Zimbabwe Shona Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Zimbabwe Shona. Here they are! All 6 of them:

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If you find yourself in a terrible storm,' he said, 'with lightning and thunder crashing, and with people panicking around you, just play your mbira and you won't notice anything; you will just remain calm.
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Paul Berliner (The Soul of Mbira: Music and Traditions of the Shona People of Zimbabwe)
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When I reach the head of the line, I hand my passport to the black official and greet him in Shona, Zimbabwe’s main vernacular. He ripens in smile and demands, β€œWhy don’t you stay here? We need people like you.” By β€œpeople like you,” he means white Zimbabweans.
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Peter Godwin (When a Crocodile Eats the Sun: A Memoir of Africa)
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The underestimation of Indigenous achievement was a deliberate tactic of British colonialism. Large structures of North American First Nations people were similarly ignored, or credited to earlier Europeans; and in South Africa, Cecil Rhodes made it illegal for anyone to mention the huge Shona structures found in what was once Rhodesia and is now Zimbabwe.
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Bruce Pascoe (Dark Emu)
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Harare literally means 'He does not sleep,' which, according to the story teller, commemorates an old man's early settlement in that area when it was still inhabited by deadly snakes and lions. In the evenings the old man, fearful of the wild animals, was reluctant to sleep. In order to steady his nerves and to prevent himself from dropping his guard, he played the mbira all night long.
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Paul Berliner (The Soul of Mbira: Music and Traditions of the Shona People of Zimbabwe)
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As an ancient cradle of Iron Age civilization, Zimbabwe has a great emotional importance to the economy of Southern Africa and that's especially true for Botswana since both countries are landlocked. Harare was the site of some historic scenes and the best trade regimes, and it is where generations of Southern African children have gone for their education. Bulawayo was a trade giant amongst the people of the north – the Bakalanga, the Venda and the Shona. Now brick-by-brick the empire was facing a second fall after the last fall of the Great Zimbabwe.
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Thabo Katlholo (The Mud Hut I Grew Upon)
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This is one of the consequences of a superior education, you see. In this independent, hundred-per-cent-empowered and fully and totally indigenous blacker-than-black country, a superior education is one that the whites would value, and as whites do not value local languages at the altar of what the whites deem supreme. So it was in colonial times, and so it remains, more than thirty years later.
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Petina Gappah (The Book of Memory)