A letter to Robert Mugabe – Tanonoka Joseph Whande

via Our fight with Mugabe will continue even beyond the grave by Tanonoka Joseph Whande | SW Radio Africa Monday, January 27, 2014

A letter to Robert Mugabe

I am not sure how I should address you, because calling someone like you by a first name is disgusting.

But since you claim to be the President of Zimbabwe, a lovely country that you destroyed, and in respect of our peace-loving people who are forced to accept this false decree, and who are burdened with an imposed acceptance of you being president, I will oblige.

Be warned, though, that you can only borrow the title of President for the duration of this broadcast. Agreed?

Atta boy, Bob!

Now, it would be silly of me, or of any Zimbabwean, to hope that this letter finds you well because we all know that you are not well, although you refuse to admit as much.

Because of your age, your health is no longer in the hands of humans but is now between you and your maker.

Sooner or later, you will have to accept the subtle conclusions that we all receive from nature.

I do not know if you receive any “Get Well Soon” messages.

You make it difficult for us, Mr President.

We can’t send you any “Get Well Soon” messages because you deny you are ill, very ill.

Yet we cannot ignore it because we know you are ill. Very ill.

This produces what they call a quagmire.

You will take care of yourself with the money that you stole from us.

It works out well for you.

No sweat.

You, Mr President, should, however, remember your own mortality.

Your continued presence is now an embarrassment. You are hanging around State House because you know that the minute you leave the gates of State House, you are easy meat.

Mr Mugabe, you got crimes piled up to high heavens. You must, however, remember that no debt will go unpaid.

It will take years; it will take time but it will be paid back in painful ways.

Honestly, you ought to be ashamed of being president for 34 years!

You are hiding behind the Presidency because you know that you are no better than the criminals you have sentenced to death, yet those who have been hanged by your executive consent are better than you, Sir.

None of them has killed more than you, Mr President.

Sir, your reign is only surpassed by that of Shimon Perez of Israel, a state you hated so much. I remember what you made me do while at the ZBC, always Ali Halimeh this, Ali Halimeh that, in support of the PLO.

Now you and Nikuv, the shadowy Israeli security company, are brethren.

You are turning 90 in a few weeks, please grow up, if it’s not too late.

Why are you persecuting us?

You fought as many mosquitoes as you did Ian Smith’s bullets. You sneered in the face of death and laughed when wild animals and hunger attacked you.

You were gallant.

When you swatted those thousands of mosquitoes; when you went hungry for days; when you crawled rather than walked, you had one purpose.

You were not doing it for yourself, Mr Mugabe. You said you were doing it for us.

We accepted that.

You suffered and had to deal with pesky mosquitoes worse than Jonathan Moyo; you laughed as hungry lions came forward.

The history books you wrote for our children say that you were and are a fearless liberator. The decomposed bodies of your fallen comrades spurred you on and you swore to do better. And with Gukurahundi, you did much better than Ian Smith.

You soldiered on because you were doing it not for yourself but for the people; for people like me to have freedom and independence, to have the right to speak and vote for my choice. You trudged on because you wanted me to have land to raise my family on.

You say you fought to liberate us.

You say you fought to bring us one man one vote.

You say you fought to bring justice.

You say you fought to regain our land.

You say you fought for equality.

Hooray, Mr President.

We have no freedom.

Our votes, if we are lucky enough to vote, are not our votes.

The courts are your courts and have little to do with justice.

The land you took from fellow citizens was taken by Phillip Chiyangwa, Gina Chombo, Obert Mpofu and all the crooks that you molded.

So what happened, Sir?

Now you do not want us to speak.

You have taken away our freedoms.

You take our votes and give them to your Nikuv friends.

You starve old men, women and children because you suspect they support someone else other than you.

We still do not have the land yet you and that little girl ungracefully own more than 15 farms.

I have just read a news item in which someone lambasts you, saying that being old is itself an illness.

Tendai Biti can be so cruel!

If age itself becomes an illness at a certain point, then we have a problem because it cannot be cured, regardless of how much you have stolen, those amounts will not aid in physical renewal.

We just have to accept the reality of the situation.

I hoped that with your 34 years of experience, you would teach those many leaders in Africa who make mistakes equal to yours, especially since they are less than half your age.

The heart of the matter is that, unlike so many people you have murdered and whose deaths you caused, you yourself, Sir, have been blessed with a longevity that defies common sense.

Your resilience and long life are virtues that prove beyond doubt why it is said that the good die young, meaning that the evil and bad ones, like you, live longer.

You are cruel, Mr President, and you will leave a terrible legacy to those you call your children; to those who, to this day, believe in you.

You are a bad man, Sir. You are a disgrace to our country.

You were given plenty of time to make history yet you tainted our history.

You claim you liberated Zimbabwe but your type of liberation is not what people had in mind.

You do not even wince when a murder is committed in your name.

As you can see, Zimbabweans are unfazed and resilient; move off the stage, dead or alive, and let the people of Zimbabwe be.

Having been granted a long, graceful time you reined terror but still failed to defeat the spirit, resilience and strong will of the Zimbabwean people.

“Man surprised me most about humanity,” said the Dalai Lama. “Because he sacrifices his health in order to make money. Then he sacrifices money to recuperate his health. And then he is so anxious about the future that he does not enjoy the present; the result being that he does not live in the present or the future; he lives as if he is never going to die, and then dies having never really lived.”

At the beginning of this epistle, I said I am one of a few to wish you, Bob, well. That is true. I would like you alive to experience the pain you have caused so many.

The suffering people of Zimbabwe need not knock on heaven’s door but they will follow you and harass you in hell or in heaven.

I am sorry to say that many of my compatriots will not let you take refuge in illness or death, even if you outlive all of us. There is enough evil as to make the devil shudder.

The fight will continue even beyond the graves.

I am Tanonoka Joseph Whande and that, my compatriots, is the way it is today, Monday, January 27th, 2014.

COMMENTS

WORDPRESS: 18
  • comment-avatar
    ZimJim 10 years ago

    Brilliant.

  • comment-avatar
    Peter tosh 10 years ago

    I couldn’t agree more Joseph,nuff respect.

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    Lindy Lou 10 years ago

    I hope he reads this. Very cleverly written and so true. This may give Mugabe some soul searching if he still has a soul,think the devil has owned it for many a long year.

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    Mafuta 10 years ago

    Mugabe doesn’t give a rats rectum about what a dirt-bag he is. His heirs should, though, because, “It will take years; it will take time but it will be paid back in painful ways,” like rest assured it will be sucked back out of his heirs, whose very acceptance of the loot makes them equally evil sharers in his evil. They will never know peace or security.

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    Tafadzwa 10 years ago

    Iwe Robert, what happened to your sense of humanity ? Your compatriots have suffered enough. Please go.

    All those people who laugh at Zimbabwe’s impotence at our failure to remove Mugabe, should remember, it took Libyans 42 years to remove Gadhafi , Mubarak of Egypt 30 years. We Zimbabweans are waiting for Mugabe to collapse, and the world shall witness our celebration.

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    Senzachena 10 years ago

    Well said, just one thing needs changing in your letter, when you use the title “Sir”, it should read CUR!! It is long overdue for the evil dog to go, by fair means or foul.

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    Mike Nyathi 10 years ago

    RGM, a foul fiend, a devil in human form. If only we could get to him before God does. All I want is for him and Shiri to hold hands and walk without protection through Lupane. See how long he lasts at the hands of people he claims love him.

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    I thought this brilliant: sad but true and each one of us would wish it had not turned out this way. But we must remember that it is given for a man to die one and then judgment. After we leave this world there are no more chances! And vengeance is We must forgive saith the Lord. We must forgive because if we don’t we cannot be forgiven and that bitterness will eat us like a cancer. Our unforgiveness, hate, resentment and bitterness bind this nation in the curse it already is. What ever he has sowed he will reap as will all of us. No one gets off any hook unless we come with repentance and cleansed in the blood of Jesus Christ. Let us release all this stuff in our hearts to the Lord and look forward. There is life after Mugabe: and as Madiba so aptly put it when he walked out of prison, “If I don’t forgive then I may as well go back to that prison.” Why bind ourselves to ZPF with all that poison in our hearts. let us let it go and be free to move forward. Let him who has ears hear!

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    Reverend 10 years ago

    Psalm 55
    22 Cast your cares on the Lord
    and he will sustain you;
    he will never let
    the righteous be shaken.
    23 But you, God, will bring down the wicked
    into the pit of decay;
    the bloodthirsty and deceitful
    will not live out half their days.
    BUT AS FOR ME, I TRUST IN YOU

  • comment-avatar
    Harper 10 years ago

    Mugabe,s death will not cure anything – his puppeteer is still fit and healthy and will simply find another puppet to manipulate and hide behind.

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    bingo wajakata 10 years ago

    Gachife mhani!

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    WOW !!! What a Blast. If he goes, we should ask Khama about who should choose the next President.

  • comment-avatar
    Chatunga 10 years ago

    Excellent T. Whande, a luta continua

  • comment-avatar
    Only Fools 10 years ago

    You mean “looting continues”

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    Gwanyamwanya We Mahobo 10 years ago

    Mugabe is at war with himself. He is full of fear and is not enjoying the life he leads. He is cursed.

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    Only Fools 10 years ago

    Mugabe never had a bullet fired at him! Ask the comrades from the bush. He never saw action ever! It was Tongogara that was the real fighter then. Mugabe did what he has always done, and that was run, run, run. Coward Coward Coward!!!

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    Ndebvu Mukomichi 10 years ago

    My Divergent Views about RGM.

    To the Haters: The writer is allowed to dislike, mallign and scold RGM the liberator and hero of Zim and Africa- but that does not change the reality of his achievements.

    Loved by the Majority: RGM has proved time and time again how much he is loved by the Zim voting public by registering electoral wins in succession.

    Feared by his Enemies: RGM is a political chess player par excellence. He patiently studies a situation before acting decisively and emerging victorious whatever the odds- some call it ‘never say die’.

    Some Achievements:
    a. Schooling- Zimbos are the most literate in Africa despite sanctions and other hurdles.

    b. Peace and security- Zim is the most peaceful in the region after RGM showed all and sundry that armed rebellions do not pay. The use of brute force to put down the 1980s rebellion was a lesson well delivered and well learnt.

    c. Land reclamation – This was the best thing to happen to an African country. The fruits are long in coming but recent independent studies are beginning to acknowledge the emerging success. Mpofu, Chombo and Chiyangwa are also Zimbos who should also get land.- The writer could also benefit if interested.

    d. Indigenisation- another gem that empowers Zimbos and will deliver electoral victories to ZPF for a long time to come.
    The country should be allowed to make its own mistakes as it implements the policies espoused by the majority- noone ever claimed perfection, but we keep on trying.

    e. Regeneration- RGM now has so many followers and copycats at home and abroad that it does not matter whether retires or stays- they will ensure the continuation of this doctrine of Mugabeism.

    f. Challenges: RGM still has a lot do for Zim and so far he only has up to 2018 to do it- he must get on with it. He is not called Karigamombe for nothing!