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Land reform success stories: The Godfrey Nkunzani farming story

Taruvinga MagwiroTo

Understated and self-effacing, grey and a little grizzled, he walks with a slight limp and the help of a cane. If you meet Godfrey nkunzani in the street, you would be forgiven for mistaking him for just another pensioner.

He is anything but. take a second look and you see in his penetrating grey eyes the vitality that belies the physical frailty. talk to him and he infects you with his warmth, honesty and humility.

Of course, appearances can fool. nkunzani is aged 63, a veteran of the war of liberation and a man with such a compelling farming story that on June 9, 2022, stakeholders in Zimbabwe’s agricultural innovation system descended on his humble abode, keen to look and learn from a man who is building a fledgling farming future from the ground up.

nkunzani was allotted a 30,5-hectare sub-division of Komani estates in 2008. While he didn’t lack inspiration and ambition, his prospects looked quite bleak. Here was an ex-soldier surviving on a pension that was taking a hit from hyperinflation, trying his hand on a vocation in which he knew little.

But he had other things working for him: accounting and logistics training as well as determination and discipline drilled from years serving in the army. These would all cour in York’s voice. If anything, like all good teachers, there was only pride there. From my observation there exists between the two men an extraordinary rapport and chemistry, clearly obvious in the way that York contributed to organising the field day.

and in the way that he talks about nkunzani.

“Godfrey is a remarkable man. I wish we had more like him with honest ambition and a willingness to work and stay on the land 24-7,” York said.

I look at him squarely in the eyes and ask, “But you are working yourself out of a job, aren’t you alan? If all your landlords are as successful as Godfrey nkunzani, and wean themselves off you over time, where will that leave you?”

“Landless,” he replies, deadpan. Then grins. after a silence he goes on more reflec“It all works out for the best, eventually. You play the hand you are dealt.”

But a small sigh hints of inner turmoil at his complex relationship with the land.

The field day itself was a huge success, but that is a story for another day. What has stuck in my mind was a moment when I was talking to nkunzani and his eyes trailed off to some distant form in the west. I followed his eyes, and met with the object of his distraction.

a couple of kilometres from his plot, the majestic new parliament building flashes its light like a portent.

I look at him, and he looks right back. “What future, Mr nkunzani?”

He shrugs philosophically: “I work with what is there”. But a small sigh hints of an inner turmoil at his complex relationship with the land.

I was clearly making progress, but my real breakthrough came in 2016 when I entered into a Joint Venture (JV) with Alan York, a collaboration that has yielded rich rewards for me.

FARMBIZ

en-zw

2022-06-24T07:00:00.0000000Z

2022-06-24T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://alphamedia.pressreader.com/article/281947431528752

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