Saturday, September 16, 2023

Social Commentary Series: Tariro

 Tariro


By Prince Gora


This story is fictional. Any relations with real life events may be or may not be coincidental.


Ruvimbo’s wicked eyes pierced every inch of my wasted body from her Mercedes Benz as I handed her a bunch of bananas from my vending stall.


“You were so good in high school, what happened to you Tariro,” she smirked. Ruvimbo had never really liked me in high school mainly because she was not half the student that I was. I was good, good partly because of my God-given intelligence but mostly because I worked hard.


Whenever she came across me studying back then, she always made it a point to sneer in my ear that education in this country doesn`t pay and that in the end, her connections would take her to places that I could only dream of, no matter how hard I worked.


I knew her sneers were a product of jealous and didn`t give them much attention. I had always believed that a day would come when my hard work would pay off and force her to take back her words but here we were, witnessing the fulfillment of her prophetic words.


“Life happened,” I replied simply and sat back on my cardboard stool behind my vending stall.


Mai Chido who had a vending stall next to mine was perplexed and as Ruvimbo drove away, she asked me a simple but direct question.


“What was that about, Tary?”


“I know this lady from high school. We went together to boarding school for four years.” I was trying with all that I have to politely cut short the conversation as soon as possible.


“That lady said you were good in school, shouldn`t you be driving a car like hers? What happened? Did you fall pregnant and get chased out of school before your exams?” Mai Chido should probably have been a police officer or journalist and not a vendor. She is an expert on how to get on one`s nerves and get them talking.


“It`s a long story Mai Chido…”


“Well, we have got the whole day here so tell me about it,” she interjected.


***


I didn`t want to talk about school or even think about it because the thing I remember most about school is the day that my mother looked at me admirably with glowing eyes from the back of the tent as I exited the stage and walked slowly towards her at the graduation ceremony. She was beaming.


“You have done it my daughter, you have made mommy proud,” she whispered to my right ear as she pulled me into a tight hug when I finally reached her. She had just watched on with teary eyes as the President, in his role as the chancellor of our university, capped me with the cap of knowledge.


Words alone cannot explain how overjoyed we were that day. For close to two decades, we had been working and building towards this goal. Now, mom`s decades of sacrifices and my years of hard work were not only coming to an end but had also paid off handsomely. It was, at long last, time for celebration and celebrate is what we did.


Had we known what the future had in store for me then, we probably would not have celebrated that much.


“I am listening Tary, are you going to talk or not?” Mai Chido persisted.


“I didn`t fall pregnant and I passed my exams,” I finally replied her first question after close to half a dozen minutes of deep pondering.


“And then what happened?”


“I went to university.”


“So you are a graduate?”


“Not that it is helping my life in any significant way Mai Chido.” I had long learnt the art of downplaying my academic credentials so that I can fit better in the street hustles.


Mai Chido was determined to hear the story of my life and she wasn`t going to stop until she had heard it so I told her about my graduation day. How happy I was that day and how much my mom and I had celebrated.


I also told her how, on graduation day, we even forgot that we had heard the story, the story that said that there were no jobs in the country and graduates were languishing in poverty.


My lecturers had long dismissed those fears and affirmed that the market for jobs was still widely open. “It is only those that have graduated with the lowest degree class that are finding it difficult to find jobs out there,” the head of our department repeatedly told our class and many others. He was a professor, older, more educated and presumably wiser than us so we chose to take his word for it and worked even harder to get good grades.


Years later, when I was beginning to get tired of job hunting, I often wondered if he had, perhaps conveniently, forgotten to add that the jobs market was open for those well connected only.


My time on internship had given me a rough idea of what it was like out there in the industry and sent me a strong warning. But again, I had chosen to dismiss that warning too. Although, in my defense, I can point out to the fact that my attachment period came right at the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic. Once things stabilized, I believed, job hunting would surely get better.


Except that when I ultimately graduated and the danger posed by the coronavirus waned, things didn`t get any better for the likes of me.


Most of my classmates who were well connected got jobs before the ink on their graduation certificates was even dry. That gave me hope. It was doable, I thought.


So I kept on sending one Curriculum Vitae after another to any company that exhibited the slightest sign of being a possible employer. Before long, it began to feel like I had already spent my first three months` future salary on the printing and delivering of resumes; resumes that seldom generated so much as a, “we regret to inform you that ...,” reply.


Hitherto, I had never really cared much about things like politics, corruption, the economy, connections and stuff like that. My grades and a good behavioral record were supposed to secure me a top paying job at a top company and all these other ‘funny stuff’ didn`t matter.


That was in college, in real life the ‘funny stuff’ mattered.


When I started closely following the news, I made a shocking discovery. A number of notable companies, including multinationals, were either downsizing or out rightly closing their local operations. The news that had been readily available to me until then had been the complete opposite.


Of greater importance to me though is the little research that I embarked on about a year after I started job hunting. I am naturally a very independent woman who likes to travel in the roads less travelled. I was like that in school and even in job hunting. But unlike in school, my job hunting tactics weren`t bearing any fruits.


Desperate to finally get my hands on a job, I got in touch with a guy called Malcom, a friend of a friend, who had recently gotten a job at a mine. My mission was to know how he had done it.


After the usual pleasantries, I put my sweet tongue and quick wit to work. I enquired first about the working environment which Malcom said, to my great surprise, wasn`t very great. He was working 75 meters underground, 10 hours every single day for three consecutive weeks before taking a five days off. The pay was generally fine but way below that expected for an engineer. That led me to pause a bit and be hesitant to make further enquires. In my mind there was no doubt that this was one of the rare moments where a CV had paid off. I couldn`t even bear the thought that a college educated engineer would need the so called connections to get his hands on this job.


I was in for a shock, two shocks actually. It turned out that Malcom had gotten the job through an uncle who worked there and that he wasn`t actually working as an engineer or anything near that there, he was a general hand.


That took some swallowing but I got it. After all, I myself was near that point where you desperately want a job to sustain your living; and by job, I mean literary any type of job.


Next up I got in touch with Nancy, Rudo and Calvin. This was just about a third of my former classmates who had managed to secure employment in the year that had passed since our graduation but there was no need for me to make any further calls. I had already picked a pattern. Maybe some of these people were on their jobs solely based on merit but every single one of them had had a little help from an inside connection. There was a second observation; only one of them, Calvin, was actually doing the job that he had been trained for.


My takeaway from all these conversations with former classmates was obvious and straight forward; and it was not that corruption was rampant in Zimbabwe. I somehow concluded that I needed to join the bandwagon. If you can`t beat them, join them right? Yeah, damn right!


At the time, all I cared about, all that mattered, was finally getting a job somewhere where I could get paid to recoup some of the money spent during my education. And to get a job, I needed to change my job hunting tactics.


Having lost more than a year looking for an engineering job, I didn`t have the luxury to lose any more time so I set to work on my new plan that very evening. Instead of listing prospective employers as I used to do, I came up with a list of prospective connections instead. I also changed my job taste; instead of looking for engineering jobs in particular, I decided to look for any job that paid decently.


It took me a month or so to get connected to a distant uncle who was well connected with a local plastic bottles manufacturing company. The company was apparently looking for a quality control person. My uncle did my bidding from inside the company and the company offered me the position which I took after a little hesitation.


My hesitancy wasn`t coming from the fact that I was about to assume a role that I wasn`t adequately trained for. Far from it. My hesitancy was more about the remuneration offer and the working environment. If I somehow had had the ability to see the future, I would not have hesitated to take the offer, I would have out rightly turned down the opportunity.


My salary, which was pegged in the infamous Zimbabwean dollars, soon proved to be highly unsustainable. Part of this was due to the fact that when I had negotiated for my salary, I hadn`t factored in Zimbabwe`s pay as you earn (PAYE) tax which stood at 20% for my salary bracket at the time. This wiped out what I had assumed to be my budget for transport and lunch. Most significant though was the fact that, for the first time in my life, I came face to face with Zimbabwe`s hyperinflation and cash crisis.


***


The remuneration issue was pretty difficult but I could deal with it. My working environment on the other hand, was nothing like I had ever imagined.


When I turned up for work on the first day, I was shocked to discover that I was only the second female at the facility and the only one (and first one) to be involved with work in the plant. The other woman, a fairly beautiful lady of middle age, was employed as a kitchen attendant.


Straight out of college and unmarried, it was obvious that I was going to attract a lot of unsolicited and unwelcome attention. But I needed to work and get along with work colleagues especially in the plant so I tried to be as polite and as nice as possible.


Unbeknown to me, this gesture and reputation of being a nice and easy going young lady, didn`t sit well with, of all people, my Human Resources (HR) Manager. My resistance to his romantic gestures didn`t help matters either and so barely a month or so into my very first job, he turned my time at the plastic bottles manufacturing plant into a living hell.


His actions did more than that though. They unearthed long buried memories of a college horror I had experienced in my first semester at college.


Before I went to college, my mother had encouraged me to watch the YouTube Documentary called ‘Sex for grades: undercover inside Nigerian and Ghanaian universities.’ The documentary investigates several lecturers who were abusing their power to prey on college girls. It was my mother’s way of preparing me for college. She wanted me to be able to spot questionable advances from lecturers and university staff so that I would be able to stop or report possible sexual harassment or abuse quite early. I had watched that documentary with no idea that I would finish the very first semester of college in a position similar to many of the brave young women featured in that documentary.


I need not get into many of the details of what happened to me in my first year at college because the story has been well documented and is all over the internet. The long and short of it is that the Engineering Drawing Lecturer, Mr. Njikwiwo, told me that I would fail his course if I resisted his sexual advances and also tried to turn me into his pimp.


“What`s a pimp?” Asked Mai Chido. I had thought that she had lost me because she had been quite for close to a quarter of an hour while I narrated my story. I only really continued to tell the story because I needed to hear it too. I needed to say my troubles, past and present, out loud.


“Well, he asked me to scout for female students for him and other lecturers to prey on.”  


Mr. Njikwiwo had pressurized me to give him my number several times. When he finally got it against my wish, he pestered me for sexual favors. He repeatedly asked me to come to beer drinking sessions and even once went to the extent of requesting that I abandon my school work so that I can be with him.


Anyways, I resisted all his requests and advances even when he threatened me that he would fail me his course and simply focused on working hard.


I thought he was bluffing but he did fail me his course. That left with no option but to engage the Zimbabwean Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR) who helped me file a case against him with the university.


A hearing was held, I presented all the evidence, including WhatsApp chats and Mr. Njikwiwo was found guilty. It later turned out that this wasn`t the first time that he had been found guilty of preying on students, it had also happened 5 years prior.


But guess what the university did? They simply advised me to report the matter to the police. I mean, what was the point of the hearing then? Still, I had accepted my fate and moved on. But those demons had moved on with me to the workplace.


I stood my ground against the HR`s advances, just as I had done with that predatory lecturer back at university. The only downside this time around was that I didn`t manage to gather enough evidence to nail him. He was much more subtle with his harassment.


The HR Manager continued to make my work life miserable for the two or three months that I continued to work at the manufacturing plant. He even resorted to shameful tactics of putting me consecutively on night shift for a whole month and even accused me of stealing once.


In the end, taking into account my meagre RTGS salary and my dignity, I chose to gracefully quit.


That`s how the graduate became a vendor and a change money dealer. I am not proud of it but I have to survive even if even it`s from hand to mouth.


There are no sexual predators who hold the key to my paycheck in the streets but the council and national police force are such a nuisance. Sadly, the only way to make a living on the streets of Harare is to bribe it off them.


That doesn`t mean that I don`t know that corruption is a cancer deeply engraved in our country and eating through it every day though. I might be making a living off it but I know that it must be and want it to be addressed from the very top office of the country to myself and others living from hand to mouth like me.


***


Mai Chido was stunned. She had listened for half an hour straight while I told her the ordeals of my life and at the end of it all, she was literally speechless.


“Zvakaoma asikana, all along I thought that if I had gone to school things would have been better for me,” she finally whispered ages after I had finished my story.


“Maybe,” I replied quietly. “It all depends on how well connected you are and how much abuse you are willing to tolerate at the workplace.”


“But Mai Chido,” I put on a cheering face for, “we have to remember that there are still some people doing great things without connections or giving sexual favors out there.”


I truly believe that these people, though few they may be, are really out there. That gives me hope. Ndichangoramba ndine tariro sezita rangu!

Saturday, September 9, 2023

Social Commentary: Mavhura Bridge

 Completely destroyed': Wooden road bridge collapses in Norway | Euronews

By Prince Gora

Note: This story is completely fictional. Any relations to real life events, places and or people are purely coincidental.

“Gogo, will it ever stop raining?” I posed the question to grandma as if I wasn’t interested about the rain at all. I wasn`t even looking at her. Instead, I was staring outside through the slightly open door of her kitchen hut.
 
It had been raining non-stop for more than 24 hours and the truth is that I was beginning to get worried.

I had initially dismissed the rains as just some light showers but after a full day of ‘non-stop light showers,’ my stance on that had since changed; the impact of the rain was now there for all to see, anyways. 
 
The roads were now flowing like a flooded Zambezi river and our front yard had literally turned into a replica of the famous Kariba dam.

“Yes, it will stop raining in a few hours now,” grandma replied in an equally disinterested but chilled voice while putting a log of wood into the fire. 
 
It was just grandma and I gathered around the fire in her kitchen hut. Grandpa had put on a raincoat and braved the rain so that the cattle could graze for a few hours.
 
Sekuru was, in fact, standing in for me. Herding the cattle was supposed to be my job, my father had specifically sent me to our rural home during the university vacation to do just that. He had also strategically sent the guy who minded the cattle for my grandparents on a three-months long leave just to be absolutely sure that I would be herding the cattle. 
 
It was his rather smart way of killing two, or should I say three, birds with one stone. The herder’s leave had been long overdue and according to my dad, I needed some rural experience so that I could appreciate our family roots better and get serious with school rather than wasting my time in college doing student activism which tainted the family's name and hampered my future employment prospects.
 
Dad strongly believed that the comrades I hanged around with were a bad influence on my behavior and it was pertinent for me to cut ties with them before I got myself suspended from school or arrested by the police - I did both barely three months later.

But Dad's perfect plan, like many of mine, was not perfect; it had loopholes. 
 
In all his scheming, he either forgot that there was electricity and a fairly stable internet connection at the local shopping center or never dared to think that I was willing to dedicate up to 5 hours of each and every day to walk a combined 10km to and from the shops so that I could stay connected to the struggle. He probably also forgot that Gogo and Sekuru so adoringly loved me that they wouldn`t possibly have let me do all the hard work of the village homestead alone, even with their frail bodies of old age.

The rain had however also just jeopardized my plan and I was getting restless. I so desperately wanted to go back to the shops and get an update of the happenings of the struggle
 
But if Gogo was right, I was just about to get back in business in a few hours.
 
I sat in silence with gogo for close to half an hour. The silence was only broke when Mr. Kandiyero, another villager who was a church mate of my grandparents, came by the house to check in on grandma.
 
After the usual pleasantries, he announced the big news; the river was flooded and the bridge had just collapsed.
 
The rain had been a crack on my ship but this, this was like 20 cracks on it and I had no plan on how to deal with the cracks. My ship was surely about to sink.

Just to make sure that my panic wasn`t premature though, I asked Gogo another question; categorically on behalf of a friend.
 
So Gogo, how will people go to the shops if there is no bridge?” I tried to musk my true feelings and made the question sound as innocent and general as it could possibly have been.

“Oh that? They don`t go. At least not until the level of the water in the river has significantly subsided.” Now it was time to really panic but grandma didn`t know that and so she went on to explain, without that much worry nor concern, that their makeshift bridge always collapsed every three or so years and people wouldn`t go to the shops until a new bridge was installed or until the level of water in the river had significantly decreased to safer levels which sometimes took up to three months.

She had to remind me that life in the village was so much different from that in the city when I inquired about how people would survive without access to fresh supplies from the shops or a grinding mill for that long.

“We have enough mealie meal to last us for the next three or so months and you brought all those groceries we need from the city to add to my already significant stock. And here in the village we have livestock, chickens, a garden and fields which provide us with literally everything else we need.”

“You know,” she briefly paused and then continued, “this is our life during the rainy season here. Even when the bridge is there, it is difficult to go to the shops after heavy rains because all the roads will be so muddy that one cannot possibly walk on them.”
 
With my little hope now completely extinguished, I decided to change the direction of the conversation and started to explain to my grandma that heavy rains like the ones the country had been experiencing over the last few years were a result of global warming and climate change. 
 
She didn`t quite understand much, or care to, about the burning of fossil fuels, carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases causing global warming but she did agree with me that deforestation was a cause for concern and that the seasons seem to have changed for the worse over the last few decades.
 
“Yeah, I think I agree with you that the summers seem to be much longer and warmer now than when I was growing up while the rains are now much more erratic than when we were kids. You never know when to plant maize seeds these days, we always have to guess.” Grandma was talking slowly and seemed to be recalling scenes and memories from a long time in the past.
 
“Deforestation is what worries me the most muzukuru, when I was about your age, there were trees all over the this place surrounding the whole village. If you compare that to the trees that are left in now, it feels like we are now living in a desert.” Whenever grandma called you muzukuru (grandson/ granddaughter), you just knew that whatever she was saying was be very important.
 
“All that is contributing to climate change Gogo, and we need to take action.” I echoed her sentiments feeling rather proud that my granny wasn't a climate change denier.

“I don`t know about this climate thing you are talking about muzukuru but if the learned guys like your father are saying that we risk losing our home, then you, young people should do something to prevent possible catastrophe. The future belongs to you after all.”

One of the reasons why grandma is so fond of me is because she has always been proud of my father, her civil engineer son who lifted the family out of poverty. Whenever one talked about the ‘learned guys’, no matter the field, she always imagines her son.

The conversation has unexpectedly but pleasantry started getting deep and it illuminated even deeper thoughts in my mind. It suddenly dawned on me that the clinic as well as the primary and secondary schools were situated just next to the shopping center.

Always a believer of the greater good, l found it very hard to come to terms with how complicated life was for my grandparents and the other villagers during times like these when they didn`t have access to a health facility. It was even harder for me to think about the hundreds of students who obviously had to miss school during such times. 
 
Having grown up in the city, I had never quite understood why schools from my rural home had always recorded very low pass rates. My father and his siblings had been lucky because they had attended a mission school where my great-grandpa worked.

What it was, I don`t know but something from deep inside me was restless and telling me to do something about this situation so I asked grandma one more question.

“Gogo, I am wondering; if this is a perennial problem, why doesn`t the councilor and the MP (Member of Parliament) address it?”
 
The people’s representatives to the rural district council and the national parliament were loved and adored by the villagers mainly because of their timely donations of food and farming inputs which, for some unknown reason, were often done just before an election.

“Oh you think the councilor and MP haven`t tried to address the issue of the roads? They have. The DDF people have even brought their construction equipment here a couple of times, maybe twice or thrice but they only squander money and never do their job.”

My follow up question on the years that this had been done quickly confirmed my suspicions. Maybe the people`s representatives had really tried to address this issue but it was very curious for me to discover that the DDF (District Development Fund) people had come at periods corresponding to election campaigns.
 
I was deeply troubled by the stories I was hearing from grandma and knew that I should really, really do something.
 
But then I was just a young second year university student without the resources nor the connections of neither an MP nor a Councilor.

And that was when I remembered that the pen is mightier than the sword. I knew that I simply needed to tell this story to the world and the world would do the rest for me.

With electricity and stable mobile network connectivity now out of the equation, I had to improvise. The only other power source available was a small 50 watts solar panel meant for charging the battery of the radio. There was also a car charger which can be easily connected to a power source like a battery with a few cable extensions.
 
The challenge was that I couldn`t charge my phone for more than three hours without risking the reprimand of my grandpa who would most likely miss out on the 2000hrs main news bulletin on the radio. Staying informed and updated has been an important principle of my family for generations. It probably started with great-grandpa who had passed it to my grandfather and he had passed it on to his son who in turn had also passed it to me.
 
“It is important that you always know what is going on in this country and the world around you. It is very important for you to watch the news my son,” my dad used to say when I was younger and seemingly disinterested with the news. Now that I was a student activist, he didn`t have to worry about that anymore. I was now the one to bring all the breaking news home and, dare I say, even made the news myself at times.

My second challenge was network connectivity. It was almost never available and definitely never stable during the day. All the same I charged my phone for the 3 hours, set an alarm for 01:00am and switched the cellphone off to save power.

I still got the reprimand though because grandpa didn`t get to listen to the main news bulletin that night as the battery had ran out of power just after 6pm. He almost lost his temper and warned me to never use the battery for charging my phone again. 
 
What that meant is that I now had only one chance to shoot my shot, just one.

Fortunately, when I woke up at 01:00am the network was better and more stable, as I had hoped and so I set to work. I wrote a 500-word article on the situation of the road and the bridge in my rural home and sent it through to the guy who published our student stories in one of the smaller local papers. I also posted the article on Facebook and even did a mini-thread on twitter (now X).

I then ran out of power before I had had a chance to see if my efforts had born any fruits.

I expected a quick reaction and even result but days and then weeks passed. Even the very long month of January came to pass and still there was nothing. I also didn`t know what was happening out there because my dad`s plan had finally succeeded and I was completely off the grid now.

The primary and secondary school students also didn`t get to go to school that January and even February. But in March, the students started going to school again and to this day, they have never stopped going to school as long as it is open.

The villagers also started accessing the clinic and shopping center at will and during any season of the year because by the time I left to go back to university in mid February, some people from the city had come with their construction vehicles to mend the main road. Their vehicles had the same shape and the same yellowish color of those of DDF but they had a different name which I cannot quite remember anymore. These guys did the job. They put gravel on the main road and also constructed a proper modern bridge across Mavhura river.

* * *

When I arrived back in the city, I found my social media inboxes buzzing with messages. Some people had made enquires about the situation in the village a month back while others had accused me of being a liar who was just trying to taint the good name of politicians who were sacrificing for their people and issued me with threats of all kinds. Some had suggested to do a go fund me to pay for the bridge construction. The Councilor and the MP had also been summoned by the social media people (social media users) and they had professed their dedication to addressing the road challenge. They had offered to and were now even taking the lead in the road construction program.

By then, the momentum and controversy around the village story had also died down and I wondered if anyone still remembered the kid who had brought it all to light. I also never quite figured out who had paid for the construction of the road and the main bridge.
 
But, it doesn`t matter. The road and the bridge were constructed, kids started to go to school all year round and the primary and secondary school pass rates have been slowly going up over the past few years. For me, that`s all that matters!


About The Author
Prince Gora is blogger and fiction writer who writes for the love and power of writing. The goal is to tell the stories of my life: the stories I have lived, the stories I have seen others live and the stories I have read and heard; both fact and fiction. Prince holds a B.Tech Honours Degree in Chemical and Process Systems Engineering (HIT) and is currently studying towards a Master's Degree in Environmental Engineering at the University of Stavanger, Norway. His writing experience include reporting for University World News (Africa Edition) between 2020 and 2023 and being an assistant editor of YETT`s bi-monthly SAFRAP Newsletter between 2021 and 2023.

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