- Abel
Tendekayi Muzorewa (14
April 1925 – 8
April 2010), also
commonly referred to as
Bishop Muzorewa, was a
Zimbabwean bishop and
politician who served...
- an
executive council composed of Ian
Smith and
three black individuals (
Muzorewa, Sithole, and Chirau), and a
ministerial council,
while Smith retained...
-
Government held in
Lusaka from 1–7
August 1979, the
British government invited Muzorewa and the
leaders of the
Patriotic Front to parti****te in a Constitutional...
- grew
politically close to
Muzorewa. He
became the
first vice-president of the
United African National Council which Muzorewa had founded, and was allowed...
-
Gwinyai Henry Muzorewa is a
Zimbabwean clergyman,
politician and the
president of the
United African National Council (UANC).
Muzorewa is a
professor of...
-
party during 1979–1980, when its
leader Abel
Muzorewa was
Prime Minister. The
party was
founded by
Muzorewa in 1971.
Running as
African National Council...
-
Smith and the
moderate African nationalist leaders comprising Bishop Abel
Muzorewa,
Ndabaningi Sithole and
Senator Chief Jeremiah Chirau.
After almost 15...
- to
organise and co-ordinate
black opposition to the deal.
Bishop Abel
Muzorewa, the
first black man to have been
ordained as such in Rhodesia, was installed...
-
whites and
blacks in 1979, led by
Bishop Abel
Muzorewa. When
sanctions remained in place, he
joined Muzorewa for the
Lancaster House Agreement in London...
- the
critical issues. H. Shaw Publishers. p. 148. ISBN 978-0-87788-238-1.
Muzorewa, Abel
Tendekayi (1
December 2005).
Evangelism That
Decolonizes the Soul:...