YOU (South Africa)

Bride weds after croc attack

days before saying ‘I do’ this Zimbabwean woman had her arm bitten off by a crocodile

- COMPILED BY LAVERN DE VRIES SOURCES: CHRONICLE.CO.ZW, DAILYMAIL.CO.UK, EWN.CO.ZA

SHE’D planned her dream wedding to a T –she’d picked the perfect dress to make her feel like a princess, family and friends had been invited to a venue she’d carefully chosen and she’d spent hours deciding on just the right décor.

Nothing would stop former profession­al tennis player Zanele Ndlovu (25) from walking down the aisle to wed the man of her dreams – not even having her arm amputated five days before saying “I do”.

The Zimbabwean beauty and her British groom, Jamie Fox (27), have given new meaning to the vow “in sickness and in health” after marrying while the bride’s arm was freshly wrapped in bandages.

The only departure from Zanele’s plan was the venue. Instead of the ceremony taking place at the sports club she’d chosen, it was held in a hospital chapel.

“I spent a lot of time preparing for my wedding day, running around for a venue, décor and so forth. I didn’t know fate would have me wed in a hospital chapel, with one limb missing,” the newlywed says.

Zanele’s arm was ripped off by a crocodile in a horror attack in late April. Her fiancé’s family had flown in from Kent in England for the wedding and Zanele wanted to show them her home country’s beauty ahead of the big day.

They were canoeing on the Zambezi River when disaster struck.

“The waters were very calm,” Zanele reJust calls. “We had guides and there were about seven canoes in the water. The crocodile just jumped out of the water and bit a chunk of my arm together with the side of the boat.”

The canoe deflated. After that, everything happened very quickly, she says.

“The crocodile bit me again and pulled me into the water. Jamie was thrown out on the opposite side so the boat was between us.”

JAMIE couldn’t believe what he was seeing. “I thought it was some joke and someone was pranking us. It took about five seconds for me to see it was real,” he says. He bravely came to her rescue, Zanele adds.

“Jamie swam over to where I was struggling with the crocodile as it tried to pull me to the bottom of the river. He grabbed my waist and with the other

hand he rained blows on the crocodile.”

Jamie is modest when picking up the story. “The crocodile finally let go,” he says.

He carried Zanele, whose right arm was hanging by a shred just above her elbow, to safety with the help of shocked river guides. Zanele had lost a lot of blood and Jamie applied a makeshift tourniquet to her arm.

She could see he was shocked, but Jamie kept reassuring her she’d be fine. “The pain was excruciati­ng but with my husband by my side I summoned the strength to fight through it.”

Zanele was airlifted to a hospital in Victoria Falls before being transferre­d to Bulawayo’s Mater Dei Hospital where surgeons amputated her arm.

But they didn’t only save her life – the medical team helped to make Zanele’s dream come true.

She was devastated to learn she wasn’t able to leave the hospital for the wedding she’d so painstakin­gly planned.

But her despair turned to delight when Mater Dei medical staff stepped in and hosted a romantic ceremony presided over by a Methodist pastor in the hospital chapel – on the very day she and Jamie had been set to wed.

“This has never happened before – it’s quite exciting,” a staff member told Sunday News as the little chapel filled up with curious well-wishers. “You can tell people are all excited about this.”

Meanwhile, a few blocks away at Busters Sports Club in Hillside, Bulawayo, guests had gathered for the ceremony, unaware of the drama – and they were horrified when family members told them what had happened.

But the loved-up couple insisted the guests celebrate their union in their absence and the guests were filmed toasting the newlyweds at the reception.

At the hospital chapel the bride was breathtaki­ng in a short-sleeved lace dress and seemed oblivious to the bandages, having eyes only for her hero.

“I have a wonderful husband,” Zanele says. “My wedding was the best. We watched the other ceremony on video and we saw photos. It was beautiful. I really wish we were there but I’m so happy the wedding proceeded despite all the drama.”

ZANELE refuses to dwell on her near-death experience.

“I get depressed by people who come here and start crying, you know,” she said.

The young woman, who’s played in internatio­nal federation tournament­s across Southern Africa, will still be able to play tennis as she’s left-handed.

The couple plan to move to the UK but for now Zanele spends her days comforting relatives. She’s been discharged from Mater Dei but is still recovering.

“I know people feel pity for me at this moment but being sorrowful doesn’t help the situation,” she says.

“I look forward to family and friends who are going to make me laugh and not remind me of what’s going on. There’s always something positive to celebrate. Just look at how beautiful this view is. Sunshine and green, it’s beautiful.”

It’s this optimism that attracted Jamie to Zanele. It was love at first sight for the charity worker when he met her in 2016 while on a working trip to Zimbabwe. “I knew then I wanted to marry her,” he says.

Jamie visited the country a few more times and started dating Zanele.

“I finally proposed in February this year at Antelope Park in Gweru. I was at my most nervous because I wanted her to say yes. She said, ‘Yes’.”

After Jamie had paid lobola Zanele set to work furiously planning their wedding. The day might have been adapted because of the circumstan­ces but for Jamie it’s miraculous he has a wife at all.

“There’s no other way to explain it. I love her even more. This incident made me feel the depth of our vows even more. For better or worse, in sickness and in health – that’s just how it’s going to be.”

‘Fate would have me wed in a hospital chapel, with one limb missing’

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 ??  ?? Zanele Ndlovu married Jamie Fox five days after she lost her arm while they were canoeing on the Zambezi River.
Zanele Ndlovu married Jamie Fox five days after she lost her arm while they were canoeing on the Zambezi River.
 ??  ?? The couple had to change their original wedding plans and ended up tying the knot in the hospital’s chapel.
The couple had to change their original wedding plans and ended up tying the knot in the hospital’s chapel.
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 ??  ?? RIGHT and FAR RIGHT: Jamie and Zanele exploring Zimbabwe before the accident.
RIGHT and FAR RIGHT: Jamie and Zanele exploring Zimbabwe before the accident.

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