Midlands introduces council candidates

THE Zanu-PF Midlands provincial leadership yesterday took the party’s 2018 election campaign to its eight districts where council candidates were being introduced to members.

Midlands introduces council candidates

THE Zanu-PF Midlands provincial leadership yesterday took the party’s 2018 election campaign to its eight districts where council candidates were being introduced to members.

Midlands introduces council candidates

THE Zanu-PF Midlands provincial leadership yesterday took the party’s 2018 election campaign to its eight districts where council candidates were being introduced to members.

Reading to your child: The difference it makes

If you are a parent or a teacher, you most probably read stories to young children. Together, you laugh and point at the pictures. You engage them with a few simple questions. And they respond.

Reading to your child: The difference it makes

If you are a parent or a teacher, you most probably read stories to young children. Together, you laugh and point at the pictures. You engage them with a few simple questions. And they respond.

Reading to your child: The difference it makes

If you are a parent or a teacher, you most probably read stories to young children. Together, you laugh and point at the pictures. You engage them with a few simple questions. And they respond.

Chidavaenzi’s novel ‘is like a movie’

On the surface, Philip Kundeni Chidavaenzi’s “The Latter Rain” (2016) sounds like another Pentecostal exegesis seeking to remind believers that things will soon be well because the latter rain is coming. Interpreting the latter rain like that will be a very grave mistake. It is like thinking that Ignatius Mabasa’s “Imbwa Yemunhu” (simply translated, it means, “You are a dog” or “I am a dog”) is a collection of vitriolic expletives when in actual fact it is a journey into a dog’s spiritual salvation.

Chidavaenzi’s novel ‘is like a movie’

On the surface, Philip Kundeni Chidavaenzi’s “The Latter Rain” (2016) sounds like another Pentecostal exegesis seeking to remind believers that things will soon be well because the latter rain is coming. Interpreting the latter rain like that will be a very grave mistake. It is like thinking that Ignatius Mabasa’s “Imbwa Yemunhu” (simply translated, it means, “You are a dog” or “I am a dog”) is a collection of vitriolic expletives when in actual fact it is a journey into a dog’s spiritual salvation.

Chidavaenzi’s novel ‘is like a movie’

On the surface, Philip Kundeni Chidavaenzi’s “The Latter Rain” (2016) sounds like another Pentecostal exegesis seeking to remind believers that things will soon be well because the latter rain is coming. Interpreting the latter rain like that will be a very grave mistake. It is like thinking that Ignatius Mabasa’s “Imbwa Yemunhu” (simply translated, it means, “You are a dog” or “I am a dog”) is a collection of vitriolic expletives when in actual fact it is a journey into a dog’s spiritual salvation.

Arterial Network engages ministry for arts development

Minister of Sport, Arts and Recreation Kazembe Kazembe has promised to give a helping hand to the creative sector to ensure that artists have access to the global market.

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