2. Mugabe is the product of a religious upbringing
Both of
Robert Mugabe’s parents were extremely religious, and strict with their son.
Throughout his childhood, he attended Jesuit school, and credits an Irish
priest as one of his most influential mentors in his youth.
3.Two of his brothers died when he was young
Sadly, Mugabe lost both of his older
brothers by the age of 10. One died from poisoning, while the other passed away
not long after their father abandoned the family.
4. Mugabe has a strong background in education
Many are aware that Mugabe has
always been a strong proponent of education. Zimbabwe’s literacy rate reached
the highest of any African country during his presidency. This is in large part
due to the fact that Mugabe worked as a school teacher prior to beginning his
political career, first teaching in Ghana and then returning to Zimbabwe to
join the revolution against the white government of Rhodesia.
5. He has seven university degrees
Six of Mugabe’s university degrees
were actually earned while he was doing distance learning in prison. They cover
a broad range of topics including education, economics, administration, and
law. Degrees include a Bachelor of Laws and Master’s of Laws from the
University of London’s external program, earned during his stint in a Salisbury
prison.
6. His first child died
The first and only child Mugabe had
with the late First Lady Sally Hayfron (pictured above at their wedding),
Michael Nhamodzenyika, died at age three from cerebral malaria in 1966. Mugabe
was informed of this from behind prison bars, and was devastated.
7. After his release from prison, he escaped Zimbabwe with the help of a white nun
Though the Rhodesians did release
Mugabe from prison, he was not supposed to leave the country. A white nun
helped him to cross into Mozambique, where he was able to rejoin the
revolutionary armies.
8. He was a Nobel Peace Prize nominee
In 1981, Mugabe was on the short
list for the Nobel Peace Prize for his initial stance about reconciliation
following Zimbabwe’s independence and his election as the country’s first
president. He said, “Our people, young and old, men and women, black and white,
living and dead, are, on this occasion, being brought together in a new form of
national unity that makes them all Zimbabweans.”
9. He had an extramarital affair while his wife was dying of cancer
While his first wife was struggling
with her cancer, Mugabe started up with his private secretary, Grace. When it
came out that she was pregnant with his child, he ignored popular opinion and
married her in 1996.
10. Mugabe traveled to Italy despite a E.U. travel ban
The European Union issued a travel
ban against Mugabe that would prevent him from entering any member countries.
However, he was able to subvert the ban on religious grounds in March 2013 in
order to attend the inauguration of Pope Francis in Italy.
11. Some honors he received have been revoked
As the number of human rights
violations perpetrated by Mugabe have increased, some of his honors have been
revoked. Queen Elizabeth II rescinded his knighthood in 2008. The Hunger
Project took back his 1988 award of the Africa Prize for Leadership for the
Sustainable End of Hunger. Numerous universities have revoked honorary degrees,
including Michigan State University, University of Massachusetts, and the
University of Edinburgh.
12. He led ZANU
In 1963, the Zimbabwe African
National Union was formed to fight white colonial rule in the country.
Influenced by the framework and successes of South Africa’s Pan Africanist
Congress, it held a military wing, ZANLA, and also touted Communist/Maoist
views. The group split in the ’70s, and Mugabe headed the militant faction.
When he was elected as prime minister in 1980, ZANU became ZANU-PF (Patriotic
Front), the ruling political party.
13. He is an accused racist
Mugabe has criticized for having
bigoted views toward whites, especially the citizens of his country. He was
condemned for seizing white-owned farms in Zimbabwe without compensation. On
the 22nd anniversary of Zimbabwe’s independence, Mugabe proclaimed in a speech:
“The white man is here as a second citizen: you are number one.” His rhetoric
has drawn many detractors.
14. His LGBT views
This may come as no real shock:
Mugabe hates the gays. Here are some things he has been quoted as saying:
“Worse than pigs, goats, and birds.” “If you take two men and lock them in a
house for five years and tell them to come with two children and they fail to
do that, then we will chop off their heads.” Since 1987, he has enforced sodomy
laws against homosexual acts.
15. His father abandoned him
In January 2014, at his sister
Bridget’s burial, Mugabe informed mourners during a 67-minute eulogy that his
father had abandoned the family in 1934, after his oldest brother Michael’s
death. Gabriel Mugabe Matibiri started a whole new family and bore new
children.
16. He won the lottery
In 2000, Mugabe won the state
lottery, raking in about 100,000 Zimbabwe dollars (the equivalent of $2,600
American dollars). His name was reportedly drawn from thousands of contestants,
and many people were stunned. The lottery was organized by the Zimbabwe Banking
Corp. About half the country’s population is unemployed.
17. Mugabe at the movies
A film star? Well…if you’ve seen the
2005 American thriller, “The Interpreter” with Sean Penn and Nicole Kidman,
then you might know Mugabe’s role. A U.N. interpreter stumbles upon an
assassination plot orchestrated by the fictional president of an African
country. The fictional President Zuwanie” and Mugabe share many traits, as does
the faux country of Matobo with Zimbabwe. The film was swiftly banned in
Zimbabwe, deemed “anti-Zimbabwean.”
18. He plans to run for president again in 2018
Mugabe won the most recent election in Zimbabwe in 2013 with 61 percent of the vote, but it is widely believed that voter fraud occurred. Despite this, and despite his advanced age, Mugabe has announced his intention to run again for election in 2018 for the office that he has held since 1987.
19. Happy Birthday, Mugabe
Mugabe received a one-ton royal
throne for his birthday, studded with gold and diamonds. He turned 90 on Feb.
21, 2014. Three throne crafters reportedly took two years of intensive work to
carve the chair out of a block of stone.
Very Intuitive
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