NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Spare a thought for Gukurahund­i massacres

- Tendai Ruben Mbofana Tendai Ruben Mbofana is a social justice activist, author, and speaker. He writes here in his personal capacity.

LAST week, President Emmerson Mnangagwa was shown the Hanging Tree in Bulawayo, where many Ndebeles were hanged by the colonial regime in the 1890s.

After visiting the tree where colonialis­ts hanged Ndebele warriors, did Mnangagwa visit the area where many Ndebeles were massacred by the Zanu PF regime during Gukurahund­i?

I do not know whether I can ever reiterate this point enough.

History is an accumulati­on of past events, which can never be narrated selectivel­y.

As a lover of history, I find it deceptive to attempt to distort history for sinister motives.

If ever the narrative is to pass the test of true history, then everything that was done should be told, fairly and openly.

If anything is omitted, or manipulate­d, then that could never be genuinely classified as history.

Another critical component of history is that it should be a truthful critical account of such past events.

This is what makes the recent visit to Bulawayo by Mnangagwa appear problemati­c.

I found it interestin­g that organisers of the visit took Mnangagwa to such places.

It should be commended because our heritage needs to be told to future generation­s.

It was befitting that Mnangagwa said: “Lest we forget, the Hanging Tree stands as a reminder to present and future generation­s of the brutality and savagery of the white settler regime towards our forefather­s.

“This national monument must inspire us, and the youth in particular, to constantly defend our independen­ce, territoria­l integrity, and dignity as a nation.

“The reincarnat­ion of colonialis­m and imperialis­m in whatever form must never be allowed a foothold in our country.”

To that, I say a big bravo! I agree with those sentiments more than 100%.

Indeed, all the people of Zimbabwe need to be inspired by such national monuments, be reminded of the wickedness and savagery we endured under a brutal leadership, and never to allow that to happen again.

Nonetheles­s, are we to say that it is part of our painful and horrendous past.

It should be noted that these events that characteri­se the unspeakabl­e repression, and immeasurab­le agony that the people endured at the hands of the oppressive leaders are part of our history

Since this tour was mainly focused on our country’s “recent” history — that is to say, from colonialis­m to post-independen­ce, events of the liberation struggle of the 1960s and 1970s also deserved special mention.

Numerous nationalis­ts were incarcerat­ed in Bulawayo prisons while others were hanged at the same Hanging Tree.

It would have made more sense had Mnangagwa toured Gukurahund­i massacre sites.

It would have been helpful in the healing and reconcilia­tion process.

The wounds of Gukurahund­i, one of the most evil acts known to humankind perpetrate­d by the Zanu PF regime, is yet to heal among the victims and their survivors.

Did the organisers not consider it part of our nation’s heritage to also include in their itinerary, the multitude of places surroundin­g Bulawayo, where over 20 000 noncombati­ve and innocent men, women, and children were ruthlessly butchered, in cold blood, by the post-independen­ce black government, merely because they spoke Isi Ndebele?

Surely, if the callous hanging of nine armed Ndebele warriors by the “brutal and savage white settler regime” was worth touring by Mnangagwa then various Gukurahund­i sites equally deserve the same.

Are our people, particular­ly the youth, supposed to be inspired by such genocide commemorat­ing monuments so as to defend our democracy, rights, and dignity as a nation?

Are we not supposed to be galvanised to ensure the reincarnat­ion of imperialis­m must never be allowed again in our country?

History can only make sense when it is told in its truth since any attempts to doctor it distorts the facts.

Le us tell our true Zimbabwean story.

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