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Harare North, South, East and West

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Recently Kubatana offered Brian Chikwava’s new book, Harare North, as a prize for the best bit of writing on the Diaspora. Here’s something from Martha in Bulawayo . . .

For me the Diaspora is any place outside Zimbabwe. This is in contrast with the main belief that the Diaspora is over the seas. I grew up in Tsholotsho and most men over the age of eighteen are in Egoli, as Joburg in South Africa, is commonly known. For me they are in the Diaspora. For the past thirty years or so this has been an increasing trend and it has led to an appalling lack of ambition. Boys dream of going to Egoli and girls dream of getting married to Injiva (a man working in South Africa). To me the Diaspora means a  total disregard for education, a break down of the family system (men working in South Africa only visit their families once or twice a year) and lack of achievement – although it might be argued that being able to  feed one’s family is achievement. But I believe if a person who could have been a doctor, an engineer et cetera ends up being a mere gardener in South Africa, there is a lack of achievement. The Diaspora has set an unreal sense of achievement so much that the youth, and in some cases adults, have totally lost focus. To me the Diaspora means a disturbance of a people’s value system and belief in themselves.

One comment to “Harare North, South, East and West”

  1. Comment by Inini:

    I disagree with your views completely. The diaspora does not mean failure in all aspects of life. Since you seem to loike the word failure much, I’d asy it may be failure to stay and work in oyur coutyr due to pressing economic conditions. I am a graduate engineer and the last time I was there in Zimbabwe my salary could not last a month. I could not afford a 5110 Nokia handset! I came here to RSA and got a job in my field and I cant complain. I’d say at personal level I have progressed though I have lost my marriage.