| |
Back to Index
The
illegal seizure by excommunicated Bishop Nolbert Kunonga of the
Arthur Shearly Cripps Shrine in Chivhu, Zimbabwe
Owen Sheers
August 04, 2011
View this article
on the SPT website
In 2004 I published
The Dust Diaries, an account of my journey tracing the life and
legacy of my great, great uncle, the maverick missionary and activist
for African rights Arthur Shearly Cripps. My journey in Cripps-
footsteps finished at his graveside in the knave of a ruined church
deep in the Zimbabwean veldt. The church was built by Cripps in
the style of Great Zimbabwe. It was midnight and hundreds of people
were packed between its walls, dancing and singing around my uncle-s
grave. Fires picked out the shape of the kopje that rose above us,
testament to the 700 Zimbabweans who had, despite fuel shortages
and other difficulties, made the journey to this isolated place
to celebrate Arthur-s life and remember his fifty years living
and working with the Shona people around Chivhu. The celebrations
lasted for three days. Remarkably ecumenical in nature, both Anglican
service and traditional Shona pungwe, they constituted the annual
'Shearly Cripps Festival-, an event attended by Zimbabwean
Anglicans for over fifty years.
This year the
Shearly Cripps festival has not been allowed to happen. On August
2nd it was reported that excommunicated Anglican Bishop Nolbert
Kunonga, an outspoken supporter of President Robert Mugabe and ZANU
PF, claimed to have 'taken over- the Shearly Cripps
Shrine, along with all other church properties in the Masvingo Province.
Sadly the local police have enforced Kunonga-s claims, despite
repeated court orders ruling access to Anglican properties should
be open to all. This claim follows over ten years of similar actions
by Kunonga, including inciting violence against those attending
services under the direction of the legitimate Archbishop of Harare.
As with his actions over the Shearly Cripps Shrine the police, ignoring
court orders, have often acted in collusion with Kunonga, even tear-gassing
church-goers.
As a descendent
of Arthur Shearly Cripps I strongly condemn Kunonga-s illegal
seizure of the Shearly Cripps Shrine and all other Anglican Church
properties in Masvingo Provience and call upon Kunonga to revoke
his false claims. Given the nature of Cripps- activist work
- fighting for indigenous land rights, defending local people
against colonial injustice, building the country-s first VD
clinic for indigenous Zimbabweans - Kunonga-s actions
in denying access to his shrine and inciting violence against the
Anglican community are particularly sickening and perverse. Extraordinary
though the actions of Kunonga and the police may seem they are also,
unfortunately, all too indicative of the cronyism, corruption and
injustice that have marred the ZANU PF regime in Zimbabwe for over
the last ten years.
Cripps strived
all his life for equality and justice. When he died he left all
his land to the local people who had lived and farmed on that land
for many years. In the light of his work and his legacy it is particularly
saddening that the kind of actions Cripps fought against during
his time in colonial Southern Rhodesia should be echoed now by Kunonga
in a post-colonial Zimbabwe.
Notes
for Editors
- Bishop Kunonga
was excommunicated from the Anglican Church in Africa after his
violent actions, including encouraging physical attacks on people
attending Sunday services under the direction of the legitimate
Archbishop of Harare.
- It was recently
reported that Kunonga broke into the church in Chivhu with the
connivance of the police, who refuse to take any complaint from
the Anglican church about these events. Government controlled
Zimbabwean television has endorsed Kunonga-s activities,
and have publicized his takeover as a matter of fact.
- Arthur Shearly
Cripps was a poet, activist and independent missionary to Zimbabwe
who lived in Zimbabwe from 1901 until his death in 1952. Throughout
his time in the country he fought tirelessly for African rights,
and specifically African land rights, publishing a book entitled
An Africa for Africans in 1927.
Both Muriel Spark and Doris Lessing have cited Cripps as an influential
figure in the development of liberal social activism in Southern
Rhodesia/Zimbabwe
- Jodi Bieber,
winner of the premier World Press Photo of the Year Award 2011,
attended the Shearly Cripps festival with Owen Sheers in 2000.
To contact Jodi about these images please visit this link.
- Owen Sheers
is a poet and author. He recently wrote the script for National
Theatre of Wales and Michael Sheen-s The Passion. The Dust
Diaries won the Welsh Book of the Year 2005 and is currently being
translated into Shona. Owen is available for interview.
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.
TOP
|