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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
The
lion of Zimbabwe looks to polls to end exile
Earth Times
March 19, 2008
http://www.wikio.com/entertainment/music/artists/world_music/thomas_mapfumo?wfid=49808041
Harare/Johannesburg -
Five years of separation from the country whose struggles inspired
all his music has wounded the Lion of Zimbabwe, Thomas Mapfumo.
Speaking down the line from his home in Oregon, United States, he
admits: "I feel so bad."
Mapfumo is talking about
his exile from Zimbabwe, where he invented the country's own brand
of struggle music during the last days of minority white rule in
the 1970s, earning him a short prison term and the status of national
icon.
"I have been away
from home for such a long time," he sighs.
Mapfumo, 62, is probably
the best known of the estimated 4 million Zimbabwean exiles who
have been squeezed out of the country by economic hardship and/or
political oppression over the past decade.
His fall from grace with
President Robert Mugabe's government began in 1989 when the voice
of the chirumenga (struggle in his native Shona, also the term for
his style of protest music) trained his sights on the new government.
In 1989 he released an
album entitled Corruption and for years afterwards was harassed
by the state. Government spies used to come looking for him at his
home. They also warned one of his friends, who worked in the presidency:
"The president doesn't like you to go to Mukanya's (Mapfumo's
nickname) place."
In the late 1990s he
moved to Oregon. Since 2003, he hasn't been back Zimbabwe - not
even for the funeral of his mother who died on Christmas Day, 2007.
"I have been hearing
a lot of rumours, you know, about some people trying to harm me,"
he says.
Mapfumo still sings in
Shona mostly and tries to stoke opposition to Mugabe's repressive
rule but the tone is less angry, more reflective.
In his 2005 album entitled
Rise Up, he urges "Let's go, father" while trying to reason
with Mugabe, saying: "I'm one of your own so don't hate me
for what I say."
Several of his more recent
songs are banned in Zimbabwe, where state-controlled radio prefers
his old revolutionary tunes, but his name is still spoken with reverence
across the country.
"Mapfumo was the
best but they chased him away," says Eddie, a taxi driver in
Harare about half the singer's age.
Like many Zimbabwean
exiles Mapfumo is sceptical about the prospects for change in the
upcoming elections, in which 84-year-old Mugabe is seeking to extend
his 28 years in office.
Asked for his thoughts
on former finance minister and ex-ruling Zanu-PF politburo member
Simba Makoni, who is standing against Mugabe in the polls, Mapfumo
shoots back: "How can you trust someone like that?"
Longtime opposition leader
Morgan Tsvangirai gets a slightly more favourable response. "We
all used to think that Tsvangirai would be given enough room to
manoeuvre but he seems to be doing not much for the people."
Mapfumo, by now a grandfather,
continues to tour internationally, keeping in touch with his fans
through his page on the Myspace social networking website and keeping
tabs on the situation in Zimbabwe.
"I have friends
who are in the ruling party, even some ministers, and police. They
sometimes call me on the phone," he says.
"I was thinking
maybe if there's any chance of these elections coming out clean
... maybe if there's a moderate leader, there's a chance we'll be
able to go back home."
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