Skip to main content

So true for Zimbos


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

An interview with Zimbabwe's most successful mathmetician

Interview with a mathematician. A human mathematician. by Tawanda Gwena Professor Heneri Dzinotyiweyi is probably the most successful mathematician produced by Zimbabwe to date. He was born on March 15, 1950. We skip the next few years of his life, only pausing to say that he went to Fletcher High School for Form 6. Then we come to his university life which started in 1971 when he enrolled at the then University of Rhodesia. There he first studied Mathematics, Physics and Geology, and then went on to Honours in Mathematics. Unfortunately, due to the 1973 disturbances following student demonstrations against racism in the country and at the university in particular (student demonstrations here have a very long history!) he was arrested and imprisoned for the latter half of the year and had to complete his degree in private study outside Harare in 1974. He was the second (the first was J M Harvey, mentioned later) Honours student in Mathematics here, having been taught by p...

Binga women in Zimbabwe make history on the Zambezi River

22 March 2012, Unwomen.org “I used to sell fish under the trees, and carry fish on my head. I would wake up at 4am to walk a long distance to buy fish from the fishermen. Now I sleep and wake up normal hours, and have my tea before the Captain comes. I never thought I would have time to sleep, eat, work and rest like this!” So reveals Kuli Mungombe, one of ten women who are making history in Zimbabwe by owning and operating a fishing rig in the country. The women, from the Tonga ethnic group, formally entered the male-dominated industry last year after being provided with the rig, equipment and skills training. They have since been working to scale up the venture in Binga, one of the country’s least developed districts, so that it can sustain them and their families, as well as create opportunities for other women in the area. This is the first time since the 1950s that women from their ethnic group have been able to fish at all.  Although it was traditionally the...

How a Passion for Food Became a Small Restaurant Business

Nyasha Tembedza is a young female entrepreneur based in Harare, Zimbabwe.  Nyasha’s passion for food and people has inspired her to build a business around these passions. With no experience in a formal kitchen but motivated by a vision to become an international restaurant chain her story is a good example of how persistence, networking and continuous improvement can turn a passion into a business. Being the first-born daughter in her family, expectations were high that Nyasha would follow the typical life cycle of going to University, getting a degree and then settling into a good job. However, for Nyasha this was not to be as she has dropped out of University twice, the first time due to going to a foreign university where failed to adjust which led her to suffer from depression. The second time she dropped out was because of the challenges of balancing running a small business and studying, and in typical entrepreneur fashion the pull of entrepreneurship was greater than ...