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Loading... The Fear: Robert Mugabe and the Martyrdom of Zimbabweby Peter Godwin
Horrific view of the atrocities done to the Zimbabwean people, the whims of a tyrant, and the psychology of non-violent resistance. Terrifying, and necessary. ( )This is the story of Robert Mugabe and company as they continue to destroy Zimbabwe. It cover the period of the elections a few years ago. It is filled with beatings, assults, rapes, murder, burning of people and property as a campaign strategy. Mugabe has so mismanaged the country so badly that inflation was out of control, resulting in Z$400 trillion electric bills. A chilling account of a nation's total breakdown into violent chaos when Mugabe's pet killers and thugs spread across a bleeding, dysfunctional nation to ensure they steal the election. Heartbreaking, but with inspiring portraits of people who refuse to be silenced in spite of the constant threats of torture and death that hang over them. The third book In Godwin's triology of life in Rhodesia transformed into Zimbabwe...testimony of how one man can destroy an enitre nation with fear. Again, history repeats itself with the story of Zimbabwe's downfall. The detailed accounts of torture and insanity help to expose Mugabe and his entourage for the despots they are and by naming all the victims and revealing their stories gives some justice to their cause. Thank you Mr. Godwin for making us aware. Short Version: “This a book by a brave man about people who are braver still. Peter Godwin brings us closer to the filth of the Mugabe tyranny than is bearable and portrays with subtlety, authority, and respect those who, against all odds and at the cost of unimaginable suffering, continue the resistance against it. Their courage is the stuff of myth, and in Godwin they have found their chronicler.” David Rieff Long Version: Some books are tough to read. Some we need to read. Peter Godwin’s newest, The Fear, is one of those books. By far one of the most haunting books I have ever read, this work chronicles the fate of Zimbabwe’s opposition after their victory, in a democratic election, to oust dictator Robert Mugabe after his thirty years of despotic rule. For their bravery in standing up and saying, “No more!”, followers of the MDC party faced torture, terror, intimidation, and death. Right about the time that I felt as if this would be a book that I could not finish Peter returned to his wife and two young sons in New York, and he was feeling much the same way. While playing dinos with his boy he envisioned a chart hanging on the end of a young torture victim’s bed, upon which the nurses had put a fierce-some T-rex sticker-a symbol of the boy’s spirit. The dichotomy of his sons’ lives and those of the children in the land of his birth overwhelmed him. In every act, every conversation, he flashed back to his homeland, and in doing so, he realized that he didn’t write this book for himself-he wrote it for the thousands of victims of thirty years of Mugabe rule in his beloved Zimbabwe. This was a story he was called to tell, for the simple reason that he could. He must bear witness to The Fear, bring the truth of it to the attention of the outside world, and bring hope to those actively engaged in their country’s fight for freedom from tyranny. Knowing that Peter Godwin is a print journalist, I fully expected excellent reporting, and he definitely delivered. The book is well organized and any digressions from chronology are clear and well transitioned. Despite dealing with a huge cast of players, he gave enough information to remind the reader where they had met a person previously, and no person ever felt extraneous. Some levity is injected into an otherwise dark narrative in the form of an almost gallowsish humor. What I did not expect was the formidable strength of his ability to paint Zimbabwe in my mind-her stunning natural beauty, economic free-fall, collapsed civil structure, and complex society were vibrant within his prose. Above all else, this book is about the triumph of humanity in the most wretched of circumstances. It is the story of people who stand, in the face of a reality so horrific that most of us can not even apprehend it, and refuse to be silenced, even unto death. Please read their story. Let Peter’s decision to write this difficult tale gain traction in your ability to share your reading experience with others you know. The fight in Zimbabwe is ongoing. If democracy is to prevail-and the suffering of thousands of torture victims be vindicated-the world must listen and speak and stand. Star ranking: absolutely five stars
Godwin... successfully straddles the many divides in Zimbabwe today – between urban and rural, black and white, rich and poor – to give a well-balanced picture, with exquisite attention to detail, of the reality of life in Zimbabwe today. This is a moving, evocative and strangely tender book.
Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 031605173X, Hardcover)Journalist Peter Godwin has covered wars. As a soldier, he's fought them. But nothing prepared him for the surreal mix of desperation and hope he encountered when he returned to Zimbabwe, his broken homeland.Godwin arrived as Robert Mugabe, the country's dictator for 30 years, has finally lost an election. Mugabe's tenure has left Zimbabwe with the world's highest rate of inflation and the shortest life span. Instead of conceding power, Mugabe launched a brutal campaign of terror against his own citizens. With foreign correspondents banned, and he himself there illegally, Godwin was one of the few observers to bear witness to this period the locals call The Fear. He saw torture bases and the burning villages but was most awed as an observer of not only simple acts of kindness but also churchmen and diplomats putting their own lives on the line to try to stop the carnage. THE FEAR is a book about the astonishing courage and resilience of a people, armed with nothing but a desire to be free, who challenged a violent dictatorship. It is also the deeply personal and ultimately uplifting story of a man trying to make sense of the country he can't recognize as home. (retrieved from Amazon Thu, 14 Feb 2013 13:27:59 -0500) In this remarkable look inside Mugabe's isolated yet restive Zimbabwe, journalist Godwin and his sister, Georgina, return to their childhood home and tour the economically devastated and state-terrorized cities, farms, and diamond mines at considerable personal risk, gathering candid interviews with dispossessed farmers, marginalized elites, and former insiders to cast a light on the workings of Mugabe's dictatorship and psychology, and the "fear factor" crucial to his control.… (more) |
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