Monday, December 23, 2013

Some strangers will put you to shame!

 Not too long ago me and my kids left home to buy few grocery items at one of the local stores. Needless to say that my wife was taking a little zee! nap (Nap or personal time for a few hours) I bundled the  three kids into the car and there we drove. By the time I got to the store, all the kids were fast asleep. I had only driven less than twenty minutes, and I must assume they had all feel asleep in the last five minutes or so. Now I had to make a decision, what I am going to do with three kids sleeping? "I would rather that they sleep on the way back home, I thought to myself"  I waited for a few minutes trying to at least not disturb their nap time! In no time I had to un buckle them out of the car seats and where they were warmly bundled.

 I must mention that just buckling unbuckling them at that age is tricky process. You have to be alert, one has already unbuckled himself, an the other one has opened the car door which might dent some body's car, or worse still be hit by another car backing up. (Reversing) In this case I employ military training mode. ( Disclaimer, I am not a trained soldier or anything close)  After successful completing this process, we all head to the store in a single file. They know they have to either hold my jacket shirt, hand or just physically contact me somehow. I am holding the little one.
 Behavior inside the store is another challenge. As a we get our grocery cart, I tell them to hold on to the cart as a usual. A middle aged lady greet us and complement us/them on their behavior. I grumbling mumble a "thank you" not because I am mean but because I am struggling to recover from that vigorous previous process. In my mind I am just praying that they do not show their true colors at that very moment. To make the short story long, we continue with our shopping. (This was not a schedule weekly shopping since their  mom usually administers those) I had a gift card that I had to use. A stranger in my church who did not want to be named had stuck it in my security locker and had my name clearly inscribed on the envelope.

 It so happened that because of my multi tasking responsibilities in the grocery I just had to throw things into the cart without adding up the total. (Men do multi task here in the western world in case you are wondering.) I knew I would tell the teller to stop at a certain amount so as to not exceed the limit. I did have some money on my ATM bank  card which I could have used but since this was not an official shopping visit, I was not going to use it. I had make sure not to exceed the limit regardless. Little did I know that this strangers lady is behind me at the counter.  When the teller finished a few things were to be left on the cart the  since the limit was easily reached. Just before I could say anything this stranger who complemented about my kids behavior emerges and offers to pay for the rest. At this point I am in pains trying to explain to her that this are not essential things rather pleasure. All that landed on deaf ears. She literally begged to pay the remaining amount for us. She could not take no for an answer. In my mind I thought that would be both dishonest and selfish act on my part. The line is building up fast and the cashier is already coordinating  with her, so I gave in. Again I thanked her for her kindness, but I must confess  I was so overwhelmed her kindness. I thank God for such kind people . I wish that this type of kindness could be extended to more deserving people. Merry Christmas!

Thursday, December 12, 2013

Bulawayo honours Mandela


THE Bulawayo City Council has...
posthumously awarded the
prestigious Freedom of The City
award to former South African
president and anti-apartheid struggle
icon, Nelson Mandela, who died last
Thursday at the sage of 95.
Mandela becomes the second former
South African head of state after
Thabo Mbeki to receive the honour.
Council‘s senior public relations
officer, Mrs Nesisa Mpofu confirmed
that South Africa's favorite son
would be officially conferred with the
city's highest civic award soon.
Bulawayo Mayor Councilor Martin
Moyo said the award was aimed at
perpetuating Mandela's legacy of
giving and sharing.
He said the resolution to award
Freedom of the City to Mandela has
been concluded and was awaiting
signing.
"It (the award) has been granted to
Mandela through a council resolution
but the signing ceremony of that
order has not been done," Clr Moyo
said.
"There is an overwhelming interest
across the city to do something about
the death of the world icon.
We have many of our citizens in South
Africa and here in Zimbabwe we have
many Xhosa speaking people," said
Clr Moyo.
Clr Moyo said he conveyed a message
of condolence for the city at the South
African Embassy in Harare on
Wednesday.
Bulawayo has a twinning relationship
with the South African cities of Durban
and Polokwane.
Tomorrow at 9am, Bulawayo
residents, civic organisations,
churches and politicians will gather at
Bulawayo Amphitheatre for an event
to honour Mandela.
One of the organisers of the event,
Reverend Useni Sibanda said
tomorrow's programme would
include among other things, solidarity
messages from the business
community, different church
denominations, cultural groups,
traditional leaders, residents and
politicians.
Mandela's death plunged the world
into mourning with world leaders
describing Madiba, as he was
affectionately known, as a humble yet
fearless and principled man.
An emotional memorial service for
Mandela was held at a packed FNB
Stadium in Johannesburg on Tuesday
where world leaders from more than
90 countries, including President
Mugabe, gathered.
About 2 000 members of the public
are said to be viewing his body every
hour at the stadium, where millions
have gathered for arguably the
biggest funeral wake the world has
ever witnessed.
Mandela will be buried in his ancestral
village in Qunu, Eastern Cape
province, on Sunday
 
                                                                       
By Mafu Sithabile

Monday, December 9, 2013

What Mandela means to me: A Zimbabwean!

S’khokhele Nkomo, s’khokhele Nkomo! S’khokhele Mandela, s’khokele Lorryhlahla!” (Lead us Nkomo, lead us! Lead us Mandela, lead us Rolihlahla!) we sang at the top of our squeaky voices. Up and down the maize field he made us march, brandishing our little hoes for Kalashnikovs. Our commander was my eldest brother Jabu and he did not tolerate slackers. No raspberry drink or a piece of bread for lazy “gorillas”, which is how we pronounced guerrillas.

This was the early 1970s in our village in the then Selukwe District of Rhodesia. My young siblings and I had no idea who Joshua Nkomo and Nelson Mandela were, but they sounded and felt extremely important to big brother and our mum. She was an extremely shy woman. In fact, this was the only time I remember her ululating in public.

After the umpteenth denial of my favorite drink, I just had to ask: “But who is this Mandela? Isn’t Nkomo what we call our cattle?”
The shock on Jabu’s face was indescribable. How could I not know? These two men were going to free us. Free all of us black people.
“From what?” my junior primary school-going-self was not bound by anything.
“From all of this! All of this!”

His arm swept across the entire universe in front of us. I nodded my not-so-small head. That sounded simple enough. If anyone could liberate me from hoeing the maize, carrying firewood each Thursday and fetching water from the brook too early in the morning in June, then that was alright. Nkomo and Mandela peered at me every day from Jabu’s little notebook. They had to be kept hidden in case the police and our father discovered them. Father did not like any talk of politics in our family.
Then vice-president Joshua Nkomo greets Nelson Mandela on his arrival in Harare on February 13 1997. (Reuters)
Then vice-president Joshua Nkomo greets Nelson Mandela on his arrival in Harare on February 13 1997. (Reuters)
Forward to the early 1980s. I was now in secondary school. The name Nkomo had become synonymous with political ‘dissidents’; bad losers who wanted to prevent the rest of Zimbabwe from enjoying their independence. The mass media said Nkomo was bad, our lecturers at university also said he was a dissident. Jabu had already given up asking Nkomo to lead us anywhere, and was focusing on his football career instead. It was said Nkomo was not the one who had led our armed struggle for independence and freed us Zimbabweans, but the other one. I had never heard of this other one in the 1970s. We certainly didn’t sing about him on mummy’s maize patch.
Mandela was still around though, this time in colour! There was his smiley face, with the trademark dharakishon (hair parting), on his head. I learnt he was in prison. Suffering to free the people of South Africa. A few dozen of them were in my class at the University of Zimbabwe. They told me their stories. Sechaba’s father had been killed in prison, Linda’s mum beaten to death after a demonstration, Hlubi’s brother believed kidnapped and or killed by the police.

I cried each time I watched a play put on by the drama department. I read the news, books and watched television shows about Mandela and the other freedom fighters all for myself. This time I could toyi-toyi with meaning, not just because I was afraid of missing out on raspberry juice. We marched in solidarity with the youth of South Africa on June 16. Mandela’s birthday was a key feature on my calendar. On Africa Day we held vigils in Africa Unity Square in Harare. On October 7 1988, I almost lost a limb pushing and shoving to get into the stadium for a human rights concert held to call for an end to apartheid. Bruce Springsteen, Tracy Chapman, Sting, Peter Gabriel and Youssou N’Dour performed. I voraciously read every speech and watched every bit of footage of Mandela’s wife, Winnie. I liked her wigs, which looked exactly like my mum’s. She spoke fearlessly. Beautifully. I admired her. Sometimes I forgot about Mandela; Winnie represented him.
We Zimbabweans closely followed the story of Mandela and apartheid, not just out of neighbourly curiosity. Zimbabwe supported the anti-apartheid movement, provided support and arms and gave refuge to ANC members. Just as others had done for us. As a result, there were several fatal bombings in Harare in the late 80s by South Africa’s apartheid government.

Mandela no longer felt as remote to me as he had back in my childhood. At last I began to appreciate what my brother had tried to teach me all those years ago. I rooted for Mandela and his people to achieve what we had in 1980. He was going to lead ‘us’, to freedom, and I felt led by him. The South was no longer another country.
He was released from prison on February 11 1990, a day before my 25th birthday. There he was, just as I had imagined him, his face still as kind as I remembered. Winnie was at his side, in that wig! I did no work that day or the few days after that. I was free, too.
Nelson Mandela and his then wife Winnie raise their fists upon his release from prison on February 11 1990. (AFP)
Nelson Mandela and his then wife Winnie raise their fists upon his release from prison on February 11 1990. (AFP)
Fast forward to the 21st century. Nkomo has been dead since 1999, removed from this earth and largely airbrushed from history. He only gets dredged out when we need to use his name for present expediency.
And now, Mandela is gone. Each time I saw him and other older freedom struggle leaders of his generation on television, I simply thought of my dad who is now in his 80s. I wanted to rush and give them their bedroom slippers, a nice dressing gown, and a warm cup of cocoa. I am sure Mandela got that when he retired – unlike Nkomo who worked till he dropped, and others who don’t seem like they are ready for that warm cocoa yet.
I wish I had had the chance to sit on a cushion at Mandela’s feet and ask him: The Queen or Mrs Thatcher? What was with that hair cut? Boxing, seriously man? Did you miss Winnie? Otis Redding or Don Williams? Tambo or Sisulu, and don’t give me the political speak, which one did you really like? It would be just an ordinary conversation with an ordinary man who had extraordinary experiences.
I will always remember his kind face and his good leadership. (Reuters)
I will always remember his kind face and his good leadership. (Reuters)
I think of Mandela, Nkomo and other men of their generation as reminders of where we have come from. I celebrate them, their often forgotten wives and their children. These men embodied our long and painful liberation struggles. They brought us this far, they’ve had their time. Mandela gracefully handed over the reins to the next generation and stepped away from public life over a decade ago, yet he will remain in my memory and consciousness forever. He gave me, a black Zimbabwean and African woman, something to hold on to; to believe in. He was a good leader. I will always remember him and speak of him in this way to my granddaughters when they grow up; casting him not as a man with mythical or saintly qualities, but a mere mortal like the rest of us. And I’m sure they won’t raise a quizzical eyebrow and ask: “Are you sure, Gogo? Did he really do all those things or are you exaggerating?”
I was freed from carrying firewood and fetching water from miles away and, thankfully, from toyi-toying on that barren maize patch! Thirty and some years later, the blood still rushes through my head each time I watch old footage of “gorillas” singing liberation songs. I get goose bumps when they sing “Sikhokele Nkomo! Sikhokele Rolihlahla”. When I sing it now, it’s still “Lorryhlala”, deliberately, for a good giggle. I doubt Mandela would mind.

Everjoice J. Win is a Zimbabwean feminist and writer.
                        



Thursday, December 5, 2013

Ladysmith Black Mambazo mourns Nelson Mandela's death!

 
The Father of our nation, Nelson Mandela, has finished his journey. One wants to think in terms of big words when describing him, but this would not be right. Among the many things one can say about our Madiba (Nelson Mandela's tribal name) is that he never thought himself as big. He was one of us; one of the people. His journey was our journey. And although he has physically left us now, his jour...ney continues within us all.

Nelson Mandela was one of us but he was able to change our nation because of his incredible will, his dignity and his humanity. We are often asked about our most memorable career moments. The expected answer is usually about work with famous entertainers or about winning Grammy Awards. This is not so. Our most memorable moment was in 1993 when Nelson Mandela was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. Madiba asked us to join him on his trip to receive the award in Norway, to sing and to represent our nation. He would say to us that we are South Africa‘s “Cultural Ambassadors” to the world. We took this honor very seriously.

Now, it's left for all of us to carry on his mission. We must continue the journey of making not just South Africa, but the whole world, a peaceful, forgiving place. If we all keep Mandela's way within us, we can achieve greatness. As we continue our own journey of spreading a message of "Peace, Love and Harmony," we re-dedicate ourselves to Nelson Mandela and his dream of a Rainbow Nation, a Rainbow World, in fact.

May his journey continue in the souls and spirits of all who were touched by him.
 
Ladysmith Mambazo facebook page!

People remember Nelson Mandela!

 Tribute to a Great Man.

 Goodbye Madiba!

 Bantu bakithi, I am heartbroken. But also very proud and thankful to have had the privilege of witnessing the works of a true hero in this lifetime!

I still get goose bumps just thinking back on the incredible experience of Madiba's inauguration....

We traveled all the way from Zim to be a part of that remarkable piece of History. Just to be in and around Pretoria and eJoza  and participate in that carnival atmosphere. (Much like when my Indy co-workers went to Miami "for the Superbowl" to support their much adored Colts, and not one of my friends possessed a match ticket!)

I still hear the thundering, rhythmic beat of thousands of feet marching up the stairs into Ellis Stadium.
I see millions of Africans of all color, belief and creed, swaying about, unabashedly delirious with freedom at last.
Freedom after a long, long walk from Robeen Island!

I can still taste the sweat and tears of joy freely flowing and spattering about from glistening and animated bodies all around me.
I am still pleasantly haunted by the sound of the people's proud war cry: AMANDLA! AMANDLA! NGAWETHU!

May the Almighty guide South Africans and the world in this moment of great trying.

When a family is trying to grieve in dignity and say goodbye to a great man amid intense international scrutiny and intrusion.

When world leaders, great and small, good and evil, will try to use the stage of Madiba's passing to gain some recognition, cleanse their infamy and notoriety, or seek some sort of perverted personal glory.

When all manner of media and their Gurus will do ANYTHING to boost their own image and ratings, even if it means disrespecting the dearly departed and ignoring Amasiko.

Lala ngokuthula Baba weSizwe.


by Dr Juliet Ndebele.