Joan & Richard awaiting the sunset |
I spent many, many happy years in Zimbabwe and love this
country.
Msasa trees |
The msasa trees are out and this year are dark red. Then
the jacaranda trees will change the scene with their magnificent purple blooms,
along with the flamboyant with their bright red umbrellas.
It is all so magical
and here at Peterhouse School where Richard and Fiona live, the beautifully
green sports fields lined by trees and magnificent sunsets create a picture of harmony, peace and beauty.
In the small town of Marondera there seem to be hordes of
unhappy and even desperate people trying to earn a bit of money any way that
they can, selling second-hand clothes or a few vegetables. Hands reach out and
faces look at you pleadingly through the windows of your car as you stop to
fill gas cylinders or shop.
Electricity is not at all consistent; sometimes you
have it and many times it is suddenly gone. There is no pattern to the power
cuts, and I believe in some areas it is off all day, forcing people to do their
work at night.
Money matters are extremely difficult – the shops seem to have
most supplies but everything is very, very expensive. If you ask questions
no-one seems absolutely sure of what is going on and I expect this applies to
the government too!
Mutare visit
We paid a visit to Mutare and my granddaughter Claire
attended a wedding there at Leopard Rock Hotel which is still looking
magnificent. So is the White Horse Inn in the lower Vumba, although I believe
some hotels in Nyanga are closed.
It is all still so beautiful. Nothing can change the beauty
of the mountains, the balancing shapes of the granite rocks, the skies which go
forever upwards in vivid
blue hues.
Msasas |
We cannot visit Harare too often as fuel is short and queues can be long, but we did pay a visit there last week and the suburbs we visited seemed well cared for although roads are pitted with potholes, so much so that the driver sometimes has to go to the right of the road or sometimes to the left giving an effect of drunkenness.
Bob met his maker
The old man Robert Gabriel Mugabe has died in Singapore and
will be flown back for burial here in Zimbabwe this week. He has, like all of
us have to, gone to meet his maker, leaving behind a country struggling to
survive.
My feeling is that in the years to come it will survive due
to the resilience and nature of the people who continue to live here with hope
and humour.
I think of Alan Paton’s book Cry the Beloved Country and so
hope that it will recover and move forward and see a return of crops growing
once again in fertile but unused soil.
Love to you all,
Joan
Stars chasing the sun away over the Wedza horizon, has been forgotten
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