I remember attending a meeting addressed by the then Prime Minister of Britain in what was Salisbury and hearing him make a version of his famous 'Winds of Change' speech. It was a seminal moment for Africa, much like Churchill saying after the Second World War that an 'Iron Curtain was descending across Europe'.
Somehow those two statements went on to describe an era on each continent that lasted in Europe's case for over 50 years and about the same length of time in Africa (Ghana came to Independence in 1958, South African transition to democracy in 1994). In 1998 a small-scale farmer took a bus from his home in the Masvingo Province of Zimbabwe, and after debussing in Mbare he walked several kilometers to the Headquarters of the Trade Union Federation where he asked to speak to the President, Mr. Morgan Tsvangirai.
Morgan is the sort of person that does not stand on protocol; his secretary went to him and he agreed to see the visitor without an appointment. The old man told Morgan that he felt he had a vision from God. He said that he had been told in that vision to tell Morgan that his Party symbol should be an open hand, palm outwards, depicting openness and non-violence and that his slogan should be 'Chinga Maitero' or 'Real Change'.
It became the rallying cry of the MDC and in fact constitutes our vision for the period through which we are traversing at present. At our first Congress, Morgan paid for the man to come to Harare and he presented him to thousands of delegates and gave him our first T-shirt with the slogan printed on the front and back.
Over the past decade or more, the forces of dictatorship in Zimbabwe have thrown everything at us - we have been beaten, tortured, killed and maimed. Thousands have been imprisoned and many have simply disappeared. In the State controlled press we are vilified every day as 'revisionists', 'sell outs' and 'agents of the West'. We are accused of wanting regime change - as if that is not what all politics is about! It is certainly what we set out to do in 1998, Chinga!!
In 2006, after the split that almost destroyed the MDC and saw Morgan Tsvangirai stripped of bank accounts, vehicles and staff as well as a significant number of his original leadership, we rebuilt the Party from the ground up and emerged, in my view stronger than ever. At that Congress we adopted a 'road map' to real change. It was quite simple - democratic resistance, negotiations with Zanu, reforms to the electoral process and then a free and fair election.