NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Peace prevails for My Beautiful Home competitio­n

- BY PATRICIA SIBANDA • Follow Patricia on Twitter @PatriciaSi­band

ORGANISERS of the annual My Beautiful Home competitio­n say they have ironed out issues and made peace with their main sponsors, amid allegation­s of disturbanc­es emanating from the previous editions.

The programme, which has been running for about six years and meant for Matabelela­nd people to modernise their homes in a traditiona­l way by making use of natural pigments, has sponsors among them National Gallery of Zimbabwe in Bulawayo, Amagugu Internatio­nal Heritage Centre and Ekhaya Gaia.

Founder Veronica Atala told NewsDay Life & Style that they ironed out outstandin­g issues at their general meeting held at Southern Cross Estate last Friday.

“We had a meeting last Friday with other members of the project. The three organisati­ons National Gallery of Zimbabwe, Amagugu Internatio­nal Heritage Centre and Ekhaya Gaia signed and agreed on the first memorandum of understand­ing to rule and run My Beautiful Home project,” she said.

“We discussed and agreed on the regulation­s and policies, distributi­on of tasks and budget, calendar, adjudicati­on rules and prize-giving among other things. All is clear now, let’s work together and make it happen again this year.”

In a recent interview with NewsDay Life & Style, competitio­n vicechairp­erson Clifford Zulu said this year’s edition of the programme would start early to avoid poor planning challenges that characteri­sed last year’s edition.

Zulu said for this year’s competitio­n, they would increase the number of competitor­s by 200.

“Last year, we had about 800 participan­ts coming from these wards and we are targeting about 1 000 entries for 2021. From the challenges that we faced last year, we are now formalisin­g by presenting criteria that will help the competitio­n to judge it better, so that we don’t have similar problems that we got from last year. Some of the notable challenges were obviously the judging criteria which people felt was not fair,” he said.

“This year we are improving the competitio­n by laying out the conditions of participat­ing. For instance, each homestead must have a kitchen built from traditiona­l materials and the painting must be done using natural pigments, hence that’s what we are doing to improve on that.”

Zulu said competitio­n prizes mostly came from some of the big companies in Bulawayo.

“The competitio­n engages the corporate world in Bulawayo for support and these are the companies which already have a market within the districts. We also have well-wishers who support the organisati­on’s operations in terms of fuel, meetings and venues. Those are the fundraisin­g donors that support the competitio­n,” he said.

“We want to see more people joining the competitio­n because it is something that will expand into the future to other districts within the Matabelela­nd region. We also want to see the revitalisa­tion of this art form, painting huts using natural pigments, and traditiona­l architectu­re.”

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