Oliver Tambo Heritage House, is a national monument in Lusaka, Zambia located in the Avondale area along the Great East Road. It is the former home of exiled South African Freedom Fighter and African National Congress leader Oliver Tambo. He spent 22 years of his 30 years of exile living in this house in Lusaka at the invitation of the then Zambian Government. It was designated as a National monument in 2017 and became a museum open to the public.[1][2]
Oliver Tambo Heritage House | |
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General information | |
Location | Lusaka, Lusaka Province, Zambia |
Coordinates | 15°22′25″S 28°23′30″E / 15.373553°S 28.391733°E |
Cost | $8 for adult foreigners, $4 for children, Locals at ZMW8 for adults, ZMW4 for children (+260 976 608565 contact number) |
Management | NHCC |
It was officially opened in October 2017 by South African President Jacob Zuma, Zambian President Edgar Lungu and founding Zambian President Kenneth Kaunda.[3]
The safe house was specifically designed so that the upstairs apartment, where Tambo lived, was entirely separate from the downstairs area where uMkhonto we Sizwe soldiers stayed, with the only staircase being on the outside at the back of the property. The intention was that if the property was attacked, this would give Tambo sufficient time to escape as attackers tried to access the downstairs of the property.[4]
References
edit- ^ "Lusaka Times: Zambia commended for honoring the Oliver Tambo House". 13 October 2017.
- ^ "Zambia the cradle of liberation of Southern Africa". The Mail & Guardian. 2024-02-02. Retrieved 2024-03-16.
- ^ "OR Tambo Heritage Site House launched in Zambia". 13 October 2017.
- ^ "African architecture: Tambo heritage house". 3 December 2020.