
“These kinds of violence are structured into the global order that we live in and have their root in the structures of Western empire that began to be formed over half a millennium ago,” she said.Īs a result, Dangarembga said the world is in need of new ways of thinking. That violence continued when Zimbabwe became independent in 1980, she added. In her remarks, Dangarembga spoke about Zimbabwe's colonial past and the various forms of violence white colonialists inflicted on its Black inhabitants in the 19th and 20th centuries. Paul’s Church in Frankfurt.ĭangarembga is the first Black woman to win the Peace Prize of the German Book Trade, which is endowed with 25,000 euros ($29,100) and has been awarded since 1950.


“What we can look to is to change our thought patterns word by word, consciously and consistently over time and to persevere until results are seen in the way we do things and in the outcomes of our actions,” she said Sunday at St. VIENNA - (AP) - Accepting a prestigious German prize Sunday in honor of her work, Zimbabwean writer and filmmaker Tsitsi Dangarembga called for a “new Enlightenment,” saying a fundamental shift is needed to overcome the structures of racial hierarchy that have led to violence in her home country and across the world. 24, 2021 (Thomas Lohnes/epd-Pool/dpa via AP) (Thomas Lohnes) Octoat 5:50 am PDT

Germany Zimbabwe Peace Prize Author Tsitsi Dangarembga, from Zimbabwe, speaks after receiving the Peace Prize of the German Book Trade in Frankfurt, Germany, Sunday, Oct.
