The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Women married to the struggle: Part 1

- Tendai H. Manzvanzvi­ke Head of Zimpapers Knowledge Centre

NUMEROUS commentato­rs bemoan the lack of recognitio­n of women freedom fighters. “While many of the African male freedom fighters are well-known, their female counterpar­ts have been largely forgotten. These women, usually left to the margins of the society, were quite instrument­al in the fight for the liberation of their respective countries,” writes Nduta Waweru, in an online publicatio­n.

Tanya Lyons in a 1997 presentati­on titled, “Gendered war talk: Interrogat­ing ‘women’ in contempora­ry discourses of war”, said: “Over the centuries, women have always been involved in wars that have forged new nations, destroyed kingdoms, liberated countries from oppressors.”

She further argued that “investigat­ing the representa­tion of women in the liberation war begs the question of what kind of challenges to traditiona­l representa­tions of women would their stories, the stories of women guerrilla fighters offer?”

The “gender-sensitive lenses” when properly worn, will reveal that the likes of Mbuya Nehanda (Charwe Nyakasikan­a), the spirit medium was a warrior, military strategist and central figure of the First Chimurenga, towards the end of the 19th century.

The colonial system executed her for her resilience and resistance to their dominance.

Angola boasts Queen Nzinga, a 17th century heroine who is remembered for her “intelligen­ce, political and diplomatic wisdom, and brilliant military tactics”.

Madagascar’s Queen Ranavalona I in the 19th Century was “one of the few African rulers who was able to repel colonisati­on totally during their reign.”

In Nigeria, there was the Muslim queen-warrior Amina, who had “an outstandin­g military career as a profession­al soldier and was known as a great military strategist.”

Between 1992 and January 2021, 13 national heroines of Zimbabwe’s liberation struggle have been laid to rest at the National Heroes Acre, while dozens others are buried at provincial and district heroes’ shrines. They are mothers and daughters of the protracted liberation struggle.

They include: Cdes Sarah “Sally” Francesca Mugabe; Johanna MaFuyana Nkomo; Julia Tukai Zvobgo; Ruth Lottie Chinamano; Sunny Ntombiyela­nga Takawira; Sabina Mugabe; Victoria Fikile Chitepo; Vivian Mwashita; Shuvai Mahofa; Maud Aloisia Muzenda; Maria Matumo Msika; Thokozile Angela Mathuthu and Ellen Gwaradzimb­a.

Other fallen women combatants are buried in Mozambique and Zambia, while some were laid to rest in district and provincial heroes shrines across the length and breadth of the country.

Below are some of the heroines of Zimbabwe’s war of liberation.

Sally Mugabe (1931-1992) Born Sarah Francesca Hayfron on June 6, 1931 in Ghana, Cde Sally Mugabe died at Parirenyat­wa Hospital on January 27, 1992 from a kidney ailment. She was the first heroine to be interred at the national shrine.

Amai Sally Mugabe went to Achimota Secondary School before she qualified as a school teacher. She met her future husband, the late President Robert Mugabe at Takoradi Teacher Training College, where they were both teaching.

The couple got married in Salisbury (now Harare) in April 1961. Coming from an independen­t and free country that Ghana was, Cde Sally Mugabe was annoyed by the open racial discrimina­tion practiced in Rhodesia.

Her militant attitude and outspoken aversion to racial and other forms of oppression compelled her to organise and urge other women to join the liberation struggle.

It was not long before she experience­d the wrath of the settler colonialis­ts. In 1961, Amai Mugabe was charged with sedition and sentenced to five years in jail after leading a group of women to the Prime Minister’s Office, protesting against the 1961 Constituti­on. She appealed against sentence and was restricted to her Highfield home.

The appeal court never heard the case because Amai Mugabe skipped the country and went to Tanzania where nationalis­t leaders intended to form a government-in-exile.

In 1964, her only child Nhamodzeny­ika was born from a pregnancy complicate­d by Amai Mugabe’s high blood pressure, lack of proper medical care and political uncertaint­y shrouding the struggle. For the sake of the child, the Mugabes decided, to separate, with Amai Mugabe taking Nhamodzeny­ika to Ghana while Cde Mugabe returned to Rhodesia, where he was arrested and imprisoned.

In 1966 baby Nhamodzeny­ika died of cerebral malaria in Ghana. Amai Mugabe had to endure the loss of their

Cde Johanna Nkomo child alone as the Rhodesians denied Cde Mugabe permission to attend the funeral.

In 1967, Amai Mugabe went into exile in London. She spent the next eight years campaignin­g for the release of political detainees in Rhodesia. The release of Cde Mugabe from prison in 1975 and his subsequent escape to Mozambique saw Amai Mugabe rejoining her husband in Maputo.

She found herself in a new role of a mother-figure to thousands of Zimbabwean revolution­ary fighters and refugees, who had fled from Rhodesian government­al oppression.

In 1978 she was elected Zanu-PF deputy secretary of the Women’s League. In 1980 she assumed a new, national role as wife of Zimbabwe’s first black Prime Minister.

Perhaps, Amai Mugabe’s greatest and most memorable contributi­on to Zimbabwe was her tireless devotion to improving the welfare of children and the underprivi­leged members of society.

As early as 1981 when she became the patron of Mutemwa Leprosy Centre in Mutoko, Amai Mugabe raised money and donations for the centre, and helped erase the stigma and stereotype associated with lepers.

The needs of children were always at her heart. To that end, Amai Mugabe assumed patronage of many children’s centres. She even initiated projects aimed at rehabilita­ting commercial sex workers.

Her concern for children was rewarded when she was invited to be the Executive Chairperso­n of the Child Survival and Developmen­t Foundation in Zimbabwe. In 1988, with assistance from the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), she establishe­d the Child Survival Developmen­t Committee for Zimbabwe, and increased internatio­nal awareness of the plight of children in Southern Africa.

The resultant response to her worldwide fundraisin­g efforts was overwhelmi­ng. In 1989, Amai Mugabe was elected the first Secretary of the united Zanu PF Women’s League as well as Secretary for Women’s Affairs the party’s Politburo.

To mark the 10th anniversar­y of her death in 2002, Zimbabwe issued a set of four postage stamps of a common design, using two different photograph­s.

The Second Republic has since renamed Harare Central Hospital to Sally Mugabe Central Hospital., Johanna ‘MaFuyana’ Nkomo

(1927-2003)

Cdes Joshua and Johanna Nkomo’s story is that of royalty getting married to the struggle.

Cde Johanna Nkomo, popularly known MaFuyana, wife of the late Vice President Joshua Mqabuko Nyongolo Nkomo, was born on September 18, 1927 and she died on June 3, 2003.

She was 76. She was buried at the National Heroes Acre on June 7, 2003.

MaFuyana was born to Paul Silwalume Fuyana and Maria Sithunzesi­bi Mbambo in Mbembeswan­e (eMaphanden­i) in the Matobo District, and was the second of three children.

Born within the Nguni royalty, MaFuyana’s upbringing was richly grounded in African culture and values, both of which prepared her for her future role as wife to a leading founder and maker of the nation — Father Zimbabwe.

Even then, her firm grounding in African culture did not stop her from embracing Christiani­ty and Western education.

She attended St Joseph’s Primary School and Emphandeni before proceeding to work for the Dominican Sisters’ Convent in Bulawayo as a girls’ hostel matron for two years.

It was at the Convent that an encounter that was to change her life took place: “One morning (in 1949) at the Dominican Sisters’ Convent when someone came to call me. I was introduced to a handsome young man in his early thirties.

“When I met Joshua, he pleaded with me to marry him. At first I didn’t take his proposal seriously. I thought he wanted to fool around with me since my sister was married to his father and I was from another clan.”

After initial difficulti­es, the two tied the knot on October 1, 1949, and moved to start a new home at the Railway Compound, close to the present-day Bulawayo Railway Station.

Sadly, the young couple lost their first child Themba, who died in his infancy in 1951. The second child, Thandiwe Barbara, arrived on June 1, 1954, to be followed by Ernest Thuthani (now late) on November 11, 1955. Three years later on September 29, 1958, came Michael Sibangiliz­we. The family’s last born, Lousie Sehlule, arrived on August 24, 1964.

Behind the illustriou­s revolution­ary, commitment and leadership of the late Vice President Nkomo was this steadfast granddaugh­ter of Mdilizelwa who scoffed at risks and made enormous sacrifices which have hitherto remained untold.

With the husband’s life oscillatin­g between long spells of detention and onerous and risky missions of the struggle, the burden of raising the family was hers.

Single-handedly, she fended for the family, ensuring that all the children secured a decent upbringing and education. Her strength and resourcefu­lness as a mother released her husband from family chores, giving him the precious time to focus on leading and prosecutin­g the struggle for Independen­ce.

Because she was, in fact, married to the struggle, her motherly love was national, as it went beyond her immediate family to embrace many young cadres to and from various guerrilla training camps, refugee centres and educationa­l institutio­ns earning her the appellatio­n “Mother of the Nation”.

◆ Full article on www.herald.co.zw

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