Many
of you know that I
and my four younger siblings were raised by my mother after my father
died in 1990. The challenges that my mother faced in this
deeply patriarchal society would determine our economic
fortunes as well as our chances of escaping poverty. My mother was
born Rangarirai Charity Kagoro in 1955 in a village in Murewa
Zimbabwe, in her family there were four boys and five girls. My
maternal grandfather was a wealthy man by village standards. My
mother attended the United Methodist run Murewa Mission. She told me
that she and her sisters wanted to continue with their education but
her brother who had trained as a teacher at
Nyadire College and
her father decided that it was a waste of time to educate girls as
they would be married off. Also at that time Rhodesia was being ruled
by the racist government of Ian Smith and the education of the
majority Africans was not a priority. It meant the end of my mother’s
schooling, I believe she completed standard six. By the time I went
to high school my mother could no longer assist me with my school
work and all she could do was to give me words of encouragement. My
mother was determined that my two sisters would
also
get the best education possible.
My
mother married my father who
came from
a
neighbouring
village. My father had also completed standard six at Dombwe about
12kms from their home since at that time the nearest school to the
village did not go as far as standard six and he could also not
proceed with education after his father refused to sell cows from him
to pursue his education further. My father would join the Rhodesian
Police Force. My mother also wanted to join the police and my father
refused because in his wisdom the woman had to stay home. A few years
before my father’s death, my mother persuaded my father that they
sign a civil marriage contract. That act would help to preserve my
father’s estate for our benefit. I remember my parents went to the
magistrate with two friends as
witnesses
to
the magistrates’ court to
sign the marriage contract that
was around 1986-7.
There were instant benefits for us. Now as a married couple they
could now get a 2 bedroom or a 3 bedroom government accommodation and
we no longer needed to share houses. My maternal grandfather was not
happy when he learnt of the wedding without his blessings as he
wanted to have
all his lobola dues paid
before he walked my mum down the aisle. My
grandfather still believed the colonial law existed that always asked
the permission from the father of the bride.
Had my parents not entered into that marriage contract my father’s
estate would have been squandered after his death.
In
November 1990 a few weeks after my father’s death we gathered back
at the village in Murewa. Firstly they read my father’s will and I
remember these words, “ My wife and her kids will live wherever she
prefers”. The expectation from both sides of the family was that my
mum would come back to the village with her 5 children gets inherited
as a wife by
my uncle and become a peasant farmer like all the relatives. As part
of the ritual my father’s only brother, his half brother and myself
as the oldest son we were told to sit in front and my mother was
given a stick and she had to choose whether she wanted to be
inherited as a wife by either of my uncles. My mother only moving on
her knees I saw her passing both my uncles and giving
me the
stick to signify that she did not wish to be inherited
by either by my uncles as a wife
and would rather look after her kids. We went back to the police
accommodation in Marondera and waited for the government pension as
well as my father’s insurance policy to pay out.
Around
July 1991 my father’s pension came out and we had to leave the
government
accommodation.
My mother took all the money and bought an
incomplete
house in Dombotombo
township
and we started living in the township. Life was
tough and my mother told me that she wanted us to get a better
education in the urban area hence
she did not want to go back to the village,
there were better schools
and
facilities in
the town.
My mother’s policy was that all children were the same and all of
us had to do chores whether you were a boy or a girl. My cousins back
in the village, girls were being married off after grade 7 and a lot
of them died before they reached 18 or in their early 20s. A
number of my cousins belong to Marange Apostolic Church, girls only
go as far as grade 7 and they married into polygamous marriages after
the 12th
birthday to much older men and they mostly have to fend for
themselves and their babies. Members of the church are not allowed to
seek medical help, so even when those young girls fell pregnant they
do not get medical help, they
give birth at the home.
They believe in praying for diseases like malaria. A decade ago my
cousin fell and broke a bone on
his hand, he stopped going to school and it took his teachers to
report to the police and he was taken to hospital to get a plaster
and fortunately they did not disown him for getting medical help. The
government is aware of this but then again it is scared of losing
votes, every election the president of the ruling party visits
Marange shrine to canvas votes from the hundreds of thousands of
Marange
church
members.
The
nearest secondary school to our village Jekwa Secondary school did
not offer science classes and only went as far as O’ Level. In
Marondera even though we were struggling at home, I was able to
pursue science education at Marondera High School. Back in the
township, I would meet bright students from some of the top schools
in Zimbabwe at Dombotombo library. Life was hard those days, I would
eat only in the morning and walk and
run almost
6kms
to Nyameni Secondary school and not eat anything during the day walk
back another 6kms home and then only eat late in the afternoon at
home.
When I went to Marondera High School, I now had to walk almost
7kms
to school. My mother was doing the best she could on a government
pension, her gardening, buying
and selling vegetables from the farmers’ market.
We
would raise broiler chicken for sale as well as run a tuck shop from
our kitchen window. At times she would rent out two of the rooms and
then 6 of us would use the remaining two rooms.
In
1995 I was completing A Level my two sisters were in form 4 and form
1 respectively.
My mother gathered enough
courage
to go and confront my uncle in
Harare
to demand the money he had stolen. What had happened is that the
government had posted the cheque for my father’s last
salary
for November 1990 to Jekwa school. My mother’s sister was teaching
the crèche at the school and had collected the cheque. When my uncle
learnt
this she convinced
my
aunt to give him the cheque as he would deliver it to my mother in
Marondera. My uncle went on to fraudulently cash the cheque in Harare
and in Zimbabwe you can be jailed for this. My uncle was working for
his other two cousins in a security company they had formed after
being released from jail for stock thefts. My mother went alone to
confront her alone and she was lucky that they did not assault her.
My uncle dared her to report him to the police and he went on to say
it was his brother’s money and he had every right to use the money.
My uncle then said why was she showing off by sending me to A’
Level as I should have looked for work after O’ Level and as for
girls they were supposed to have been married off after grade 7 since
they could now read and write. Words have power as it is, all his
sons only went as far as O’ Level and all his daughters got married
after grade 7.
In
early 1996 my mother’s fears came to pass. My sister had failed her
O’Level examinations and she was pregnant. As the father figure, I
told her to go and stay with her boyfriend. When I would
come
home during
weekends from
my temporary teaching job, I saw that she was coming home frequently
with her baby and she
was clearly struggling.
I told mum that she could come back home with her kid. The following
year she went to night school at Dombotombo primary school and passed
her O’Level examinations. In 1999 I was staying in Avondale a
walking distance to the University of Zimbabwe. My sister came to
stay with me and started going to the A Level night school at the
university. She managed to pass and got a job in a wholesaler and
started looking after her son and
also helping at home.
My
youngest sister did also major in sciences and when her results came
out we did not think she would be accepted in university and she came
to stay with me in Harare and started going to Speciss college in
Harare studying CIMA. When the university opened she was accepted
into
a BSC degree program.
When my sister graduated around 2004-2005, I told her how
I wished our mother had lived long enough to see this. When
she
also
graduated with her Masters degree
in
Pretoria, I told my sister the same and when she
eventually
graduates
with her Doctorate, I will still tell her the same thing.
In 2007 we
also left Zimbabwe after I was granted a South African work permit.
My wife struggled to get a job despite her banking experience. The
only job she was able to land was of being a waitress. We
decided that she should not take the job and rather study for a
degree. She
wanted to study for a bachelor of commerce administration degree. I
encouraged her to study with me for the Accounting degree as she is
very good with numbers. She went on to graduate a semester ahead of
me with very good marks. Around 2014 I drove to Zimbabwe and spent
the
day with a close relative from
my wife’s side.
This relative then told me that it was not
advisable to
educate a
wife because once she starts working she might leave you and he gave
me an example of a relative of theirs who sent the wife for nursing
training and once she was working she left the husband. I just kept
quiet and never responded to him. I know that I do not own anyone and
why should I worry about how another person will choose to do with
her life.
In
my 23 years of working, I have had the privileged
of
being mentored by many exceptional women in my career. I benefit from
the support
and companionship
of my beautiful wife MaNyoni. I will also celebrate the women who
have had and some continue to have an impact in my professional life.
At the end of 1997 when I was fortunate
to get a big break to
join the insurance industry, I was interviewed by Ms Pat Saukila at
Eagle Insurance Company in Harare and I will be forever grateful for
the opportunity. In 1999 I joined Diamond Insurance Company and our
Managing Director was Mrs Grace Muradzikwa a distinguished leader, I
learnt from her and her management team including her then General
Manager Mr Isaac Gunda
the importance of customer service. I was working in the personal
lines claims department dealing with direct clients. When I had claim
cheques that needed signing and when her managers when not available,
her office was always accessible through her PA Gillian and she would
always help us. My
direct boss at that time was Ms Pepelapi Gumbo.
In
2000, I would join AIG Zimbabwe and I was recruited by Ms Pauline
Arnold. My direct
boss the claims
manager at AIG was Ms Tendai Chingovo and she has
been
the most transformational figure in my career so
far I
have written in a previous blog the important lessons that I learnt
from her
(http://kanyokad.blogspot.com/2017/09/what-i-have-learnt-in-my-21-years-of.html
. At the end of 2002, I joined Zimbabwe Insurance Brokers as a junior
manager and I had the pleasure of working with many women including
my peer Ms Shingi Chirinda then our
Accountant, my deputy Ms Netsai Nyaundi and my secretary Mrs Loice
Shangwa. I joined Zimnat Lion Insurance as an Underwriting Manager
beginning of 2004, I was interviewed by our then Human Resources
Director Mrs Lynn Mukonoweshuro. In my section I had very capable
women including my then Chief Underwriter Mrs Rumbidzai Chinwada and
my secretary Ms Sandra Chipunza. In the management team my peers
included Ms Emilia Hatendi, Mrs Maureen Chigumadze, Mrs Betty
Togarasei and Mrs Tambu Madzivire. When I became the Bulawayo branch
Manager, I was reporting to Mrs Precious Chasara back in Harare head
office and I found my new boss to be firm but fair. At the branch, I
was assisted by many capable women including my deputy Mrs Vongai
Machonisa and my secretary Alice.
After
I joined OUTsurance in 2007, I was trained by Denise Van Burick and
she became my boss for many months when she became the Acting Team
Manager. My next lady Team Manager was Michelle De Winnar and I also
learnt a lot from her. I then reported to Maureen Siobo and my
manager’s boss was Lerato Rasentsoere. In 2015, I moved back to
business claims and I reported to Isabel Erasmus until when I
resigned in October 2017. When I came back to work in April 2018, I
started reporting to Abigail Mampuru till the present day. There
are a number of lady bosses in our department that I report, I am
also very grateful for their help. Some of my friends at work who
I
would get advice from include Kim Naidoo, Rethabile Aphane and many
more
I
know that Zimbabwe is currently undergoing harsh economic challenges
but it is my hope that the government and society in general does not
abandon those girls who are leaving school for a number of reasons.
If those girls are not fully integrated into the economy that will
not only condemn those women but
their
children also
to a life of poverty. I saw it with my mother, she worked hard
growing vegetables and maize and other crops during rainy seasons on
the municipality land. Some
years the municipality would slash down the crops.
She would wake up around 4am to go to the farmer’s market. Despite
all this handwork, she earned very little income and we would run out
of basic foodstuffs like mealie meal. I see it every morning in
Pretoria with ladies making vetkoeks along the city’s road and
selling them for around R1 each. They get into town around 5am after
travelling from townships that are about 40kms away from the city
centre. A
lot of the ladies also work six days a week as domestic workers in
the suburbs earning minimum wage. Despite
their hard work they won’t make much money. My prayer is that those
young girls stay in school until at least they finish their high
school to give them a chance in life and also break the cycle of
poverty.
From
my 23 years experience working in both the government and in the
private sector, I support the call to have an equal number of women
as men in the workforce including in top management structures. This
will help to eradicate the toxic masculinity that we come across, as
we have seen absolute power corrupts whether in politics but also in
organisations. A lot of strides have been made for example when South
African President Mr Cyril Ramaphosa announced his cabinet, gender
balance was 50/50 and it was the same in provincial government. The
issue of women rights affects women of all races and all faiths. For
example in the
Employment Equity legislation in South Africa women of all races are
listed as a designated group that must benefit as there are very few
women of any race in the top management structures
of many big organisations. On the legal front important changes are
coming through for example the Harneker
judgement in the High Court in Cape Town and later confirmed by the
Constitutional Court of South Africa recognising all surviving
spouses married under Muslim Law (polygamy) in Wills Act.
All
of us we can help
change
the world, one girl at a time.
God
bless
So inspirational Daby
ReplyDeleteYou are a sensible man. This was interesting to read.
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