WUNRN
Author:
Nyaradzai Gumbonzvanda is a founder of Rozaria Memorial Trust, established in
memory of Mbuya Rozaria Marumisa – Dizha. She is an advocate for peace and
women’s human rights. She currently serves as the General Secretary for the
World YWCA.
HER
REFLECTIONS ON ZIMBABWE’S 29th INDEPENDENCE ANNIVERSARY - AN ESSAY
Nyaradzai Mugaragumbo-Gumbonzvanda
18 April 2009
The 18 of April 2009 is a special day when our nation celebrates its 29 years
of independence from colonial rule. A nation celebrating the gallantry of its
daughters and sons who shed their blood, suffered, imprisoned and struggled
until victory was indeed certain.
I reminisce the meaning of this day to my late mother, Rozaria Marumisa Dizha,
born 1923 and passed on in 2006. An ordinary Zimbabwean like any other woman,
she contributed the best she could, with the means she had towards the
liberation of the country. She gave her daughters and sons to the liberation,
some serving as prisoners of war and others skipping the borders. Like other
villagers, she provided food and financial contributions for the comrades “war
vets” survival during the guerrilla warfare. In the wee hours of the day, with
volume turned low, she listened the voice of Zimbabwe on radio. Women’s role in
the liberation struggle remains a silent song, yet many of us recall vividly,
that women and their daughters agonized and organized like every other
Zimbabwean.
Mbuya Rozaria watched that day in 1978, when her whole village was bombed, all
the houses were torched, and many children, women and men were wounded. The
Rhodesian army was after the guerrillas who had been seen in the area, it is
rumored. Within days all the schools in the neighborhood were closed, only
to-open at independence. Mbuya Rozaria joined in burying the dead, her own
people. She nursed and consoled the sick and bereaved. She did not loose heart
but remained part of the many ordinary Zimbabweans who supported the struggle.
In 1980, she was one of the many and thousands of rural women who walked the
many miles to cast their vote. It would be the first time for Zimbabwean black
women to vote. Voting for independence, voting for President Robert Mugabe! I was
young then, but I danced in the village as we listened to the radio and heard
the election results. I did not know that 28 years later, we would hold our
breath for over 3 weeks, waiting for yet another election result, uncertain and
with fear. We cried with happiness, knowing that our family members scattered
far and wide will come home again, and we will be a whole family again.
We danced to the festive village drums (jiti) all night going from village to
village, welcoming the comrades coming home, with life, independence and some
flashy goodies. Soon after independence, the young men and women who had been
fighting the war of liberation were back home. Most of the prisoners of war
were released. Those were happy days. Many a young women were swept off their
feet with the recently demobilized combatants who were an enigma unto
themselves! Oh the early eighties were sweet moments for us as girls old enough
to understand the intrigues and dynamics brought by this wave of change and its
possibilities. Today’s young Zimbabwean girls are desperately looking for
education, employment and hope.
In 2009, I look back and wonder what this independence celebration would have
meant for my late mother. She would have remained clung to her rosary in
prayer, saying as many Hail Mary’s as she could, as a devout Christian and
catholic who knew that her God is a caring and loving shepherd. She could have
been disappointed. She would have been sad that schools are not fully
functioning; that hospitals have no drugs; that we had a cholera crisis. She
would not have understood why we have to use the US Dollar, rand or pula. She
could have asked many questions, would have swallowed her disappointments, and
urged the younger ones to do something so that life is better and meaningful.
She would still be listening to the radio and attending church as before.
She died at home in 2006, at her son’s house in Murewa. At that crucial moment
two of her beloved daughters present said “Amen”. The family could afford her
hospital fees, but the health care system had collapsed. She was a home-based
care case. Today is a far cry from her independence dreams. Years earlier, she
had buried her grandson to AIDS, then her son, another son and a daughter. She
had cared for them all at home. She had been to hospital with them, only to be
advised, ambuya (granny) its best for you to care for your child at home. These
were the signs of the catastrophic economic, humanitarian and health crisis in
Zimbabwe. She buried them with dignity, in the village, next to their late
father’s grave. She stood with her daughters in law, held her grandchildren and
whispered that it will be okay, they should strive to remain in school. She
smiled and knew she had given her best, to her country, her children and her God.
She was ready to sojourn into the afterlife.
As we celebrate the 29th Zimbabwe independence this year and remember the life
of the late Mbuya Rozaria Marumisa Dizha, we honor many ordinary women who gave
birth to a new nation. Just like any other veterans of the struggle, we salute
them and give them our respect. We owe them the basics that they fought for.
Freedom. Life with dignity. Respect. Recognition. Prosperity. Health, education
and above all affirmation that every Zimbabwean deserves recognition as a
heroine or hero. A status conferred within one’s own heart. In prayers, we ask
for the soul of the late Mbuya Rozaria Dizha to rest in perpetual peace as we
ask the leadership of today to respect that which was dreamt by many Zimbabwean
women and men who served with humility and invisibility. These are the heroines
whose names may never be mentioned in the list of honorable members laid to
rest at the National Heroes Acre.
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