Chishawasha is the name of a Roman Catholic Jesuit mission located about 25 km east of Harare, Zimbabwe. The mission was founded by the Jesuit priest Father Francis Richartz in 1892 on a large farm.[1] The mission has 3 schools - Chishawasha Primary School, a secondary school for girls called St Dominic's' Chishawasha as well as a mostly-boys school called St. Ignatius College. There is a Regional Major Seminary for diocesan priests from Zimbabwe and Botswana,[2] and Silveira House, a Jesuit centre for religious training and education, is also located there.

Background

The Jesuit Mission arrived in Zimbabwe between 1890 and 1898 along with the Pioneer Column serving as chaplains. In recognition to this service, Cecil John Rhodes gave them a farm which they used for developing a mission centre.[3]

17°47′20″S 31°13′38″E / 17.788880°S 31.227203°E / -17.788880; 31.227203

References

  1. Chengetai J.M. Zvobgo. A History of Zimbabwe, 1890-2000 and Postscript, Zimbabwe, 2001-2008, p.30.
  2. Mission. Accessed 1 April 2016.
  3. Chiguvare, Jawet (30 September 2018). "Chishawasha community, Jesuits clash over land". DailyNews Live. Retrieved 21 September 2019.


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