Thandizani Newspaper Yanu

The Maravipost: Malawi Society

Curb AIDS, give her some sugar, oh boy!—Forum

BLANTYRE—Good love and sex work wonders.

 

Don’t hold back, give it your all, plant a smile across your spouse's face and you will be appreciated. That's the new message to Malawian couples.

Just who is saying this?

 

Northern Region Women's Forum.

 

Why?

It will help check the spread of HIV and AIDS, the killer disease with no known cure and which claims some 80,000 Malawians every year.

 

What? Is this how serious it is?

 

"The secret is not out there, it’s in your hands. The man and woman should sit in the room and touch each other where they like to be touched and it will all fall into place," the Daily Times, quoted coordinator of the Forum, Lillian Kumwenda, as telling chiefs and people living with HIV at Embangweni in Mzimba.

 

Kumwenda added: "If this happened, HIV would be greatly reduced. Couples would not be going out seeking satisfaction from other people."

 

Is it that people are doing it but not just the right way?

 

"In most homes, sex often favours the man who often leaves the woman hanging...a development which sends the woman searching for sexual satisfaction elsewhere."

 

Kumwenda also smacked polygyny, saying the man usually fancies one woman at a time while leaving the other woman or women starving, longing for sex for days on end.

 

In Mzimba among the Ngonis, tradition allows a man to have more than one wife. 

 

Women do talk about these issues among themselves. If they didn’t, how would Kumwenda have known?    

 

What about the disease Kumwenda said could be tackled if people where monogamous, AIDS that is? Is there still stigma about the disease?

 

Yes, there is, she said and stigmatisation was to blame for the spread of the disease, which first appeared in Malawi in 1985.

 

She said although 88 percent of HIV is through sex, many Malawians still can't openly discuss sex issues.--maravipost

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Malawi Anglican bishop-elect accused of rape

BLANTYRE--A church court is hearing a case in which an Anglican bishop-elect for the northern region is being accused of raping a young woman six years ago.

 

Hilda Chirwa, according to the Daily Times, was summoned by the court chaired by Bishop Albert Chama of Zambia, the dean of the Central African Province.

 

High court judge Lovemore Chikopa is also hearing the case where Chirwa alleged that Bishop-elect for the northern region, Fanwell Magangani "raped me, I screamed but there was no help, later I missed [my] periods and I told him. When I did, he told me to go for an abortion."

 

Chirwa said she was raped when she had gone for a church meeting at Likoma Island and was given K5, 000 to seek an abortion in May 2004 to save Magangani from "embarrassment."

 

Magangani refused to comment on the allegations, telling the Times he had not been told by his superiors. "Ask the bishops who were there to give you more details," he said.

 

Bishop Brightson Malasa of the Upper Shire Diocese, one of the five bishops hearing the case, said a final decision would be made after the court scrutinises the allegations.--maravipost

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Mystery surrounds missing pregnant Zim student

BLANTYRE--While the Malawi Police Service believes a pregnant Zimbabwean student, who has been missing for over a month and feared dead, might have skipped the borders by road, family members in Zimbabwe say she is yet to show up.

 

Another mystery is her lover is missing too.

 

"Our preliminary investigations indicate that she must have crossed the borders and may be back home in Zimbabwe by now," Dave Chingwalu, the police spokesman, told Maravipost.com in an interview Wednesday.

 

Chingwalu was, however, quick to add that "police has not yet ruled out anything. We are still investigating all angles".

 

Twenty-five-old Zimbabwean Linda Gasa--a second-year accountancy student at the Malawi College of Accountancy (MCA) in Malawi's commercial capital, Blantyre--reportedly left the campus for the southern resort district of Mangochi on August 4 to discuss her condition with her boyfriend.

 

She was reportedly five months pregnant and family members claim the one responsible was her married lover whom police have identified as Blantyre businessman Misozi Charles Chanthunya.

 

"Mr. Chanthunya wanted her to abort the pregnancy but she was refusing and this had caused discomfort in their relationship," said her sister, who has travelled all the way from Nairobi, Kenya, to look for her.

 

She said Linda has never been heard of since her Mangochi excursion and the family fears for the worst. She said to complicate matters the lover has also disappeared into thin air.

 

Chingwalu, the police spokesman, confirmed Chanthunya is indeed at large.

 

"We are still looking for him; we don't know why he is hiding but we are still investigating," he said.

 

Chingwalu also confirmed family members approached police for guidance before they started flighting adverts in newspapers for their missing kin.

 

"They came for two things: to lodge a complaint that their kin was missing and also they wanted to know whether their "Missing Person" adverts may jeopardise our investigations," he said. "We gave them the go ahead."

 

Chingwalu wondered why the family was thinking Linda was dead.

 

But while Chingwalu insisted police believe Linda exited Malawi for Zimbabwe by road, Jessie Kachale, a cousin of Linda's, was quoted by The Nation newspaper as saying Chanthunya bought his lover an air-ticket for her to travel to Zimbabwe.

 

To add to the mystery her family in Harare has been calling Malawian media houses saying Linda is nowhere in Zimbabwe.

 

"She called to say she would fly in and went to the airport but she was not on any plane from Malawi," said a family member who did not want to be named. "Even if she travelled by bus a bus from Blantyre or Lilongwe takes just about two days. But it's now a month; we are very worried."

 

Chingwalu said police are interested to speak to Chanthunya.

 

"We have opened a 'missing person' docket for Linda but there is no docket for Mr. Chanthunya," he said.--maravipost

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'Kuphunzira Sikutha': Celebrating Int'l Literacy Day

UNTIL I started knocking on people’s office doors to ask about what was being done to celebrate this year’s International Literacy Day in Malawi, September 8th, I hadn’t thought of how differently various people might interpret the concept “literacy”. Picking up the phone to tell a director of a ministry department about what I had come for, one secretary didn’t bat an eyelid to add “adult” to the word. It didn’t matter that I repeated the phrase “International Literacy Day” several times. And she was not the only one. Several people heard it as “International Adult Literacy Day”.

Obviously a basic meaning of “literacy” starts out as learning how to read and write, and in Malawian discourse, the type of literacy most commonly heard on the street and across the airwaves is “Adult Literacy”, Sukulu ya Kwacha. No doubt adult literacy is crucial an issue as is emerging literacy, what we teach toddlers in nurseries and Standard 1 classrooms. But literacy is an extremely broad term, and covers probably each and every area that requires specialized knowledge across the breadth of human productivity. Viewing literacy in this manner forces us to consider the importance of learning more complicated knowledge systems beyond the ability to read and write as a child or as an adult literacy learner. It is not enough to know how to read and write; one needs develop life-long intellectual habits of reading regularly and utilizing modern technologies including computers and the Internet.

 

A crucial factor in developing and maintaining such intellectual habits is a thriving book industry. There was a time in Malawi when we had what could be considered a thriving book industry, considering our development stage and years from independence at that time. When I was growing up in the then Municipality of Zomba, I had access to four excellent bookshops, and a well-stocked library, within walking distance. A Malawi Book Service bookstore easily competed with a Times Bookshop a stone’s throw away from each other along the M1 road in the centre of town. At Zomba Zero the CCAP Church ran a CLAIM Bookshop not too far from the Times and MBS Bookshops, and straight down the road from Zomba Zero to Chancellor College was the MBS University Bookstore.

 

It was the same when I travelled to Blantyre, where I was able, in one day, to visit Times Bookshop, Central Bookshop, and a few other bookstores and libraries. Even when I travelled to rural parts of Malawi such as Mulanje, Ntcheu or Kasungu, I was still able to find well-stocked bookshops ran by the MBS, CLAIM, or Times Bookshop. Today, only the CLAIM bookshop and the National Library Branch still stand in Zomba. The Malawi Book Service and the Times Bookshop no longer exist. Central Bookshop had two shops in Blantyre and one in Lilongwe. Today two of those don’t exist anymore. When I visited Maneno Bookshop in Lilongwe in June, I saw more books from other countries, and very few from Malawi. It was the same at the lone Central Bookshop at the Chichiri Mall in Blantyre. At Maneno I saw children’s books from Kenya, and almost none from Malawi. At Central    Bookshop I was told that people called to ask about the next issue of People Magazine, while stacks of Malawian magazines lay unsold. 

 

There are reasons of political economy and recent socio-economic changes that explain problems in the book industry in Malawi. This is despite the gallant efforts of the Malawi Writers Union (MAWU) and the Book Publishers Association of Malawi (BPAM) to keep book production
in the country afloat. The National Library Service has also grown in strength and outreach, as have several efforts by enterprising Malawians who establish private bookshops and open libraries in schools. The last ten years have seen the introduction of Teacher Development Centres (TDCs) that serve between 10 and 20 neighboring schools, and libraries are an unfailing feature of these centres.

 

The most inspiring Malawian success story on the international science and technology circuit, that of William Kamkwamba, owes its origins to a TDC library. It is a pity that none of the bookstores I have visited in Blantyre, Zomba and Lilongwe recently stock Kamkwamba’s co-authored book (with Bryan Mealer) The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind. Kamkwamba’s story always elicits jaw-dropping silence and attention, whether here in Malawi or in the United States. There his book has become a best seller. I look forward to the day when every young Malawian and school-teacher will read the book and feel inspired by how a quest to enhance one’s literacy and knowledge wowed the world.

 

Part of Kamkwamba’s story was made possible through the power of the Internet, in particular Malawian and African bloggers. Digital literacy is a must for any society that wishes to enter the 21st century. Digital literacy involves knowledge of how to use computers, which can start with as simple a step as setting up an email account. It is disappointing that very few Malawian teachers have email accounts, let alone access to the Internet. This is understandable for teachers working in the remotest parts of Malawi where trading centres don’t even have electricity. But many centres that have electricity have seen entrepreneurial Malawians set up Internet cafes, with Internet charges as low as K5 ($0.03) per minute. I know of one teacher who taught in Kasungu in the early 2000s when there was no Internet café at Kasungu town. This teacher would take the bus every Saturday morning and go to Lilongwe, a two-hour journey each way, so he could access the Internet. But I also know teachers today who reside within walking distance of free Internet access, and they have never used it.

 

Young Malawians, like their counterparts the world over, are taking to the Internet and 21st century technology much more rapidly than grown ups. I know of primary school pupils who have email addresses, and their teachers don’t. It is the same with other educators in the system, and in the society at large. Everyone who has a business in Malawi has a cellphone, which they proudly brand on their products, shop walls and in newspaper advertisements. It is still very rare, in 2010, to see Malawian advertisements carrying email addresses and website URLs, notwithstanding the proliferation of relatively cheap Internet access in cafes across trading centres in almost every district.

 

Young Malawians, like their counterparts the world over, are taking to the Internet and 21st century technology much more rapidly than grownups. I know of primary school pupils who have email addresses, and their teachers don’t. It is the same with other educators in the system, and in the society at large. Everyone who has a business in Malawi has a cell phone, which they proudly brand on their products, shop walls and in newspaper advertisements. It is still very rare, in 2010, to see Malawian advertisements carrying email addresses and website URLs, notwithstanding the proliferation of relatively cheap Internet access in cafes across trading centres in almost every district. This year’s theme for the International Literacy Day is “Literacy and Women’s Empowerment.” UNESCO in Paris will on Wednesday September 8 award Literacy prizes to women’s projects that are promoting women’s empowerment through literacy. A Malawian group, Coalition of Women Farmers (COWFA), is this year receiving the 2010 Honourable Mention of the UNESCO Confucius Prize for Literacy for its Women Land Rights Project (WOLAR).

 

These Malawian women have charted a new way of looking at literacy. They are challenging our stereotypes of women as helpless, hapless victims who are hopelessly disempowered. They are showing us how empowerment is not a one-way, transmission-style process, but rather a self-motivated aspiration. As Julius Nyerere once wrote, people cannot be developed. They can only develop themselves. It is the same with empowerment. Women cannot be empowered by someone else; they can only empower themselves. A profile describing the project undertaken by the Coalition of Women Farmers observes that only four percent of Malawian women own land, yet 70 percent of Malawian subsistence farmers are women. But it is also well known that Malawian women take up the responsibility of providing food for their families. Given the food
crises Malawi has experienced in the first half of this decade, and the surpluses of the last four years, the empowerment of women in land ownership is one way of establishing a social structure that could ensure that food is available to more Malawians throughout the year.

 

Using literacy to achieve that goal reinforces the understanding that reading, writing and numeracy should not be for their own sake, but rather for greater transformation and socio-economic well-being. Literacy is part of the framework within which each of the eight Millennium Development Goals ought to be understood and integrated, if they are to be seen as more than top-down, donor-driven rhetoric.

That is how we ought to look at literacy, and address what many Malawians see as the absence of a reading culture. We should view literacy as a process of not just knowledge consumption but production as well, embracing new technologies to facilitate grassroots participation and promote human dignity, especially that of women, children, and those with special needs. More importantly, we should use modern literacies for the promotion of social justice and uMunthu-peace. As we Malawians like to say, kuphunzira sikutha; learning never ends.

 

  • The author, Steve Sharra, holds a doctorate in Education

 

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