Zim Celebs

Mbuya Stella Chiweshe to be burried tomorrow

The late mbira queen Mbuya Stella Rambisai Chiweshe is set to be buried at Masembura village in Chiweshe, tomorrow after the government denied her national heroine status — which, according to stakeholders in the arts sector, would have been more befitting given her role in lifting the national flag on the international scene.

The government has instead granted her a State-assisted funeral — a less glamorous honor.

Chiweshe succumbed to brain cancer at her Kuwadzana home in Harare on Friday. She was aged 76.

The songbird was married to Peter Reich, a German national at the time of her death.

In a statement, government said Chiweshe epitomised Zimbabwe’s cultural excellence through the Mbira Dzavadzimu genre, which she successfully took to the international stage.

“The Acting President Constantino Chiwenga, after consultation with His Excellency President, Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa, has announced that government has granted the late music icon and Mbira Dzavadzimu player, Mbuya Stella Rambisai Chiweshe, a State-assisted funeral,” the statement read.

“This means all the costs related to her internment will be assumed by the State. His Excellency the President, who is on leave, and the acting President, extend their deepest, heartfelt condolences to the entire Chiweshe and Reich families on this, their saddest loss. May her soul rest in eternal peace.”

The late mbira queen defied all odds as a female artiste to promote Zimbabwean culture through music and film.

With a career spanning over 40 years, Chiweshe was a recipient of various local and international awards, including the Billboard Music Award (1993), the National Arts Merit Awards (Nama) (2006), the Nama Lifetime Achievement Award (2020), and the Nama Legends Awards (2021).

The National Arts Council of Zimbabwe confirmed the burial arrangements saying her body will leave for Masembura today.

In other news – Hopewell Chin’ono secures 50 dialysis machines for Zimbabwe

Award-winning journalist and filmmaker, Hopewell Chin’ono, has secured 50 dialysis machines for Zimbabwe from one of his contacts based in the United Kingdom.

Dialysis machines are artificial kidneys that perform most, but not all, kidney functions for patients who have permanent or temporary renal failure. Learn More

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