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Zimbabwe News Update

📅 Published: August 14, 2025

📰 Source: gambakwe

Curated by AllZimNews.com

Sithole’s early years were marked by poverty and limited access to formal education.

Despite opposition from his father, he ran away to attend the Dadaya Mission School in 1935, where he studied under Reverend Garfield Todd, a future prime minister of Southern Rhodesia.

He earned his National Junior Certificate and, through private study, obtained a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of South Africa.

In the early 1950s, Sithole spent over three years in the United States studying theology and preaching, after which he returned to Rhodesia to become principal of Chikore Central Primary School and an ordained Methodist minister.

His intellectual output was prolific—he published nine books, including the seminalAfrican Nationalism(first published in 1959), a blend of autobiography and political polemic that chronicled the nascent nationalist movement.

In August 1963, Sithole co-founded the Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU) alongside Herbert Chitepo, Robert Mugabe, and others.

He was elected the first president of ZANU, a militant organization committed to ending white minority rule.

ZANU was banned by the Rhodesian government in 1964, and Sithole was arrested in June that year alongside Mugabe and other leaders.

He spent about ten years in Harare Central Prison (then Salisbury Central Prison), where he continued to influence the liberation struggle by authorizing Chitepo to lead the movement from abroad.

After his release in 1974, Sithole was sidelined politically.

In 1975, Robert Mugabe, who was then operating from Mozambique, was chosen as ZANU’s leader following a factional split.

Sithole’s moderate stance, including his public renunciation of armed struggle during his trial, contributed to his ouster in a palace coup engineered by Mugabe.

Sithole subsequently founded the ZANU-Ndonga party, which rejected violent methods and sought a more moderate political path.

During the liberation war, Mugabe and his faction of ZANU operated primarily from Mozambique, where they coordinated guerrilla warfare against the Rhodesian regime.

Sithole, by contrast, was less involved in the armed struggle and more focused on political negotiation and moderate opposition.

His faction, ZANU-Ndonga, was marginalized and targeted by Mugabe’s ZANLA forces, especially during the critical period leading up to independence.

The rivalry between Sithole and Mugabe was both political and personal.

Mugabe accused Sithole of neglecting the fighters in Zambia, where ZANU camps were bombed with heavy casualties.

Sithole’s moderate approach was viewed as a threat to Mugabe’s militant strategy, leading to Sithole’s political isolation.

Sithole participated in the transitional government under Abel Muzorewa in 1979 and attended the Lancaster House Agreement talks that paved the way for Zimbabwe’s independence in 1980.

However, his party failed to win any seats in the first post-independence elections, and he faced persecution, including arrest in 1995 for alleged conspiracy against Mugabe.

He spent several years in self-imposed exile in the United States before returning to Zimbabwe in the early 1990s.

Sithole died on12 December 2000in Philadelphia, USA, without having been granted national hero status during Mugabe’s rule.

After Mugabe’s fall in 2017, Mnangagwa’s government posthumously conferred national hero status on Sithole in 2022, recognizing his foundational role in Zimbabwe’s liberation and intellectual heritage. 🔗 Read Full Article

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Alongside aggregation, our team of nationwide reporters provides real-time, on-the-ground coverage.

Stay informed and connected — reach us at admin@allzimnews. com.

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All Zim News is a central hub for all things Zimbabwean, curating news from across the country so no story is missed. Alongside aggregation, our team of nationwide reporters provides real-time, on-the-ground coverage. Stay informed and connected — reach us at admin@allzimnews.com.

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