Dr Vimbai Gukwe Chivaura (picture sourced from the Internet) |
I
got word of Dr Chivaura’s passing from my friend, Greatman, and it was quite a
shock since I hadn’t heard of his illness. Not that it would have been easy to
hear of it given that I’m so far away from home.
I
had a long-standing relationship with Dr Chivaura dating back to 1999 when I
started my 1st year at the University of Zimbabwe (UZ) to the time
that I produced a Current Affairs programme he participated in at the Zimbabwe
Broadcasting Corporation. At UZ, as soon as people who had done literature
learned I was going also going to take the subject, they would immediately
start talking about Chivaura, saying things like, “Uchamuona hako,
muchanzwirira!” and things like that. I eventually met him, and oh boy, did we
get an earful! He was quite charismatic. He’s not the type of person you would
forget easily. Following his passing, I was chatting to former classmates, and
everyone still had something they remembered him saying, unlike some lecturers
who we have to scratch heads for before we can remember something they said, or
even their names. It is for this reason that I decided to write something in
memory of Dr Vimbai Chivaura. I felt he couldn’t just go like that. Something
has to be written. I know there will be quite a few obituaries in his name,
many of them unwritten.
For
the general Zimbabwean populace, Dr Chivaura’s claim to fame were his
unapologetic views on the ruling Zanu PF, opposition MDC, and the land reform
programme. I remember a day that he broached the land reform programme during a
lecture. One guy said it would have been a good concept if it had been done
systematically. “Systematically?” he asked, wide eyed. “If you had spent two weeks
without eating sadza and it was suddenly presented to you, would you eat it
systematically? Wouldn’t you just attack it?” he said.
Dr
Chivaura never really stuck to formal lecturing. He liked chatting and picking
people’s brains on topical issues. I don’t remember him for specific set books,
but for his views and for prompting students to think critically about the
world around them. During one of his lectures, he started talking about how
fast men were becoming irrelevant in women’s lives. “In the West, penises are
being sold over the counter. You just go and pick the one you want wonozvibaya
zvako wega!” he said.
He liked stimulating debate without really
imposing his strong views on anyone. He stood his ground, you would never be
left confused about how he felt about anything, yet he listened attentively to
everyone’s point of view. The debates were almost on an equal footing. It is
probably for this reason that students still loved him and liked to listen to
his hilarious interpretation of the country’s issues. Many people are hated for
their divergent views. It wasn’t usually the case with Dr Chivaura and his
students, but he wasn’t loved too much on the streets by people who watched him
on TV.
Without
attempting to contaminate his memory, I will be honest and mention that Dr
Chivaura was a bit of a flirt. At some point I needed help with my postgrad
project and my co-coordinator referred me to Dr Chivaura. As I got into his
office, he looked at me with his trademark smile and said, “Hauchionaka! Ndiwe
chaiye musikana wandinoda kuendesa kuna amai vangu!” It was an awkward moment
for me because I thought he was really old. And I was right! When he passed, I
got to know that he was just a year my father’s junior. Another time, I had to
see him again for the said project, and after the greetings, he said, “Chichema
tinzwe ndigochemawo,” which for me was laden with innuendos. I don’t know if he
was really hitting on me or was just enjoying playing with words as he was a
poet, but it was a little weird for me. I didn’t take him seriously and he,
fortunately, never said anything suggestive again.
Dr
Chivaura was also quite a gossip. One day he saw me chatting to a friendly
literature lecturer who people said was gay. He called me later and said, “I
saw you talk to ******. Unoziva here kuti ingochani?” I must have mumbled
something because I was horrified and wasn’t sure how to respond. He was
undaunted and said, “Unoda kuziva here kuti ngochani yake ndiyani?” Before I
could affirm my willingness to know, he came closer and hissed in my ear,
“Ndi********!” Only Dr Chivaura would pull a stunt like that.
I
remember meeting him near Zesa offices just after I had delivered my first
child. He had seen me pregnant prior to that, so he said congratulations and
went on to tell me he had also got a baby at around the same time as I
delivered. I was a little bewildered as
I was of the opinion that he was at an age where he was supposed to be
receiving grandchildren, not procreating. But who am I to tell people when to
stop having babies? Right now, I just feel really sorry for that child he told
me about, his siblings, and their mother. He must be close to 10 years of age
now, and he just lost a father with a very strong personality. I was honoured
to have come into contact with Dr Vimbai Chivaura, and I feel sorry for literature
students at UZ who will just have to content with tales about him and not be
able to meet this enigma. May his soul rest in eternal peace.
** names withheld because of the sensitivity of the allegations
** names withheld because of the sensitivity of the allegations
Here
is how some of my classmates remember him:
Greatman:
Chivaura for me was one of the elite that pretended to be pro-African, yet
their lifestyles spoke everything Western. He was obsessed with talking about
African drums and stuff. I, however, liked his informal and casual approach to
a lecture room situation.
Za:
Chivaura
was a character and a half. He said he was very proud to be a black man because
black men, including himself, were handsome whichever way you looked at them. He
was against the bible because he said it was the white man’s way of colonizing
the black man’s mind. I clearly remember him challenging the authenticity of
the biblical creation. He said that in the bible, it is written that when Cain
slew Abel he was banished to the land of Nod, and when he got there he married.
So he said, “And where did the land of Nod and its people come from since the
first people were Adam and Eve, Cain’s parents?”
Ngoni:
I enjoyed his lectures a lot. No student failed his course because he spent the
whole period talking about Chennels and Musaemura, then towards the end he
would just dish handouts. If you read the handout, that would be the exams kkk
Quite a read.I enjoyed it esp the part which says you don't remember the literature books of his course. There were no set books mu course yake but I don't remember the content either kkkk
ReplyDeleteHis course was easy to pass :)
ReplyDelete