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ZIMBABWE:
Politics make strange churchfellows
IRIN
News
June 14, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=53947
HARARE - Zimbabwean
churches trying to address the worsening political and economic
crises are being thrust into the unfamiliar role of political activism,
and are perceived as split along party lines.
Church groups perceived to support President Robert Mugabe and those
who favour a faction of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change
led by Morgan Tsvangirai have been attacking each other, making
headlines with their public bickering.
The running verbal battles started on 25 May, when organisers of
the traditional National Day of Prayer, observed by Zimbabweans
of all religious denominations, cancelled the function after they
were summoned to the president's office.
The National Day of Prayer has always been organised by the Zimbabwe
Council of Churches, (ZCC), a grouping of traditional and Pentecostal
denominations. After meeting Mugabe, some ZCC members appeared on
national television to express support for the 82-year-old veteran
president and his policies.
Insiders claimed the decision to cancel the prayer day was spurred
by a fear that the more radical, pro-opposition Zimbabwe Christian
Alliance would take over the show.
During the liberation war, which lasted from the late 1960s until
the late 1970s, Mugabe was quoted in an interview as saying: "We
appeal to them [churches] to allow us to politicise the people under
their control because we believe that everybody must be mobilised
so that the total commitment of our people can be achieved."
With inflation at almost 1,200 percent, poverty-stricken Zimbabweans
have sought refuge in religion, as IRIN reported recently. Churches
have noted rapidly growing numbers of new members, while several
top government officials have also become lay preachers or have
applied to train as pastors. Political influence over religious
groups has become critical to controlling the masses.
The president of the ZCC, Peter Nemapare, told a television reporter
after the State House meeting: "We know we have a government that
we must support, interact with and draw attention to our concerns.
Those of us who have different ideas about this country surely must
know we have a government which listens."
This was roundly condemned by other church members and the Christian
Alliance. "We totally disagree with the tone and substance of the
sentiments voiced by the church leaders who went to state house.
In what way do they support this government which has shed innocent
blood, brutally tortured its citizens and destroyed their homes
and livelihoods, and promoted racial hatred?" the alliance asked
in a statement issued last week.
Bishop Trevor Manhanga, who led the delegation that met with Mugabe,
denied they were supporters of the ruling party. "We are prepared
to be given all sorts of labels and brick-bats that will be thrown
at us, but we will not be diverted from pursuing dialogue," he told
IRIN.
The Christian Alliance promptly staged a prayer march in Zimbabwe's
second city, Bulawayo, to commemorate people affected by the state-sponsored
purge of informal settlements and markets called Operation Murambatsvina,
which began in May last year and left more than 700,000 people homeless
and often also without livelihoods.
The ruling party and those churches perceived as pro-Mugabe seized
the initiative by cancelling the annual day of prayer and renaming
it the Zimbabwe National Day of Prayer, but a prayer march by the
Alliance in the capital, Harare, is scheduled for 25 June to coincide
with the new day of prayer.
"On our part, there can be no partnership with the ZANU-PF government
until and unless there is genuine repentance and change on its part
- what relationship can there be between the light of the Gospel
and the darkness it stands for?" the alliance asked in the statement.
Pius Ncube, the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Bulawayo and a known
Mugabe critic, has also jumped into the fray, alleging that some
clergymen had been bribed by the state to praise the country's leadership.
"There is no secret about the fact that some of the church leaders
who embarrassed the church by praising Mugabe have got farms that
they were given by the government, and that compromises them because
they will never speak for the poor and downtrodden. A lot of our
colleagues are actually working with ZANU-PF to try and help the
ruling party to boost its membership."
ZCC's Manhanga denied that they had been given money and farms to
campaign for Mugabe. "There has been a lot of talk that we were
given farms and money, but the issue is not about whether we were
given farms or not; the issue is we should try and bring the problems
facing Zimbabweans to an end."
According to an internal memo, currently in circulation among the
churches perceived as pro-government, Mugabe will be the guest of
honour at the new day of prayer on 25 June. "We all agreed on the
need for such an event [national prayer day] and the modalities
of holding the event, including how the government will participate."
A veteran church leader, Jonah Gokova, has criticised politicising
the day of prayer. "If it [the day of prayer] is for all Zimbabweans,
then the ruling party and all opposition party leaders should have
been invited to pray for peace. We are very sad at the developments
that are taking place in the church."
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