The life and times of Mai Musodzi
LEGENDS are not made, but are born, their legacy lives forever
and ever.
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| Mai Musodzi |
This best describes
the life of the late Rhodesian feminist and social worker, Elizabeth Maria
Ayema, popularly known as Mai Musodzi, who is also one of Zimbabwe’s 100 most
influential women of all time.
Nearly six-and-a-half
decades after her death, Mai Musodzi is still celebrated through the work she
did for communities. A dance and music fiesta was held recently in Mbare by
young artistes from the community to celebrate her work.
“Her life was
excellent. She lived it for everyone to benefit out of a number of initiatives.
She is sadly missed not only as my grandmother, but as a mother of the
community, a women’s rights defender, a leader and a role model,” said
82-year-old Leonard Chabuka, her grandson, in a wide-ranging interview with
NewsDay at their family home at 58 3rd Avenue in Mbare.
Chabuka, who is the
renowned woman’s eldest grandson, said the home, formerly number 58 Cottage 3rd
Street, was located a few metres from Edith Opperman Maternity Clinic, a medical
facility which Mai Musodzi successfully lobbied for.
The clinic is located
off Addbennie Road in which the Mai Musodzi Hall — which was named after her—
is located.
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| Mai Musodzi Hall |
Chabuka, the third
child of Mai Musodzi’s only daughter, Lucy Jessy Ayema, who was married to
George Chabuka, is the sole survivor of the woman’s five children.
“I was 17 when Mai
Musodzi died at the age of 67. By that time, I had travelled a long journey
with her. Mai Musodzi was a human rights defender,” he recalled.
Although Mai Musodzi
was allocated a cottage known as “Marriage Quarters” for wedded couples, she
found it unfair for fellow women married to foreigners to stay away from their
husbands.
She consequently
challenged the system in a newly-established court, where Sergeant Vito of the
Vito Tavern fame and after whom Vito Road in Mbare was named, was the
prosecutor.
Chabuka said his
grandmother acted as the defence lawyer, adding that the woman deserved more
accolades than just a recreational hall named after her.
“You see, we are
talking of a woman who escaped war and carried out all this good work. Apart
from a hall, two roads in Mbare are named after her husband, Ayema Street, and
her son, Francis Joseph Street,” Chabuka said.
Out of all the Musodzi
sons — Luke, Moses, Francis and Raphel — Moses was different, according to
Chabuka.
Moses was first a
teacher and then became a journalist with African Newspapers. His interest in
politics led him to the post of the first chairperson of the Harare branch of
the African National Congress in 1957, alongside nationalists James Chikerema
and Moses Nyandoro.
“Moses died without a
child with his legally married wife Patricia Chatambudza, but some years later
two women came to me claiming that their children belonged to Moses,” he said,
adding that he helped them secure identity documents.
Francis, who was a
teacher and an active member of the Industrial and Commercial Workers Union
(ICU) as well as an elected member of the Native Advisory Board, left behind
seven children, but only two have survived to this day. They currently live in
South Africa and Saudi Arabia respectively. Raphael had seven children and only
two, based in Canada and the United Kingdom, are still alive.
Chabuka recalled that
there were efforts to set up a Mai Musodzi Trust, but they appeared to have
suffered a stillbirth.
“I remember a trust
being set up, but somehow the operations were disrupted, so I’m saying if the
seven of us (Ayema siblings) come together and form a Mai Musodzi Trust, we can
start off from where our grandmother left,” he said.
He said there are a
lot of people with an interest in the history of Mai Musodzi and as a family
they feel honoured.
Chabuka said two books
have been written about Mai Musodzi. One was written by the late Japanese
professor, Tsuneo Yoshikuni, and published by his friend, David Harold Barry.
It was later published by Weaver Press in Harare in conjunction with Silveira
House in 2007. The other book, he said, was done by Lawrence Vambe, but was
thin on detail.
“The publishing of
these books really helps. It is good for the youngsters as well as the family
members of this present generation,” Chabuka said.
He said as a family
they were happy about the recent commemorations and specifically cited Harare
High School pupils, who recited a poem about Mai Musodzi.
“Those students nailed
it. I hope next year the event will be bigger and everyone will be invited,” he
said.
Mai Musodzi was born
Musodzi Chibhaga in 1885 under Chief Hwata in Mazowe, but was orphaned following
the 1896-1897 uprisings against the British colonialists. A niece to the spirit
medium Nehanda Nyakasikana, she was later baptised Elizabeth Maria at
Chishawasha in 1908 and married a Zambian British South African Police
sergeant, Frank Kashimbo Ayema, the following year.
After relocating to
Mbare, then known as Harare Township, she became involved in community
empowerment initiatives and charity work which benefited many women through an
organisation she founded, Harare African Women’s Club, in 1938.
In 1947, she was
awarded an MBE (Member of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire) and
was among guests invited to dine at the Government House with Queen Elizabeth
I. She died on July 21, 1952 and was buried at Pioneer Cemetery in Mbare.
Source-Newsday


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