A Legacy That Breathes, A Nation That Builds

H.E President Mnangagwa

As Zimbabwe gathered at the sacred National Heroes’ Acre on June 23, 2025, to bid farewell to one of its brave sons, the President’s voice carried not just grief, but a resolute reaffirmation of a nation’s founding philosophy, that a country is built, governed, and spiritually nurtured by its own people. Beneath the mourning, there echoed a call to consciousness, a rekindling of patriotic duty, and a clear reminder that independence was not a gift, but an outcome of blood-soaked determination and ideological clarity.

This burial was not merely a ceremonial act of laying to rest, but a bold national reflection, inviting every Zimbabwean to gaze into the soul of the republic. The President did not speak to history as though it were buried, he spoke to history as a living force, as a mirror that demands our continued action. In his words, there was no room for apathy, no excuse for complacency, and no tolerance for betrayal of the struggle that birthed the modern Zimbabwean state.

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The story of liberation is not an abstract memory, nor is it merely a tale of guns and trenches, it is the foundation of national responsibility. It is the reason why Zimbabweans must rise each morning with a burden to build, to defend, to produce, to innovate, and to protect the national soul. Every province, every village, every institution is called to become a construction site for transformation. The President’s words made it clear, this is the generation that must move from slogans to substance, from sentiment to service, and from remembrance to renewal.

The President highlighted how the liberation war was not just about dismantling foreign rule, but about opening space for indigenous vision. When gallant fighters crossed rivers, walked vast terrain, and stared death in the face, they were planting the seeds of a future Zimbabwe that could feed itself, educate its children, and stand tall on the global stage. And now, with the land returned to its rightful owners, with the means of production in national hands, the question is not whether we have resources, but whether we have the will to turn sacrifice into prosperity.

The Commander-in-Chief spoke of how Zimbabwe’s agricultural growth, particularly the drive to improve productivity and food sovereignty, is a direct extension of the legacy of those who fought for land. He reminded us that the gains of the land reform programme must not be diluted by laziness, selfishness, or division. It is in the maize field, in the tobacco barn, in the irrigation scheme, in the cattle pen, that patriotism must now manifest. To betray the land is to betray the liberation, and to betray the liberation is to betray the future.

There was a time when survival was the victory, but today, excellence must become the victory. The challenge has shifted. The battle is now against underdevelopment, against corruption, against ideological amnesia, and against imported thinking that erodes national confidence. The President urged the youth to emulate the clarity, humility, and discipline of the liberation generation. To be Zimbabwean is not to wait, it is to act. It is not to consume, it is to create. It is not to beg, it is to build.

As the body of the late hero was lowered into the soil of eternity, the message became unshakable the soil does not only bury, it gives birth. And what must now be born is a new generation of Zimbabweans who understand that sovereignty is a daily labour, that heritage is a living covenant, and that the past demands a future worthy of its pain.

The President’s words were not just meant for the podium, they were meant for the Parliament, for the classroom, for the homestead, for the council chamber, for the marketplace, for the boardroom, for the pulpit, and for the plough. Because the revolution was never about personalities, it was about purpose. It was about giving Zimbabwe back to Zimbabweans, and now, it is about ensuring that Zimbabweans give themselves fully to Zimbabwe.

As the sun set behind the heroes’ monument, it did not close a chapter, it cast light on a national assignment still unfolding. And the message remains, with solemn clarity, with fire in its breath, a country built in war must be developed in peace, brick by brick, stone upon stone, by the hands of its own children. Because the legacy breathes, and the nation must build.

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