• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
  • News
  • Economy
  • World
  • Lifestyle
Why I boycotted the queen

Why I boycotted the queen

3 years ago
China in Africa: Who is fooling who?

China in Africa: Who is fooling who?

1 year ago
Sino-Zim: Turning the ironclad pact into dollars

Sino-Zim: Turning the ironclad pact into dollars

1 year ago
If our friends in China did it…

If our friends in China did it…

1 year ago
Handbook to guide Gukurahundi Outreach

Handbook to guide Gukurahundi Outreach

2 years ago
Harare building collapses, woman dies

Harare building collapses, woman dies

2 years ago
Africa backs Zimbabwe’s Security Council bid

Africa backs Zimbabwe’s Security Council bid

2 years ago
ED says no to third term

ED says no to third term

2 years ago
Banks start changing accounts to ZiG

Banks start changing accounts to ZiG

2 years ago
SADC will prioritise food security, says Incoming Chairperson

SADC will prioritise food security, says Incoming Chairperson

2 years ago
Caps fans invade pitch, match abandoned

Caps fans invade pitch, match abandoned

2 years ago
Measures to promote use of ZiG

Measures to promote use of ZiG

2 years ago
ZiG starts circulating on April 30

ZiG starts circulating on April 30

2 years ago
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
Saturday, January 24, 2026
  • Login
Zim Sentry
  • Local News
  • Africa
  • International
  • Thought Leader
  • Economy
  • Lifestyle
  • SportsTrending
No Result
View All Result
Zim Sentry
No Result
View All Result
Home Thought Leader

Why I boycotted the queen

Queen Elizabeth II visited my school in Harare. The headmaster wanted us to sing the British anthem. So I protested.

September 15, 2022
in Thought Leader
0
Why I boycotted the queen

The UK's Queen Elizabeth II joins in a toast with President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe, during a banquet in the Queen's honor in Harare, Zimbabwe on October 10, 1991. [AP Photo]

493
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Tafi Mhaka

Dear Royal Family,

I was a lower sixth (year 12) student at Prince Edward School in Harare, Zimbabwe, when Queen Elizabeth II visited our school in October 1991. Zimbabwe was hosting that year’s Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting and the queen — as the head of the Commonwealth — was attending.

In preparation for the “big day” at the school, our headmaster, a stern and imposing disciplinarian named Clive Barnes, made sure the school facilities were pristine and students learnt to sing, God Save the Queen, the British national anthem.

I regarded the latter as an especially condescending and redundant exercise. If she wanted to visit our school and sing with us, I thought, why didn’t “Her Majesty” learn to recite our national anthem — Ishe Komborera Africa?

Our school had been established as Salisbury Grammar in 1898, during the early days of colonisation. However, its name was changed to Prince Edward School after the then-prince of Wales visited in 1925. That may explain why our school was included on the queen’s itinerary, and how the visit descended into a deplorably pretentious and quintessentially British affair that didn’t represent the wider Zimbabwe.

So, when the day arrived, I decided to boycott the queen.

I stayed at home to express my revulsion and indignation towards everything — centuries of British-funded slavery and shameless colonialism — which the royal family represented. To be clear, I treasured the multicultural society that I lived in. I appreciated that Prince Edward was a multiracial government school.

However, I drew a line in the sand when it came to fawning over the queen of England or British royals, in general. I didn’t hate the queen, or the duke of Edinburgh who had accompanied her, but I abhorred the old institution she represented. And I didn’t believe she could relate to our long and arduous struggles against white supremacist rule.

I believed she didn’t want to.

She hadn’t attempted to atone for the centuries-long repression that facilitated her considerable wealth and white privilege. I hadn’t seen ordinary Britons performing our national anthem or standing in awe of an African queen or king, as we were expected to do in Queen Elizabeth’s presence. So I couldn’t muster the moral proclivity to meet her.

I knew that a 17-year-old’s symbolic gesture wouldn’t change anything. Yet I was determined to follow my conscience and take a defiant stand against the queen and the royal family.

I stayed at home and don’t regret that decision.

Today, I have family members who remain impoverished because of the United Kingdom’s colonial exploits. Like many in Africa, the mineral and agricultural wealth emanating from our ancestral lands and poorly remunerated labour enriched the royal family and enabled the UK’s industrialisation, leaving us incredibly poor and disenfranchised.

I have always felt the royal family and the UK ought to offer an unqualified apology and compensation for slavery and colonisation.

I have read that Queen Elizabeth II purportedly supported the Black Lives Matter movement. King Charles III, as prince last November, described slavery as appalling. I know that the UK passed the Slavery Abolition Act almost two centuries ago. Yet the royal family has remained unable, but more likely unwilling, to apologise for slavery and lead the campaign for reparations.

I find it disgusting and embarrassing that Queen Elizabeth’s estimated $500m fortune was established on stealing foreign lands, destroying livelihoods, repressing Africans and selling slaves. I find it abhorrent that the royal family is, for all intents and purposes, a thriving $28bn commercial empire.

It’s a shame that people outside of the UK, especially in former British colonies, actually have the time to indulge the royal family’s colonial enterprise. I couldn’t do it 31 years ago. I won’t do it now.

The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial stance.

* Tafi Mhaka
Johannesburg-based social and political commentator.
Mhaka has a BA Honours degree from the University of Cape Town and works in the communications industry.

Tags: Ishe Komborera AfricaJohannesburgQueen ElizabethTafi Mhaka
Share197Tweet123Share49
tendaik1

tendaik1

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Richarlison World Cup goal voted best of the tournament

Richarlison World Cup goal voted best of the tournament

December 24, 2022
By-election victories have primed us for 2023 polls, says ZANU PF

By-election victories have primed us for 2023 polls, says ZANU PF

October 24, 2022
A new ocean is being formed in Africa

A new ocean is being formed in Africa

February 11, 2023
China in Africa: Who is fooling who?

China in Africa: Who is fooling who?

0
Zim/Iran seek improved economic relations

Zim/Iran seek improved economic relations

0
President Masisi to open Harare Agric show

President Masisi to open Harare Agric show

0
China in Africa: Who is fooling who?

China in Africa: Who is fooling who?

October 5, 2024
Sino-Zim: Turning the ironclad pact into dollars

Sino-Zim: Turning the ironclad pact into dollars

October 5, 2024
If our friends in China did it…

If our friends in China did it…

October 5, 2024
Zim Sentry

Copyright © 2022 ZimSentry. All Rights Reserved

Your Trusted Watchman

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Local News
  • Africa
  • International
  • Thought Leader
  • Economy
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports

Copyright © 2022 ZimSentry. All Rights Reserved

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

You cannot copy content of this page