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12/8/12 The White Savior Industrial Complex -‐‑ Global -‐‑ The Atlantic

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The  White  Savior  Industrial Complex By  Teju  Cole If  we  are  going  to  interfere  in  the  lives  of  others,  a  little  due  diligence  is  a  minimum  requirement.

Left,  Invisible  Children's  Jason  Russell.  Right,  a  protest  leader  in  Lagos,  Nigeria  / Facebook,  AP

A  week  and  a  half  ago,  I  watched  the  Kony2012  video.  Afterward,  I  wrote  a  brief  seven-­part  response, which  I  posted  in  sequence  on  my  Twitter  account:

1-­  From  Sachs  to  Kristof  to  Invisible  Children  to  TED,  the  fastest growth  industry  in  the  US  is  the  White  Savior  Industrial  Complex.

Teju Cole @tejucole

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These  tweets  were  retweeted,  forwarded,  and  widely  shared  by  readers.  They  migrated  beyond

Twitter  to  blogs,  Tumblr,  Facebook,  and  other  sites;;  I'm  told  they  generated  fierce  arguments.  As  the

days  went  by,  the  tweets  were  reproduced  in  their  entirety  on  the  websites  of  the  Atlantic  and  the

2-­  The  white  savior  supports  brutal  policies  in  the  morning,

founds  charities  in  the  afternoon,  and  receives  awards  in  the

evening.

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3-­  The  banality  of  evil  transmutes  into  the  banality  of

sentimentality.  The  world  is  nothing  but  a  problem  to  be  solved  by

enthusiasm.

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4-­  This  world  exists  simply  to  satisfy  the  needs—including,

importantly,  the  sentimental  needs—of  white  people  and  Oprah.

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5-­  The  White  Savior  Industrial  Complex  is  not  about  justice.  It  is

about  having  a  big  emotional  experience  that  validates  privilege.

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6-­  Feverish  worry  over  that  awful  African  warlord.  But  close  to  1.5

million  Iraqis  died  from  an  American  war  of  choice.  Worry  about

that.

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7-­  I  deeply  respect  American  sentimentality,  the  way  one  respects

a  wounded  hippo.  You  must  keep  an  eye  on  it,  for  you  know  it  is

deadly.

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MORE  ON  THE  LORD'S RESISTANCE  ARMY

The  Decline  of

American

Nationalism:

Why  We  Love  to

Hate  Kony  2012

The  Soft  Bigotry

of  Kony  2012

Kony  2012:

Solving  War

Crimes  With

Wristbands

New  York  Times,  and  they  showed  up  on  German,  Spanish,  and  Portuguese  sites.  A  friend  emailed  to tell  me  that  the  fourth  tweet,  which  cheekily  name-­checks  Oprah,  was  mentioned  on  Fox  television.

These  sentences  of  mine,  written  without  much  premeditation,  had  touched  a  nerve.  I  heard  back from  many  people  who  were  grateful  to  have  read  them.  I  heard  back  from  many  others  who  were disappointed  or  furious.  Many  people,  too  many  to  count,  called  me  a  racist.  One  person  likened  me to  the  Mau  Mau.  The  Atlantic  writer  who'd  reproduced  them,  while  agreeing  with  my  broader  points, described  the  language  in  which  they  were  expressed  as  "resentment."

This  weekend,  I  listened  to  a  radio  interview  given  by  the  Pulitzer  Prize-­winning  journalist  Nicholas Kristof.  Kristof  is  best  known  for  his  regular  column  in  the  New  York  Times  in  which  he  often  gives accounts  of  his  activism  or  that  of  other  Westerners.  When  I  saw  the  Kony  2012  video,  I  found  it tonally  similar  to  Kristof's  approach,  and  that  was  why  I  mentioned  him  in  the  first  of  my  seven tweets.

Those  tweets,  though  unpremeditated,  were  intentional  in their  irony  and  seriousness.  I  did  not  write  them  to  score cheap  points,  much  less  to  hurt  anyone's  feelings.  I believed  that  a  certain  kind  of  language  is  too infrequently  seen  in  our  public  discourse.  I  am  a  novelist. I  traffic  in  subtleties,  and  my  goal  in  writing  a  novel  is  to leave  the  reader  not  knowing  what  to  think.  A  good  novel shouldn't  have  a  point.  

But  there's  a  place  in  the  political  sphere  for  direct  speech and,  in  the  past  few  years  in  the  U.S.,  there  has  been  a chilling  effect  on  a  certain  kind  of  direct  speech  pertaining to  rights.  The  president  is  wary  of  being  seen  as  the "angry  black  man."  People  of  color,  women,  and  gays  -­-­ who  now  have  greater  access  to  the  centers  of  influence that  ever  before  -­-­  are  under  pressure  to  be  well-­behaved when  talking  about  their  struggles.  There  is  an expectation  that  we  can  talk  about  sins  but  no  one  must be  identified  as  a  sinner:  newspapers  love  to  describe words  or  deeds  as  "racially  charged"  even  in  those  cases when  it  would  be  more  honest  to  say  "racist";;  we  agree that  there  is  rampant  misogyny,  but  misogynists  are nowhere  to  be  found;;  homophobia  is  a  problem  but  no one  is  homophobic.  One  cumulative  effect  of  this  policed language  is  that  when  someone  dares  to  point  out something  as  obvious  as  white  privilege,  it  is  seen  as unduly  provocative.  Marginalized  voices  in  America  have

12/8/12 The White Savior Industrial Complex -‐‑ Global -‐‑ The Atlantic

4/7www.theatlantic.com/international/print/2012/03/the-‐‑white-‐‑savior-‐‑industrial-‐‑complex/254843/

Obama's  War  on the  LRA

The  Bizarre  and Horrifying  Story of  the  LRA

fewer  and  fewer  avenues  to  speak  plainly  about  what  they suffer;;  the  effect  of  this  enforced  civility  is  that  those voices  are  falsified  or  blocked  entirely  from  the  discourse.

It's  only  in  the  context  of  this  neutered  language  that  my rather  tame  tweets  can  be  seen  as  extreme.  The interviewer  on  the  radio  show  I  listened  to  asked  Kristof if  he  had  heard  of  me.  "Of  course,"  he  said.  She  asked  him what  he  made  of  my  criticisms.  His  answer  was considered  and  genial,  but  what  he  said  worried  me  more than  an  angry  outburst  would  have:

There  has  been  a  real  discomfort  and  backlash among  middle-­class  educated  Africans,  Ugandans  in particular  in  this  case,  but  people  more  broadly, about  having  Africa  as  they  see  it  defined  by  a  warlord  who  does  particularly  brutal  things,  and about  the  perception  that  Americans  are  going  to  ride  in  on  a  white  horse  and  resolve  it.  To  me though,  it  seems  even  more  uncomfortable  to  think  that  we  as  white  Americans  should  not intervene  in  a  humanitarian  disaster  because  the  victims  are  of  a  different  skin  color.

Here  are  some  of  the  "middle-­class  educated  Africans"  Kristof,  whether  he  is  familiar  with  all  of  them and  their  work  or  not,  chose  to  take  issue  with:  Ugandan  journalist  Rosebell  Kagumire,  who  covered the  Lord's  Resistance  Army  in  2005  and  made  an  eloquent  video  response  to  Kony  2012;;  Ugandan scholar  Mahmood  Mamdani,  one  of  the  world's  leading  specialists  on  Uganda  and  the  author  of  a thorough  riposte  to  the  political  wrong-­headedness  of  Invisible  Children;;  and  Ethiopian-­American novelist  Dinaw  Mengestu,  who  sought  out  Joseph  Kony,  met  his  lieutenants,  and  recently  wrote  a brilliant  essay  about  how  Kony  2012  gets  the  issues  wrong.  They  have  a  different  take  on  what  Kristof calls  a  "humanitarian  disaster,"  and  this  may  be  because  they  see  the  larger  disasters  behind  it: militarization  of  poorer  countries,  short-­sighted  agricultural  policies,  resource  extraction,  the propping  up  of  corrupt  governments,  and  the  astonishing  complexity  of  long-­running  violent  conflicts over  a  wide  and  varied  terrain.

I  want  to  tread  carefully  here:  I  do  not  accuse  Kristof  of  racism  nor  do  I  believe  he  is  in  any  way  racist. I  have  no  doubt  that  he  has  a  good  heart.  Listening  to  him  on  the  radio,  I  began  to  think  we  could  iron the  whole  thing  out  over  a  couple  of  beers.  But  that,  precisely,  is  what  worries  me.  That  is  what  made me  compare  American  sentimentality  to  a  "wounded  hippo."  His  good  heart  does  not  always  allow him  to  think  constellationally.  He  does  not  connect  the  dots  or  see  the  patterns  of  power  behind  the isolated  "disasters."  All  he  sees  are  hungry  mouths,  and  he,  in  his  own  advocacy-­by-­journalism  way,  is putting  food  in  those  mouths  as  fast  as  he  can.  All  he  sees  is  need,  and  he  sees  no  need  to  reason  out the  need  for  the  need.

But  I  disagree  with  the  approach  taken  by  Invisible  Children  in  particular,  and  by  the  White  Savior

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Industrial  Complex  in  general,  because  there  is  much  more  to  doing  good  work  than  "making  a difference."  There  is  the  principle  of  first  do  no  harm.  There  is  the  idea  that  those  who  are  being helped  ought  to  be  consulted  over  the  matters  that  concern  them.

I  write  all  this  from  multiple  positions.  I  write  as  an  African,  a  black  man  living  in  America.  I  am every  day  subject  to  the  many  microaggressions  of  American  racism.  I  also  write  this  as  an  American, enjoying  the  many  privileges  that  the  American  passport  affords  and  that  residence  in  this  country makes  possible.  I  involve  myself  in  this  critique  of  privilege:  my  own  privileges  of  class,  gender,  and sexuality  are  insufficiently  examined.  My  cell  phone  was  likely  manufactured  by  poorly  treated workers  in  a  Chinese  factory.  The  coltan  in  the  phone  can  probably  be  traced  to  the  conflict-­riven Congo.  I  don't  fool  myself  that  I  am  not  implicated  in  these  transnational  networks  of  oppressive practices.

And  I  also  write  all  this  as  a  novelist  and  story-­writer:  I  am  sensitive  to  the  power  of  narratives. When  Jason  Russell,  narrator  of  the  Kony  2012  video,  showed  his  cheerful  blonde  toddler  a  photo  of Joseph  Kony  as  the  embodiment  of  evil  (a  glowering  dark  man),  and  of  his  friend  Jacob  as  the representative  of  helplessness  (a  sweet-­faced  African),  I  wondered  how  Russell's  little  boy  would develop  a  nuanced  sense  of  the  lives  of  others,  particularly  others  of  a  different  race  from  his  own. How  would  that  little  boy  come  to  understand  that  others  have  autonomy;;  that  their  right  to  life  is not  exclusive  of  a  right  to  self-­respect?  In  a  different  context,  John  Berger  once  wrote,  "A  singer  may be  innocent;;  never  the  song."

One  song  we  hear  too  often  is  the  one  in  which  Africa  serves  as  a  backdrop  for  white  fantasies  of conquest  and  heroism.  From  the  colonial  project  to  Out  of  Africa  to  The  Constant  Gardener  and  Kony 2012,  Africa  has  provided  a  space  onto  which  white  egos  can  conveniently  be  projected.  It  is  a liberated  space  in  which  the  usual  rules  do  not  apply:  a  nobody  from  America  or  Europe  can  go  to Africa  and  become  a  godlike  savior  or,  at  the  very  least,  have  his  or  her  emotional  needs  satisfied. Many  have  done  it  under  the  banner  of  "making  a  difference."  To  state  this  obvious  and  well-­attested truth  does  not  make  me  a  racist  or  a  Mau  Mau.  It  does  give  me  away  as  an  "educated  middle-­class African,"  and  I  plead  guilty  as  charged.  (It  is  also  worth  noting  that  there  are  other  educated  middle-­ class  Africans  who  see  this  matter  differently  from  me.  That  is  what  people,  educated  and  otherwise, do:  they  assess  information  and  sometimes  disagree  with  each  other.)

In  any  case,  Kristof  and  I  are  in  profound  agreement  about  one  thing:  there  is  much  happening  in many  parts  of  the  African  continent  that  is  not  as  it  ought  to  be.  I  have  been  fortunate  in  life,  but  that doesn't  mean  I  haven't  seen  or  experienced  African  poverty  first-­hand.  I  grew  up  in  a  land  of  military coups  and  economically  devastating,  IMF-­imposed  "structural  adjustment"  programs.  The  genuine hurt  of  Africa  is  no  fiction.

And  we  also  agree  on  something  else:  that  there  is  an  internal  ethical  urge  that  demands  that  each  of us  serve  justice  as  much  as  he  or  she  can.  But  beyond  the  immediate  attention  that  he  rightly  pays hungry  mouths,  child  soldiers,  or  raped  civilians,  there  are  more  complex  and  more  widespread

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problems.  There  are  serious  problems  of  governance,  of  infrastructure,  of  democracy,  and  of  law  and

order.  These  problems  are  neither  simple  in  themselves  nor  are  they  reducible  to  slogans.  Such

problems  are  both  intricate  and  intensely  local.

How,  for  example,  could  a  well-­meaning  American  "help"  a  place  like  Uganda  today?  It  begins,  I

believe,  with  some  humility  with  regards  to  the  people  in  those  places.  It  begins  with  some  respect  for

the  agency  of  the  people  of  Uganda  in  their  own  lives.  A  great  deal  of  work  had  been  done,  and

continues  to  be  done,  by  Ugandans  to  improve  their  own  country,  and  ignorant  comments  (I've  seen

many)  about  how  "we  have  to  save  them  because  they  can't  save  themselves"  can't  change  that  fact.

Let  me  draw  into  this  discussion  an  example  from  an  African  country  I  know  very  well.  Earlier  this

year,  hundreds  of  thousands  of  Nigerians  took  to  their  country's  streets  to  protest  the  government's

decision  to  remove  a  subsidy  on  petrol.  This  subsidy  was  widely  seen  as  one  of  the  few  blessings  of  the

country's  otherwise  catastrophic  oil  wealth.  But  what  made  these  protests  so  heartening  is  that  they

were  about  more  than  the  subsidy  removal.  Nigeria  has  one  of  the  most  corrupt  governments  in  the

world  and  protesters  clearly  demanded  that  something  be  done  about  this.  The  protests  went  on  for

days,  at  considerable  personal  risk  to  the  protesters.  Several  young  people  were  shot  dead,  and  the

movement  was  eventually  doused  when  union  leaders  capitulated  and  the  army  deployed  on  the

streets.  The  movement  did  not  "succeed"  in  conventional  terms.  But  something  important  had

changed  in  the  political  consciousness  of  the  Nigerian  populace.  For  me  and  for  a  number  of  people  I

know,  the  protests  gave  us  an  opportunity  to  be  proud  of  Nigeria,  many  of  us  for  the  first  time  in  our

lives.  

This  is  not  the  sort  of  story  that  is  easy  to  summarize  in  an  article,  much  less  make  a  viral  video

about.  After  all,  there  is  no  simple  demand  to  be  made  and  -­-­  since  corruption  is  endemic  -­-­  no  single

villain  to  topple.  There  is  certainly  no  "bridge  character,"  Kristof's  euphemism  for  white  saviors  in

Third  World  narratives  who  make  the  story  more  palatable  to  American  viewers.  And  yet,  the  story  of

Nigeria's  protest  movement  is  one  of  the  most  important  from  sub-­Saharan  Africa  so  far  this  year.

Men  and  women,  of  all  classes  and  ages,  stood  up  for  what  they  felt  was  right;;  they  marched

peacefully;;  they  defended  each  other,  and  gave  each  other  food  and  drink;;  Christians  stood  guard

while  Muslims  prayed  and  vice-­versa;;  and  they  spoke  without  fear  to  their  leaders  about  the  kind  of

country  they  wanted  to  see.  All  of  it  happened  with  no  cool  American  20-­something  heroes  in  sight.

Joseph  Kony  is  no  longer  in  Uganda  and  he  is  no  longer  the  threat  he  was,  but  he  is  a  convenient

villain  for  those  who  need  a  convenient  villain.  What  Africa  needs  more  pressingly  than  Kony's

indictment  is  more  equitable  civil  society,  more  robust  democracy,  and  a  fairer  system  of  justice.  This

is  the  scaffolding  from  which  infrastructure,  security,  healthcare,  and  education  can  be  built.  How  do

we  encourage  voices  like  those  of  the  Nigerian  masses  who  marched  this  January,  or  those  who  are

engaged  in  the  struggle  to  develop  Ugandan  democracy?  

If  Americans  want  to  care  about  Africa,  maybe  they  should  consider  evaluating  American  foreign

policy,  which  they  already  play  a  direct  role  in  through  elections,  before  they  impose  themselves  on

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Africa  itself.  The  fact  of  the  matter  is  that  Nigeria  is  one  of  the  top  five  oil  suppliers  to  the  U.S.,  and

American  policy  is  interested  first  and  foremost  in  the  flow  of  that  oil.  The  American  government  did

not  see  fit  to  support  the  Nigeria  protests.  (Though  the  State  Department  issued  a  supportive

statement  -­-­  "our  view  on  that  is  that  the  Nigerian  people  have  the  right  to  peaceful  protest,  we  want

to  see  them  protest  peacefully,  and  we're  also  urging  the  Nigerian  security  services  to  respect  the

right  of  popular  protest  and  conduct  themselves  professionally  in  dealing  with  the  strikes"  -­-­  it

reeked  of  boilerplate  rhetoric  and,  unsurprisingly,  nothing  tangible  came  of  it.)  This  was  as  expected;;

under  the  banner  of  "American  interests,"  the  oil  comes  first.  Under  that  same  banner,  the  livelihood

of  corn  farmers  in  Mexico  has  been  destroyed  by  NAFTA.  Haitian  rice  farmers  have  suffered  appalling

losses  due  to  Haiti  being  flooded  with  subsidized  American  rice.  A  nightmare  has  been  playing  out  in

Honduras  in  the  past  three  years:  an  American-­backed  coup  and  American  militarization  of  that

country  have  contributed  to  a  conflict  in  which  hundreds  of  activists  and  journalists  have  already  been

murdered.  The  Egyptian  military,  which  is  now  suppressing  the  country's  once-­hopeful  movement  for

democracy  and  killing  dozens  of  activists  in  the  process,  subsists  on  $1.3  billion  in  annual  U.S.  aid.

This  is  a  litany  that  will  be  familiar  to  some.  To  others,  it  will  be  news.  But,  familiar  or  not,  it  has  a

bearing  on  our  notions  of  innocence  and  our  right  to  "help."

Let  us  begin  our  activism  right  here:  with  the  money-­driven  villainy  at  the  heart  of  American  foreign

policy.  To  do  this  would  be  to  give  up  the  illusion  that  the  sentimental  need  to  "make  a  difference"

trumps  all  other  considerations.  What  innocent  heroes  don't  always  understand  is  that  they  play  a

useful  role  for  people  who  have  much  more  cynical  motives.  The  White  Savior  Industrial  Complex  is  a

valve  for  releasing  the  unbearable  pressures  that  build  in  a  system  built  on  pillage.  We  can  participate

in  the  economic  destruction  of  Haiti  over  long  years,  but  when  the  earthquake  strikes  it  feels  good  to

send  $10  each  to  the  rescue  fund.  I  have  no  opposition,  in  principle,  to  such  donations  (I  frequently

make  them  myself),  but  we  must  do  such  things  only  with  awareness  of  what  else  is  involved.  If  we  are

going  to  interfere  in  the  lives  of  others,  a  little  due  diligence  is  a  minimum  requirement.

Success  for  Kony  2012  would  mean  increased  militarization  of  the  anti-­democratic  Yoweri  Museveni

government,  which  has  been  in  power  in  Uganda  since  1986  and  has  played  a  major  role  in  the  world's

deadliest  ongoing  conflict,  the  war  in  the  Congo.  But  those  whom  privilege  allows  to  deny

constellational  thinking  would  enjoy  ignoring  this  fact.  There  are  other  troubling  connections,  not

least  of  them  being  that  Museveni  appears  to  be  a  U.S.  proxy  in  its  shadowy  battles  against  militants

in  Sudan  and,  especially,  in  Somalia.  Who  sanctions  these  conflicts?  Under  whose  authority  and

oversight  are  they  conducted?  Who  is  being  killed  and  why?  

All  of  this  takes  us  rather  far  afield  from  fresh-­faced  young  Americans  using  the  power  of  YouTube,

Facebook,  and  pure  enthusiasm  to  change  the  world.  A  singer  may  be  innocent;;  never  the  song.  

This  article  available  online  at:

http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2012/03/the-­white-­savior-­industrial-­

complex/254843/

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