Shingisai Suluma is rebooting her ministry through a Canada gospel tour stop, framing the comeback as worship-first, not clout-chasing.
Comeback anchored in worship, not hype
Comeback anchored in worship, not hype
- Shingisai Suluma launches a return via the Grateful Concert in Canada.
- Positions the moment as a spiritual reset, not nostalgia bait.
- Marks a reentry after time away from mainstream stages.
- Leans hard into gratitude, healing, and restoration.
- Says starting there carries deep personal meaning.
- Frames the return as shaped by faith and lived experience.
- Ties the season to gratitude rather than reinvention.
- Treats the moment as obedience-driven ministry.
- Grateful Concert Tour officially kicks off with the Canada edition.
- Built around worship-forward experiences, not flashy production.
- Centers prayer, reflection, and testimony.
- Designed to feel like church, not a gig.
- Michael Mahendere joins as a featured gospel act.
- Sharing the stage with Blessing Jedthun, Takesure Zamar, and The Cherayis.
- Hosted by Eleana Makombe.
- Highlights local gospel voices within Canada.
- Celebrates 30 years in ministry.
- Known for songs Maitiro Enyu and Tatenda Taona.
- Albums span Zvanaka through Rwendo.
- Widely regarded as a leading Zimbabwean gospel voice.
- Calls the return historic and deeply meaningful.
- Emphasizes worship atmosphere over entertainment.
- Describes the night as a space for God to move.
- Sets tone for a wider North America tour.
- Stresses ministry over fame or numbers.
- Missed the earlier Grateful Legends invite due to family.
- Views the return as perfect timing.
- Measures success by one restored heart.