1.
Islam in Zimbabwe
[By Ali Risimati Mathonsi ]
During the consultative conference of the Southern African Development
Community
(SADC) some years ago, it was indicated by the officials that Islam was a
threat in southern Africa. This was followed by Zimbabwe's President Robert
Mugabe's slam on Islam.
According to Umar Phiri of Iqra Ilm Center (Harare), Muslims have not only
been living in harmony with citizens of other religions, but Islam urges
Muslims to care for neighbors.
In Zimbabwe, Muslims are not allowed to use the government media. They are
barred from paying for an advertisement in the print media. In Waterfalls,
Harare, the local Jama'at is building a new mosque. The old mosque will be
used as a school for children.
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2.
Islam takes hold in Zimbabwe
[By ALFRED CHAGONDA in Harare]
THE Islamic religion, practised in Zimbabwe
over the years, is beginning to take root in this predominantly-Christian
nation of 12,5 million people.
The religion, dominant in North Africa and Middle East countries, is
particularly holding sway in Zimbabwean schools.
It is estimated that the Muslim population in the country is more than
1.2 million people, the Ziana news service reports.
A teacher at a Harare girls' high school, who requested anonymity,
attributes the increasing conversion to Islam to encouragement from parents
who feel Islam would assist in providing the proper upbringing for their
children in an age of permissiveness.
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3.
Zimbabwe Muslim
[By International Islamic News Agency (IINA)]Harare,
Muharram 19/Apr 13 (IINA) - Statistics indicate that there were 1.2 million
Muslims in Zimbabwe before the advent of British colonialism in this country
in 1888. But from then on their numbers have been declining, to the extent
that there now are only 200,000 Muslims in the country, out of a total
population of about ten million.
The majority of the Muslims live in the rural areas, where they till the
land, and in mining areas. Those who are involved in business live mostly in
towns and cities.
Zimbabwe’s Muslims have formed various types of Islamic organizations, and
are keen in spreading the Islamic way of life and culture in various parts
of the country. They have therefore set up Islamic schools, after they had
obtained government permission, under which each group of 50 families is
allowed to set up its own Islamic school. They also have the right to build
mosques in those areas.
At the University of Zimbabwe a chair of Islamic and Arabic Studies has been
set up. There are about 100 main mosques in Zimbabwe, plus hundreds of other
smaller mosques, attached to each is a Qur’an teaching school.
It is reckoned that Islam came to Zimbabwe in
the first century of the Hijri calendar, and Islamic civilization and
culture prevailed in the country until the advent of British colonialism in
1888. The colonial administration persisted until Ian Smith made what was
known as the unilateral declaration of independence (UDI) in 1965.
It is noteworthy that the British colonialists adopted a negative policy
toward the Zimbabwean Muslims, and started to persecute them and deprive
them of their possessions, including their agricultural holdings. They were
then forced to work in mines, under very trying circumstances, simply
because they resisted the colonialists and urged their compatriots also to
do so.
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4. Zimbabwe Christians and Muslims seek cooperation
[By Ecumenical News International]
The call was made by
a University of Zimbabwe lecturer, Ezra Chitando, at an interfaith dialogue
seminar between Christians and Muslims recently held in the city of Kwekwe,
south-west of Harare, the capital.
In his speech about the religious situation in Zimbabwe, Mr. Chitando
said that dialogue and cooperation was needed between Christians, Muslims,
practitioners of African traditional religions, Jews, Hindus, Buddhists and
new religious movements, if religion was to make a positive impact on
people.
"Different religions in the country should cooperate," Mr. Chitando told
more than 100 Christians and Muslims who attended the meeting, according to
the Ecumenical Documentation and Information Center for Eastern and Southern
Africa (EDICESA), one of the organizers of the meeting.
"Religions of Zimbabwe may become the voice of the voiceless, if only they
can cooperate," according to Mr. Chitando, who noted that Islam, had grown
from being a tolerated minority to a significant force in Zimbabwe.
Mr. Chitando said that there were 1.2 million Muslims
in Zimbabwe.
Other estimates put the figure at 200,000 Muslims. According to the SBS
World Guide, published in Australia, approximately 50 percent of Zimbabwe's
population of 10 million people follow mixed Christian and traditional
beliefs, 25 percent profess Christianity alone, 24 percent follow indigenous
beliefs, and there is a "small Muslim minority."
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