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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
Zimbabwe: Talks and tears for Tarisai
Alex T.
Magaisa, NewZimbabwe.com
August 15, 2008
http://www.newzimbabwe.com/pages/magaisa91.18618.html
Somewhere, in a village
nestled in the bushes of Chikomba, there is a young girl called
Tarisai. Every morning, Tarisai wakes up early to fetch water from
the sandy bed of the mighty Save River. The great river is dry in
most parts, so in its vast belly of sand, she digs and digs, until
the precious liquid oozes into the hole.
She spends a length of
time scooping the dirt, to make way for what passes for some clean,
precious liquid. She fills her bucket and carefully places it on
her small head, climbing the cliffs and hills until she gets home
to Amai. She has already mastered the art that, perhaps, only African
women can, of balancing the large load on her head without the need
to support it with her hands.
Amai is unwell. She has
been unwell for some time and she cannot carry her fragile body
anymore, let alone a load of water on her head. Tarisai is eight.
Father was called to another world a year ago. The weight of the
homestead is upon Tarisai-s young shoulders.
Later in the day Tarisai
will go to the woods, to pick the little firewood she can find,
to make a fire. She comes home and cooks for mama. There is not
much to cook, the few greens that she dried months ago, that pass
for relish and a bit of sadza (cornmeal). The good men and women
who used to come with supplements have long stopped coming. Someone
higher up in Harare stopped them, she heard.
This is Tarisai-s
routine. Every day comes and goes, the same way. But even by her
dire standards, things have got worse recently. And there is not
much she can do to make things better. Every day she prays, summoning
God-s help - because she has learnt the hard way, that
none of this world can do much to help her.
Late at night she picks
up the little wireless radio father brought back from his days in
the big city many years ago in the 1990s before his employer told
him they were 'rationalizing- and that his services
were no longer required. They gave him a tie and a few dollars to
recognize his long and loyal service.
Tarisai tries hard, very
hard, to find a signal. She wants to listen to the news; to know
what the big men in Harare have decided for her life. Sometimes,
she catches a signal, sometimes, she does not. But whenever she
does, the announcers are always harbingers of bad news. Sometimes
she does not bother. She just waits. Like everyone else in the village
and the many villages scattered across Zimbabwe, she waits. It-s
like waiting for Godot.
She is a beautiful girl,
Tarisai is. Little boys like to say she was made in His happy hour.
But her world, Tarisai-s world, is a far cry from the sophisticated
world of the internet and 24-hour news channels. She is far away
from the 'breaking news-. She is never going to be an
expert on her life, even though none of the learned men will ever
know what it means to be Tarisai. But they are 'Africa experts-
nonetheless, experts on her life - but what do they really
know?
She has no voice in the
vibrant universe of internet chat-rooms and forums. Which may just
be as well, for she will never see or hear the expletives exchanged
there; naked words that can hardly be repeated in these pages; angry
young men and women but at least they have choices. Tarisai does
not have much.
All she has heard is
that there are big men and big women located at some grand hotels
in Harare and Pretoria, deliberating about her future. But these
deliberations are for the big men and big women only - she,
whose future is at stake; whose shoulders carry the dreams and burdens
of those whose interests the big men and big women are supposedly
fighting to enhance; she is an outsider; she is not supposed to
know.
Tarisai is eight, but
in those few years, she has lived the lives of many old men and
old women. She only saw the world when the dispute over which these
men and women are fighting began in earnest. She was on her mother-s
back, sleeping, when they queued at Warikandwa Primary School to
cast their votes in the Constitutional Referendum. She has seen
them return to the polling stations, again and again, since then.
Indeed, her life has changed. It has simply got worse.
You have to wonder, when
you read all the papers; when you watch the big 'breaking
news-; when you hear the politicians at press conferences,
where is Tarisai-s voice?
There are few times in
life, when one must yearn for a miraculous transformation, to become,
if only for a few hours, the fly that makes uninvited entry into
the four walls in which those big men and women are discussing the
future of Zimbabwe. And perch oneself in some corner far enough
to escape their attention and the possibility of a crushing blow
but close enough to hear their every word. It must, surely be in
the thoughts of those scribes who have spent days and nights lounging
and gossiping in the hotel lobby, for onward transmission to news
agencies, for a small fee. It must also, you have to think, be in
the thoughts of little Tarisai, as she makes her way to the riverbed
of the mighty Save, to fetch the precious liquid every morning.
But then you also ask,
could there be just one journalist; at least one scribe who might
be tired of waiting for the big secrets from the Rainbow Towers,
and instead make way to that village in Chikomba; to spend time
with Tarisai and her fellow villagers and ask them what their thoughts
are; ask Tarisai if she has a message for the politicians discussing
her future at the Rainbow Towers. And perhaps write a story about
Tarisai and her fellow villagers, a story which will carry their
views and expectations to the decision makers. Perhaps the politicians
could read these stories and, who knows, perhaps their views might
also guide them in their thought-processes.
Because, you see, Tarisai
will never come close to Rainbow Towers. She has never been to Harare
and, at this rate, she might never get the taste of city life. And
at eight, Tarisai has ten more years before she can exercise her
right to vote; never mind that she carries the responsibility of
every adult in her homestead; she is a child, but she is also the
mother of her mother. She makes decisions and carries out tasks
to sustain her fragile family. But the law says she is far too young
to decide who can lead her and her country, not even her ward or
constituency.
That is the democracy
we are taught to believe in; the democracy we have accepted as the
answer to our troubles; a democracy that does not recognise Tarisai
as a responsible decision-maker in the electoral process notwithstanding
her role as the pivot of the modern African family. Those important
decisions are for men and women who spend time at the beer hall
and the shebeen; men who return home and assault their wives to
secure conjugal rights. But not for Tarisai - the little girl who
has abandoned school to look after mama.
And when I watched Hopewell
Chin-ono-s powerful documentary on the scourge of AIDS
in Zimbabwe, and big though I am, an African man taught from a tender
age to be a 'man- and never cry, could not hold back
tears; tears for a broken nation whose politicians continue to dilly-dally
about power. There is a temptation, in the topsy-turvy world of
politics, to forget these silent victims; victims of a more brutal
and sordid violence at the hands of that little but vicious parasite.
I have written many words
in the past, far too much to probe the conscience of politicians.
There is little to say that has not been said before. But I thought
of Tarisai and I thought of her daily struggles - this little
girl who has become a mother to her mother; a baby for whom life
has been a battle from the beginning and for whom such battles are,
at this rate, set to continue long into the future, that is, if
and it-s a monumental 'if-, she is favoured with
more time. But having been weighed down by so much in her formative
years, you have to wonder if she will have the energy to do so,
let alone the will.
Tarisai-s hopes
rest on the shoulders of the big men and women in Harare, who are
having secret deliberations. But how much do they think of her as
they deliberate?
Tarisai, 'Please
Sirs, look at me; look at the state of the country!-, she
might be saying, for that indeed is her name.
If Tarisai-s story
does not turn something in the hearts and minds of the big men and
women in Harare, then, I suppose, nothing ever will. For there are
far too many Tarisais in the many scattered villages of Zimbabwe
- all looking to Mugabe, Tsvangirai and Mutambara.
*Alex Magaisa
is based at Kent Law School, The University of Kent, UK and can
be contacted at wamagaisa@yahoo.co.uk
. This piece was inspired by Hopewell Chin-ono-s film
"Pain in my Heart", for which he won the CNN Multi-Choice
African Journalist of the Year 2008.
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