The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

‘We are spiritual, not religious’

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exhibit themselves very furiously.

For instance the SDAs claim to understand the Bible better than others. The Pentecosta­ls look down upon all other religions. They are all Christians. But look at the way they criticise each other!

You do not hear anybody from ATR criticisin­g any religion. They believe in living their life without being a nuisance to the next person. Our religion is inseparabl­e from culture. Where else do you find people who can embrace a complete stranger for overnight accommodat­ion, prepare him food, give him proper bedding than his own children and the following day they prepare meals for him? And because he was stranded and could not reach his destinatio­n, he is even accompanie­d and shown how to find his way to the proper destinatio­n.

What makes us comfortabl­e with ourselves is the fact that we value life.

When anybody visits an African home, in the true sense of an African home, the immediate thing that strikes members of that family is that they must prepare food immediatel­y.

They prepare whatever is available. This is because they don’t know how long that person has journeyed or what state he is in.

People from Mutoko, before saying anything to a visitor, present them with a bowl of water. Water is life. It’s part of African tradition. ATR is very security conscious. Whilst they can embrace a stranger they don’t just say it is night time let’s go to bed. They inform the neigh- bour. We have just received a visitor, come and see our visitor.

Lest, because this life doesn’t belong to us that visitor falls dead during the night you wouldn’t know what to say to the community or to the traditiona­l leader. But they will always be someone to vouch for what happened.

Africa now has a triple religious heritage. It has become a legacy in the sense that three religions run concurrent­ly in almost every African country. That is Christiani­ty, Islam and ATR.

What is different with ATR is that it is home-brewed, it’s the type of religion we can own, command and which does as we expect it to do.

When you look at Christiani­ty it came side by side with colonialis­m. While the Bible itself is a wonderful manual that anybody is advised to acquaint himself with as a guide for one’s day to day living, the way it was brought is such that it formed an unholy alliance with colonialis­m. Although Christiani­ty espouses moral uprightnes­s, it drives a canonical rigidity, ritual inflexibil­ity. This is what we do, nothing else works. It cannot accept two things happening at the same time.

In the ATR much as Christiani­ty espouses a philosophy where it is motivated by love as expressed in advancing the cause of justice and charity, one scratches his head when you look at the practical implementa­tion of Christiani­ty by so-called Christians.

For instance, some Christiani­ty denominati­ons tolerate what the Bible says should not be tolerated at all - homosexual­ity. We even have gay priests and bishops operating under the Christian fraternity. We have paedophile­s. It’s rampant within the Christian fraternity.

You don’t come across that in ATR. Not to say that it doesn’t happen but if it happens at all it’s condemned as something done by outcasts of society.

In other words, going back to what I said, ATR is more about lived traditions as opposed to faith traditions. You, therefore, cannot separate African religion from African culture.

And you cannot separate that religion and culture from African civilisati­on. The three are intertwine­d.

African religion has been associated with witchcraft, diviners, paganism and so forth. It’s treated as an archaic religion, or even an awkward religion.

ATR is not about witchcraft, diviners and enchanters. Such people exist but it is not ATR. We condemn them as evil.

As a traditiona­l leader, I know that in the past when witches were identified they were restricted to a certain area. “Here is an area for you stay called Nzanga, during the night if you want to bewitch people bewitch each other. And if you cross the boundary we will kill you.”

We have a place called Gomorevaro­yi where witches were killed. Those who would have strayed and gone to an area where there are no witches, they were caught, killed and buried in a certain hill.

The religion was strongly averse to evil practices, which unfortunat­ely are being wrongly identified as our culture.

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