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Gifts for Mama PDF Print E-mail
Written by Sandra Mushi   
Tuesday, 10 November 2009

“Who would marry me if he finds out I have children?” she announced. “Sele is the one, mama.”
 “You are going to leave them here with me for good?”  I asked my first born Ashura as I pushed more firewood with my walking stick into the fire to make the small kitchen warmer. 

 “Of course I will come get them once I am settlled in marriage,” she answered as she looked picked a bone from her plate.  With one eye shut she peered through the cavity of the bone then sucked. 

I looked at my kifungua mimba as she she sucked the bone noisily with both her eyes shut.  Kassim was also the one until a month ago when he decided to leave Ashura for another woman.  He wanted to make sure that Ashura could have children before they got married, he didn’t want to end up with a barren wife.  At the end, he left Ashura with his proofs: two year old Zaituni and 14-month old Zukia.  Like any mother I wanted my daughter to get married. So with open arms I welcomed Zaituni and Zukia in my life.  I was looking forward to it, as the grand children children would add some vivacity into my rather quiet and drab life. 

I turned around and I looked at Zaituni and Zukia who were quietly sitting on a straw mat eatting their dinner.   Zaituni, the oldest, chewed as she gaily shooed away fowls who came close to the sinia of food they were sharing hoping for some crumbs.  A big red cock boldly jumped onto the metal tray and ran off with a lump of ugali, making both Zaituni and Zukia shrill with sudden fright. 

I did not hear from Ashura again until a year later.  She did not have the glow she had the last time she visited.  Neither Zaituni not Zukia recognized their mother.  On tow was another baby.  Zaituni walked around us in an anxious stroll.  A scrawny stray dog, who had become Zaituni’s companion and friend followed behind, sniffing the baby as he strolled by her.  The more Ashura tried to warm up to her daughters, the more they both cowered away.  With the baby, there was also five kilograms or rice, a tin of Kimbo cooking oil, five kilograms of feeding two mouths and now with another one added.  The dog sniffed the tin of oil then turned away.  With his tongue hanging out, he went to the straw mat where the baby was sitting and curled next to her. 

Looking at the scrawny dogs whose ribs were so visible that I could count them, I remembered the last time Ashura was here, I remembered the bone she sucked and wondered if the scrawny dog would have loved it too. 
 
"I  didn’t know I was expecting Kassim’s child when I met Sele, Mama.  He has left me.  And it will be difficult for me to take care of her while working in the city.” 

Again I welcomed little Zuhura in the bed I now shared with Zaituni and Zukia.  That night I looked up to the skies and prayed to God - thanking Him for the food and the new grand daughter that arrived in my house that day.   

After almost three years of having not seen my second born daughter, Mwanaidi, she visited me unannounced bearing gifts.  I had never received so many gifts before - not from any of my seven children.  Instead of small bags, she had brought whole sacks of food - maize flour, rice, beans, millet, sugar, cooking oil, dried sardines, peanuts and clothes.  Lunch that day was rice, beans and kisamvu cha karanga.  The kisamvu was smooth and thick as Mwanaidi had pounded the cassava leaves and peanuts well.   That night I looked up to the skies and prayed to God - thanking Him for the food and the long lost daughter that arrived in my house that day - and the good man who was providing for her.   

The gifts kept coming and I kept looking up to the skies and prayed to God - thanking Him for all the wonderful gifts. As luck would have it the gifts stopped coming just as suddenly as they had started pouring in.  Mwanaidi was brought back home bundled up and as skinny as a stick.  With her, there were four other grand children, who I had not even known about.    
 
“He died Mama, and his family threatened to kill me, saying I killed him,” she had cried.  “They even refused to take care of his children!  I know it’s the wife.  She hated me.” 

Jamila my fourth born visited also after a long time with a mzungu.  Her mzungu had hair as white as cotton wool and the most wrinkled skin I had ever seen.  Silently I wondered what Jamila saw in such an old man, but the pile of gifts from them always kept me quiet.  This one would be different I told myself - afterall he is a mzungu.  I knew we would be well taken care of.  That night I looked up to the skies and prayed to God - thanking Him for the mzungu who would make sure that we never went hungry.   

That Saturday afternoon, the weekly bus from the city did not drop off sacks of food as usual, instead it was Jamila who got off in tears, weak and with horrible rashes - with two children behind her  Her neck bones stood out so much, reminding me of Zaituni’s scrawny dog. 

"He provided well financially, but he couldn’t provide, erm,” she stammered as she tried to explain, “you know, erm, physically.  I have needs too, mama.  I am young and viral, mama.
 
After he kicked me kicked me out, I went to live with Uno, my other boyfriend.  But, but, I didn’t know he was sick, mama.” 

With two sick daughters, nine grandchildren and no income - that night I looked up the skies and asked God if there was no end to this. 

Sandra Mushi
About the author:
Sandra Mushi is a writer based in Dar es Salaam. She publishes the blog at SaHaRa Soul Food . Her first book, a collection of poems, The Rhythm of My Rhyme is available in selected stores, readers can get in touch with the editors for further details on where to buy it.




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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 10 November 2009 )
 
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