The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Chimoio, Nyadzonia: Tale of contrastin­g memories

- Text: Garikai Mazara Photograph­y: Believe Nyakudjara Design: Memory Gwiza

THE first trip to Chimoio two years ago was a potpourri of emotions: high on expectatio­n, high on anxiety and equally high on sadness.

It is difficult to visit Chimoio and not be engulfed by some degree of sadness, sadness at the senselessn­ess of war, sadness at the height to which humanity can sink, sadness that there are some souls that lie resting out there, souls that never made it into a new Zimbabwe, souls who died with just a dream of a free and just Zimbabwe.

Then that sadness, at least on that last visit, was compounded by what seemed like a deliberate attempt to forget the role of Chimoio, what seemed like a page in our history was being forgotten. A dark page.

Chimoio Shrine, built in remembranc­e of the thousands who were mercilessl­y massacred by the Rhodesian forces during three days of senseless bombardmen­t in 1977, looked neglected, forgotten and tacked away just in the history pages.

The perimeter security fence around the shrine stood in some places and fallen in other sections. The flags were tattered and torn (the repetition is for emphasis) and Augusto Maritimo, the caretaker admitted that as much as he is keen to keep on mowing the grass to keep the shrine in good shape, his enthusiasm was not being matched by Zimbabwean authoritie­s.

Apart from his allowances (for looking after the shrine) which were not constant, he bemoaned the apparent neglect that the shrine, given its stature in the history of both Mozambique and Zimbabwe, had to endure.

Fast forward two years and there is evidence that someone at the National Museum and Monuments, custodian of all such shrines inside and outside the country, must have seen and felt guilt about the state of affairs at Chimoio.

The signage at the entrance, which had been erased by years of sunshine, has been given a new fresh coat of paint. In fact, the message is now legible, unlike on the previous visit, where its massage had been erased by the passage of time.

The entrance is getting a facelift, with a brick-and-mortar enclave welcoming visitors.

Though Augusto was not at hand this time to give an update on what is going on at the shrine, his brother, Betinho Joao, was available to show us around. At 22 years old, he narrates the events of Chimoio with the authority of an eye-witness. The Chimoio massacre was 18 years before he was born!

Besides the fresh pair of Zimbabwean flags, which proudly fly either side of the Mozambican one, the new signage at the entrance and the facelift of the entrance, the shrine’s museum is taking shape. A bit of backgr The site of th larly known as k Chimoio town. W independen­t in 19 country, not wan the new governm were farmers.

The Mozambic to liberation mov some of the relin tion movements who left his, wh

ground info might help. he Chimoio shrine is popukwaAdr­iano in and around When Mozambique became 975, many Portuguese fled the anting to work together with ment. Some of these leaving can government, sympatheti­c vements in the region, offered nquished farms to the liberas. Adriano is one such farmer hich was promptly offered to Zanu-PF, where it set up its base.

The Chimoio camp, just like the one at Nyadzonia, served dual purposes, doubling up as refugee and military camps. Those who had been displaced by war at the front, especially in areas that bordered Mozambique, found refuge at the two camps, among many others littered in and around our neighbour.

The house that Adriano left, his farm house, became the centre of operations of Chimoio. And in the senseless bombing that occurred from around 8am on November 23 1977, a bombardmen­t which was to last for the next three days, the house was not spared.

However, some of its walls remained intact and the National Museums and Monuments has embarked on a painstakin­g exercise to, not only, rebuild the house but turn it into a museum.

The way the museum has been set up is such that any visitor to Chimoio will take in the events of those three days of bombardmen­t without talking to anyone. In fact, the museum is a repository of not just the Chimoio massacre but the journey that Zimbabwe travelled from the formative days of nationalis­m, through the bravery of the Chinhoyi Seven, Altena Farm, the Chitepo Assassinat­ion, Nyadzonia massacre, the Chimoio massacre, some of the decisive battles which played big roles in Smith making concession­s at Lancaster House, right through to Independen­ce in 1980.

With the aid of graphic images, the museum tries to capture the mood of suffering that comrades endured during those relentless 72 hours.

There is a recreation of a scene of the Chimoio massacre, which aids one in understand­ing how grotesque the attack was.

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