Callistus Ndlovu

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Prime MinisterRobert Mugabe
Preceded byRobert Mugabe
Succeeded byKumbirai Kangai (as Minister of Industry and Commerce)
Prime MinisterRobert Mugabe
Callistus Ndlovu
Minister of Industry and Technology
In office
July 1985  13 April 1989
Prime MinisterRobert Mugabe
Preceded byRobert Mugabe
Succeeded byKumbirai Kangai (as Minister of Industry and Commerce)
Minister of Mines
In office
January 1984  July 1985
Prime MinisterRobert Mugabe
Preceded byMaurice Nyagumbo
Succeeded byRichard Hove
Minister of Construction
In office
April 1982  January 1984
Prime MinisterRobert Mugabe
Preceded byClement Muchachi (as Minister of Works)
Succeeded bySimbarashe Mumbengegwi
Member of the Senate
In office
1985–1990
ConstituencyMatabeleland North Province
Member of Parliament
In office
13 May 1980  1985
ConstituencyMatabeleland South Province
Personal details
Born9 February 1936
Died13 February 2019(2019-02-13) (aged 83)
Resting placeNational Heroes' Acre
PartyNDP (1960–1961)
ZAPU (1963–1984)
ZANU (1984–1987)
ZANU–PF (after 1987)
SpouseAngeline Ndlovu
Children7
Alma materPius XII Catholic University College (BA)
New York University (MA)
Stony Brook University (PhD)

Callistus Dingiswayo Ndlovu (9 February 1936 – 13 February 2019) was a Zimbabwean academic, diplomat, and politician. He joined the Zimbabwe African People's Union (ZAPU) in 1963 as a teacher in Matabeleland, and went on to serve as its representative to the United Nations and North America in the 1970s. After Zimbabwe's independence in 1980, he was a member of the House of Assembly from 1980 to 1985 and served as a senator from 1985 to 1990. He left ZAPU and joined the ruling ZANU–PF party in 1984.

Ndlovu held several portfolios in Prime Minister Robert Mugabe's cabinet in the 1980s, serving as Minister of Construction from 1982 to 1984, Minister of Mines from 1984 to 1985, and Minister of Industry and Technology between 1985 and 1989. In 1989, he was implicated in the Willowgate corruption scandal and resigned from the cabinet after being accused of lying to the official panel investigating the allegations. He ran unsuccessfully for Parliament in 2000 and again for the Senate in 2013, and served on the ZANU–PF Central Committee and as the party's provincial chairman for Bulawayo. He died in 2019 in South Africa, where he was being treated for cancer.

Callistus Dingiswayo Ndlovu was born on 9 February 1936 in Plumtree, a town near the western border of what was then Southern Rhodesia.[1][2][3] He grew up in a Kalanga family of four.[1][4] As a boy, Ndlovu herded cattle and often harvested mopane worms to pay for his schooling.[4] He attended Empandeni High School, a Catholic mission school in Plumtree, where he earned his junior certificate and began training as a teacher.[1] After the training, he started a correspondence course through the Joint Matriculation Board of South Africa.[1] After completing matric, he taught from 1959 to 1961 at the Empandeni mission, first at the primary school and later at the high school.[1][2][3] He then taught Mafakela Primary School in Bulawayo in 1962.[2][3]

In 1963, Ndlovu entered Pius XII Catholic University College in Basutoland (now Lesotho), where he graduated in 1965 with a Bachelor of Arts in economics, history, and Zulu.[1][2][3] While a student, he served as president of the university's Student Representative Council from 1963 to 1964, and as the publicity secretary of the National Union of Basutoland Students from 1964 to 1965.[1][2][3] He went on to earn a Master of Arts in history from New York University in 1969, followed by a Doctor of Philosophy in history from the State University of New York at Stony Brook in 1973.[5][6] His doctoral dissertation was titled Missionaries and Traders in the Ndebele Kingdom.[7]

Academic career and revolutionary activity

In 1960, Ndlovu joined the National Democratic Party, an African nationalist party founded by Joshua Nkomo.[2] In 1963, while a student at Pius XII Catholic University College, he joined the Zimbabwe African People's Union (ZAPU), and became chairman of the party's branch in Basutoland.[2][3][6] After completing his bachelor's degree, Ndlovu returned to Rhodesia, where he taught economics and Zulu at Mpopoma High School in Bulawayo in 1966 and 1967, and was elected president of the African Teachers' Association in Matabeleland.[1] While a teacher, was detained for three months at Khami prison by the Rhodesian government for promoting ZAPU politics.[1][2][3]

Upon release, Ndlovu left Rhodesia for New York, where he studied towards his MA and PhD on an Aggrey Fellowship.[1][2][3] Between 1969 and 1980, he was an associate professor of history and political science and director of the African Studies Institute at Hofstra University on Long Island.[1] He received an award for distinguished teaching in 1973, and was granted Freedom of the City by Minneapolis in 1973.[2][3] While in the United States, Ndlovu served as ZAPU's chairman for North America from 1967 to 1971, and was a member of the party's Revolutionary Council from 1971 to 1980.[2][3] From 1973 to 1979, he was ZAPU's chief representative to the United Nations, and opened an office for the party near the United Nations headquarters in Manhattan.[1][2][3] Ndlovu attended the 1976 Geneva Conference and the 1979 Lancaster House Conference as a political advisor to the Patriotic Front delegations.[1][2][3] During the liberation struggle, Ndlovu often made trips to ZAPU camps in Zambia, where he was responsible for ensuring supplies of medicine, books, and other necessities, which he obtained with the support of the African-American Institute.[6]

Post-independence political career

Later life and death

References

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