real problems.
These phrases provided no means to secure development in industry or in agriculture, and
no way to find food for the population. The 'personality and conscience of Africa' was a
myth that brought neither capital nor socialism to Ghana, did not solve its inter-regional
rivalries, did not appease the Ashanti cocoa growers, did not provide the aluminium plant
that Nkrumah tried to secure, and did not save him from the popular wrath.
A more extensive essay would show that similar fates were waiting for
other states that claimed they could build socialism in their little states, without
resources, without capital, and without a working class. Their failure could have been
anticipated by Marxist thinkers - and if local leaders did not have the understanding of
what was required, they were unfortunate in not finding the advisers they needed. Of James
it must be said that he more than any others, should have been better prepared to explain
the problems critically. His great disservice was to give political mysticism the sanction
of an apparent Marxist radicalism.
The problems of the 1960s,.when James, played a central role in Pan
African politics, are of more than historic interest. The theoretical confusion of the
left when confronted with class struggles in backward societies goes back to the polemics
in Russia before the revolution of 1917: an issue resolved in practice but leaving a
legacy of theoretical confusion. The struggles for colonial independence were denied the
insights that Marxism should have offered, Instead, mysticism prevailed and populist
theories replaced scientific analysis.