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Mugabe
church donation raises eyebrows
Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
Jacob Nhlanhla (AR No. 131, 07-Sept-07)
September 07, 2007
http://iwpr.net/?p=acr&s=f&o=338522&apc_state=henh
Amid escalating calls
to excommunicate him from the Roman Catholic Church, President Robert
Mugabe has donated a large sum of money to it.
After damaging
stand-offs between the Zimbabwean ruler and the Zimbabwe
Catholic Bishop's Conference, ZCBC, as well as highly
regarded critic Archbishop of Bulawayo Pius Ncube, some analysts
see the 300 million Zimbabwe dollar donation (one million US dollars
at the official exchange rate and just over one thousand US dollars
on the black market), made late last month to a women's Catholic
Church grouping, the Marian Association, as more of an electioneering
stunt than a way of making amends with the church.
Mugabe describes himself
as a devout Catholic who attends Sunday mass regularly. However,
fellow Catholics maintain he should have been excommunicated long
ago from the church that raised him, for failing to respect human
rights and good governance.
But Father Oskar Wermter,
a Jesuit missionary priest who has lived in Zimbabwe for over 30
years, said calls to excommunicate Mugabe were "old hat"
and were unlikely to be heard. "This was mooted years ago.
It was explained then that this was no longer done today. At any
rate, excommunication in a strict legal or canonical sense is a
measure applied only in certain circumstances defined by church
law," he said.
Wermter, based in Harare,
said that while excommunication had been evoked in the past to deal
with political leaders - heads of governments, kings and emperors
- who violated human rights abuses, the phenomenon was rare in the
21st century.
"We no longer live
in the Middle Ages. The local bishops do not even have that power.
It would have to come from the Pope himself," explained Wermter.
But he added that renewed
calls for Mugabe to be excommunicated were indicative of people's
growing desperation to see a resolution to the crisis that has gripped
Zimbabwe for the past ten years.
Ecumenical efforts to
find solutions to Zimbabwe's woes under the faith-based Christian
Alliance and the Save Zimbabwe Campaign banners - groupings of local
Christian denominations and pro-democracy activists - have been
snubbed by both Mugabe and his ruling ZANU-PF party.
Early this year, Pope
Benedict XVI expressed his support for the ZCBC after it issued
its most vocal pastoral letter since the crisis set in, blaming
Mugabe for the escalation of human rights abuses and for destroying
a once-vibrant economy.
While Catholics here
continue to call for Mugabe's excommunication, the president
insists he is just an "ordinary Catholic who goes to Mass
every Sunday".
Mugabe was educated by
Jesuit missionaries but made a shift from alter boy to radical nationalist
when he joined the nationalist movement in the early 1960s, which
he then led in a bitter guerrilla war against Ian Smith, then prime
minister of Rhodesia. The war culminated in the country's
independence from Britain in 1980.
Calls for Mugabe's
excommunication from the Catholic Church were first made after the
human rights abuses during the "Gukurahundi Era" in
the early 1980s were exposed: an estimated 20,000 people were killed
under Mugabe's rule in the Matabeleland uprisings -
a travesty which was documented by the Catholic
Commission for Justice and Peace, CCJP.
Almost three decades
later and with his fight against his opposition party detractors
now encompassing his critics in the Catholic Church, calls for his
excommunication have grown louder. Derrick Shorai, an official with
the CCJP in Harare, says he, along with many of Zimbabwe's
Catholics, has always supported the idea of having Mugabe excommunicated.
"Perhaps it shows our desperation to get rid of him not just
as a Catholic but as the country's president," said
Shorai.
"Mugabe has caused
so much untold suffering, but still enjoys access to the sacraments.
We just don't know how he has been able to receive these,
despite his known human rights abuses."
Reacting to the pastoral
letter issued by the ZCBC earlier this year, strongly criticising
Mugabe's regime, the 83-year-old leader warned the bishops
to stay away from politics or risk being dealt with as opposition
political activists.
The veiled threats escalated
recently when on July 7, during the burial of an army brigadier
at the country's Heroes Acre burial shrine, Mugabe chastised
"priests who steal other men's wives". A fortnight
later, one of his fiercest critics, Bulawayo Archbishop Pius Ncube,
was accused of being an adulterer in the media.
Among the archbishop's
supporters are those who believe the expose was a carefully orchestrated
sting operation by Mugabe's lieutenants to disgrace the archbishop.
This has swelled the chorus among some Catholic supporters that
he be excommunicated.
A pastor with Christian
Alliance who preferred to remain anonymous said, "While the
people's concerns would appear legitimate, you cannot trust
a man accused of so much to take this lying down. His relationship
with the Catholic Church especially has always been stormy but we
have to understand that it is God who will judge him, not us."
Retired Bulawayo archbishop
Henry Kalern was reluctant to talk about the issue, citing the present
controversy surrounding his successor.
According to Wermter,
Mugabe has "effectively excommunicated himself", given
the sustained human rights abuses meted out by his government. "In
a very real way, though not technically as defined by church law,
Mugabe has effectively excommunicated himself, that is to say put
himself outside the community of the church, by resisting the word
of the church and attacking the bishops in a most offensive, vulgar
form. At least the constant propaganda line that he is a 'practising,
devout Catholic' is now shown to be false," he told
IWPR.
But Mugabe, always the
wily politician, has begun to make amends. His donation came as
a surprise to those who thought he had cut ties with the Catholic
Church after his run-ins with the bishops and the Ncube incident.
"There are two
reasons he could have [made the donation]," said one local
Catholic who refused to be identified. "The Catholic Church
has a huge following in Zimbabwe and the elections are coming. He
does not wish to lose that vote. Also he might be in his own way
telling the Catholics that he still belongs."
Mugabe handed over the
money through his ally in the ruling party and presidential hopeful
Oppah Muchinguri. The donation was confirmed by Bishop Patrick Mutume
of Harare who said it would be invested on the money market until
a decision was made on how it could be best utilised. Muchinguri
is at the forefront of the campaign for Mugabe's nomination
as ZANU-PF's sole candidate in next year's election.
She herself is eyeing the vice-presidency and is fighting tooth-and-nail
to have incumbent Joice Mujuru fired.
Jacob Nhlanhla is the
pseudonym of an IWPR journalist in 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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