News / National
Nehanda's statue: Relative approaches court
17 Apr 2021 at 02:14hrs | Views
THE dispute over the construction of a statue of Mbuya Charwe, the spirit medium of Mbuya Nehanda, has escalated after a woman claiming to be the surviving granddaughter of the First Chimurenga heroine approached the High Court challenging the erection of the effigy.
In the court application, Susan Rosi Tirivangani cited Home Affairs minister Kazembe Kazembe and National Museums director Godfrey Mahachi as the respondents.
Upper Mazowe Cultural Landscape custodian, Chief Maxwell Dzapasi-Hwata and an alleged maternal nephew of Mbuya Charwe, Israel Marufu, have been named as joint applicants in the suit.
The trio is arguing that if Kazembe and Mahachi go ahead with erecting the statue at the intersection of Julius Nyerere Way and Samora Machel Avenue in Harare without observing traditional rites, natural disasters will occur across the country.
"The first applicant (Hwata) being a Muhera of Shava (eland) totem considers ornaments to do with spirit mediums as sacred.
"Hence erecting a statue of Mbuya Charwe in the public streets of Harare without following the Hwata people's cultural rites will definitely attract bad incidents to the capital city of Harare and the Hwata people in general.
"Applicants are mindful that Mbuya Charwe, besides being a spirit medium of the highest level, was also a rainmaker and as such if statues in strange colours and metals are improperly erected without following traditional rules they will attract lightning and destructive thunder bolts from time to time or other disasters," the trio said.
Tirivangani, Dzapasi-Hwata and Marufu are also arguing that the spirit of Mbuya Charwe is aggrieved as the government has not made any attempts to pay tribute to her descendants for her role in the Chimurenga war.
"Taking into consideration the rate upon which possessed people keep explaining voluntarily that the damage caused to Mbuya Charwe's long term spiritual reputation from as far back as 1896 only to be ridiculed in 2020, after the exhibition of a false image that has sparked horror, and effects thereof will unfold as time goes if the government of Zimbabwe doesn't remedy this by engaging with the deceased's representatives," the application reads.
They are seeking to bar Kazembe and Mahachi from erecting the statue without consent from the relatives of the spirit medium.
In the court application, Susan Rosi Tirivangani cited Home Affairs minister Kazembe Kazembe and National Museums director Godfrey Mahachi as the respondents.
Upper Mazowe Cultural Landscape custodian, Chief Maxwell Dzapasi-Hwata and an alleged maternal nephew of Mbuya Charwe, Israel Marufu, have been named as joint applicants in the suit.
The trio is arguing that if Kazembe and Mahachi go ahead with erecting the statue at the intersection of Julius Nyerere Way and Samora Machel Avenue in Harare without observing traditional rites, natural disasters will occur across the country.
"The first applicant (Hwata) being a Muhera of Shava (eland) totem considers ornaments to do with spirit mediums as sacred.
"Hence erecting a statue of Mbuya Charwe in the public streets of Harare without following the Hwata people's cultural rites will definitely attract bad incidents to the capital city of Harare and the Hwata people in general.
"Applicants are mindful that Mbuya Charwe, besides being a spirit medium of the highest level, was also a rainmaker and as such if statues in strange colours and metals are improperly erected without following traditional rules they will attract lightning and destructive thunder bolts from time to time or other disasters," the trio said.
Tirivangani, Dzapasi-Hwata and Marufu are also arguing that the spirit of Mbuya Charwe is aggrieved as the government has not made any attempts to pay tribute to her descendants for her role in the Chimurenga war.
"Taking into consideration the rate upon which possessed people keep explaining voluntarily that the damage caused to Mbuya Charwe's long term spiritual reputation from as far back as 1896 only to be ridiculed in 2020, after the exhibition of a false image that has sparked horror, and effects thereof will unfold as time goes if the government of Zimbabwe doesn't remedy this by engaging with the deceased's representatives," the application reads.
They are seeking to bar Kazembe and Mahachi from erecting the statue without consent from the relatives of the spirit medium.
Source - dailynews