Changwe Brian

Changwe Brian

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#Seeker_and_Revealer_of_Truth
#Citizen_of_the_World
#Transformational_Coach
#Teacher
#Student_of_Light The purpose of life is a life of purpose

01/05/2026

Expensive is relative...

30/04/2026
30/04/2026

The challenge of modern leadership is Business Politicians.

The Ancient patriotic baton as long been lost. Hopefully, a new Light will emerge to salvage the Vision of the Fathers🙏

BREAKING: Chabinga Hands Over PF "Lugwalo " to Chitalu Chilufya

Information reaching indicates that Robert Chabinga has handed over the PF “lugwalo” to Chitalu Chilufya, who is now set to align with the UPND as PF president.

Meanwhile, Chabinga is reportedly seeking adoption under the UPND ticket in Mafinga.

30/04/2026

Things refuse to be mismanaged for long...

Photos from One Africa's post 30/04/2026

Let his H.E HH maintain the grip. We can't be modern slaves👎

29/04/2026

When the enemy of the enemy becomes King, he wastes his time fighting his enemies instead of serving the people.

29/04/2026

Laws should not make us suspend Humanity.



29/04/2026

When the beliefs change, the possibilities too...

29/04/2026

Football remembered🔥

28/04/2026

"I have no tribe. My tribe is Zambia." — Kenneth David Kaunda
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28/04/2026

Kenneth David Kaunda — Father of a Nation

We gather today not merely to mourn a man, but to honour a monument. KK, as a grateful nation called him — was not simply Zambia's first president. He was Zambia's first dream made flesh.

He came of age in a land that did not yet belong to its people — a land rich in copper, yet impoverished in freedom. Where others accepted that condition as permanent, Kaunda refused.

He organized. He marched. He sang. He wept — and those tears were never weakness; they were the overflow of a heart too full of love for his people to contain itself.

His philosophy of "Humanism" was not a political slogan — it was a creed he lived. He believed that the measure of a nation was not the wealth of its mines, but the wellbeing of its people. He poured resources into hospitals, into schools, into roads that connected remote villages to the promise of a better life. He wanted no Zambian child to grow up unseen.

In 1991, he did something rare among the leaders of his generation — he lost an election, and he let democracy win. He stepped down. He handed power to the people who had given it to him. Not every leader has the grace for that. Kenneth Kaunda did.

He lived to ninety-seven years — long enough to see Zambia grow, to see her stumble, to see her rise again. Long enough to know that what he planted had taken root.

So as we say farewell to this great man, let us not be consumed by grief. Let us instead be filled with gratitude — gratitude for a life so fully lived, so generously given. Let us carry forward his Humanism: his belief that every person matters, that every child deserves a future, that no people on earth are less deserving of freedom than any other.

Kenneth David Kaunda did not just build a country. He built a belief — that Zambia was worth fighting for, worth loving, worth sacrificing for.

Rest now, Father of the Nation. Your handkerchief is folded. Your work is done. And the Zambia you loved will carry your name for as long as her rivers run.

"One Zambia. One Nation. Forever."







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