by John Ross Schroeder
What happens to Zimbabwe now and in the near future may affect the entire continent. The long-awaited African renaissance has yet to materialize. Guns, brute force and political corruption shape Africa's future.
by Mabasa Chichaya
The Feast of Tabernacles was kept at the new Church-owned property under construction in Kadoma, Zimbabwe.
by Jerold Aust, John Ross Schroeder
What will the new year of 2008 mean for Africa's current state?
by John Ross Schroeder
Zimbabwe, at one time a prosperous African nation, is seriously short of food, and a lack of fuel has brought industry to a standstill.
by Vivien Botha
An inspiring, hope-filled Feast of Tabernacles and Eighth Day were held in Mossel Bay, South Africa.
by Darris McNeely
I have visited Zimbabwe, and I know the creative energies of its people. The land has vast potential for development for the benefit of its own and neighboring peoples. There is no excuse for the suffering the citizens must now endure.
by Melvin Rhodes
In 1960 British Prime Minister Harold MacMillan addressed the South African parliament and talked of a "wind of change sweeping across Africa." The rapid changes in Africa that followed have led to dictatorships, anarchy, economic and...
by Cecil Maranville, John Ross Schroeder
Though there are a few bright spots, the overall African situation still looks decidedly grim.
by Melvin Rhodes
Over a month after the voting, the results of the Zimbabwe presidential election still have not been officially announced. The autocratic president of Zimbabwe, who has been in power for almost three decades since the fall of Rhodesia, is...