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Mazwienduna speaks Christian religion, LGBTQI in Zim

2024-09-10

Author(s): Scott Douglas Jacobsen

Publication (Outlet/Website): NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Publication Date (yyyy/mm/dd): 2024/08/31

IN-SIGHT Publishing founder and In-Sight: Independent Interview-Based Journal Editor-in-Chief Scott Douglas Jacobsen (SDJ) talks to Takudzwa Mazwienduna (TM), a member of Young Humanists Zimbabwe on a number of issues.

Below are excerpts of the interview:

SDJ: Today, we will talk about religious demographics in Zimbabwe. One thing, I note, Zimbabwe is super religious. But it is not as religious as I thought.

Canada, not known for being a very religious country, I think; however, it used to have this status, and even more than Zimbabwe.

In the 1970s, it sat at around 90% Christian. You read that right. In the early 2000s, it was about 75% Christian.

By 2021, it was about 54% and the downward trend is continuing, to about 50%, probably, or a little less, this year. That’s unprecedented. Zimbabwe looks like late 1980s and early 1990s Canada. That’s promising! Any preliminary thoughts?

TM: That is very hopeful, but then again, unlike Canada, Zimbabwe’s education system is not so different from colonial times.

Some secularists like Shingai Rukwata Ndoro have worked with the government to make education progressive, but mission schools still dominate.

There is still a lot of proselytisation in schools despite the government discouraging it.

SDJ: How did the religious demographics in Zimbabwe look in prior decades?

TM: The London Missionary Society made sure that model citizens of the colony had to be Christian.

Couple that with Missionary Education that tied intellectualism with Christianity, it made religion the default for natives.

It is mostly Pan-African activists that speak against Christianity today, shunning it as a colonial legacy.

They do not advocate for secularism, however, but a return to native animist religions.

They are, however, open to secularist ideas since their religion is not monotheistic, and the Zimbabwean atheists have conversed with them on an interfaith radio show we all participated in back in 2017.

They seemed like plausible allies. Nevertheless, Christianity is the dominant religion, although at times it can be mixed with the traditional religion.

The pentecostal Christian denominations however shun traditional beliefs and label them as demonic.

SDJ: When was the Christian religion truly ascendant there?

TM: The colonial era is when Christianity took over. It also explains why its main rival, the traditional religion is a common target for demonisation by various Christian denominations today.

SDJ: How is the Christian religion a political force in the 2020s?

TM: There are certain Christian denominations that are very influential in politics.

One of the richest prophets called Uebert Angel was made the Presidential Envoy and Ambassador-atLarge for to Europe and the Americas. He later on stepped down after an Al Jazeera documentary exposed him smuggling tonnes of looted gold in cohorts with government officials.

One of the biggest pentecostal churches, Zimbabwe Assemblies Of God Africa (ZAOGA), mandates its devout followers to vote for the ruling Zanu PF party.

The indigenous Christian churches that dominate in the rural areas, popularly known as mapostori or apostolic churches, promise their followers that God will add one or two decades to their lives if they vote for the ruling party.

They are a big asset for the ruling party during elections so much so that they were exempted from COVID-19 lockdowns in 2020 and they carried on with their church conferences.

SDJ: What are the major concerns regarding the Christian religion in Zimbabwe now?

TM: Its grip on education and politics is getting stronger and while Zimbabwe is still secular on paper, something has to be done about Christianity’s influence.

SDJ: We all know the Ugandan and Ghanaian anti-LGBTI stance using UN LGBTI Core Group language–bills attempted to be put into law. Aren’t they the most regressive in the world? Has anything like that been attempted there?

TM: While Zimbabwe definitely isn’t LGBTQI friendly, homosexuality was decriminalised in 2013.

The old colonial laws of sodomy were done away with, but there are instances of customary laws in rural areas, where Christian apostolic faiths dominate that still punish people for homosexuality at the chief’s court. Most LGBTQI Zimbabweans seek refuge in Botswana and South Africa.

Mozambique is also LGBTQI friendly since the African Traditional Religion dominates, but the wars and ISIS terrorism going on there discourages Zimbabweans to seek refuge there

SDJ: Thank you for the opportunity and your time, my friend.

TM: Always a pleasure Scott!

License & Copyright

In-Sight Publishing by Scott Douglas Jacobsen is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. ©Scott Douglas Jacobsen and In-Sight Publishing 2012-Present. Unauthorized use or duplication of material without express permission from Scott Douglas Jacobsen strictly prohibited, excerpts and links must use full credit to Scott Douglas Jacobsen and In-Sight Publishing with direction to the original content.

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