The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Prisoners seek spiritual cleansing

- Veronica Gwaze

FOR killing his sister-in-law and attempting to murder his wife, 38-year-old Simbarashe Munakamwe was sentenced to 17 years in prison.

Now an inmate at the Chikurubi Maximum Prison, Munakamwe is battling to come to terms with what he did.

“I think I was possessed by evil spirits. Tell me, where did I get the guts to repeatedly stab the two women who were an integral part of my life?” A visibly troubled Munakamwe asked rhetorical­ly. Munakamwe, who is one of the 350 inmates that were baptised at the Chikurubi Maximum Security Prison last week, said he desperatel­y needs spiritual cleansing.

He claims he is haunted by evil spirits. “I am living in hell. During the night, I see my late sister-in-law lying in a pool of blood. I cry at night and wish I could just die,” Munakamwe said.

He said upon release, he is going to pay lobola to his in-laws as a way of finding a solution to his nightmares.

Although he was recently baptised, Munakamwe says his soul is still a troubled one.

Munakamwe is among the numerous inmates who are desperatel­y seeking spiritual cleansing. Mr Tongesai Katsvairo, a chaplain and assistant principal correction­al officer with the Zimbabwe Prisons and Correction­al Services (ZPCS) said there are no provisions for spirituall­y troubled inmates to conduct African traditiona­l rituals in prison.

“Unfortunat­ely, there are no provisions for inmates to invite traditiona­l healers to exorcise demons. We can only pray for those encounteri­ng spiritual problems and counsel them,” Mr Katsvairo said. ◆ Read the full article on

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