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Short
writings from Bulawayo
Jane Morris
Extracted from Pambazuka News : Issue 285
January 11, 2007
http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/comment/39147
Writing
in Zimbabwe seems to be experiencing an upsurge. There are obviously
huge problems for publishers - few people have any spare cash
to buy anything but the bare essentials for survival, and few bookshops
in Zimbabwe stock any books that are not set school texts. Writers
too are affected by the struggle for survival - paper and
pens are expensive, let alone computers, which are beyond the reach
of the majority, and there are few outlets for their work. But writers
are writing, and publishers publishing.
Over the last
three years, five collections of short writings have been published
by two publishers: Short Writings from Bulawayo I, II and III from
amaBooks
and Writing Still and Writing Now from Weaver Press. This piece
focuses on the Short Writings from Bulawayo series.
Many pieces in these
anthologies document the effects of the crisis in Zimbabwe in stories
and poetry. Writers are reflecting what they see happening around
them day after day - the human suffering resulting from government
policies. This is particularly pronounced in the most recent of
these collections, Short Writings from Bulawayo III.
The effects of Operation
Murambatsvina or ‘clear out rubbish', where hundreds
of thousands of people were made homeless, are seen through the
eyes of those at the receiving end of the destruction in the work
of Diana Charsley, in her short story Forgiveness, as their homes
are razed to the ground.
It is not only the newer
writers who record the present moment. Established writers like
John Eppel and Albert Nyathi document, through poetry, record the
destruction of communities and vendors losing their livelihoods.
John Eppel in Sonnet with One Unstated Line:
‘Hear the cry of
hornbills lost in yards
of rubble and rags, to split the ears
of those who stand and watch; and the guards
unguarded, hammering, hammering.'
and Albert Nyathi in
Ode to Departed Writers:
‘Operation
Murambatsvina came
With a large broom called bulldozer
And the new townships which were blessed
With the cutting of ribbons were all gone
Africa Unity Square had roses
And now it is clean again'
Writers are looking at
issues hitherto largely avoided in fiction. In Thabisani Ndlovu's
powerful story The Boy with a Crooked Head, the violence inflicted
on the people of Matabeleland during Gukurahundi is seen through
the eyes of a child - ‘I wonder why Uncle Vikitha, a
useless person, was made to disappear . . . by soldiers who looked
like us but spoke our language in a funny way.'
Christopher Mlalazi's
id i weaves together, in a nightmare township landscape, the realities
of Murambatsvina and the present hardships with the effects on a
family of the atrocities committed in 1980's Matabeleland:
‘My brother's problem is not hereditary, it's
the army and what they did out there that did that to his head.'
Mlalazi again turns to
Murambatsvina in his piece The Bulldozers are Coming, published
in the 14 December 2006 edition of The Zimbabwean, where he documents
the effects of the ‘clean up' on a woman who miscarries.
The land issue appears
in several stories. Catherine Buckle's Full Circle in Short
Writings from Bulawayo II shows the pain of dislocation experienced
by both a white farmer thrown off her farm and a black woman subsequently
thrown off her small plot on the same farm. Masimba Manyonga's
A Seed of Hope in the first Short Writings from Bulawayo details
the hopes and the despair of an impoverished ex-combatant farmer
as he journeys from his rural home to the streets of Bulawayo, where
his finds evidence of economic breakdown wherever he looks. Fiction
that documents what the writer sees happening around them is often
more accessible than history and is able to capture the human story.
Even in the midst of
the tragedy of Zimbabwe, there is still humour in the collections,
in some of the township characters of Christopher Mlalazi and in
the protagonist in Godfrey Sibanda's The Coming. In The Coming,
the narrator is unable to attend the Great Leader's rally
because of diarrhoea; his excuse is mocked by one of the youths
who has the task of rounding up everyone to attend the rally: ‘The
Great Leader is coming and you want me to believe there's
suddenly an epidemic in this town. And the epidemic only affects
members of the Opposition Party.' Mzana Mthimkhulu's
writings can always be relied upon to bring a touch of humour, such
as in his depiction of an eager young boy in a school choir competition
in The Concert.
However, poverty, despair,
hopelessness, AIDS, loss, queues - the suffering of the people
- are recurring themes in much of the writing. Juba, in Farai Mpofu's
story Whirlwinds, in Short Writings from Bulawayo II, walks the
streets looking for, and failing to find, permanent employment,
despite his qualifications. In the end, he decides to ‘rob
three or four of those township dwellers, raise enough money to
go to Johannesburg, and graduate into the world of crime.'
Ignatius Mabasa's
character in Paying to Die has ‘never had the guts to go and
get tested.' Instead, he seems ‘to have decided to help
the disease he believes is there, by living carelessly.' The
mother, in Judy Maposa's One by One My Leaves Fall, loses
all four of her children. ‘One by one my leaves withered and
fell. All dead. All gone.'
In Pentecost Mate's
Pay Day the people in queues ‘are mostly quiet because there
is nothing left to talk about. They have talked about price rises,
about shortages of basic commodities, about the changing laws and
rules that govern them, about the taxes they pay . . . . They have
talked about the fuel crisis . . . about power cuts, water cuts . . . .
And about salaries below the poverty line, about the huge sums of
money they owe . . . .'
As would be expected,
queues have become a ubiquitous topic. In John Eppel's My
Dustbin, poverty and hunger drive children to rifle through dustbins:
'These children have
acquired the patience of queueing;
children of the neighbourhood; suburban;
queueing at my bin for a lucky dip.'
Phillip Chidavaenzi writing
in the Sunday Mirror comments, ‘the economic hardships in
Zimbabwe today continue to offer a fertile template for literary
works. . . . (These collections of short writings) have given
a whole new generation of Zimbabwean writers that could have remained
in the wilderness the space to display their wares and in the process
make their claim on Zimbabwe's literary space.'
Many of the writers whose
work was first featured in the Short Writings from Bulawayo series
have gone on to ‘claim the space': Christopher Mlalazi
has had short stories published in the Edinburgh Review and in the
Caine Prize anthology, The Obituary Tango, Deon Marcus's poetry
collection Sonatas has won first prize for poetry and drama at the
Zimbabwe Book Publishers Association awards and for Best First Book
at the National Arts Merit Awads, and several writers have had stories
published in Writing Now and in other collections.
There will be more writing
from many of the authors featured in the Short Writings from Bulawayo
series to look forward to. Bryony Rheam, Christopher Mlalazi and
Raisedon Baya have novels either completed or at the finishing stages,
Thabisani Ndlovu and Mzana Mthimkhulu, amongst others, have collections
of short stories awaiting publication. John Eppel has a new short
writings collection, White Man Crawling, due to be published in
2007.
The writing of now is
naturally a reflection of our times. A unifying theme in many of
the stories and poems is loss - of livelihood, of innocence,
of purpose, of freedom, of love, of belonging, of culture, of home,
of country, of life. A reflection of our times. ‘Dreams shattered
beyond repair.' (Tawanda Chipato, from Hope, Short Writings
from Bulawayo II)
*Jane Morris
is an editor with amaBooks,
publishers of Short Writings from Bulawayo I, II and III.
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