An unimaginable
loss has happened. Our phenomenal intellectual pan
African giant on land issues, Professor Sam Moyo,
has died following injuries sustained during a terrible
car accident in New Delhi, India. We are in disbelief.
We are waiting for him to come home. We feel ripped
apart with pain.
We grew up following you in our townships. We nicknamed
you Sekuru 'Chimusoro', the one with the very big
head. All our parents wanted us to be exactly like
you. At the end of every school term, you would
come home with a report card full of number ones.
Your arms would be laden with trophies and certificates
for best student in this subject; outstanding record
in that.
Your mother, Gogo Mavis Moyo's face would beam with
enough joy to light up the whole continent. She
was a woman of her own accolades, a pioneer black
female broadcaster at a time when radio was segregated
by racism. But somehow your achievements made her
glow in the way that only a mother can do.
We always marveled at the shiny silver cups with
your name on them. Playfully, you would fill them
with cherry plum juice and serve us to drink along
with candy cakes. The pink icing would crease between
our fingers. Domestic chores, serving those around
you, never bothered you. You had such a deep sense
of the hospitality of food, and the power of sharing
drinks with those you loved, that we always felt
welcome to your side. Our great tree that bore so
much fruit. Yes we would laugh, but you would steer
us to talk about the thing that mattered most to
you; and even if we did not know it then, to us.
How to fully reclaim the land that was stolen by
the colonial forces.
Throughout your life, you carried your intellectual
smarts with so much ease. In your later years, when
your trophies had turned to degrees, you would seek
us out so we could sit in your seminars. At that
time I think you were at the Zimbabwe Institute
of Development Studies (ZIDS). Later on you moved
to SAPES and taught the SARIPS Masters Programme
with radical feminists like Dr Patricia Macfadden
you made our brains sweat. In the beginning we would
all look at each other unable to write down some
of the big words and theories you used. And yet
you persisted. Sharing your knowledge with us, crafting
an epistemology around land and agrarian rights.
Together you showed us why land was a critical resource
for women to have ownership and control over.
When we tried to call you Prof, you would smile
and say, 'vafanavangu, ndinonzi Sam - my youngsters,
I am just Sam.' It didn't matter that you had 'eaten
many books' as the saying used to go. You would
listen to our elementary theories, nurture us with
love and suggest, 'let's write a policy brief on
this subject. That's how we will change the world'.
You lent your brilliance to the environmental think
tank Zero, pulled us into the Senegal based Codesria
and introduced us to people who wore Dashiki shirts
as a form of political expression. People whose
papers you had photocopied for us to read. This
was before computers. It was the time of type-writers.
Your scrawl was impossible to decipher, but we knew
that if we didn't figure out your handwriting, there
would be trouble. You could not abide intellectual
laziness.
On Boodle Road, in Harare's Eastlea suburb you set
up the African Institute of Agrarian Studies (AIAS).
It was nothing short of a bold move. This was Zimbabwe
in the early 2000s when land invasions were at their
apex. Nothing could deter you. Not physical threats,
nor slurs to your name. And who can forget the raid
of your home office in Borrowdale. You put your
ubiquitous cigarette to your mouth and shock your
head. ' why did they have to mess my papers up?
I had order here'. I would look at the piles and
piles of papers you had and wonder what kind of
order you meant. Your office was a project for a
neat freak.
Last year, we danced until dawn in your front garden.
Your lawn groaned underfoot of our stampede. It
was your 60th birthday party. Food, music, friends
and land politics. The delicious chocolate cake
was a creative meme of your desk. Cellphone, books
on land with the spine carrying your name. And of
course your friends from all over the world filled
your yard. Or skype feed.
By your side was your sweetheart and partner, the
top human rights lawyer Beatrice Mtetwa. We marveled
at how possible it was for two wonderful, strong
and brilliant human beings to love each other so
much. It made us feel good to see you dancing. It
was as if no one else was around as you smiled at
each other and twirled each other to Hugh Masekela's
trumpet. Power couples that publicly show each other
affection and validation are so very rare in our
activist civil society worlds. We were hoping for
a huge international African wedding and had decided
we were going to be in the bridal party. I don't
know how we will comfort you Beatrice. I don't know
how we will comfort GogoMoyo. What will we do for
Sibongile and her sisters?
On the days I forgot to call to check on you, you
would ring. And demand our company. 'Is Nancy (Kachingwe)
around? Where is Saru? Let me make you Oxtail. Bring
your friends over'. You always offered your home
to us, wether you were there or not.
Thank you for giving us so much of you SekuruChimusoro.
SiyabongaMoyondizvo. We will forever carry you in
our hearts. Broken as they are by your untimely
and devastatingly painful death. Alone, so far away
from the homeland you fought so hard for.
November 23, 2015.
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