Archive
How do you cook an elephant? With some difficulty. And how’s the cooked hippo?
After Mr Mugabe’s 91st birthday party in Victoria Falls, where elephant was served, an American newspaper wanted to know how to cook an elephant. There are difficulties of scale here. The African elephant is the world’s largest land mammal, far outweighing its Asian cousins. A crane or a huge block and tackle would be needed…
Read MoreGripe….Growl….Grrrr….
The test of a good baked bean is being able to snack it cold, right out of the tin. One of Zimbabwe’s first major investments after independence in 1980 came from the U.S. Heinz Corp. The necessary Michigan pea bean began successful cultivation locally. Outgrowers delivered the beans to the local Heinz Olivine factory and…
Read MoreAngus Shaw’s Harare
From the Air Zimbabwe in-flight magazine. I never got paid for it, not even a free flight to Bulawayo – due to circumstances beyond their control, they said. Over a lifetime, the Harare skyline has changed beyond recognition. With notable exceptions – the High Court, the foreign ministry, the Munhumatapa building ( time on the…
Read MoreSoccer is a life saver for HIV Positive Ladies
Published to coincide with the FIFA World Cup in South Africa in 2010. Watch this space for more on the progress of the Positive Ladies now. http://www.kubatanablogs.net/kubatana/soccer-is-a-life-saver-for-hiv-positive-ladies/ DOMBORAMWARI, Zimbabwe — For members of the Positive Ladies Football Club, playing soccer is much more than just a way to have fun. All its members are women…
Read MoreDawn Chorus
Listen to the first things you will hear in the morning, when waking up in Zimbabwe and then in Syria. Dawn chorus in Zimbabwe Dawn chorus in Syria
Read MoreThe Star Fish Story
The Roman Catholic sisters in Mbare dished out the fortified, nutritional drink mahewu, what food they managed to find and antiseptic creams and other basics donated by pharmacies, some time-expired but effective all the same. (There were politicians who hated this – and even tried to stop it – it was driven by charities, non-government…
Read MoreIt’s life
At first I disapproved of the “greening” of Zimbabwe’s cellphone towers. But then I took a longer, more contextual view and it didn’t seem too bad. Maybe that’s the way to look at life. The tower in Chitepo Avenue seen from Samora Machel East.
Read MoreThe legend of the Ark of the Covenant and the disputed Zimbabwe connection
The legend of the Ark of the Covenant and the disputed Zimbabwe connection By ANGUS SHAW According to legend, white lions of God and a two-headed snake guarded the “drum that thunders” in a cave in southwestern Zimbabwe’s sacred Dumbwe mountains. But, after an Indiana Jones-like tale of intrigue and adventure, the 700-year-old relic some…
Read MoreIs the pen mightier than the sword?
Freedom of expression: the debate goes on “I despise what you say but I will defend to the end your right to say it.” The enlightened approach current for so long in democratic society. Something to think about: “ I believe in freedom of speech, but if you insult or threaten my mother I reserve…
Read MoreCOMING SOON – A spy story about drought resistant crops in famine-prone Africa.
The Itinerant History Teacher By Angus Shaw PROLOGUE Dammit. The Internet, the smartphone and Wikipedia have killed me. I am a history teacher no-one needs. People can get what they want with the click of a mouse or a tap on an App. I get work at Third World institutions where there is still some mix…
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