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Mender of broken soles
Stanley
Ruzvidzo Mupfudza
July 2008
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Stanley Mupfudza
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The time he came to us
our land had been without rain for many, many years. Indeed, there
were many among us who had known nothing but years of drought from
the time we had been born. There were others, of course, who vaguely
remembered days of abundant rain, when birds still sang in the trees.
But such reminiscences were nothing more than nostalgic ramblings
of old men and women for many of us. We were not, as you might have
thought, heartened when he appeared saying he possessed the gift
to make rain fall. The truth of the matter is that when he announced
his arrival with the hauntingly sweet melodies of his mbira playing
we became agitated. We had grown accustomed to the long dry spells,
the rotting bones in the planes and the deathly silence that filled
the air. Besides, everyone knew that the Mambo of the land had banned
all forms of music and merry making. But that music, conjured up
by his fingers from the metal keys . . .
"I am a rainmaker
in the land where I come from," he said.
There was a whole generation
among our people that had never heard of music in their entire lives,
or witnessed the miracle of a rain making ceremony. All they knew
was that we got water out of the benevolence of the Mambo. Why,
everyone knew that whatever thoughts we had, and dreams too, were
from the good heart of our revered leader.
We looked at him askance.
"Are you
the king of the land from whence you come, then?" we enquired
of him.
"No," he said, "for there is another who holds
that title. I am but a simple man who happens to possess the gift
of music and the power to ask the Creator to open up the heavens
and send forth rain that heals the land."
We thought he was mad.
"How
is that possible not to be the king and possess such powers?"
someone asked.
"It is the Creator-s wish, for gifts are distributed
accordingly and justly to one and all," he replied.
We heard never heard
such blasphemous words before. Nor had we seen such a man as he.
He was tall, lanky man with white dreadlocks that cascaded to his
shoulders. His age was difficult to determine for there were instances
when he looked just as young as the youngest ones among us or as
old as the oldest. He wore strange black clothes. He frightened
us. We were also wary of him because our Mambo was known to send
spies among us to ensnare those who harboured treacherous thoughts.
There was nothing worse, the Mambo said, than a treasonous heart
and of all sins, he abhorred this the most. In fact we did not even
know what exactly a treasonous heart was but that was besides the
point, so we were always being warned about the dangers of having
one. Some of the elders had hinted of days when seeds of discontent
had flourished across the land, but the Mambo had reaped them out
but that had been so long ago that many of us had no idea what sort
of seeds these were and what sort of plants they flowered into.
All we knew was that
we had the most benevolent Mambo who had ever lived. He loved us
so much that babies were taught how to be silent, for wailing could
be deemed as a form of music. They were told the gruesome murders
that had been perpetrated by our Leader in the past, for our own
good. Such cruelty had been forced upon the Mambo. His palace was
adorned by the heads of all those who had dared to sing their own
songs in the past, and to dream their own dreams, as a reminder
to those of us who might dare to do the same in the present. When
one night our beloved Mambo had sent all his best sorcerers to collect
dreams from our souls while we slept, we had been eternally grateful
for the act of being relieved from such a burden as cherishing dreams
of our own.
Now here was this strange
man with the flowing tussled hair that the old men in our midst
said reminded them of lion kings of yore that had once roamed the
land before the Mambo became the one and only lion and king we knew.
This stranger was actually playing music and talking of the gift
with the power to summon rain. It was obvious that he was new to
our land and he had not heard of how our one and only much loved
Mambo had magical horns that had the power to gore out an individual-s
soul. Ours was probably the only land across the entire breadth
of the earth where the birds had learnt to sing in sign language
for fear that their sweet songs might incur the wrath of our almighty
ruler.
The elders wistfully
spoke, once in a while of the erstwhile drum and rattle- ngoma nehosho-
the heart of what they called our music. That had all been banned,
of course. Mambo had ordered his mauto to come into our houses and
bore holes into the taut hides of the ngoma, and throw away all
our hosho into the bonfires which lit the night skies so that the
glory of his vanity was visible for all to see far and wide. Boorangoma,
we called him- the one who destroyed the drum- but once that name
became common knowledge it too became taboo.
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