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Homeless
but not hopeless in Africa
Pius Ncube
December
23, 2006
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,3933-2516265,00.html
Christmas, the
Feast of the Incarnation, when we relive the mystery of God come
among us as Man gives us as much cause to reflect on the nature
of humanity as on the nature of the Godhead.
Paramount to
the story of the Nativity is that God took on our human nature;
that the Word was made flesh and dwelt among us full of grace and
truth. This truth brings back to us with great force the dignity
of human beings. A dignity that cries out to us from the depths
of suffering, oppression and pain. When God became Man in Palestine
He made Himself the hungry one, the naked one, the homeless one.
The Christmas
story is not a comfortable one. In Bulawayo and the surrounding
region of Matabeleland in Zimbabwe the lives of the children, the
women and the men I am called to serve are not comfortable either.
So often people spend two days before their next meal. For many
this Christmas will not only be one without presents, but one without
food as well.
For them the
story of Our Lord’s birth, life and death has too many resonances
and echoes. Hearing of their Saviour born in Bethlehem in a stable
because there was no room at the inn, many of them will remember
the homelessness they and their little ones suffered when the cruel
Mugabe regime that oppresses our people tore down their homes last
year.
Through Operation
Murambatsvina or "Clear Out Rubbish", hundreds of
thousands were made homeless by a government that cares more about
preserving its own power than looking after its people; it was a
callous affront to human dignity.
The Lord Jesus
was born in a stable and laid in a simple manger; He was not born
among the rich or the powerful. I long for our political leaders
in their mansions and Mercedes-Benz to hear the call to serve their
people, for them to hold out their hands across boundaries to protect
the weak, the lowly and the oppressed.
Our Government,
like King Herod, hunts down those who present a threat to its lust
for power and privilege. Just as the Holy Innocents, all the baby
boys in Judaea, were slaughtered to protect Herod’s place on the
throne, so in Zimbabwe food supplies are manipulated and whole districts
deprived of food for not showing political loyalty to a dictatorial
regime.
The Holy Family
was forced to flee into exile and find safety in Egypt, and millions
of Zimbabweans have fled the terror, hunger and desperation of our
land to live in exile. We ask for kindness and patience in those
countries where Zimbabweans seek refuge and try to lead normal lives.
As we celebrate
the birth of Jesus we know that the story moves forward to His death
at the age of 33. For most of the world that is regarded as young
and Our Lord’s life as a short one. Not in Zimbabwe any more; in
the past couple of decades our average life expectancy has been
halved to stand only in the mid-30s. An average of 500 people die
of Aids every day. We have 1.3 million orphans and many child-headed
families. Often a girl of 15, who has lost both parents, has to
look after three or four younger siblings. Disease, malnutrition
and economic mismanagement leading to lack of medicines and clinic
facilities are cutting swaths through our population.
Yet still for
mile after mile along the dusty roads of Zimbabwe you will see the
families of the faithful, walking through the night to be at church
on Christmas Day ready to celebrate the birth of their Saviour.
Poor, sick,
orphaned, ill-dressed and unshod these, the very humblest in human
terms, are the treasures of the Church. As they walk beneath the
clear starlit African night joining with Christians around the world
to hear again the Christmas story they will be reminded of the message
of the angels in the skies above Bethlehem 2,000 years ago.
For such expressions
we give thanks. We thank also all those who have supported us in
different ways in countries across the world. When we sing of a
midnight clear and glorious, a song of old, let us give thanks and
reflect, making a special prayer for all those who suffer oppression,
not only in Zimbabwe but for the many troubled spots across the
world: Iraq, the Middle East, the Darfur region and the tsunami
victims, to name a few.
May we
listen to the message of the angels: "Peace on the Earth, good
will to men, from Heaven’s all gracious King." Oh hush the
noise, ye men of strife, and hear the angels sing!
*Pius Ncube
is the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Bulawayo, Zimbabwe
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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