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This article participates on the following special index pages:

  • Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles


  • We cannot live without truth
    Oskar Wermter SJ
    Extracted from Mbare Report No 15
    July 13, 2005

    I could not get into my own premises, such a throng of people jostling each other were in front of the gate. People are hungry and desperate. Where is the next meal coming from? The sick, the handicapped, the elderly may get elbowed out of the way; the bedridden may be left out altogether. Mbare has an unusually large elderly population. Leaders of our parish neighbourhood groups come with lists of people we have not been able to assist yet and tell harrowing stories of biting hunger. How do we reach them all?

    A few vendors are timidly emerging again on the streets with just a few vegetables and fruits for sale, not more than they can grab and run with if the police come round the corner. You get arrested if caught vending.

    Most people who were self-employed or depended on income from renting out rooms are ruined. They have no chance ever to follow their trade again unless they are party supporters and are given stands at the new sites controlled by the party. People not supporting the party no longer have a right
    to life.

    Not all who escaped the chaos in Mbare to the rural areas have been lucky. A woman who has a history of being harassed as an opposition party supporter, who had her house burnt and was beaten up, came back from a remote area to look for food: there is nothing where she went; she has been feeding her family on vegetables only.

    There is no cleaning-up. There is only destruction and heaps of rubble lining certain streets and filling up empty spaces where people have dumped the debris left after -tsunami-. Mbare was never so ugly.

    That is the depressing thing: the enormous lies that are being told day in, day out. The country is being cleaned up, order is restored; you are freed from crime and corruption; new houses are being built. Truth is constantly being twisted and distorted, which touches our very humanity. We cannot live without truth. It is part of the air we breathe. You choke on this diet of lies, you vomit when constantly fed such poison.

    The boys of Hartmann House loaded our car with blankets they had brought from home for the displaced people. The students of St George's reputed to be interested only in cricket or rugby, far from the social reality of the country | raised $ 20 million with which we bought three bales of blankets, 60 blankets each. It is very encouraging to experience the solidarity of fellow Christians.

    On Monday afternoon, while watching the crowds lining up for food distribution, amidst the hustle and bustle of people shouting and arguing, crying and pleading, suddenly Cardinal Napier, archbishop of Durban, SA, appeared. I could not believe my eyes: what is he doing here? Then more clergy emerged from a mini-bus: the delegation of the SA Council of Churches was visiting Mbare. Tell your president|, our aid workers told the visitors. Our president never received them. It was good to experience the concern of our neighbours from down south.

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