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Gukurahundi
exhibit hits a sore point
Jason Moyo, Mail and Gaurdian (SA)
October 15, 2010
http://www.mg.co.za/article/2010-10-15-gukurahundi-exhibit-hits-a-sore-point
Zimbabwe has
pulled out all the stops to ban images of the military crackdown
on the Ndebele.
Using bold images
of blood and gore, Owen
Maseko's banned exhibition brought up a subject that still
stokes Zimbabwean's thinly veiled ethnic tensions.
Paintings of
village women weeping tears of blood stood against walls splattered
with red graffiti, before police took them down and banned the exhibition.
Maseko's
exhibition at the Bulawayo Art Gallery was a protest against the
Gukurahundi, the military campaign launched by a Zimbabwean army
unit in the 1980s against armed dissidents. Rights groups say thousands
of civilians were killed.
In September
the exhibition became the first art in years to be officially banned
by the Zimbabwe government.
In a government
notice Home Affairs Secretary Melusi Matshiya announced Maseko's
exhibition had been banned under censorship laws. Matshiya said
the "effigies, words and paintings on the walls portray the
Gukurahundi era as a tribal, biased event'.
And, he pointed
out that "the male statue showing genital organs standing
at the opening in the gallery [is] proof of indecent nature and
as such is prohibited from public exhibition".
The Zimbabwean
government also dusted off a colonial-era law that compels artists
to hold "entertainment licences", which they must renew
every year.
Hours after
the exhibition opened police arrived at the gallery, covered some
of the art with old newspapers and arrested Maseko. He is now challenging
the ban in the Constitutional Court. "As an artist, I am inspired
by what happens around me, my experiences, other people's
experiences," he said from Bulawayo. "An artist needs
to be relevant. Gukurahundi is part of history, even if it is a
history others do not want remembered."
Last week a
coalition of rights groups gave Maseko an award for "his bravery
in giving a face and voice to the Gukurahundi massacres through
visual arts." But, Maseko said, his ordeal has left him isolated
as cowed fellow artists keep their distance from him.
One of his canvases
depicts a group of women wailing beneath the words: "They
made us sing their songs while they tortured us and killed our brothers
and sisters."
Maseko said
his work was based largely on the testimony of victims. The military
campaign ended after former PF-Zapu leader Joshua Nkomo agreed to
unity with Mugabe. But that agreement is a source of great bitterness
and frustration for Maseko, as it is for many Ndebele activists.
"The unity
accord was signed only because Nkomo was desperate to stop the killings,"
he said.
Maseko insisted
Zimbabwe's attempts at "national healing" can
succeed only if citizens are allowed to express themselves freely
on issues such as Gukurahundi.
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