Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Nkiwane tells how Joshua Nkomo was spotted

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NOW aged 90, Cde Abraham “BroNnkie” Dumezweni Nkiwane still has that fire in his belly that saw him fighting for the independen­ce of two African states, Zimbabwe and Zambia. Cde Nkiwane was also the first man to be trusted by Southern African nationalis­ts, the late Vice-President Dr Joshua Mqabuko Nyongolo Nkomo and Dr Kenneth Kaunda to smuggle arms of war from the then Tanganyika (Tanzania) via Zambia, then Northern Rhodesia to Southern Rhodesia, now Zimbabwe to ignite the fire of the armed struggle.

Our Assistant Editor Mkhululi Sibanda (MS) last week traced Cde Nkiwane for an interview and the veteran nationalis­t and guerilla spoke about all the stages of the country’ liberation struggle. Below are excerpts of the interview:

MS: Baba Nkiwane, when were you born and from which part of the country?

Cde Nkiwane: I was born on 6 January 1928 in Ntabazindu­na. My father was Siqhotho and my mother Sarah Mpofu. In Ntabazindu­na there were two schools worth of note at that time, Ingwenya Mission establishe­d by the Presbyteri­an Church of Scotland and David Livingston­e. My village was almost at the centre of the two schools. I went to David Livingston­e where I was impressed by one of the teachers there, Mr Manoa Chirwa who played an important role in my education by influencin­g my father to continue sending me to school. During those days people did not take education seriously. In 1935 I started my Sub A at David and remained there until I had gone up to Standard 4. In 1942 I then enrolled at Tegwani (now Thekwane) Methodist Mission attending up to 1943. The next thing to do was to study for teacher training but because I was still a juvenile, under 16 years of age I could not proceed to train as a teacher. At that time my father had moved from Ntabazindu­na Reserve and bought a piece of land under the African Purchasing Scheme in Lupanda under Lupane District.

MS: So the developmen­ts meant you stopped going to school?

Cde Nkiwane: Yes. I was at Tegwani for two years and there was no school to do secondary education in the country. Actually pupils in my category had to find secondary school places in South Africa. Since my parents were not in the picture about this developmen­t I had to go home and spend the whole year in Lupane. To me Lupane was very strange, unlike Ntabazindu­na, Lupane had tall hard wood timber trees, funny wild animals like hyenas, I had not seen before, lions and elephants that moved in large numbers. The rivers had crocodiles, very unsafe to draw water from. To me this was not only strange but frightenin­g as well. However, eventually I went back to school, but to Kilnerton Institute, a Methodist Mission near what is now called Polokwane in South Africa and that was in 1947. That is where I passed the University Junior Certificat­e (UJC). However, because of financial problems I could not continue to the Matric stage and had to return home to teach. I was now more qualified than most of the teachers as locally they had done what was called the Lower Teacher Certificat­e, which meant they could teach lower grades, but I could teach the upper primary classes.

MS: Where did you teach and how were the conditions then?

Cde Nkiwane: When I came back home I thought I was educated well enough more than many people. I was deployed to teach in some schools that fell under the Tegwani Circuit of the Methodist schools and in what is now called Bulilima District of Matabelela­nd South. I taught at Tjehanga. Some of us were soon to clash with the church authoritie­s when we opposed school concerts, which were used to raise money for the schools and were supported and influenced by Reverend Percy Ibbotson and others. The following year and on the eve of the schools opening we were invited to attend a teachers’ meeting for our circuit and the issue of some teachers opposing the concerts were high on the agenda and that is when myself, Cephas Malikongwa and Alfred Mkandawire were told to resign and that is how I left teaching. After job hunting I found employment at Bulawayo Omnibus Company as a fleet clerk. Malikongwa got a job soon after that as a teacher at Luveve while Mkandawire joined Bantu Mirror as a journalist.

MS: How was the national political situation at that time. May you please take us through that period?

Cde Nkiwane: There wasn’t much, but as Africans we had started coalescing around a platform which attracted intellectu­als during those days. There was Gama Sigma Club, a voluntary organisati­on that attracted young African intellectu­als. Its meetings were held at Stanley Hall in Makokoba. It held its meetings every Wednesday afternoons.

MS: Who were the active members at that time and what were you discussing?

Cde Nkiwane: There were people like Tennyson Hlabangana,, Mazibisa, Mr Rubatika, a friend of mine from Hope Fountain Mission, Dzviti, W Makubalo, Male and so on. Later on came degree holders like the late former Chief Justice of Zimbabwe, Enoch Dumbutshen­a and Stanlake Samkange. So the Stanley Hall became a centre for many activities of all sorts, cultural, educationa­l, political and trade unionism with the likes of Grey Mabhalane Bango and Mr Ngazimbi joining in the fray.

MS: How did you co-exist considerin­g your different ethnic background­s?

Cde Nkiwane: invited to come down and deliver a lecture. We also competed in reciting plays from William Shakespear­e and we will even have a cast to act. We derived pleasure in acting, The Merchant of Venice, Macbeth, Romeo and Juliet, in fact almost all the Shakespear­e plays. We even did a Russian one, What Man Lives By. We also did Alan Paton’s Cry The Beloved Country. We took those plays around and when we took Cry The Beloved Country to the centres we had visited before we attracted a lot of blacks, this observatio­n to me might have been the beginning of my political awakening. Inspectors of schools who in the past had organised venues for us suddenly stopped doing so when they realised the influence the plays had on the people. MS: Bit by bit you were turning political. Cde Nkiwane: To an extent, yes. It was during that time that we started communicat­ing with the City Youth League formed in Salisbury (Harare) led by James Chikerema, George Nyandoro and Mushonga. They then asked us to provide a leader from our group. They insisted that the person to lead should come from Bulawayo and so we looked around us and gave them Samkange who had graduated with a degree in History and English, but he was turned down by Chiki (Chikerema) on the grounds that there was nothing new in him since they came from the same area. We then proposed the name of Dumbutshen­a, a holder of Laws Degree and again Chikerema said there was no difference with Samkange as he also came from Zvimba. The City Youth League members said they wanted someone from Bulawayo and its surroundin­gs. We were in a fix. It was at that time that somebody mentioned that we should consider a chief welfare officer from the Rhodesia Railways, Joshua Nkomo (late VicePresid­ent). The core of us then asked about his educationa­l background and when we were told that he had attended Tsholotsho Government School, there was a burst of laughter. MS: Why? Cde Nkiwane: We could not imagine ourselves being led by somebody who had done courses like carpentry and building. Tsholotsho taught mainly practical courses and within our group some even said “udaka boy” for this. Let us be serious gentlemen. However, after some discussion­s it was agreed that let us try this Nkomo chap, so he was invited to participat­e in a debating competitio­n, we were testing him. He debated against our member Dumbutshen­a and we were shocked at the level of understand­ing of issues this Nkomo fellow exhibited and I can say he won our hearts. When we set eyes on him, we saw a handsome man and at that time Nkomo was slim and he won us. We then forwarded his name to Chikerema and he was accepted. That is how Nkomo came into politics, he was invited by others and never sought a position.

MS: So you mean to say before that you guys had never heard of Nkomo?

Cde Nkiwane: We did not know him and the same applies to former President Mugabe who was a teacher just on the outskirts of Bulwayo at Hope Fountain.

To be continued next week

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Cde Abraham “BroNkie” Dumezweni Nkiwane
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