News / National
Nkiwane snubs Heroes Acre burial
10 Jul 2021 at 10:54hrs | Views
THE family of the national hero Abraham Nkiwane has said it is yet to come up with the burial date of the veteran nationalist. They agreed that the liberation stalwart will be buried at his farm in Umguza district on the outskirts of Bulawayo.
Zanu-PF Secretary of Administration Dr Obert Mpofu said Government and the party will respect Nkiwane's wish to be buried at his farm.
Traditionally, national heroes are interred at the national shrine in Harare. Nkiwane (93) succumbed to prostate cancer at the United Bulawayo Hospitals (UBH) on Tuesday where he was admitted. He was in the elite Zimbabwe People's Revolutionary Army (Zipra) High Command.
Family spokesperson Pastor Fairchild Mhlophe said they are yet to finalise on the burial date although indications were that he could be buried tomorrow.
"We are yet to come up with the burial date, but the burial site is his farm and as a family we agreed to honour his wish," he said.
Nkiwane was born on January 6, 1928 in Ntabazinduna in Matabeleland North and attended the Presbyterian Church's David Livingstone Primary School before proceeding to Thekwane Mission after which he taught at Tjehanga School from which he was expelled along with others for their demand for justice in the manner the Methodist Church was running schools.
In 1949, he was employed by the Bulawayo Municipality working in the African Department under the directorship of Dr Hugh Ashton.
In 1954 when Nkiwane was reading towards a Bachelor of Commerce degree, he left for Northern Rhodesia (now Zambia) at the time of the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland which had been inaugurated in 1953.
Initially, he lived in Livingstone where he worked as stock controller in a company known as Rhodesia Mercantile Holdings. He worked for that company until 1960. In 1961, Nkiwane joined United National Independence Party. Soon he began to work full time for Zapu and subsequently moved to Lusaka.
Not so long after that Zapu leader Dr Joshua Mqabuko Nkomo visited Zambia specifically to solicit political support from Dr Kenneth Kaunda. Nkiwane is survived by his wife, Ntombizodwa and three children — two sons and a daughter.
Zanu-PF Secretary of Administration Dr Obert Mpofu said Government and the party will respect Nkiwane's wish to be buried at his farm.
Traditionally, national heroes are interred at the national shrine in Harare. Nkiwane (93) succumbed to prostate cancer at the United Bulawayo Hospitals (UBH) on Tuesday where he was admitted. He was in the elite Zimbabwe People's Revolutionary Army (Zipra) High Command.
Family spokesperson Pastor Fairchild Mhlophe said they are yet to finalise on the burial date although indications were that he could be buried tomorrow.
"We are yet to come up with the burial date, but the burial site is his farm and as a family we agreed to honour his wish," he said.
In 1949, he was employed by the Bulawayo Municipality working in the African Department under the directorship of Dr Hugh Ashton.
In 1954 when Nkiwane was reading towards a Bachelor of Commerce degree, he left for Northern Rhodesia (now Zambia) at the time of the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland which had been inaugurated in 1953.
Initially, he lived in Livingstone where he worked as stock controller in a company known as Rhodesia Mercantile Holdings. He worked for that company until 1960. In 1961, Nkiwane joined United National Independence Party. Soon he began to work full time for Zapu and subsequently moved to Lusaka.
Not so long after that Zapu leader Dr Joshua Mqabuko Nkomo visited Zambia specifically to solicit political support from Dr Kenneth Kaunda. Nkiwane is survived by his wife, Ntombizodwa and three children — two sons and a daughter.
Source - the herald