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'Mad
Bob': man or monster?
Mail & Guardian (SA)
February 29, 2008
Just before
Robert Mugabe's momentous escape from Rhodesia to Mozambique
in 1975, he had dinner with journalist Heidi Holland. Mugabe had
not been an expected guest. Rather, he was the unnamed "someone
else" whom constitutional law expert and Zanu-PF sympathiser
Ahrn Palley told Holland he would be bringing along for dinner.
Holland was
surprised when she saw a lean, steel-faced, middle-aged man on her
verandah. Here in the flesh was the man whose photograph she had
published on the cover of Illustrated Life Rhodesia -- the magazine
she edited against the instructions of her boss and to the fury
of the Rhodesian security police, who banned it. Soon after that
evening, Mugabe left the country and guerrilla warfare against the
Rhodesian state intensified.
Thirty-two years later
Holland met Mugabe again in an interview at his official residence
late last year. If the dinner had been a chance meeting, the interview
most certainly was not: Holland spent five weeks in Harare waiting
for a gap to open in Mugabe's diary. While the president flew
off to Lisbon and attended to national and regional engagements,
Holland waited in her hotel room ... and waited.
Although Holland says
sheer persistence paid off, her struggle credentials might have
been significant. Which her statement -- in which she claims "my
own history [with the nationalists] went back quite far"--
doesn't quite capture. It was a Catholic contact who finally
smoothed the way: "Father Fidelis Mukonori got me the interview
with Mugabe," she says with gratitude in her voice.
Holland's interview
with Mugabe is most likely the first given to a foreign journalist
since those he gave to Sky News in 2004 and the SABC in 2006. Holland
describes Mugabe's office as "quite plain, but elegant";
she was served a bun and a sausage on "very fragile"
English porcelain."That place is full of contradictions,"
she says.
Mugabe sat in a gold-coloured,
swivel high chair behind a dark wooden desk in an office dominated
by a map of the world. "He is incredibly lonely. I don't
think I have met a person as lonely as him."
Holland says one of the
difficulties of the interview was that she didn't know how
much time she had. "I couldn't dwell on a particular
question. I covered a lot of ground, but not with the kind of depth
I'd have wanted," she says. Foremost in her mind were
land restitution, the foundation of the Zimbabwe economic crisis
and Gukurahundi -- where up to 20 000 civilians died at the hands
of an army unit that reported directly to the president -- post-independence
Zimbabwe's most egregious moral stain.
The interview forms the
basis of the concluding chapter in her tantalisingly titled Dinner
with Mugabe (Penguin Books South Africa), an eminently readable
psychological biography of the Zimbabwean president. While that
far-off dinner might have been an impetus for the book, more pressing
and contemporary was the reportage on Zimbabwe in the past eight
years, which Holland characterises as "simplistic" and
not "nuanced at all".
"A lot of reporters
didn't review the history," says Holland. In contrast
her study features chapter-length, candid interviews about Mugabe
with key actors in the operatic Zimbabwe saga. Among them are former
Zanu-PF chief spin-doctor Jonathan Moyo; the late premier Ian "I
Told You So" Smith; Lord Carrington, a junior minister in
the Winston Churchill government and British foreign secretary at
the time of the Lancaster House agreement in 1979; Zanu-PF founder
member Edgar "Two Boy" Tekere; former agriculture minister
Dennis Norman; and Mugabe's niece Patricia Bekele.
Realising that Mugabe's
mental and emotional disposition is very complicated, Holland saw
the need to work with psychologists -- three of them. They analysed
and interpreted the interviews and the author added her own cogent,
incisive and, at times, damning perspectives of Mugabe.
Holland acknowledges
that even after working with psychologists she is not quite sure
she has unmasked the man who thrives on public relations stunts.
"He suppresses
a lot of things," she says of Mugabe, whom she believes "embodies
much of the pain and the anger that is felt in Southern Africa"
towards colonialism.
Talking to Holland you
get the sense that here is a book that portrays Mugabe in images
other than that of the inexplicable, mentally unbalanced, "Mad
Bob" monster who, in a moment of pique, ran down a nation
that Julius Nyerere described as a jewel. "I suspected Britain,
apartheid South Africa and white Rhodesians had a case to answer,"
says Holland.
She set about finding
people with whom Mugabe had interacted, including childhood mates,
influential priests, political friends and foes and close relatives,
and Donato, his younger brother. "I knew people who said he
was a decent man once . . . and I spoke to dozens of people."
As she researched and
wrote the book she was acutely aware that time was rushing past
and some of the key protagonists were dying. Since she began Donato
and Smith have died.
Holland regrets not having
spoken to James Chikerema, the late nationalist and Mugabe's
relative, who was bed-ridden at the time she was doing her interviews.
Others, such as Tekere, Emmanuel Ribeiro, Lady Soames (wife of the
governor of Rhodesia at the time of the transition), Kazito Bute
(almost 100) and Catholic priests who are quite close to Mugabe,
are frail and old.
Holland says that the
older people she interviewed brought a certain authenticity, which
younger interviewees might not. "I realised that old people
tell the truth. They have no reason to lie," she says. Holland
points out that when they talked to her it was almost as if they
were setting the record straight for posterity.
Holland insists that
her book is not a revisionist take on Zimbabwe's recent history.
"One doesn't want to soften the historical record . . .
as what he [Mugabe] has done is catastrophic." Her account
is informed by the realisation that the "monster doesn't
tell us about ourselves, our systems and our history".
She says she was pleasantly
surprised when Donato, who bore a striking resemblance to Robert,
agreed to see her. "One of the reasons I looked for him was
to see if Mugabe looked after his family." The picture she
gleaned confirms that hunch. "He is not just this monster.
He is a human being -- certainly not this one-dimensional villain.
He is complicated, intense and an interesting person. People want
him to be more evil than he actually is."
She says there really
is a softer side to Mugabe, who dotes on his teenage kids. (Mugabe's
first son with Sally, his late wife, died in the 1960s while Mugabe
was in prison). Holland says he describes his daughter as "silent"
and the two boys as "naughty".
When we turn to talk
about Michael, Mugabe's elder brother, who died of suspected
poisoning at 15, Holland says that while interviewing Mugabe it
was as if it "was happening right in front of him again".
Michael's death was a crucial and traumatic moment for Mugabe
because he became, in effect, the first-born. Furthermore, he had
to assume the responsibilities that came with being head of the
family after Gabriel, his father, deserted them for Bulawayo, where
he had another family.
I had the opportunity of listening to the audio discs of the interview
with Mugabe. It is polite without being fawning and executed with
canny guardedness by Holland.
It was a mighty surprise
to hear the leader I have always thought a perpetually angry old
man laughing and talking animatedly in a slightly accentuated and
gravelly voice as Holland prods his memory.
In thinking and writing
about her interviewees Holland gives us Robert Mugabe with all his
fatal flaws, foibles, vices -- and virtues. For that reason Dinner
with Mugabe is the best picture of the man that has ever been published.
It is as exhaustive as is possible in the circumstances and tells
us much about Zimbabwe's painful past, its tolerable present
and its citizens' hidden selves, with all their triumphs and
blunders.
* Dinner with
Mugabe will be on sale from March 12 2008
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