Antelope Mine Explained

Official Name:Antelope Mine
Settlement Type:Village
Pushpin Map:Zimbabwe
Pushpin Mapsize:200
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:Zimbabwe
Subdivision Type1:Province
Subdivision Name1:Matabeleland South
Established Title:Founded
Established Date:1913
Timezone:CAT
Utc Offset:+2
Coordinates:-21.05°N 54°W
Elevation M:970
Blank Name:Climate
Blank Info:BSh

Antelope Mine is a village in the Kezi district of the province of Matabeleland South, Zimbabwe. It is located about 114 km south of Bulawayo and 14 km south of Kezi.[1] The village was established in an area once rich in wildlife and was named after a goldmine which started operating in 1913 but closed in 1919.[2] The mine was established on the site of ancient African workings which were first discovered by Europeans in the 1890s and the first claims were pegged in 1894.

The modern village is a commercial centre for the surrounding area and the Semukwa communal land. Together with the village of Maphisa, it draws on the nearby Gulamela Dam to irrigate a large communal agricultural scheme. Many mission schools have been established in the area, and the Salvation Army operates both a mission school and a hospital in the village.

Antelope Mine is, like several other mining areas in Zimbabwe, a centre of settlement for members of the Chewa people. They migrated to the then British colony of Southern Rhodesia in the 1950s from Northern Rhodesia (the present-day Zambia) and Nyasaland (now Malawi) to work as migrant labourers in the mineral extraction and agricultural industries.[3]

During the Zimbabwean government's Gukurahundi campaign against the Ndebele population of southern Zimbabwe in the 1980s, the disused mine workings at Antelope Mine were the site of a concentration camp run by the Fifth Brigade of the Zimbabwean Army. Many prisoners were reported to have been killed and their bodies thrown down the mineshaft.[4] On two instances, in 1996 and 1999, skeletal remains believed to be of executed ZAPU prisoners were discovered in the abandoned mineshaft.[5]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Encyclopedia Zimbabwe. Arlington Business Corporation. Worcester. 1989. 2nd. 0-9514505-0-6.
  2. Book: Historical Dictionary of Zimbabwe. Scarecrow Press, Inc.. Lanham, MD. 2001. 0-8108-3471-5.
  3. Book: Ndhlovu, Finex. The Politics of Language and Nation Building in Zimbabwe. 2009. Peter Lang. 978-3-03911-942-4. 67–8.
  4. News: Tracking down a massacre. Simpson. John. BBC News. 7 May 2008. 1 November 2016.
  5. News: Mass grave discovered in Matabeleland. Independent Online. 28 September 1999. 3 November 2016.