I would change Shakespeare's quote in "Twelfth Night" to become "If fashion be the food of life play on....give me excess of it...." I am an avid slave to fashion and its no secret. However, trying to keep up with the latest trends can prove to be expensive and honestly, my sisters can attest to the fact that in Zimbabwe most of our shops and so called boutiques are heavy laden with chinese fake originals and downright poor quality clothes. As if thats not enough, these boutiques duplicate each other and refuse to branch out and order clothes that dare to be different .They prefer to play it safe. This is detrimental to their business because what they have to offer to us fresh faced youths is just plain boring like dishwater. Anyway their business acumen is not any of my business. My main concern is that i crave diversity and trendy clothes of acceptable quality. I refuse to go around clothed in something that will have me believe that i have enrolled in the same school of fashion with half of the population. 1 refuse to have a style stance that is common or ends up looking like a school uniform because we are too many dawning the same clothing items.
Style is never about copying to a tee fashion trends we see overseas but it is all about being able to manipulate that trend and make it your own. The need to be trendy has always been my ultimate goal. As a result i decided to thrift shop and boy did i find some pieces that have people green with envy. It has never been my wish to partake in second hand clothing or 'Vintage " as they call it. My first concern has always been the health hazards associated with buying second hand clothing. In Zimbabwe thrift shopping is popularly termed visiting 'khothama boutique'. Its all because of the bending down technique associated with the process of retrieving the wares.So i would like to impart some knowledge on how to thrift shop effectively. And to give you methods that will guarantee you being able to retrieve the most precious gold or pieces that are to die for.
Oscar Wilde spoke of me when he said " the only duty we owe to history is to rewrite it" Let us rewrite history TOGETHER using the kaleidoscope of cascading words
Tuesday, 8 December 2015
Unveiling of the myth that is "Circumcision"
In Genesis 17 verse 11 God spoke to Abraham and said "And you shall be circumcised in the flesh of your foreskin, and it shall be the sign of the covenant between me and you." This is a command God made between him and his people to seal the covenant between them. The removal of the foreskin symbolized how God as a covenant keeping God wanted to make a special covenant with his people who were so dear to his heart. Biologically,
Child marriages on a high as economy systematically pulmates.
A child nurturing a child is the norm in the new Zimbabwe. Everywhere your neck has the privilege to turn has you bombarded with the sight of young girls backing newborns. What has the future of the vulnerable girl child come to? Whom have these children left the custody of their books to? Have they given up on the life that was before the nation started facing these economic woes?So many questions and yet so few answers.
Thursday, 3 December 2015
Chapter One -Maidei's Canvas
CHAPTER
ONE
The mail has come…I can see my fellow schoolmates tethering
in excited chatter in which I refuse to partake. My lack thereof of that
feeling I can see beaming on their faces is because I never got letters.
Boarding school in primary school demands that thread tying you to your home to
remain untouched, untempered with and intact. However, mine has been severed to
smithereens since I am the forgotten one. The child people only remember when
they see. As long as I am not in their line of vision I am a foreign city. A
foreign city that is only remembered when one is forced to go on vacation there.
Some see it as only a letter but that little package would bridge the gap
between me and my distant parents. Something I always anticipated but was
always disappointed to the point of having no expectations.
Disappointment mounting upon disappointment seemed to
the story of her life. Anga aneta
nekubaiwa nehupenyu kunge tsono dzinohoreswa.Sometimes she felt as though
she couldn't take any more of it since there was no more room for it in her
disappointment immersed life. All that was left was for her to scream ‘I AM
DISSAPOINTED OUT!!’ She should have drowned a while back from it but it took even
her by surprise how she was still alive and how she kept on surviving through that
horrid feeling. It was yet still a wonder to her how she still got up…she had
not a single pinch of hope left in her body that reeked with the stench of
disappointment. Ndicharamba
ndichishungurudzika kusvika kupi ko nhai veduwe? How much more could she
take? She quizzed the powers that be desperately. The question hung like a
pendulum swaying to and fro in the dead of an empty neglected room. Resounding
over and over again like the tik tok of the grandfather clock in the deserted
corridors of a convent.
Sei?
Baba’s death from that disease everyone in our society spoke about in harsh
whispers and frowned upon, fore ran that of mama whose death had not prepared me
for a sense of loss I knew I could never recover from. We had been taught in
bible knowledge class about the story of John the Baptist and him being the fore
runner of Jesus Christ. There seemed to be a resemblance with the deaths of my
parents the difference being john was paving the way for the coming messiah
whilst baba’s death had not paved the path for mama’s death in any way instead
the grief I felt was so heavy my shoulders ached….
Mama wrote me letters only when I found a way to twist
her arm about it. I wanted her to remember me without the unnecessary cohesion.
Disappointingly, this remained a far fetched dream that would never blossom into
reality. Like man being able to land on the sun...a dream no one attempted to
buy. Question me one day to explain to you how a mother is able to forget her
own child like she didn't birth her in those harrowing moments of labor. Worse
yet why she had not opted for the quick cowardly way out that would have blotted
me from existence without me having set foot into the world of human existence.
In response to your question, it still was a riddled mystery how a mother could
do that to her own flesh…her own colt that needed her milk till it was off age
and independent enough. I cannot answer your question because I refuse to
answer for her sins. She should answer, mama should surely answer. The platform is there for her to do so
adequately. Unfortunately, she is belly up and most probably weaving her tales
and giving those much needed answers to the lifeless bodies in the city council
cemetery. Of what use is that to me? This is one of the moments where I wish I
could trade places with one of those corpses and get my much needed answers.
I’m being worse than the word foolish in this moment
but that is as far as honest about my feelings as I can go. I know you wonder
how I could wish to be dead at this point in time when those corpses would give
whatever valuables they had in this lifetime to have a second go at life. Life
and death, far apart but yet so close. You could swear the two were walking
hand in hand depending on those involved. Maybe life and death could be
companions one day. It would be my deepest wish so that I could talk to mama. Finally put her on the stand. If this chronic
case of nostalgia could bring her back, she is already here.
Many questions …no answers. Whom is to blame nhai amai?
happy thursday selfie
I couldn't resist the urge to take a few selfies today. Quote of the day "God sees the depths our hearts and loves us just the same.
"
"
short hair diaries
I decided one day to cut my hair and start all over. I looked up african young women who had tried and tessted that path like Nnandi Ngoma from South Africa and Tariro NeGitare who hails rights here in Zimbabwe .Upon having done the damned i began to realise that the struggle became real.
The longer the hair ,the fatter your wallet ,so they say. Apparently, this hair gets expensive by the inch. So i have been putting on weaves since i was 19 years old and it had been close to ten years without having made a visit to the barber. It had slipped from me that an African woman could actually carry her crown proudly without any additives. Inasmuch as i was uncomfortable i had little choice but to bear the brunt of my not so clearly thought out decision. The English have an old adage that says " you make your bed, be prepared to lay in it" . This was now me laying in my bed so to speak.
So i had to to do the best that i could with the little resources i had. Funny enough i embraced my new look in no time and everywhere i went people would be like "wow...how do you afford to be so confident without a single weft of a weave in your hair?" this gave my self confidence a boisterous boost and i became addicted to always trimming it up so that it looked phresh all the time. I was a barbers machine addict for a good four months straight and was loving it. however, i have decided to try and grow it out and maybe start plaiting it again. Not because i got negative feedback but because by nature i like to try out new things and am a slave to change. Hence, my short hair era has sadly come to an end. But who knows... who is to say that maybe it will hit a comeback when i set my eyes on that barbers machine and the journey will begin...again. Nothing is set on stone except for the Ten Commandments.
Yeah, short hair is good at the beginning ,what withe fresh faced look and youthfulness that comes with it. But when i started to grow out my hair,this bliss just took a left and turned into a nightmare. I was now fast running out of ideas on how best to style myself up. Plus with shorter hair it is a fashion crime to bare faced. With no make up you look like you got off the last chicken bus from my native Buhera. I couldn't risk going out there in public without my best face forward anyway, it means i would have to put on make up every other day. And that burns an illicit hole in your pocket i am telling you. What with the well known brands of foundations and powders costing a hefty catch, it did not make things any better. Mind you, one tip i dish out for free is that ...buy your cosmetics be it lipstick, foundation and powder from well renowned and established brand houses like Edgars, Truworths and of course you can trust pharmarcies. Chances of bumping it a fake or fong kong in those shops is nil.
Anyway back to the hair, i regretted it as soon as the barber had put down his machine. But contrary to what i believed most of the feedback i got from onlookers was that it suited me and i looked younger. What i couldn't grasp was why i felt far from confident with my natural short hair. It then dawned upon me like a light bulb that i had been socialized in such a way that short hair wasn't to be put in the same sentence with a woman. In Zimbabwe people now associate strutting with short hair as maybe being a sign that things are not going too well for you financially. Your financial disposition should be seen with the human hair or Brazilian or Peruvian or Indian hair plaited in your hair.
The longer the hair ,the fatter your wallet ,so they say. Apparently, this hair gets expensive by the inch. So i have been putting on weaves since i was 19 years old and it had been close to ten years without having made a visit to the barber. It had slipped from me that an African woman could actually carry her crown proudly without any additives. Inasmuch as i was uncomfortable i had little choice but to bear the brunt of my not so clearly thought out decision. The English have an old adage that says " you make your bed, be prepared to lay in it" . This was now me laying in my bed so to speak.Tuesday, 1 December 2015
she relents
up and down my soul has wandered
looking for ease where there's none
yet i want to be your one
and only child
whose soul will relent
in pursuit of the deep things
only you inhuman can comprehend
i am in am out
who knows and who cares
they see me restless but are rest at ease
my restlessness will relent
like God's child will repent
nights and noons gone by still i will relent
my soul wonders in awe at your patience
you are not like they
who are rest at east when i relent
because you are my God who loves that i have repented
looking for ease where there's none
yet i want to be your one
and only child
whose soul will relent
in pursuit of the deep things
only you inhuman can comprehend
i am in am out
who knows and who cares
they see me restless but are rest at ease
my restlessness will relent
like God's child will repent
nights and noons gone by still i will relent
my soul wonders in awe at your patience
you are not like they
who are rest at east when i relent
because you are my God who loves that i have repented
Prologue- MAIDEI'S CANVAS
PROLOGUE
Maidei was her name.
And still is her name because I almost choke from her
pungent existence around me despite her body lying in nature’s own decay. I
still hold on that it is still her name because my spirit is holding on to her
relentlessly and will not let her go. The grip of my spirit resembles the iron
fist that of a gladiator readying himself for his last chance to fight for his
life. Yes, physically to others, mother, you are no more but to me your
daughter I refuse to just write you off from this world that easily.
I want you here… Why are you not here? Did this world
finally stifle the hopelessness too that you had in life? A hopelessness you
were so sly to hide from prying eyes. Even if other pairs of eyes where
ignorant to it mine were privy to it all. That robust flame that once used to
light up your face and my world…put out …leaving in its place eyes so vacant I
could drown in their hollowness. Mama… come back! I want to tap off the
livelihood that once lit up your face. To dance in the flicker of emotions that
transcended like a kaleidoscope of beautiful emotions…from joy…to
mischief…awe...to wonder…admiration and to hope.
I am coming out in the open about my addiction today
after my whole life of using… my drug of choice being the fire in your eyes. I am
afraid that the withdrawal symptoms will devour me to irretrievable shreds when
I do not get my next fix. Those
symptoms will leave me bleeding to my death in the hope that I join you and
award me the reunion I so crave to my core. I know that I have already lost a
battle unfought. That my defeat is inevitable. I will not labor to put up a
fight because the outcome will be the same. Shameful defeat…
So many questions left unanswered…will her ghost
answer them and give me the peace I so deserve? The long relentless pursuit
ceases here in this narrow bed of a grave and I cannot help but feel cheated of
my right to know why she left us and never looked back. Leaving behind girl
children without a mothers touch …girl children now shells of women …and worse
still in their emptiness their last skeleton of hope has been diminished into nothing. They shall
never know the truth.
Violation of the right to education of every minor as per the Constitution
The right to education as articulated in Section 75(1)-(4) of the
Constitution of Zimbabwe is vague and embarrassing. This is because the
provisions therein fail to stipulate the environment in which this right can be
exercised or enforced by the holder of that right. As a result it begs the
question that how can a right holder be guaranteed of enforcing their right
without fear of being deprived unlawfully of such exercise merely because of a
triviality.
Students in Zimbabwe at the moment are in examination mode and are
hoping to reap what they have sown. Of particular interest is the story of the
male student from Bocha village, precisely Mutsvene High School, who was barred
from sitting for two examination papers merely because he was not putting of
any shoes.
What pulls at your heartstrings in this matter that was published
by the Herald newspaper last week Thursday, is that he is not the first or nor
shall he be the last to write his examinations without shoes. So many affluent
businessmen and influential persons today in our country walked and mirrored
that path because their families where impoverished and couldn’t afford shoes
let alone the school uniform. They however were not barred from writing these
exams barefoot….but look at where they are today. They are who they are because
their poor backgrounds acted as a motivating factor for them to rise above
their circumstances. They proved that it is not as if the shoes do the writing
for you in the examination but steely determination supersedes all else.
This school is situated in the depths of the rural areas and the
majority of students enrolled there hail from poverty stricken homes. Their
families can barely afford putting a single meal on the table a day let alone
can they afford to buy shoes. They cannot afford to exercise their basic right
to food, as a result, having shoes on their feet becomes a luxury that is farfetched.
However, there is some solace and comfort in knowing that the same
Constitution in Section 81(2) safeguards the best interests of the child. The
best interests of a child below the age of majority are paramount in every
matter concerning that child.
This provision in relation to the story mandated the Headmasters’
wife to make an educated evaluation of whether it was in the students’ best
interests to turn him away from writing these examinations merely because of
such a triviality. Really??? She played God the moment she did that and means
there are consequences that she has to face without question. The Constitution
is the supreme law of the land as per Section 2 of the Constitution. Her
actions are a gross violation and disregard of the provisions thereto and this
desperately calls for the Zimbabwe Human Rights Lawyers Association to act
pronto. This behaviour cannot go unpunished and this student would need to be
compensated with damages in a variety of forms.
In my view this teacher has to be made into an example for other
teachers to desist from such unwarranted behaviour. We are well are that the
job comes with it some frustrations but this job should not be a means to earn
a living but a calling. If it were a calling she would have tried to understand
the boys’ predicament and would not in any uncertain terms turned him away.
This is the rising problem in our country where people apply for jobs not
because of the natural push from within them to serve their communities but
instead because it’s a means to an end and they couldn’t care less of the
casualties along the way. This is because this action touches on so many aspects
of that boys’ life some of which cannot be compensated. The damage is a
challenge to quantify in monetary terms. This leaves this situation difficult
in determining the outcome.
Inasmuch as the headmaster volunteered to pay for the boy in June
2016 for the examinations he missed, how shall he compensate him for time and
energy wasted preparing for these examinations? Furthermore, he must have been
studying with others,they shall proceed to the next stage and he shall remain
behind, who shall assist him? To add on the set back on time and the fact that
he shall have two sittings instead of one. Many jobs nowadays insist that the
applicant should have one sitting for their ordinary level examinations and
have one certificate as a requirement. How shall that be recompensed? The
emotional and psychological trauma cannot be ignored, how shall that be dealt
with? Whoever his is guardian has been trying to suffer through the preparatory
stages for the examinations by buying books and stationary and food, how shall
that be compensated? Is it a crime to be poor, does one choose to be poor or
you are born into it and you strive to leave that life behind through full
utilisation of opportunities presented? In this case this boys’ one shot at
breaking away from a background of poverty has been shattered to many
irretrievable pieces. How will this opportunity be pieced back together? This
is a mission school, how does the Roman Catholic Church seek to return to
status quo this situation?
So many questions and yet so few answers. It is a gross injustice
that will be a mammoth’s task to rectify. Yet it could have been avoided in the
first place. The teacher responsible for what transpired may be disciplined
according to the code of conduct of teachers and may be stripped of her duties
and yet still fired….but does that bring
restitution to the boy in question? Food for thought indeed.
Yellow bone ...the new definition of beauty?
YELLOW BONE… THE
NEW DEFINITION OF BEAUTY?
It’s amazing the great lengths at which some people would
leap all in the name of vanity. Or is it vanity or the mounting pressure to fit
in the bracket of the new definition of beauty. As I walk in the streets of
Harare CBD I realize that most of the ladies are looking radiant and glowing as
ever. I wonder what the magic recipe behind this beauty is so that I may
partake in it. Most ladies seem to have stumbled upon the fountain of youth
because as a woman trust me its far from easy to admit that our fellow gender mates
are looking amazing. So I must admit, everywhere I go and where my head has the
privilege to turn to I encounter a full course meal of the eyes, embodied by
one woman. Vakadzi vanaka mhani! And
I need to know the secret behind this phenomenon.
Upon a general survey with my ever curious eyes I have
reached the conclusion that in every four women, three are light skinned. Is it
just a mere coincidence or there’s a reason behind this man made status quo? I
will speak for myself, I’m not light skinned or even medium toned but I dapple
between a darker medium tone and the dark skin tone. Right before I proceed, I
need to tell you a little history about myself.
Growing up I was the sibling to one older sister and she was
the epitome of beauty for me. I looked up to her in all things because she was
well liked and seemed to get attention of males constantly. I always looked at
myself and thought there was something horribly wrong with my family. That maybe
my mother was handed the wrong baby at the hospital in the form of myself. So
you can imagine how much of a shadow I felt in comparison with my sister.
Anyway, fast forward, I’m sure you have guessed correctly that my sister was
and is what they now call ‘Yellow bone’ or ‘Yellow
Bonzo’.
People seem to have run away from the old adage that the
“darker the berry the sweeter the juice” and have instead run with the saying
that “the lighter skinned lady the luckier the man who wins her heart”. Any way
the pressure has mounted on women to either conform or lose out. And most have
chosen to conform for fear of remaining on the sidewalk whilst other women have
a place on the tarmac. My question would be, where is this pressure coming
from?
Firstly, men have now taken the liberty to define the new
dimension of beauty. They have seen that have a darker skinned woman means that
you are no valiant enough or man enough. They have seen that they want their
egos to be massaged by fellow men in their circles because they have a “trophy”
girlfriend or wife on their arm. Hanzi
simbi yamdhara. Men no longer measure the value of a woman through her
virtues but instead through the color of her skin and how appealing she looks
in the crowd. It has gone so far as some husbands telling their dark skinned
wives to bleach their skin or ship out. Or adversely, they decide to have extra
marital affairs with these so called beautiful women to the extent that they
throw in the towel to their marriages. The security of a dark skinned woman in
her marriage has been left to dangle on a worn out shoelace. Thus, some give in
to the tide and ride along with the situation. I mean there’s even an old
saying that says “if you can’t beat them join them.”
The means to the end is the one I question. Every street
corner is laden with skin lightening creams of various assortments from as far
as Zambia and Angola. They have even realized that these creams do not go skin
deep and have introduced pills and injections that do the trick faster and with
less effort. From what I have heard from a well-established dermatologist,
these creams have some side effects that some people are unaware of or have
decided to ignore. She mentioned that these creams have the deadly chemical
“hydro quinine” which erodes the skin cells and kill the functions of the skin
cells to heal and repair themselves. Furthermore, when exposed to harsh weather
conditions like extreme heat or cold the skin ceases to protect itself but
instead is left exposed to such brutalities. Ultimately, the skin becomes an
addict to the cream and when one attempts to stop using it suffers from severe
withdrawal symptoms like unstoppable skin rush and acne and the acute darkening
of the skin.
Another source of this pressure to look beautiful and fit in
is the programmes we watch on TV. We see
celebrities and singers looking so radiant in their lighter skin and thus are
nudged to conform. An example is in the Nigerian movies where most women are
light skinned.
Why take the risk and what cost? All I can say is I want to
be a part of the remaining nearly to be extinct breed of dark skinned women who
are comfortable in their own skin. I want to be that woman in a photograph
where people will be in awe and say ‘wow do such women still exist?’ Yes,
because being dark does not rule you out as being ‘ugly’ . Look at Alek Wek ,
Olivia Davis and Lupita Ny’oongo just to mention a few. Women of color who are
not afraid to flaunt their darkness in a bold way and say, ‘look if Hollywood
doesn't want this they can jump ship because this ship is going places’. Being
proudly African and patriotic to how God carved us to be is the strength of the
African woman. She refuses to be defined by ever changing trends but is
constant in her belief that in her darkness she turns heads.
Published by TawanaTariro
Child beggars...who is to blame?
When the word child comes to mind, it’s usually associated
with a lot of play, fun, school and laughter. These are the activities they
indulge in as part of their growth process. However, we have seen a breed of children
in the streets of Harare or any other urban city taking to work through
begging. Who is to blame for this predicament?
The Constitution defines a child as “any boy or girl who is
below the age of 18”. A child as a minor is incapable of making any decisions
that affect his or her life hence the need for a major through a parent or
guardian above the age of majority to stand as its custodian. In exercising
their representative capacity for the child, the parent or guardian is expected
to safeguard the best interests of that child over and above all things. This
provision is enshrined in the Constitution. Is it in the child’s best interest
to be deprived of education, play and fun by parents who use their child as a
mode of survival in begging?
A child is entitled to play and learning as part of the
socialization process and growth. But it would appear as though there is an
increased number of children who beg for a living or after school beg, in the
process being deprived of both and much more. A stolen childhood is the end
result.
What pulls at your heartstrings even the more is these
innocent children most barely in their teens are roped into this lifestyle by
their own parents who are supposed to be their custodians. A child of the
streets who has been born to a begging parent is being used as a front to
manipulate generous givers. The parent has seen that the only way the general
populace can be over generous or nudged to be generous is if they are ensnared
by the pitiful faces of these children asking for donations especially money.
Most of these have not reached teenage hood. Their parents
rely on the notion that the younger the child begging the more generous the
loot. These parents actually sit in the peripheries or out of plain sight
whilst monitoring the movements of their begging children. For those who beg
after school, the children are given a target of how much to bring home after
“a day’s work”. Failure to do so has some dire consequences like in the form of
deprivation of food.
What I greatly doubt
is how much they benefit directly from whatever they acquire in a day’s work?
Or maybe their “employers” just take the spoils without reimbursing the one who
worked for it.
Surely, who is to blame? Has the economic dwindle failed our
children and influenced them to turn to begging as a way of survival yet in
turn robbing them of the childhood they deserve? Or have their own parents
failed them much more through being the force behind a child begging? Some
parents, upon being quizzed actually say they have no choice but to use their
child so as to sustain the family.
I believe that in as much as the situation
is dire, as the custodian of that child and the major in the situation, as a
parent and naturer you have a choice. A choice to let your child be a child.
Let that child enjoy its childhood without interference from anything or
anyone. Show only love for your child by working hard and doing the begging
yourself to sustain your family.
Published by TawanaTariro
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