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Josiah
Bob Taundi's gallery of images inspired by Operation Murambatsvina
February 09, 2006
Read
the interview with Josiah Bob Taundi - includes audio files
Copyright rests
with the author. No unauthorised use of these images. For further
enquiries please consult the artist by writing to jbtaundi@yahoo.com

This work is
licensed under a Creative
Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.5 License.
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Title:
Day Of Reckoning
Medium: Poster colour on paper
Unframed size: 93 x 73 cm |
This is a home industry scenario in the ghettoes, a noble
small to medium enterprises idea used to empower youths economically.
That is where you find urban legends like "Vote for whomever"
and political parties' T-shirts typical of urban walls and
wear, respectively, in Zimbabwe today. Somehow we have become
an election-based country. However, authorities also knocked
down these centres of empowerment during Operation Murambatsvina
never mind the fact that they paid taxes to council and government.
Effectively whether one was the typical "indigenous businessman"
typified by Westminster formal wear or belonging to the political
protagonists Zanu PF or MDC you all faced the same end: out
of business
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Title:
The Wait
Medium: Poster colour on paper
Unframed size: 67 x 48 cm |
Waiting
for the bus, kombi, waiting for payday, waiting to draw cash
from the bank, waiting for sugar, bread, waiting for service,
waiting for bills, waiting for political change, waiting for
salvation, waiting for God. Waiting. Waiting for something
to happen, of its own accord. No action, just waiting, patiently.
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Title:
Relief
Medium: Poster colour on paper
Unframed size: 93 x 73 cm |
Refugee
camps such as Caledonia and Helensvale, which sprung up as
a result of Government's Operation Murambatsvina, inspired
this piece. They were places of suffering beyond measure,
unnecessary in the first place. No food, no running water,
no sanitary facilities, no shelter, no health care, no income,
no love - nothing. It was a human catastrophe, a national
shame. That was until humanitarian organisations chipped in.
Suddenly there were tents, medical supplies, food rations,
blankets and all other basics. It was relief at last, but
for how long? The multilateral and donor agencies that government
want people to believe are part of our problem became the
solution itself. They gave our people some dignity that had
been taken away by our own Government. But no matter what,
the Big Brother was always there watching who was doing or
saying what.
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Title:
Water Crisis
Medium: Pastel on paper
Unframed size: 50 x 36 cm |
Women
of burden are no longer a rustic sight. It is today's urban
reality. No water for days, weeks and months. The authorities
blame what they like. One time it is high demand, high evaporation,
people abusing water, burst pipes and recently in Harare it
was a one metre sludge mass that had accumulated over five
years because no one remembered to clean the reservoirs. That
is the same story for virtually every basic amenity. There
was a cholera outbreak in Harare more than six months after
the so-called Clean Up exercise! We have become a nation that
lets infrastructure run until it fails while we look for scapegoats.
It is as if God will one day crash down in all His Mighty
and set things right while we just sit and blame.
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