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Tribute
to Claris Chopamba
Fourie
Revai, Charity Hodzi and Vimbai Njovana
August 25, 2013
As three women we are tired of the constant vilification
of women’s bodies. The control of the sexuality of women by
men, other women gatekeepers and the state at large continues to
haunt Zimbabwean women. Yes we are tired; for our anger has been
seething and the recent
death of Claris Chopamba has blown the lid off of this boiling
pressure pot. The main issue that is there is violence against woman.
Zimbabwe! another woman has been killed! And there we go again with
our morality and our so called chastity caps.
Claris’ parents have lost a daughter; someone
has lost a sister and another person a friend. Claris is a human
being and we women though we did not know her in person have lost
another woman in our battle for womanhood. Zimbabwe is busy making
clandestine contestations about the fact that she was a ‘small
house’. Yes she was a ‘small house’ and so what!
Please take of your moral caps and your chaste hearts and remove
the scales from your eyes and see murder for what it is. Murder!
A woman has been killed and we are wailing. Our hearts are broken
because Irvine Mereki shot her and justified that he had to kill
for the sake of his so-called investments that he made. We are busy
once again justifying the ownership of women’s bodies by men.
Oh, he is justified because “he had paid for her upkeep and
therefore had bought her! She was his” they say.
His, since when we ask? He left his home and his
family to be with her. He made a choice and her death is not meant
to be put on the moral scale of whether she deserved to be killed
or not. Please, get off of your high horses and see this for what
it is. Murder, violence against women, issues of masculinity and
femininity. What makes a man a man? Yes that is what is at the heart
of this murder and it is violence in its worst form. To justify
our not acting we will say she deserved it; after all she had spent
his money. Then we shy away. The next murder that takes place we
will justify it once again and say oh, the man was going through
financial distress blah blah blah! Seriously, for how long shall
we continue to have this moral cap protecting abusers such as Irvine
Mereki and glorifying them?
We say rest in peace Claris Chopamba, we did not
know you but we know there are many who knew you. You do not deserve
the kind of death that you experienced at the hands of Irvine Mereki.
We love you as you are part of our fabric as women. We refuse to
have people smear your honourable self and body by calling it Irvine’s.
You are Claris, you are a woman and we will always remember you!
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