The Herald (Zimbabwe)

President meets Mangena’s widow

- Herald Reporter

PRESIDENT Mnangagwa yesterday met Mrs Sikhubekis­o Madeya Mangena, widow to Rodgers Alfred Nikita Mangena, national hero and former commander of Zimbabwe People’s Revolution­ary Army, the militant branch of the Zimbabwe African People’s Union who died in 1978 in Zambia.

Mrs Mangena was accompanie­d by his son Lotshe who was born just two years before his father met his demise.

In an interview with ZBC TV, Mrs Mangena described his husband as a dedicated cadre to the independen­ce of his country.

“He was a soldier by birth I suppose, and not just by training. He knew what he wanted in life. He wanted his country to be independen­t and he fought for it and gave his life towards the independen­ce we have today,” she said.

His son Lotshe said he learnt that he father was a disciplina­rian.

“There are a lot of exciting stories about him. He was very punctual, he never took nonsense, he was very discipline­d and disciplina­rian,” he said.

One of the pioneers of the armed struggle, Cde Mangena was killed in a landmine explosion in southern Zambia in 1978.

His remains were reburied at the national shrine on August 11, 1998.

Rodgers, whose Chimurenga name was Nikita, was the son of Bakayi Mangena and Elizabeth Ngwenya.

He was a brilliant child and the good school reports Rodgers brought with him from Chegato enabled him to enrol in second term of 1963 at Chingola Secondary School, after brilliantl­y passing an aptitude test.

The young Rodgers was awarded the Rhodes Scholarshi­p which he did not take up because he opted to join the liberation struggle.

After the initial military training, Cde Mangena together with Andrew Mafu, Philip Maphosa and Tapson Sibanda were selected to go for further training in Algeria.

At the end of their course they were sent to Tanzania, first to Kongwa then to Morogoro training camps.

When Zapu’s military wing was reconstitu­ted and renamed Zimbabwe People’s Revolution­ary Army (Zipra) in 1971 following the departure of the Chikerema-Nyandoro group, Cde Mangena was appointed Commander of Zipra with Jason Ziyaphapha Moyo as acting Commander-in-Chief.

Cde Mangena also became a member of the Zimbabwe’s People’s Revolution­ary Council.

Under his command, Zipra matured and grew from strength to strength and developed into a well-organised and discipline­d force within a short space of

Government has since named the cantonment which houses the Zimbabwe National Defence University and other institutio­ns the Rodgers Alfred Nikita Mangena Barracks.

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