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Here's the text of an email I received from some Zim friends. It's a heartwrenching story. FBB ______________________________________________ The death of a dream: One Zimbabwean farmer's story For more than four decades, Larry Norton and his family farmed the same stretch of land in northern Zimbabwe - until last week. Larry Norton is also a world-renowned wildlife artist. Here he tells the devastating story of the pressures that forced him to leave. 15 August 2002 I sit in a storage shed in Harare, surrounded by the chaotic elements of our life and home and our piles of possessions, and try to reflect on the past few days. Last Thursday, 8 August 2002, we evacuated our farm -D ahwye - in the Mvurwi region of Mashonaland in north-east Zimbabwe, about 100km from Harare, abandoning the home in which three generations of our family had lived for almost half a century. After two years of mayhem, we could not go on. The government-sponsored land invasions had begun in March 2000, shortly before our 14-month-old son Oscar died from cancer. We were unable to spend his last days on the farm because of the trouble. He died in an apartment in Harare surrounded by refugee farmers from Macheke, 75km to the east of the capital, where in April that year David Stevens, a supporter of the main oppositionp arty, the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), was the first white farmer to be killed. Since that time we have lived through the unparalleled destruction of a country and economy, under the corrupt and dictatorial rule of President Robert Mugabe and his Zanu-PF party. Our farm has been a microcosm of the battlefield. My mother and father came north from South Africa in the 1950s. They worked as managers on various farms and borrowed money to purchase Dahwye in 1957. They nearly went broke, and for a time my father lived in a tent made from fertiliser bags while he opened up a tobacco farm in virgin bush. It was in an area described on the map as "Terra Incognita", but he made enough moneyt here to pay off the loan. We returned to Dahwye in the mid-1960s. I was born in 1963. Over the next 40 years, my parents developed Dahwye and later an adjoining property, Braidjule Farm, into fully irrigable units farming tobacco, maize, wheat and cattle. A game-farming operation on the marginal parts of the farm resulted in massive herds of wildebeest, zebra, impala, eland and tsessebe. Excess animals were sold to expand the wildlife business countrywide. My father conducted more than three decades of pasture research work and perfected legume/grass pastures in the harsh wetlands, increasing carrying capacitiest wenty fold. For him, the farm was not his own, it was a heritage for us, and our children. Every cent was reinvested in dams, irrigation and development. In 1999, Sara and I decided to build our home in the rocks of the Dahwye Game Park, not far from where we were married. The old farmc ottage we had lived in was falling apart and we decided to try to develop the wildlife and tourism potential of this piece of the farm by building a guest lodge and launching a safari operation. It was not to be. Soon after our magnificent home was complete, Oscar's long illness disrupted our plans. The land invasions put an end to them. Our last day on the farm was a nightmare of chaos. We still had tons of household goods and machinery to move. Early in the day a mob of Zanu-PF youth and settlers illegally broke through the homestead fence to erect a flag near the lorry we were packing up. The police were called in and the mob was dispersed as far as the gates of the security fence, where the police officer advised that they should watch us in case we tried to steal anything. (Once a farmer has received a Section 8 - a final notice to quitf arming - he may not remove certain assets from the farm.) There they lit fires and hacked the word "Zimbabwe" into an old msasa tree standing at the gate. The police made the waiting press people unwelcome. During our last drive around Dahwye, my father said it looked as empty of wildlife as when he had first seen it. As we stopped to open a gate, I collected a bag of soil to take to Cape Town when we leave. As my father watched me, tears rolled down his face. Finally, we paid off the staff and at my father's request bowed our heads in a prayer of thanks for the long years we had lived and worked together. We had left thew orkers some cattle and hardware to assist in their new lives. My mother sobbed and tears burned in my eyes as we said goodbye to these people we had worked with for so long, and left them to their fate. Mum locked the house for the last time. At last, our final convoy of four vehicles left the rubbish-strewn thatched house that had been a family home for 46 years. We drove towards the gate. The mob locked the gate as we approached. Sensing a bad situation my father, in the lead vehicle, did not hesitate; he revved the engine and smashed through the gate. And so we left Dahwye, without looking back, our beloved farm empty now of cattle, game and equipment, in parts burned out and already derelict. Alive only with the sound of axes and dogs. Irrigable land lies fallow, the dams stand full of water and soon the spectre of hunger will stalk the empty fields, as settlers dig for mice beneath the weeds. The night we left the main pump for the housing area was stolen, and the mob broke into my studio and office and my parents' home, which I hear is to become a beer hall. TheD ahwye we have known and loved is dead. Many impressions come to mind as I try to recall the events of the past two-and-a-half years. First, Ir ecall my son Oscar's memorial service, held at the same rock altar in the game park where Sara and I were married and where our children were christened.< /SPAN> It is a naturally sacred place. As the service began two fish eagles appeared overhead, circling and ululating their haunting cry, witnessed by the 250 people gathered below. By April this year, resettlement pressure on Dahwye was growing. Zanu-PF youth who could not be paid for their work during the presidential election were allocated our farm instead. The youth base commander began to build his hut at the rock altar. Our workers were appalled at an act so sacrilegious to traditional culture that they appealed to him to stop. But this was clearly a psychological strategy designed to cause us maximum pain. For the next three months Sara and thec hildren would have to go, daily, past this obscenity on their way to school. Huts multiplied across the game park. We watched our game in despair, wandering amid the chaotic resettlements, surrounded by dogs, people, huts and fires. Pillars of light rose into the night sky from the fires started by the settlers. Entire segments of the country were consumed in an orgy of burning. By a small miracle we obtained a game capture permit from the authorities. In a dramatic operation, over five weeks, we captured, saved and sold about 180t sessebe, 75 zebra, 60 wildebeest, three eland, 85 impala and 12 ostriches. We had already lost animals to poaching and I am convinced that many of the settlers in our game park came with meat in mind. Our children attended Barwick Primary School, not far from our farm. Teachers there have described the deep trauma that they have observed in farmers' children who, over the past two years, have been silent victims of the baying mobs and the daily humiliations their families havee ndured on the farms. The ever-present anxiety they observe in their parents is silently taken on board. I have often seen our own children trying to work out ways to protect us from the daily dramas. During the weekends and holidays, security briefings on the farm radios do not allay their fears. When things have been bad children have expressed fear at returning to boarding school as they have to leave their parents alone on the farms. There have been times during this ordeal that have been worse than others. When farms were being burned and looted in the nearby districts of Chinhoyi, Mhangura, Doma and Hwedza, we waited,e xpecting the worst. Some members of our family were trapped in their home,u nable to escape as their neighbours were being ransacked. Packed suitcases and food rations stood in the hallway at all times, in preparation for a hurried exit. The house was emptied long ago of sentimental objects and photographs. As a community we tried to plan for worst-case scenarios - for example, if violence had erupted after the presidential election. Community plans for the evacuation of schools were, and still are, realities that those in farming areas face on their own. From the ashes of this situation we have managed to save one thing. Before Oscar died, we planted a little Christmas tree that we had bought for him in Cape Town during his hospitalisation. The day before we left the farm, we dug up the tree and replanted it beside the children's ward of St Anne's Hospital, Harare, where the nuns (who remember Oscar from his stay there) have decided that it will be decorated each Christmas, and that from now on it will be called Oscar's Tree. It is hard to describe the courage I have witnessed in my own family. My dad and mum, 73 and 64 respectively, humorous even amid the destruction of all they have loved and worked for, battling to finish the job of packing up their home and farm. Sara, my wife, determined even under these adverse circumstances to raise money for the Red Cross Children's Hospital, which looked after Oscar. She trained for the London Marathon on farm roads throughout the mayhem, ran the marathon and raised �7,000 for theh ospital. My daughter Megan, who is 11 years old, a rock for all of us, always smiling and unfazed. My five-year-old son Ben, who cried often for the loss of his beloved farm, decided that we should make crosses and scatter them around the farm and throughout our house to protect it in our absence. Madeleine, who is six months old, is one of the few people in Zimbabwe, oblivious to its woes, who has smiled through it all. The unreported daily acts of courage and integrity by farmers in this impossible time must be mentioned. Their lonely vigils against the forces of intimidation have been humbling to observe. One day, I hope it will be recognised and saluted. Even now, impossible labour laws and propaganda have in some situations turned the labourers against them. Farmers are barricaded into their homes by labourers demanding pay and gratuities few can afford. In the past two years, I have seen young men take on the visage of battle-weary soldiers, with lined faces and grey hair, as they strive to protect family, friends and farm workers who wered efenceless but for their initiative. I have seen their desperation as thea uthorities and so-called new landlords have prevented them from moving their own equipment, livestock and household goods from their farms, which have been seized. A war veteran leader in front of a mob of 200 people told me, categorically,, that we would not move one thing off our farm. Fortunately, he failed. Now that we are in Harare, and off the farm, there is time to try to analyse what we have been through. We are sharing a house with another displaced family, the Mitchells from Beitbridge in the far south of the country. Billy's father collapsed and died from a heart attack soon after they received government papers of acquisition earlier this year. One thing I have learnt, as we try to make sense of these terrible events, is that it is impossible to judge any farmer orf arming community by the course of action they have followed. Each farm andf armer has faced a unique circumstance. All have fought lonely battles against overwhelming odds, outgunned by the full force of state machinery. We don't want sympathy. Many farm workers, rural black people and opposition supporters have faced worse. Some of us can move from here. I, at least, have another trade, as a wildlife painter. Many farmers have no other options. The government has, by its own definition, attempted to conduct an ethnic cleansing of thef armland. White farmers, by nature of their race, have been targeted for displacement, en masse, at a time of fast-approaching and unparalleled starvation. Why? Why, 20 years into Zimbabwe's nationhood, this sudden assault? The answer lies, of course, in two bloody and farcical elections, the results of which have failed to impress the world. No one disputes the need for viable, transparent land reform, although it's significant to note that about 60 per cent of white-owned farms were purchased after independence, under Zimbabwean law. The parallels between watching Oscar die from cancer and our belovedD ahwye's slow destruction are profound. The grief process of watching that which you love slowly destroyed is the same. My soul will always be in Dahwye. Ith olds my earliest memories and those of my children - and no one, by decree or destruction, can ever take that away. | ||
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<Hunter - DownUnder> |
Very moving. I honestly don't know how I would cope with the displacement. The temptation to rig the house to go boom must be extrodinary. | ||
one of us |
Thank You ForrestB. | |||
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one of us |
Many thanks- This is deeply troubling... | |||
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one of us |
I CAN'T SCREAM LOUD ENOUGH! | |||
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Moderator |
Thank You, Forest, for sharing this with us. It goes without saying, how we feel about it. | |||
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One of Us |
Forrest, Thank you for posting that and if you could I would like you to pass on our feelings. Outside of the incredible injustice of the situation one thing still seems to shine. The human spirit that this family displays after the death of a son, and being uprooted from the only place they have ever known as a home. The courage and hard work that they needed to transform this land into what it was is nothing compared to what it took to hold their family together and salvage what they did at the end. And what they did take from the land was dignity and the raw honesty that seems to grow with such abundance on family farms. My heart and prayers go out to them and somehow I know they will not only survive but flourish. What has happened to them will make them stronger. The memory of Oscar's tree will stay with me. Chic | |||
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one of us |
With the way the American farmers are going its to bad theres not some way to bring thhese deicated and brite farmers here,they sure could make a go of it from the sound of their letters | |||
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one of us |
There is nothing I can say that will ease the pain and suffering these people have endured. Where the hell is the liberal media now? | |||
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