Abstract

The armed struggle in Zimbabwe is a well-documented phenomenon. In their preoccupation with the general politics and history of the armed struggle, these studies have, however, neglected one of the most important aspects of the armed struggle: the difference in political and historical pursuance and execution of the war in the former rural Rhodesia between ZANLA and ZIPRA guerrillas, as having different levels of impact on rural peasants on the one hand, and attracting different forms of response from the Rhodesian Security Forces on the other. Due to these differences, this article claims as case studies of the districts of Rhodesia that both the political and historical developments within ZANLA operated areas in the Zaka District were different from those in the Bulilima District where ZIPRA guerrillas waged their armed struggle. It is argued that the way peasants in Zaka felt and experienced the armed conflict in the former Rhodesia was different from the way peasants in ZIPRA operated Bulilima experienced the same phenomenon.2 Given that the Rhodesian security forces also responded to the political and historical development of the armed struggle in a particular district, it is suffice to note that the armed struggle in rural Rhodesia was a complicated phenomenon that had profound effects on Bulilima and Zaka peasants. The article concludes that, only through a district focused comparative analysis of the effects of the armed struggle in the former Rhodesia, can such differences in experience and impact on peasants be identified and appreciated.

Highlights

  • ZANU and ZAPU were Zimbabwe’s two main liberation movements that militarily challenged the former Rhodesian regime. Waging their guerrilla war from Mozambique (ZANLA) and Zambia (ZIPRA), the two guerrilla armies operated in different parts of the country

  • Zimbabwe African National Liberation Army (ZANLA) and Zimbabwe People Revolutionary Army (ZIPRA) were sponsored by China and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) respectively

  • The Chinese Communist Party came to power by waging a guerrilla war and had vast experience in this kind of warfare

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

ZANU and ZAPU were Zimbabwe’s two main liberation movements that militarily challenged the former Rhodesian regime Waging their guerrilla war from Mozambique (ZANLA) and Zambia (ZIPRA), the two guerrilla armies operated in different parts of the country. The purpose is to provide a historical background of the genesis and development of Zimbabwe’s liberation struggle in the context of ZAPU and ZANU.[5] This section leads to an understanding of why ZANLA and ZIPRA guerrillas operated independently from one another. It relies heavily on secondary sources as most of the interviewees expressed their ignorance of the embryotic politics of ZAPU and ZANU. Through stories told by the participants, the article managed to give a reconstruction of the liberation struggle as it unfolded in the Bulilima and Zaka Districts, complemented by data from secondary sources

THE POLITICS AND HISTORY OF THE ZIMBABWE ARMED STRUGGLE
ZANU AND ZAPU IN EXILE
ZIPRA AND ZANLA’S CONDUCT OF THE GUERRILLA WAR IN BULILIMA AND ZAKA
CONCLUSION
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