Thursday, May 31, 2012

Armed Conflicts in the Great Lakes Region: Effects on Communal Cultural Arts Practices


In this article, I argue that armed conflicts whether desired or undesired do not only affect the psyche of the demographic constituents where they exist, but their effects stretch to deform the knowledge, belief and cultural taxonomy of the communities therein. This editorial is set against my experience working with communities in post armed conflict areas of Southern Sudan, parts of northern Uganda, and my extensive literary reading about the implications, architecture, complexities, and simplicities of armed conflicts in the great lakes region. I would like to emphasize that my interaction with communities in these areas was not research based. Rather, it was consultancy based in some cases, and mere participation in arts related activities in others. In this bend, I am not crafting this piece as a research product. This narrative is just an ongoing purification of what my exposure to grassroots realities in these communities gave forth.

The great lakes region has been ravaged in armed conflicts for more than two decades.  Southern Sudan, northern Uganda, the entire Eastern corridor of Democratic Republic of Congo to its foot in Burundi have been drowned in misty of political misdemeanor, tribal apprehension, interstate trepidation, and guerrilla combat.

It is estimated that more than 3 million people have surrendered their lives to this hazardous vice. Even with the end of war in northern Uganda in 2005, and the signing of the CPA between Sudan People’s Liberation Movement and government of Sudan in 2005, which paved way for the independence of Southern Sudan in July 2011, tributaries of political and military turbulence, fragility, tension, and volatility in the region are still gushing.

The internal tribal bickering in the new state of Southern Sudan and the confrontational altercation between Sudan (Northern Sudan) and Southern Sudan does not intersperse any waters of political and military optimism.  In the same blend, the militarization of issues and conditions that are craving for political remedies seems to be falling flat in providing the key to the paradise of peace.

Implications of armed conflicts on cultural arts

Certainly, it is lucid that the armed conflicts had deleterious corollaries on the compositional, preservational and performance processes of the cultural arts within the communities that were affected. In any armed conflict, survival of the individual, and by extension the community, takes precedent over food, clothing and shelter-the basic necessities. It is a continuous struggle to have clasp over life even without essential necessities.

The psyche of innocent war victims is preoccupied with constant search for life, which relegates basic necessities of life to privileges or/and luxuries. In war desolated areas, people were sandwiched between the struggle to survive and the constant threat to their existence. Consequently, cultural arts did fall prey of this psycho-social gradient. Surprisingly, the civil service sector, government, church, and other stakeholders have paid miniature or zilch consideration to this cultural attrition. Yet, any society without cultural arts is a society without memories, history, and heritage.  

One of the effects of armed conflicts in great lakes region was forced migration, which left thousands of people homeless. In northern Uganda, forced migration gave birth to internally displaced camps (IDPs). It is worth propounding that the survival and relevance of cultural arts highly leans against the geographical location of its participants. In this vein, communities demarcate or/and identify, for example, some sites/monuments that catalyze their artistic creativity, philosophies, ideologies, democratic, aesthetic, and bureaucratic. Alienation from native cultural spaces did not only impinge on the psyche and kinesthetic of the forced migrants, but precipitated estrangement from cultural history and heritage. Worst still, performance spaces and opportunities for the arts were fatally constricted. 

                                  Internally displaced persons camp in northern Uganda.

Reigniting cultural craftwo/manship in the new geographical and cultural spaces became difficult for the forced migrants as a result of disconnection from their cultural monuments, context and sites that accommodated performance. Likewise, since cultural arts were contextually situated, the slight budge in compositional and performance contexts altered the form, shape, purpose, rationale, and structure of these art forms. These contextual undulations exterminated some key aspects of cultural arts in some cases, and changed the indigenous textual outlook and relevance in others.   

Moreover, the upshot of armed conflict on the social structures (family and community) cannot be underestimated. The practical and theoretical foundation of cultural arts is anchored in the family and community structures. Like other communities in sub Saharan Africa, communities in the great lakes region rely on communal philosophical filament to lubricate individual and communal artistry.

Couple with other belief systems, this ethno-ideological attitude fashions the knowledge system that gives birth to cultural arts. In this regard, the arts do not only reflect the culture of the people but they also exemplify the social, political, economic and theological nomenclature of the communities where the people come from. The interface between the ethno-psyche of the people and the entire surrounding infrastructure is reciprocal – a ping-pong between ‘ethno-with-ins’ and ‘ethno-with-outs’ or ethnic software and ethnic hardware. Because armed conflicts preoccupy the mind with self survival, the concept of ‘others’ is reflexively lost in this psycho-mental reformulation process.

Homelessness, which is characteristic of communities in armed conflicts grinds down the foundation of family, and erodes the pillars of community – a threat to the rich treasure and trait of communalism. Suffocated in this socio-communal collapse and constant shift in the mindset of the body demographic, some cultural arts have slid, fell and buried in ditches of imperceptible history.

At a micro level, armed conflicts have robed communities of skilled and knowledgeable individuals. The most potent threat of any armed conflict is its power to disorganize, dis-empower and disable the already established knowledge, value and support systems of a given community. Suffice to note is that that even survivors in any war, if at all, are constantly fixated with persistent pursuit for self survival.

As such, communal apprenticeship in cultural arts in areas of armed conflicts has been dissuaded in the process. To this end,   demise of people has carried with it treasured cultural knowledge and skills. The knowledge lacunas that emanated from this state of affairs, in some cases, have become too deep and wide to bung. Progressively, this fissure has plunged perilous holes in communal cultural identity, and the construction and propagation chain of cultural knowledge and skills that are enveloped in the arts.

The verity that armed conflicts have rapped, mugged, and asphyxiated cultural arts in the great lakes region is unobjectionable. The ugly hand of wars has extended to chock cultural arts – the indigenous software that facilitates existence of mankind. Yet, the arts have the potential to address conditions that steer armed conflicts. As communities are healing from the wounds inflicted on them by armed conflicts, cultural arts can be the doctor, nurse, medicine, and surgical knife plaster that can hasten the curative procedure. BUT this can only see light if the arts are given chance.

Alfdaniels Mabingo is a  Fulbright Fellow at New York University.

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