Feature articles on Bradburne and Mutemwa appeared in the
Sunday Telegraph on 23 April 1989, 28 August 1994 and 14 September 2009. The last two articles were written by the newspaper's editor,
Charles Moore, who had visited Mutemwa. In July 2001, the Franciscan priest Father Paschal Slevin,
OFM, presented a petition to
Patrick Fani Chakaipa,
Archbishop of Harare, for an inquiry into Bradburne's canonisation. Father Slevin commented: "I have no doubt that John died a martyr in his determination to serve his friends, the lepers. If his martyrdom is accepted, his cause for sainthood could go quite quickly". A service is held in Bradburne's memory at Mutemwa every year, drawing as many as 25,000 people each time. In 2009 a Mass commemorating the 30th anniversary of his death was held at
Westminster Cathedral in London. The 40th Anniversary of Bradburne's assassination was marked both at Mutemwa with the pilgrimage and then an exhibition and talks at Westminster Cathedral on 21 September 2019, where his relics were displayed for the first time. He left behind 6,000 poems. He is in the
Guinness World Records for being in terms of lines of poetry alone, the most prolific poet in English. Comprising a total of 169,925 individual lines. Bradburne's output almost doubles that of William Shakespeare. Most of his poems were written after 1968 and cover a wide range of spiritual, natural, elegiac and narrative subject matter. As he wrote his domestic letters largely in verse, new poems from the recipients are still occasionally found. A campaign to have Bradburne
beatified and
canonised was started by the late Celia Brigstocke, Bradburne's niece, and continued by Kate Macpherson, his great niece. On 1 July 2019 the
Congregation for the Causes of Saints in Rome issued a formal
nihil obstat for the cause of beatification of Bradburne to proceed. The letter was sent to Archbishop
Robert Ndlovu, primate of Zimbabwe, who in April 2019 had convened a meeting of Zimbabwean Bishops at which there was unanimous approval to support the cause. A
postulator, Enrico Solinas, a lay judge at the Umbrian Interdiocesan Ecclesiastical Court of Perugia, was appointed in 2018 and is taking the cause forward. On 5 September 2019, the 40th anniversary of Bradburne's death, a special ceremony was held at Mutemwa to officially launch the cause. ==References==