Monday 17 August 2015

Mpumalanga Accident

Traffic Jam on the Joburg-Mpumalanga highway after the accident

Yesterday I passed by the scene of a really bad pileup in Mpumalanga where 4 people lost their lives. A driver caused the accident after making a U-turn on the highway. One reckless driver and 4 people lost their lives. I was so disturbed I struggled to sleep. Hundreds, if not thousands, more were affected because traffic flow was delayed by quite a few hours. Road regulations were not made to piss us off; they’re for our own safety. Children get orphaned, spouses are widowed, parents lose their children because of what look like minor violations of these regulations. I continue to thank God every time I get home safely from any outing. There's so much that can go wrong.  Be safe on the roads. 
The whirlwind that formed around the accident scene

Wednesday 12 August 2015

Chicken salad and Strawberry Smoothie with Delisile

Chicken salad
 Chicken salad is any salad that counts chicken as a main ingredient. Not only is it easy to make, it is delicious and healthy too as it makes use of a variety of vegetables. It is a no-fuss way of using up leftovers to prepare a composed meal. Chicken salad is good virtually any time of the year, for breakfast, lunch, or dinner. Typically it is made with leftover chicken. It may also refer to a garden salad with fried, grilled, or roasted chicken cut up on top.
The one featured today, prepared by Delisile Mavimbela from Thyme @ The Hub, made use of fried chicken strips seasoned with BBQ spice. The coffee shop is run by Pick 'n Pay Supermarket. 
Increasingly, more and more people are cutting down on grains. In that regard, chicken salad can be enjoyed as it is, without a starch. However, for those that don’t get satisfied without a bit of starch in their meal, a more filling alternative would be to serve it in a sandwich (ideally whole-wheat), pita or wrapped in a tortilla. Common ingredients for the salad may include mayonnaise, hard-boiled egg, celery, onion, pepper, grapes and nuts. In place of chicken, tuna and/or salmon can be utilised. If avocados are not in season, mango chunks and cashew nuts can do the trick. Prawns and calamari are also good alternatives for seafood lovers.

INGREDIENTS (to serve 1)
1 breast fillet
Lettuce
Olives
Feta cheese
1 tomato
1 onion
1 cucumber
1 small avocado

METHOD:
  • ·         Cut the lettuce evenly with a knife and spread it on a plate.
  • ·         Add a layer of sliced tomatoes on top of the lettuce.
  • ·         Add the chicken strips, carefully spreading them equally around the plate.
  • ·         Place slices of avocado on top of the chicken strips.
  • ·         Add olives and feta cheese evenly on the plate.
  • ·         Serve with your favourite dressing.


STRAWBERRY SMOOTHIE
As with the chicken salad, there are no hard and fast rules for making a smoothie. Any two seasonal fruits, for instance banana and pineapple, or kiwi and pineapple can be used. However, strawberry and banana remain the firm favourite for most. One point to note is that at the peak of the season, fruits are sweeter that they would be towards the end.  This will determine the sweetness of the smoothie.

Strawberry Smoothie
INGREDIENTS
1 banana
4 or 5 strawberries, depending on size
Lemon sorbet
Plain yoghurt
Blocks of ice
Vanilla ice cream, optional

METHOD
  • ·         Peel the banana and chop it into smaller pieces.
  • ·         Combine banana and strawberries and blitz in a blender.
  • ·         Add ice cream or ice blocks.
  • ·         In a blender, combine strawberries, chopped bananas, yoghurt, vanilla ice cream, and ice blocks.
  • ·         When the mixture is properly blended, serve immediately.



ABOUT THE CHEF
Delisile Mavimbela
Delisile Mavimbela has been working at Thyme @ The Hub from 2012, having moved from Matsapha. She is very passionate about preparing healthy meals that boost the immune system. Delisile loves preparing the chicken salad for her customers not only because of its healthy properties, but also because the ingredients are affordable and accessible to everyone. “Anyone can make their version of chicken salad, but ours is the best,” she said. The colourful salad she prepared prompted one woman to immediately change her order, opting for the salad. Delisile usually does not like to use artificial spices when she cooks. She prefers vegetables in their natural state. She is available on 7604 3169.

*Published in Times of Swaziland




Marimba Chicken Wings and Sweet Potato Dessert

I had the pleasure of visiting Asante Guesthouse in Manzini, where I met the most enthusiastic chef in the world, Master Mtsetfwa. He made some delicious wings whose aroma was so seductive I couldn't wait to get my hands on them. He also made a delectable sweet potato dessert, which, because of its richness, I only ate a little. I'll definitely use his recipes to wow my guests one day. 

  
Marimba wings
Ingredients

Wings
2 cloves garlic, crushed
2 tablespoons Portuguese chicken spice
1 tablespoon lemon juice
2 tablespoons tomato sauce
1 tot white wine
Chilli, optional

Sweet potatoes (for the chips)








Spicing the wings
Method


  • Coat chicken in spice
  • Brown in hot oil
  • *oil must be hot so as not to wash the spice off the chicken
  • Add garlic
  • Add lemon juice
  • You can add chilli at this stage
  • Add tomato sauce, then ginger
  • Remove from the stove and finish off in the microwave.



Dessert ingredients

1 cup fresh cream
Sweet Potato Dessert
Half cup raisins
Half cup condensed milk
3 medium sweet potatoes

Method


  • Boil sweet potatoes
  • Mash them until smooth and lump-free
  • Blend the cream to ensure that it sets
  • Mix cream, sweet potatoes and condensed milk
  • Add raisins, leaving a few for garnishing, and mix again until they are evenly distributed in the mixture
  • Put the mixture in individual bowls and garnish with raisins, strawberries and mint.

 About the Chef

Chef Master Mtsetfwa
Chef Master Mtsetfwa has been cooking at Asante Guesthouse for the past two years even though he has been cooking for about three and half years now. He said his love for cooking came from performing chores for his mother in the kitchen. When he discovered that he could actually cook, he decided to take up cooking as a profession. Chef Master is juggling many balls all at once: he is working, studying Hospitality Management, and teaching part-time at Stan Catering. He’s available at Asante Guesthouse, Manzini on +268 2505 3556.


*Published in Times of Swaziland May 22, 2015




Monday 10 August 2015

The wonder that is childbirth...

 My friend Dee is in the maternity ward right now, waiting to be induced before she welcomes her second baby in the world. She is in Harare and I’m keeping her company from Manzini via whatsapp. Lucky fish! When I was waiting to be induced in 2006, there was no whatsapp. I was however fortunate to have my mother and husband sitting with me in the ward, waiting for my gynaecologist, Dr Nyaumwe to come.
The labour ward is a traumatic place to find one. Women were screaming their heads of and it really scared the living day out of me. I wondered if I would also scream in the same way or if I would be braver. My mother, while sitting next to my husband, made the grave mistake of telling one of the screamers to be brave. In very colourful language, the woman told mum how sex was beautiful yet its rewards were painful. That was a very awkward moment.
Dee has been giving me blow by blow accounts of what she’s witnessing in the ward:

The noise which is here from other women is so traumatizing. God help me.

 Sha the people who are in labour now were induced in the morning. One has justdelivered amidst ear-deafening screams, the other has just been wheeled off to the delivery room. There’s one left and she’s performing like nobody’s business. 

It’s funny, people scream and wail but no tears come out. I got here while pain free so I’m taking in everything around me.
 There is one woman opening her legs so much that I don’t know where to look. I pray I don’t do that. I understand why some people opt for C-section now …to maintain dignity.

 A nurse has come to see the woman opening her legs and said, “iii vasikana, regai kushamisa shamisa zvinhu zvenyu” 

That woman who was opening her legs is now hitting everything she can lay her hands on and throwing herself on the floor, kicking things…the nurses are not amused 
When I went to deliver my son, I carried my bible with me and when the women were screaming their heads off, I read them bible verses that I thought would help them bear the pain better. I also offered to make tea for them and had to stop when one of them snapped at me and told me to mind my own business. What a meanie, I thought.  I had no idea what kind of pain it was because I had never been through it and the doctor hadn’t induced me yet. When it eventually came, I literally lost my mind. I actually don’t even remember anything that happened during the time that I was in pain, but I know I did not scream. So I was sharing this with Dee and she said she also didn’t scream. Some people just aren’t screamers and choose to keep in gangsta, like me J.
At some point during the chat I started to feel very emotional, knowing that while I was watching Robbie Williams and The Lighthouse Family on VH1, someplace else there were people in agony giving birth to future ministers, teachers, musicians, prostitutes or thieves. Unfortunately you can never tell how your child will turn out when you give birth. All you can do is bath in the glory of having brought someone into the world. It took me back to the time when I was doing court-reporting in Joburg. Sometimes there would this thug standing accused of incredibly atrocious crimes. The mother, who never missed any of his appearances, would be sitting in the gallery, teary-eyed and blowing kisses to her beloved son. Some mothers would bring cigarettes for their sons who committed gruesome murders so that they could use them to buy favours in jail and stay safe. It didn’t matter what they had done, they would still be someone’s precious baby. Dee commented how some mothers actually got angry at the offended for having their children arrested.
Motherhood is precious, but can also be heartbreaking. Everybody who gives birth to a loved baby has high hopes for it; visitors come and say prayers for the baby to have a blessed life. But in some cases, the babies will disappoint as they grow, whether by choice or inadvertently. Some do make their parents proud and make them cry for joy, like Chad Le Clos, Beyoncé and other less celebrated former babies that do well in life. And then there the opposites, but they won’t show their true colours at birth, so they allow you to rejoice too. At that priceless moment when you hold your fragile bundle of joy, flooded with tenderness, you never think you will have to deal with looking for bail money, or negotiate with aggrieved women whose husbands your daughter would have “snatched”, or the heartbreak of sitting in a doctor’s room and be told that your child is autistic L. At that moment when you hold a newborn baby, there’s no tomorrow, or day after tomorrow. You just live in the moment, praising the Lord for a wonderful gift that many yearn for and might never receive. You never imagine that one day you could be on your knees asking the Lord, “Why, Lord, oh why….?”

Discussion on high suicide rate in Swaziland


Swaziland has a very high suicide rate. According to statistics released by the Royal Swaziland Police, 160 people committed suicide from January 2014 to January 2015. Of these, 126 were men. One hundred and sixty people in 12 months effectively mean about 13 people commit suicide in a month, and that’s a staggering figure. One of my friends, a beautiful woman called Siphelele Mngomezulu, is a Psychotherapist. I had wide-ranging discussion with her regarding why Swazis commit suicide at such an extensive scale, whether they are receptive to counselling and what can be done to curb this scourge, among other things. She’s a woman of many words, but an absolute pleasure to listen to. Please note that she spoke in her personal capacity, not on behalf of the organisation she works for. This is what she said:  

The high suicide rate in Swaziland is mainly cause by socio-economic issues, broken families, and lack of support in the family, but mainly it’s a result of financial meltdowns. People are not coping with finances, and then they commit suicide. Suicides also have a lot to do with relationship breakdown. You find that when women commit suicide, usually their husbands have cheated or left, and there’s no more money for school fees and other expenses.
HIV is also a major factor leading to depression which in turn leads to suicide. People are struggling to accept suicide as just a chronic ailment that you can live with. Right now our system is such that we initiate counseling for everyone that comes to the hospital. On arrival you are told to test. If as health workers we say, “We want to know your status before we treat you,” we are practically saying test or you won’t be treated. It doesn’t necessarily translate to readiness for testing for the patients. The comebacks are terrible. We get a lot of psychosis; people are failing to accept because they were not ready in the first place, mental meltdowns.  People will think, I went to the hospital with stomach problem and I came back HIV positive, how do I even begin to tell my husband. Doctors are increasingly resistant to treating people whose status they don’t know because they don’t want to treat the symptoms and instead of the source.
HIV is donor-funded. First they came with “voluntary counseling”, now we have provider-initiated HIV counseling. How do you say no to someone you need services from? When someone declines to get tested, ideally we should say it’s OK, but now the doctor will start explaining to you why it’s important for you to test and will demand the HIV results. So ready or not, the patient has to test. We cater for low to medium earning people who can’t afford to walk away from our institutions where very little is charged, R20 for consultation and treatment. Some, however, will accept that the test was a push in the right direction because they will get the right treatment and engage in more responsible behaviour.
It goes back to cope under difficult or new situations.
Rarely, you also get suicide when there’s abuse in the family, for instance children that are being abused by parents or teachers. Women in relationship ages like 17 – 40 have a lot of problems with their husbands and they feel they have to die as a result of those problems. Very few women commit suicide for financial reasons. They sometimes come for counseling because of stress and headaches, but seldom want to kill themselves for that. The majority of suicides are over relationships that break down, and most of them breakdown because there’s no money and they are not coping with the pressure. So the reasons are interlinked, somehow. They all have an effect on the other.
For men it’s usually because of financial pressures. They’ll think, “This woman cheated on me because I don’t have a job, I have so many debts and am not meeting family expectations.” I have also noticed there is a trend, there’s a season for a reason. In January we get a lot of attempted suicides because of school fees issues, finances are bad after the festive season. At some point in March you get a lot of school-leavers that have not done well in matric and then attempt suicides. Of course relationship-related suicides are all year round. But I find in the majority of cases, it’s a cry for attention more than a genuine wish to die, or fear of how will I be received having failed, more than wanting to die. If I’ve cheated and my husband has caught on, I’ll attempt suicide and go and lie on a bed somewhere while a social worker harmonises the situation, whereas if I had just gone home, the husband would have probably just picked up a sjambok, run after me and tell me to pack my bags and go. So I’m going to pretend I want to die. This is also evident in the types of methods people use to try and commit suicide. They’ll take Blue Death, for crying out loud it doesn’t even kill ants, how is it going to kill you, a whole human being? They’ll take an OD of a few Panados. Those who really want to die go for the weevil tablet, try to hang themselves, take very strong pesticides. Those who use the very small things, I always think they don’t really want to die.
Siphelele Mngomezulu: Psychotherapist
During counseling sessions, they want to call in the husband and harmonise the situation. They are not content with just being counseled and changing their mindset. The women are determined, “No! I want to come here, then you’re going to call my husband and make it a big issue and sit us down. And you’re going to make us ok. That’s what I want!” They feel getting counseling and advice on how to make their lives better isn’t enough. The man will say, “I want my wife here. I want you to tell her to forgive me, to tell her that I tried to kill myself because I love her.”
In situations where the woman tries to commit suicide because the husband is having an extra marital affair, she just wants to hear him on the hot seat saying, “I’m sorry, I’ll repent, I’ll make things better, I love you.” But two weeks down the line she’s back again after another suicide attempt because the husband is still not back. Sho it’s like forcing someone to change. They won’t change. You need to change your mindset. You need to be the one that’s better equipped to deal with it, than try to kill yourself, that’s my theory. Why must I die when I’m not in the wrong? You cheat, I die? How does it work? Why can’t I just move and start again? Most of the time we have women saying, if I move I don’t have anywhere to go, I can’t afford rent, I’m not working…” – socio-economic  factors linking again to relationship breakdowns. Root cause was the meltdown. The person will be attached and will say, “You took me out of school, I don’t have a qualification, you made me your wife, I have four children with you now, where must I go, so I’d rather die.”
These are even better than boyfriend and girlfriend scenarios.  A lot of girls try to kill themselves because their boyfriends are with someone else. Sometimes it’s about school fees. I know a child who went to pay fees at the bank. On her way back she lost the deposit slip and was afraid of the parents hitting her. She kept quiet. At exam time she was told she couldn’t write as she hadn’t paid. They couldn’t trace the money from the bank. She attempted suicide because she couldn’t face telling her parents that you’ve paid fees for the whole year and I’m not going to write exams because I lost the deposit slip. She really didn’t want to die. She just wanted someone to go and break the news to her father and make her look like the victim.
We live in a society that glorifies suicides. Our media sells with negative reporting, for some reason. Headlines like “Woman and man found naked doing witchcraft” get all the attention, but if a group of women stands up and goes to the rural areas to donate blankets, no-one wants to cover them. Reporters don’t want to cover you for doing good. They want to cover you for bad. Suicide is glorified. Also, in society when someone commits suicide, we talk about it. It becomes such an issue. And if we talk over and over about, it makes an impression on immature mind.  Suicides are then mimicked. Sometimes our children just wants to be centre of attention for a while, they don’t really know what they’re doing or why they’re doing it. A child committed suicide at a primary school and it was widely spoken about at the school. During that period I got a lot of children from that same school attempting suicide. Do you even know what it feels like to die? No. did you really want to die? No. Do you know where you go when you die? No. In about 8 out of 10 cases of children attempting suicide, there is someone known to them who committed suicide.
People that commit suicide might lose interest in things that they previously liked, suffer from lack of sleep, tiredness, and isolate themselves from other people. Some will become tearful with constant crying and general depression. But when you dig into a person’s problem and find the common trends of people who wanted to die but didn’t die, they have this underlying depressing issue, like, “I’m failing to come to terms with the fact that my son is autistic.” That’s real, they really wanna die because you have this feeling of not being a perfect mom, there’s turmoil in your soul. But some people that commit suicide are people that you sit down with and chat, and find tomorrow they’ve committed suicide. It’s not real, it’s a cry for attention, you don’t really wanna die. It’s difficult to pick up signs from a person who is doing it to get attention, because usually the signs just aren’t there. They think, “I might not die, I don’t wanna die, so what can I take to make me almost dead but not dead.” That’s when you get your Panado overdose, who’s gonna die from Panado? And they make sure they do it when they know they will be found before they die, like around the time the husband comes home from work. People that really want to commit suicide will send people away, they’ll be found dead for hours. They will create an environment that is conducive for committing suicide.
These methods also help us to assess the realness of the urge to really wanna die, because we could be spending a lot of time on counseling for people who don’t really need it. They just want your intervention to harmonise the situation they are in.  We spend a lot of time on those that clearly really want to die. Those that shout, “I’ll kill myself, I’ll kill myself, stop me before I do!” usually don’t really want to die but it is important not to ignore them. They should still be helped with whatever is making them even want to talk about suicide before they try. If you ignore them, they’ll attempt to take their lives to get attention and they could actually die. Even though we think it’s a cry for attention, we still don’t take it lightly. It’s only called attempted suicide if you survive. If you succeed, it’s suicide! You’re gone and we’ll never have answers. We’re left with questions and thinking if only I’d listened, if only I’d helped when she said it. Suicide is like a mental block and the only solution that stands is suicide. Those that commit suicide or try to do so for attention don’t get that. They deliberately go at it. That is the difference between someone who is suicidal and one who does it for attention. Those that keep things to themselves are really dangerous. Those are the ones you wake up to find dead with a packet of weevil tablets by their side.
That person, who is suicidal in more cases than one, suffers from a mental illness like depression, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, or Attention Deficit Disorder, and at some point their brain shuts down. There is a relationship between suicide and mental illness. Those that attempt suicide for attention don’t have that, and during psychotherapy you discover that you can’t treat it because it’s not there in the first place, they just want your intervention.
I believe we all are mentally ill to a certain extent. I always say it’s a thin line between sanity and insanity. From time to time we cross over to insanity and then we cross back to sanity, just that some people don’t have the opportunity to come back. When they go, they go for good. And if you allow emotions, feelings, depression,  and situations to lead you to insanity too many times too much, you don’t have an accepting spirit, you don’t talk about things, you’re not going out there to get help, chances of crossing and not coming back are very high. People with addictive behaviour cope with situations in different ways. Some drink alcohol, in turn they become alcoholics because they’ve allowed problems to push them to the other side and have not come back from time to time to check if they’re still OK. So yes, our brains do get to a point where we do things that we don’t understand, that we wouldn’t do under normal circumstances. We should be able to trace back and say, “This is where it came from, this is the source,” and you should be able to deal with the source, not the symptom. Like if it pushes you to club a lot, understand why you’re clubbing, what’s pushing you away from your home so much. Deal with the root cause because you can’t solve clubbing for as long as the problem at home is still there. Set standards for yourself and keep checking if what you are doing is still normal.
People have a lot of mental illnesses, lots and lots and lots that go unnoticed. I was telling people the other day that so many people are functioning normally yet not so normally. We put it down to them having an attitude problem or taking out their stress on others at work. It’s a mental challenge and the only way to curb it is to confront the source. As long as you don’t solve it, it will eventually surface as abnormal behaviour.
Counseling helps a lot but people only come when they are referred. It’s a guided conversation that helps you think out of the box, someone talks to you without judging you, and helps you look at your situation from a different angle. Unfortunately Swazis are not receptive to counseling. They believe in tibi tendlu – you don’t air your dirty linen in public. You keep it to yourself. If my wife is cheating, I can’t go and talk to someone about it, I’m going to be mocked. And they don’t believe in telling their problems to a stranger or to each other. It makes it worse that counseling is a new profession in the African context and it’s mainly practiced by younger people. If an old man walked in and found me in a chair, he’d say, “What can you tell me about life, what do you know?” At the moment people are almost being forced to come for counseling, “Your BP is uncontrollably high, go for counseling.” If you ask them to come back again in a week for another session, they never do.  Because of limited resources, our follow-up system is almost non-existent. If you’re lost to follow-up, you’re lost.
Counselling works best when it’s voluntary. To force something down someone’s throat doesn’t mean they will swallow. We still leave people to exercise the freedom of choice in that regard, so that we know whatever advice or guidance we give will be received, it will be used and it will help.
Life generally presents a new situation every day. How do you handle it? You can pick up a child’s coping abilities from an early age. When you say, “No you can’t have sweets,” does your child throw a tantrum, does he cry, does he accept it? Like when I was about to have my baby, my mother said you can’t go through labour, you have to get an elective C-section. You don’t deal well with pain, taking out a tooth is a mission, labour will make you lose your mind. Lack of knowledge makes us miss a whole lot in understanding those around us. You know when you hit your child, does he sulk for a week, do they feel inadequate? If they do, then you know when you say to that child, “Ngifuna ukukushaya wena (I want to hit you) when you come back from school,” they might go and not come back because they are afraid. You should find ways of punishing your child that will not push them over the edge. Sometimes we push people around us over the edge because we don’t take time to understand each other.
Sometimes people don’t know that the walls are caving in on them until it’s too late. Others around them also don’t realise it until it’s too late. We hardly do mental education in schools. We need to educate parents and teachers on being observant of their children. You know there are children who, when the teacher says, “Who was making noise, I going to give you all three strokes,” they could wet their pants in fear. That is genuine. You don’t just wet your pants. To say to a child like that, “Tomorrow, I’ll get you,” that child you have put in suspense for the whole day and night won’t sleep nor eat. If that child has heard of suicide or knows how to commit suicide, won’t they try it before the next day? People need to be taught how to look out for the signs and know how far you can go with whom. We take things lightly and want to push people, keep pushing people, for what?

Previously counselors were found at the psychiatric hospital, so people have not come to terms with that. People still associate counseling with mental illness which is still discriminated against in our communities. The Ministry of Education needs to have counselors in schools in order to nip the problem in the bud. 

Related:

Thursday 6 August 2015

Robbing people in the name of Jesus

I’m very disturbed by the conspicuous consumption I see in the church leaders of today. It appears worshipping God or becoming a pastor has less to do with having a calling and more to do with having a clearly thought out business plan to hoodwink people using the bible. Gone are the days when people went to church to be spiritually enriched. Now they just go to be impoverished and spiritually tormented by demands for monetary contributions with promises of blessings if they give more. Most Christians don’t take time to read the bible by themselves and rely more on their pastors to interpret the bible for them. As a result, they become so terrified of God punishing them if they don’t give “to the church”. Who really is the church? I thought “the church” was the congregation, but pastors are the only ones benefitting from the hard-earned cash of the flock they are supposed to lead. They are wolves in pastors clothing, preying on the sheep that follow them blindly.
I’ve had several conversations with my friends regarding the issue of supporting the church financially, and some of their views are below. Some feel they should continue giving because the bible states that they should do so, others are more cautious. There are indeed verses in the bible that encourage people to support the church, but I know they don’t say the pastor should become a fat cat at the expense of the congregants. Particular stories that are abused include the one of the poor widow who gave everything she had to the temple (Mark 12:41-44), as well as the one about Ananias and Sapphira (Acts 5: 1-11).
Pastors are cruising in top of the range vehicles while their congregants remain without two cents to rub together to support these opulent lifestyles. I remember a lot of things that have turned me into the bitter Christian I am today. I remember tithing seasons at the Methodist church I grew up in. Some people would completely stop coming to church because of the onslaught that was unleashed on those that dared not give a tenth of their earnings to the Lord. I also remember how a District Superintendent had a vehicle bought for him using church funds to enable him to supervise the churches in his constituency better. However, as he drove to church on Sunday mornings, he would wave at some of the people who contributed these funds as they trudged to church with their dusty shoes, never offering them a lift. Word on the church benches was that he even used the vehicle to go to Chiadzwa to illegally procure diamonds for his own (further) enrichment.
I also remember a time when the church hall had to be extended as the congregation had grown bigger and late comers had to listen to the sermon from the windows while standing outside. My father was responsible for fundraising for the project. He stays in a small town without a lot of industrial work, so the majority of the inhabitants are poor. But then again, even those in the big cities of Zimbabwe are also poor. Anyway, the project hit a snag when it was time to roof the hall. My poor father had become extremely unpopular for standing in front of the church requesting donations for the roof. The rainy season was fast approaching and the hall still had no roof. People would carry umbrellas to church to protect themselves from the elements.
Along with the rainy season came the pastor’s welcome party, and church protocol demanded that it was to be grandly commemorated, with the good shepherd being showered with gifts. This was despite the fact that the pastor was coming back to the church for his second term. He still had to be re-welcomed. People would dig deep into their shallow pockets to ensure they showed their allegiance. Section leaders stalked those who hadn’t made contributions for the big party, poverty was not an excuse.
My father was there again in front of the church before the grandiose event. He requested that the celebrations be postponed until the church roof was up. There was a huge brouhaha, instigated by none other than the reverend himself and supported by his henchmen and women. The reverend (with nothing to be revered about him as far as I was concerned) told my father that he was out of line trying to change church rules. He said the church would be in trouble if the headquarters heard that the party had been postponed, it had to be done at the stipulated time. Really? What would they have done, charge the pastor with misdemeanour and send him to hell for not receiving his gifts? The pastor’s friends looked at father like he was the devil in their midst. At the end of the service, people were huddled with the pastor, whispering, reassuring him the party would happen, and giving my father dark looks. I feared for his life and didn’t rule out an assassination attempt. In the end, the party went ahead and my father had to contribute to it too as all eyes were on him, wanting to see if he would be the anti-pastor.
I also haven’t forgotten the birthday parties held for pastors and their wives, with bibles pointed to the heads of poor congregants and mantras like, “give and you shall receive” being chanted ad nauseam. People would be forced to throw lavish parties for church leaders but had to contend with their kids singing Happy birthday to you when their own birthdays came.
My policy is that if I have money, I would honestly rather give it to the needy, not line pastors’ pockets. I doubt that God would judge me for that. I asked the Christians in my circle for their sentiments around the issue of tithing or giving to the church and their responses are as follows:

Dad: Partly we are happy when the monies we give to the church go towards pastoral support and are used to maintain the church hall and other necessities. But we grumble when we are made to fund the birthdays of pastor and his wife and that of the District Superintendent and to have to welcome pastor and DS despite being with them for more than two years.

Mainini Tatenda: It is biblical to give so that you receive and I think it’s the same principle anywhere else. It’s important for us to get preachings on tithing etc. as much as we learn about marriage and praying. It is now a personal decision on whether one should tithe or not. I have heard some preachings on giving first fruit and harvest. Because I have not totally understood it, I have not given any of these. Until I do have some idea, then I will participate…so more preaching on them is required for me. As for giving to pastors, I think it’s also biblical and it’s up to one to do so. Apparently some people have been blessed through it. Our giving should be well-rounded though, and remember relatives and neighbours who need giving too. At my church we are given a financial report that shows how much went in and expenses etc.

Sihle: I don’t tithe because I haven’t seen anywhere in the New Testament where I am required to do so. There is nowhere where Jesus said I should tithe. I understand that it was a practice in the Old Testament and all the other stuff that they used to do like those sacrifices. What I don’t understand or have a problem with is how everything else is done away with and people find it convenient to choose tithing. My argument is if people want to go by the book, then let’s not be selective. We are now in a new dispensation with the birth and death of Christ. Why do we go to church on Sunday when the word clearly says we should observe Sabbath? I do go by what the New Testament says that I should not give under compulsion and that I do where I feel led to do. I also don’t seed because there’s no biblical reference to it. Where in the bible does it say for you to receive your blessing you need to have sown a seed? My question is what happens to someone who doesn’t have money? Are we saying because they don’t have then they don’t deserve blessings? As for pastors’ birthdays, I have not time for that. The main problem is us the congregants who take our pastors as gods. But that issue is most prevalent in Pentecostals because they were formed by individuals, unlike the main line churches which don’t belong to a particular person.

Erica: I am a Christian and I follow the bible. I like sermons on tithing because they are guidelines from the bible. Other givings like birthdays, welcomes etc I give willingly depending on availability of funds and budget and I give knowing that I’m giving God’s messenger. Whatever I give, I’m happy as long as it’s being used in the church to worship the Lord. Even if the money is used to buy bacon (a delicacy for most Zimbabweans) so be it. What I know is I would have done my part.

Auntie Lillian: Tithing is God’s mandate. Everyone must give a tithe. The good thing about tithes is they are not compulsory, you just give a tenth. Sermons on giving and tithing are uplifting depending on what you think the bible says. The biggest issue is on the birthdays. People’s contributions or what they should buy are dictated to them. Sections are told how much to pay towards these birthdays even though some people cannot afford it. In such cases people should just be encouraged to give what they can, not specific sums of money. Often it’s too much for one person. Like you must fulfill church obligations, then the same person must fulfill obligations for RRW (Mother’s Union). If you have UMYF (youth) in your house, you are also responsible for their contribution. That is not fair, but with tithes, it I have $10, I can give $1 to the church and I’m done.

Tadiwa: Honestly I haven’t been tithing. I know it’s not biblical but I’ve been giving the needy what they need when I can. Birthdays shouldn’t be sponsored by church members. Pastor is at work in the church. No-one throws a birthday party for me at my workplace. If he’s clever he can do own party and catch the congregation on the gifts. Our church has become classy at the expense of looking after the poor.

Milcah: I think sermons on tithing aren’t bad as the bible says it should be done. What’s wrong is manipulating the verses by threatening the congregation. Then giving to the church is also an obligation of the congregation and the bible says so. But it shouldn’t be a daily song, rather it has to be a reminder once in a while since people tend to be reluctant to provide for pastors. What’s wrong is when those who give more financially are given positions or begin to be held in high esteem instead of having those who are spiritually gifted. I personally used to avoid going to the United Methodist Church during the harvest period because I’d be bombarded with preachings about money at church and cell group meetings. It’s almost like they’d be forcing you instead of encouraging you to pay. Birthday celebrations for pastors shouldn’t be mandatory. If the church is happy with the services of the pastor, they can easily spoil him with a birthday party. But if you are forcibly made to contribute, then that would be wrong. Whenever I have the money I make sure I tithe. When I was working I’d never skip a month. If I’m to work again I will tithe consistently. 

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