|
Back to Index
Gardening
lifeline for urban women
Ignatius
Banda, Inter Press Service (IPS)
December 02, 2008
http://www.ipsnews.org/news.asp?idnews=44943
Growing and selling vegetables
has become a lifeline for 41-year-old Mavis Dube at a time when
millions of Zimbabweans face increasing poverty and hunger after
years of debilitating economic recession.
Due to severe food shortages
and high unemployment rates, Dube, like many other Zimbabweans,
had no way of income generation and had to find a different way
to feed her family. Together with nine other unemployed women, she
applied to the Bulawayo municipality for a piece of land close to
a council borehole.
The women now grow tomatoes,
cabbages, onions, lettuce and other vegetables in a communal garden
in Nkulumane, a working-class suburb in western Bulawayo. Their
yields feed their families but also generate income in sought-after
foreign currency, as they sell their vegetables in exchange for
South African rand.
Dube is one of few Zimbabweans
who can still afford to buy basic commodities, such as bread, sugar
and meat. "We are not rich, but we can look after our families
and feed ourselves," she said. "From what I grow here,
I have been able to send my children to school and occasionally
buy a loaf of bread."
Bread has become a luxury
for many. A loaf currently costs about $1 -- the average Zimbabwean,
such as teachers for example, earns less than $10 a month.
"We sell to people
who purchase in bulk. They pay us in rands and this enables us to
cushion ourselves against inflation," explained Katherine Zulu,
another member of the neighbourhood vegetable garden.
In addition, the women
sell their produce for local currency to individual customers.
Each member of the communal
garden makes about $50 per month, Zulu explained -- five times the
average Zimbabwean's salary.
It has become important
for Zimbabweans to earn foreign currency after the country's
Central Bank authorised retailers earlier this year to peg their
goods in other currencies alongside the Zimbabwean dollar.
As a result, most goods
available in the country are now priced in US dollars and the South
African rand.
Whatever additional income
the women generate is pooled for special bulk purchases. "With
our savings, we plan to buy basic commodities that are currently
not available in Zimbabwe, like maize meal, cooking oil, laundry
soap and rice in bulk in South Africa," said Zulu.
The women also use the
money to purchase pesticides and maintain the council borehole.
Dube and her colleagues
are not the first women to start planting vegetables out of hunger.
Gardening self-help projects have sprouted throughout the country,
which has failed to overcome a months-old political logjam that
has seen humanitarian agencies, such as the World Food Programme
(WFP), estimate that up to half of Zimbabwe's population will
need food assistance in the coming year because of poor harvests
in successive seasons.
Nkulumane councillor,
Ralph Maweni, says he supported the gardening project because it
enables women to survive in an "unbearable economic environment".
Zimbabwe currently has
the highest rate of inflation in the world and, according to the
World Bank, the economy has shrunk by more than 70 percent since
2000, the time president Robert Mugabe embarked on his controversial
land redistribution programme.
Because of the difficult
economic situation in the country, the Bulawayo municipality decided
to encourage income-generating activities initiated by residents.
"Such gardening projects empower women at a time that many
households are failing to make ends meet," said Maweni.
The area has a history
of communal gardening projects. The Bulawayo City Council has helped
to set up numerous township communal gardens in the past two decades.
But many of these gardens have been abandoned due to water shortages.
That's why Dube,
Zulu and eight others carefully chose a piece of land close to a
borehole, which provides access to water free of charge.
To kick-start the project,
the women pooled resources to purchase seedlings, gum poles and
barbed wire to demarcate their garden, which now stands at about
half the size of a football pitch.
"We put together
100,000 Zimbabwean dollars, which was a lot of money for us when
we started late last year," Zulu said.
A few months later, the
project received a financial boost from a local benefactor, Pauline
Jubane, a retired primary school headmistress, who purchased seedlings
so that the women could expand their garden.
Jubane says she decided
to assist the women who had impressed her with their proactive resolve
to find a way out of poverty and hunger. "There are very few
projects where a little cash can guarantee returns on such a scale,"
she told IPS.
"The fact that the
women are able to send their children to school and afford every-day
basic goods shows that this project is bearing fruit," she
added.
While the local Ministry
of Women's Affairs, Gender and Community Development encourages
women to be self-reliant, the Dube and her colleagues say they are
disappointed they have not received any assistance from the ministry.
"With the progress
we have made to far, we would be happy to be allocated more space
and other inputs from government like seedlings, pesticides and
fertiliser," said Dube.
At the launch of the
International Women's Day commemorations in Harare in March, Minister
of Women's Affairs, Gender and Community Development, Oppah Muchinguri,
emphasised the importance of "the equitable distribution of
national resources of the country," for the empowerment of
women.
"We feel the ministry
is only helping people who support political parties. They always
get the land and any kind of assistance. But here we are trying
to show that even with little or no help we can do something in
these trying times," Zulu told IPS.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|