Speeches & interviews
- Latest speeches
-
Articles and interviews »
- Transcript of Archbishop's Interview With Radio York
- Recession and Good Neighbours
- Sex buyers beware: you are now a target
- There must be no slippery slope on assisted suicide
- Recognising the importance of young people
- Young People are the Leaders of Today
- Archbishop's Easter Message
- Archbishop of York's Easter message: 'There is always hope '
- Do not be afraid
- The currency of Zimbabwe is falsehood
- The message of Easter is 'Hope'
- Englishness is back on the agenda
- Global Questions: The G20 summit
- Joint Lent Appeal for Zimbabwe »
- The intolerance towards Christians in the public sector is an affront
- Archbishop of York writes in The Times
- The meaning and the history of The Nativity
- Archbishop of York writes in the News of the World
- Mugabe must be toppled now
- Faith and Nation
- Archbishop of York writes in The Times
- Article and interview archive
- Speech archive
Joint Lent Appeal for Zimbabwe
Wednesday 25 February 2009
The Archbishops' of Canterbury and York write for The Times
Zimbabwe Appeal
Twenty five years ago, people involved in the struggle against apartheid in South Africa would say wistfully, 'Look at Zimbabwe: it's come through a bitter war of liberation without wrecking its social cohesion, it's developed a proper democratic culture and it's feeding itself.'
Granted that this was, even then, a slightly too rosy picture, it wasn't nonsense. It represented a conviction that Zimbabwe was showing what was possible to its neighbours and indeed to the whole continent. And this means that one of the worst of the countless casualties inflicted by Robert Mugabe on his wretched country is the destruction of many people's hopes both in Zimbabwe itself and throughout Africa. The continent can't afford more failed states, mass hunger, contempt for the rule of law. And how much more painful it is when a country has been held up as a sign of promise.
We have been witnessing the slow death of a people. And slow death is only intermittently newsworthy; nothing to report except more of the same, so that the temptation is to switch off. But this doesn't mean that the need for hope is any less urgent on the ground.
In the last couple of years, the churches in Zimbabwe have shown signs of coming together in a cohesive way to challenge the tyranny of the government and the apathy of neighbours. The Anglican Church has been through a quiet revolution, finally expelling discredited bishops and rallying around leaders of real stature like the Bishop of Harare. And they have paid a heavy price. Anglican churches and congregations have been targeted by government-sponsored thugs and parishioners have been harassed, beaten and arrested.
But the important thing that the Anglican Church, along with others, has done is to remind a battered and violated population that their dignity still matters and that change is possible. The response to their witness has been remarkable: thousands gather to worship in spite of attacks and death threats. The Church continues with its school feeding programmes (its schools working as food distribution points and so guaranteeing both nourishment and education for the young), with its work for the soaring numbers of orphans from cholera and AIDS, with its basic local health clinics and its trauma counselling for victims of torture. If the country is ever to be rebuilt – and a society can be destroyed pretty quickly but can only be rebuilt slowly, over generations – the Church will be central to the project.
With about fifty per cent of the population now estimated to be in danger of starvation, with cases of cholera rising to nearly 75,000 and a fatality rate of one in twenty, with AIDS still a mass killer and no antiretrovirals available, with raw sewage pumping into streets, the humanitarian situation is as bad as it could be.
As for the infrastructure of society, we all know about rates of inflation (the figure of 261 million % beggars imagination); for all the high rhetoric about resisting colonialisms, the fact is that the country's mineral rights have now been sold off to China and Zimbabwe is now wholly dependent on foreign currency. Less well know is the fact that government schools, which were due to open on January 27, have been closed because teachers are demanding an increase in salary – their present salary level being the equivalent of US$10 per month. The state of health services is appalling: medical professionals are simply being paid nothing and there is a massive exodus of doctors and nurses from the country.
These facts are worth rehearsing, if only because they are bound to slip out of view again and again as other stories claim headlines. But they also reinforce the need for urgent humanitarian action.
Three weeks ago, the Primates of the Anglican Communion unanimously called for a concerted initiative of aid and support for the Church's community work in Zimbabwe, and today we are launching our own Archbishops' Appeal here in the UK.
The Church remains a trusted deliverer of aid at grass roots level, capable of getting food and medical supplies to those who need them, and we urge everyone, inside and outside the Christian Church, to give it their strong support. And for Christian believers, we want to repeat the Primates' call for prayer and fasting especially today, Ash Wedensday – accepting our responsibility to stand alongside all who are suffering in Zimbabwe.
We know that there is no quick solution to this; and we know that there will be no serious solution as long as Robert Mugabe remains in power and refuses to accept the verdict of his people in last year's election. Lives can still be saved; and more importantly hope can be sustained if we continue to support the Church in Zimbabwe as a vehicle of promise and a guarantor of the human dignity so fearfully insulted by the current regime.
Related content
Related Pages
25 February 2009
Archbishop Issues Invite to All to Pray for Zimbabwe

