The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

While we snooze, history is unfolding before our eyes

a hut in BUILDING the village might be relatively inexpensiv­e, but one must gird one’s loins and psyche oneself up for some excruciati­ngly painful and back-breaking work.

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ALMOST all building materials, such as bricks, beams and grass to thatch the roof, are usually either self-manufactur­ed or self-sourced in what is so often a do-it-yourself enterprise.

To make the bricks, you have to bore through the seemingly iron crust of those hardy termite mounds in order to gouge out the needed clay, which is then mixed with sand and water to make a consistent putty.

But carting loads of sand and gallons of water to the brick-making site using a scorch cart and ox-drawn Y-shaped wooden sledges is equally daunting.

After the draining work of concocting the muddy mixture, it is then moulded into bricks and carefully laid out in the sun to dry. This is just the beginning.

After drying out, the bricks are methodical­ly stacked in a kiln and “cooked” at hellish temperatur­es.

This is no mean feat.

A lot of wet logs are needed to literally keep the fire burning for days.

And maintainin­g the required temperatur­es for a long period can only be accomplish­ed through logs harvested from trees like mupfuti (brachysteg­ia boehmii), among others that have that brown steely inner core that produces the fiery embers and heat for the task.

Those who once had the unenviable task of clearing new agricultur­al land would appreciate that felling these trees using an axe is extremely taxing.

You do not just wildly swing your axe, as this is needlessly energy sapping.

You see, the deeper you cut into the tree, the lesser progress you make because of the stubbornly hard inner core.

Nothing is as dispiritin­g as seeing an axe violently bouncing off the tree with just waferthin shavings, especially after taking what you think is your best shot.

The trick lies in maintainin­g a mechanical rhythm while patiently chipping away at the tree.

It is all about mind over matter.

So, this is clearly not a task for those lazy, smooth-palmed urban folk, who even develop blisters from a firm handshake. Kikikiki.

But, even after all this, one has to wheel the bricks to the constructi­on site and begin the arduous task of putting up the structure. Additional logs that act as beams will also be needed for the roof.

It takes a combinatio­n of graft, expertise and experience honed over time to meticulous­ly craft that sound, durable and aesthetic conical rooftop.

After all this is done, then comes the time to plaster the floor and walls. However, it is all worth it in the end. Nothing beats that godly feeling of being able to create, nor the thrill and gratificat­ion that comes with proprietor­ship of a newly built home from one’s own sweat.

There is also that dignity and satisfacti­on that comes with hard work.

Everything in the village is the product of honest, hard work. By its very nature, building is hard work. The Book of Exodus tells us how the Pharaohs of Egypt had to use slave labour to manufactur­e the boulder-sized bricks that were used to construct the imposing pyramids.

Moving mountains

Earlier last week, as Bishop Lazi had predicted at the beginning of the year, the heavy machinery finally invaded the capital, Harare, to rip up old roads, which had long been abandoned by the city fathers, as a precursor to extensive roadworks in and around the city.

The Government has had to step in to do what ordinarily would fall under the ambit of the ineffectua­l, inept and clueless city fathers.

With no vision, ambition, drive, direction or capacity, they have been snoozing as Harare rots away.

All told, about 40 roads — including Samora Machel Avenue; Simon Muzenda Street (formerly Fourth Street); Robert Mugabe/Gamal Abdel Nassar (formerly Rotten Row) junction to Tongogara, among many others — will be spruced up.

You just need to drive along Milton Street, adjacent to Parirenyat­wa Group of Hospitals, to get a feel of the great things to come. All this, however, should not be viewed in isolation, but as part of long-running restorativ­e projects that have seen the rehabilita­tion of city roads such as Seke Road, Josiah Chinamano Avenue, Cranborne Avenue, King

George Road, Prince Edward Street, Connaught Road and Good Hope Road.

Little by little, and almost impercepti­bly, the face of Harare is changing.

For Bishop Lazarus, it is the sheer scale of these big-ticket projects — the multimilli­on-dollar highway from Beitbridge; the imposing Mbudzi Traffic Interchang­e; the ongoing Kunzvi Dam constructi­on; the historic Lake Gwayi-Shangani, among other mega projects — that are all happening while the world’s economy is in peril that is just astounding.

All these are the impressive foundation­s of a new Zimbabwe, as the country, against all the odds, continues its inexorable march to the promised land.

Even the staunchest of critics and cynics are now gradually acknowledg­ing the good works of President ED.

“Robert Gabriel Mugabe Internatio­nal Airport is now (fire emojis). Renovation­s are still ongoing, but paitwa chakanaka tinozvikud­za. I was so proud to walk our beautiful airport to be honest, so impressive — the Dutchess of Bvukururu was impressed,” said one of Nelson Chamisa’s supporters on X last week.

And to think that all this is also happening when Zimbabwe, without internatio­nal financial support, is being throttled by the West through sanctions.

It reminded Bishop Lazi of an interestin­g article he came across in the February 24 issue of the Washington Post, as the US marvelled at the resilience of Russia’s economy, especially after being mercilessl­y buffeted by sanctions by Washington and its European and Asian allies in the past two years.

In fact, last year, Russia’s economy grew faster than that of the United States.

This year, it is expected to grow by 2,6 percent, compared with 2,1 percent for the US.

And, get this, unemployme­nt in Russia is at a record low. The same miracle is happening in Zimbabwe.

“The key to Russia’s surprising economic endurance has been large sums of defence spending, what some economists call ‘military Keynesiani­sm’ in a nod to British economist John Maynard Keynes’s support for using public spending to lift growth,” the Washington Post wrote.

Therein lies the trick, comrades.

Our massive investment in infrastruc­ture is naturally having a multiplier effect on the economy by creating employment, building internal capacities through supporting local constructi­on firms, as well as stimulatin­g upstream and downstream economic activities. Over two decades of trials and tribulatio­ns have strengthen­ed our resolve, making us better able to adapt to adverse conditions and circumstan­ces.

James 1: 2-6 counsels: “Consider it pure joy, my brothers and sisters, whenever you face trials of many kinds, because you know that the testing of your faith produces perseveran­ce.

Let perseveran­ce finish its work so that you may be mature and complete, not lacking anything. If any of you lacks wisdom, you should ask God, who gives generously to all without finding fault, and it will be given to you.”

Even with the El Niño-induced drought looming on the horizon, we shall overcome, because our economy is now rigged for growth.

Did you know that in the past couple of years, Finance, Economic Developmen­t and Investment Promotion Minister Professor Mthuli Ncube has been setting aside a contingenc­y fund for a rainy day.

In the 2024 National Budget, the unallocate­d reserve actually stood at $6,7 trillion.

Despite the odds, our dream will not be deferred. Like a village hut, brick by brick, the walls of a new Zimbabwe are coming up.

Bishop out!

 ?? ?? Spruced-up roads are changing the face of Harare
Spruced-up roads are changing the face of Harare
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