It is here. HIFA? NOOOO. Winter? Well almost, we can feel the bite but still NOOOO. On Tuesday, 16 April 2013 over a hundred cultural practitioners gathered for
the presentation of the Cultural Statistics Survey Report at the Rainbow
Towers. The survey which was conducted
in October 2012 covered the areas of Harare, Chitungwiza, Norton, Ruwa and
Epworth, so if you filled in one of those long winding questionnaires your
efforts did not go in vain.
A first of it’s kind
in Zimbabwe, the exercise was the brainchild of Culture Fund in partnership
with ZIMSTAT and supported by the UNESCO International Fund for Cultural
Diversity. A follow up to the Culture
Fund Baseline Study on the Culture Sector in Zimbabwe of March 2009, the main
objective of the project was to sensitize policy makers and investors to the
results of the findings on the contributions of the cultural industries to the
economy. The size of the sample is
however inadequate to determine the national economic contribution of cultural
industries to the national GDP but serves as an indicator and starting point
towards a national survey in the future.
Director of Culture Fund Zimbabwe, Farai Mpfunya addresses delegates,
Rainbow Towers
Guest of Honour, Prof Luc Rukingama who is the UNESCO Harare
Cluster Office Director, spoke of the importance of having in depth knowledge
of the cultural industries in Zimbabwe so as to understand how they operate and
how much they are contributing to the national economy. He echoed what the Director General of
ZIMSTAT, Mr M Dzinotizei had said earlier in his opening speech that “to be
informed is to be empowered.” The
information contained in this report is not only relevant to the policy makers
but also to artists, cultural houses and investors as an indication of how they
can fully tap into the development of the arts in Zimbabwe.
Nyanduri Tinashe Muchuri performing his poem, “Zvokwedu”
The report which was hailed by many as a starting point and
a step in the right direction was not without shortfalls as the project had
followed UNESCO Framework for Cultural Statistics (FCS) template of 2009. It
was noted that the template had “various limitations at implementation level
and there was need to domesticate the template in order to embrace a more
inclusive regime of downstream economic activities,” according to the
observations and recommendation of the survey’s technical team presented by Ms
Roseline Chirume of ZIMURA . A number of
issues were highlighted which will hopefully be improved by the time the
national cultural statistic survey is conducted.
Director of the National Arts Council, Mr Elvas Mare makes a
contribution during the general discussion
Farai Mpfunya ,
Director of the Culture Fund of Zimbabwe indicated that there is a possibility
of further meetings to discuss the findings of the report in the course of the
year and interested stakeholders should be on the look-out for those meetings.
Batsirai E Chigama