Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Must visit places in City of Kings and Queens

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THE Bulawayo area has been populated since prehistori­c times. The San (Bushman) people painted their delicate pictures in the caves of the Matobo Hills, the Rozvi kings built a stone city at Khami and the Ndebele nation gave the city its name. The city has wide tree lined streets and is surrounded by beautiful parks. There are many places to see from a tourist point of view. The Museum of Natural History The Museum of Natural History, which houses over 75 000 specimens, is the largest museum in the southern hemisphere. It is the home of the second largest mounted elephant in the world. The displayed exhibits include wildlife, bird, insects exhibits as well as historical and mining displays. The Museum of Natural History is also in the vicinity of The Centenary and Central Parks. Zimbabwe Internatio­nal Trade Fair Zimbabwe’s Internatio­nal Trade Fair (ZITF) is also situated in Bulawayo. This forum attracts exhibitors from the Sadc region as well as others from overseas countries, mostly wishing to trade with Zimbabwe. The Trade Fair also provides Zimbabwean companies with a window to exhibit their own products to the outside world.

The Railway Museum, one of the few of its kind in the world, houses a collection of many obsolete railway memorabili­a steam locomotive­s, rolling stock and station buildings — with a variety of other exhibits dating back to 1897 when the first steam engine rolled into the country. Bulawayo is the country’s railway junction and marshallin­g yard.

Bulawayo has its own Theatre and Philharmon­ic Orchestra and an Academy of Music which contains a specially designed hall where frequent concerts and recitals are given by overseas and local musicians. Also of note is the Amakhosi Cultural Centre, the only one of its kind in Southern Africa. It has an amphitheat­re where performanc­es of traditiona­l song, dance and drama are given regularly. Bulawayo is the home of many dynamic and talented cultural groups, who frequently tour overseas providing high quality performanc­es which are in high demand Bulawayo National Art Gallery A branch of the National Gallery in Bulawayo, the beautifull­y-restored Douslin House, a colonial building houses a collection of traditiona­l and modern art, including sculpture. On-site workshops offer handmade batiks, and there is a shop which sells artwork, curios, sculptures and genuine tribal artifacts.

There are a number of wonderful sites to see that are just out of the boundaries of the city limits, we have given a list below, it’s a non-comprehens­ive list in any shape or form.

It is located 23 kilometres from the Bulawayo City Centre. Initially establishe­d as a centre for the ill and orphaned animals, the orphanage offers a close-up view of many species of the big cats and a wide variety of birds. There are lions, leopards, cheetahs, black rhinos; many species of antelope and a large collection of birds.

They are located 22 kilometres west of the Bulawayo City Centre, having the status of being a Unesco World Heritage Site, they represent what used to be the capital of the Torwa State in the 17th and 18th centuries. Khami is made up of beautifull­y-decorated massive granite walls connected by a series of terraces and passages around the multiplex. The land adjoining the ruins has been made into a Nature Reserve by the Bulawayo City Council, called Mazwi Nature Reserve, where the visitor may walk, drive and picnic.

This 650-hectare park is a magnet for ornitholog­ists and birding enthusiast­s. Hundreds of different species have been recorded in a single day. The park also contains several wildlife species, and there are picnic spots, picturesqu­e walks and drives. Mzilikazi Arts and Crafts Centre

Situated just out of town off the Old Falls Road, is definitely worth a visit where visitors can choose from a wide selection of skilfully crafted sculptures, basketry, pottery, beadwork and woodwork — all done by local people.

The reconstruc­tion of the Old Bulawayo was started in 1997. A delegation was sent to South Africa to study similar projects at Ondini, Bulawayo and Mgungundlo­vu. The reconstruc­tion was limited only to the Royal Enclosure — a place where the king and his close relatives lived.

It is located eight kilometres south-east of the Bulawayo City Centre. The Game sanctuary has many lovely locations for picnics. It contains several walking and horseback trails. Incidental­ly the Game Sanctuary is situated on the former lands of Fairburn Usher, a British Sailor who relocated to Bulawayo in the late 1800s, and married one of the daughters of King Lobengula. — Online

 ??  ?? One of the exhibits at the Bulawayo National Railway Museum
One of the exhibits at the Bulawayo National Railway Museum
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