“The birds of the air can perch in its shade”

via “The birds of the air can perch in its shade” 25 November 2014 by David Coltart

Tomorrow my good friends and colleagues Welshman Ncube, Tendai Biti, Priscilla Misihairabwi Mushonga, Elton Mangoma and others will sign a unity pact bringing our two parties together. Sadly I will not be there because I am already committed to attending a School Prize Giving event, which I agreed to attend weeks ago, but I will be there in spirit.

Some may disdainfully dismiss this as a non event – an old friend in another party recently said that this amounts to “nought plus nought equals nought”. Whilst I am the first to concede the obvious – that the MDC performed poorly in last year’s elections – and that this is but a small step, I disagree with those who say this is a non event.

Firstly, given that the two biggest parties are busy tearing themselves apart it is refreshing to have former colleagues come together again. One of my greatest sadnesses when the MDC split occurred in 2005 was that I had to separate from some of my closest friends, including Tendai Biti and others. That split was a gift to tyranny and remains so. At the very least then it is good to be back on the same team with fearless and principled men and women who have all along shared our vision of a free, tolerant and vibrant Zimbabwe. There is no doubt that together we will be stronger than when we were apart.

Secondly, I am pleased to be reuniting with “doers”. In my view Tendai Biti and Elton Mangoma in particular were two of the best Cabinet Ministers and their work speaks for itself. It was Biti who turned the economy around and did his best to allocate money to the most worthy causes. It was Mangoma who performed miracles in paying off ZESA’s debt and in turning it around. Both were attacked viciously, Mangoma was arrested, precisely because they were so effective. But that is only two people I have singled out – there are many others in the renewal team, such as Lucia Matibenga, who have a lot to offer Zimbabwe, as there are in our present team.

Thirdly, this reunification combines not only talent but regional support. Our achilles heel, rightly or wrongly, was always that we were perceived as a regional party with most of our support in Matabeleland. This step removes that perception and brings ethnic and regional balance – in other words we dovetail well. We may be small at present but we will not be doubling up but rather complementing each other’s respective support base.

Fourthly, I have tried not to be disdainful of small things because in fact the Bible tells us that it is through small things that the good Lord creates large things. Jesus described the Kingdom of God as “like a mustard seed, which is the smallest seed you plant in the ground. Yet when planted it grows and becomes the largest of all the garden plants, with such big branches that the birds of the air can perch in its shade” (Mark 4:31). Now for the avoidance of doubt I am not comparing this event to the Kingdom of God! All I am saying is that God’s usual practice is to use small and weak things to achieve His mighty purposes. That was why he approached Gideon who responded by asking God “How can I save Israel? My clan is the weakest in Manasseh and I am the least in my family” (Judges 6:15). So this may a small and seemingly insignificant event but that in itself does not mean that great things will not come out of it.

Fifthly, I believe that this must be seen as a start, not an end in itself. We desperately need to align and unite those in Zimbabwe who have a deep rooted belief in democracy, tolerance, freedom, servant leadership, small unobtrusive government of the people, by the people and for the people. We know there are like minded people in other parties or who do not have a political home at present. We know that most Zimbabweans feel rather desperate about politics at present, feeling that there is little sense anywhere. My hope and prayer is that this event will see the beginning of a process which will attract all those people who are uncomfortable where they are to put their energy into a grouping of people who have a different, constructive, positive vision of Zimbabwe.

So tomorrow’s event may only be one plus one now but I am happy to be associated with this great group of patriots. God bless Zimbabwe.

COMMENTS

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    Tsuro 9 years ago

    David

    I admit I still admire your drive and dreams, however my gut feeling are you are betting for the wrong horse(s) as happened before.

    The content and thrust of your contribution still carry the same tone when Mutambara was coming on board, we all thought you(MDC-N) were going to fly. The under current, of impatient vultures and hyenas with known political ambitions from college days still defines MDC renewal.

    I see you as a group of intellectual lawyers but my assessment is that your group will fail for the following reasons:

    *Like Zunde too intellectual: A 100 lawyers in one cockpit-disaster coming.

    *I do not see anyone with grass roots charisma in the group

    *The group exhibits some intellectual superiority in general in our eyes and portrays appetite for power and more deserving to lead the opposition not “ana tea-boy”

    *Who is the leader and who has the clout to keep the group together? Remember you tried to import, will all know what happened.

    *It seems there will be two power poles in the group, namely Biti and Ncube . A ship with two captains eventually sinks. Remember Mtambara- Ncube war.

    Zanu seems to like you and continuoly props you up to weaken a more threatening “bear” in the form of Tsvangirai, hence you are viewed with suspicion, a tag which linger in people’s minds especially after causing the 2008 disaster.

    *Unintentionally or intentionally you shall continue to be viewed as an MDC break away appendage…a Malema, and you are likely to remain a shadow.

    For the above reasons I am out and I am not buying voting shares in your company and would rather still keep them in MDC-T, which I agree has many shortcomings.