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              This 
                article originally appeared in The 
                Standard, Zimbabwe’s 
                Sunday newspaper. Starving 
                teachers in the rural Masvingo central constituency have resorted 
                to eating porridge meant for primary school children for survival 
                as hunger blights the province. The 
                porridge is donated by humanitarian aid organizations and targets 
                starving school children most of whom are dropping out of school 
                due to hunger. 
 When 
                The Standard news crew visited several constituencies in 
                the province, teachers were queuing up for porridge alongside 
                their pupils at break-time although the porridge is only meant 
                for pupils. The teachers said they had turned to sharing the porridge 
                with the children because their paltry salaries could not sustain 
                them. Teachers earn about $100 000 a month.  
               
                “We 
                  have no option but to share the porridge with our pupils, for 
                  us to survive and also for the energy to teach them,” said Jeffrey 
                  Gumbo, a teacher at Mutenda primary school. “There is widespread 
                  hunger and starvation and we have not been spared, so we have 
                  to eat anything we get in order to escape hunger.”  
              He 
                said there was a severe scarcity of grain in the area such that 
                sometimes they spent several days without eating sadza 
                (Zimbabwe’s staple maize meal). The teachers said 
                they could not afford to buy the grain that is being sold in foreign 
                currency by local businesspeople who draw allocations from the 
                Grain Marketing Board (GMB).  “With 
                the current drought situation, grain has become a rare commodity 
                here. We go for days without eating sadza,” he said. “Imagine 
                a bag of grain is costing R300 and with my salary I can’t afford 
                to buy even half a bag.” Another teacher at a school in Mapanzure, 
                who also survives on porridge meant for school children, praised 
                organizations like Christian Care and the Red Cross for saving 
                people’s lives in the province.  “When 
                we heard that the ban on food aid was lifted, we breathed a sigh 
                of relief because we knew food would be coming to school children 
                and we will be saved. If this was not the situation some teachers 
                here would starve to death,” said a teacher, who declined to be 
                named.
 Takavafira 
                Zhou, the Progressive Teachers’ Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ) president, 
                said government had forced teachers to depend on donated food:  
               
                “This 
                  confirms what we always said that teachers’ salaries are just 
                  pathetic. That is why they are now scavenging for food,” Zhou 
                  said. “Their salaries cannot buy food and they have no option 
                  but to demean themselves queuing for donated food with their 
                  pupils. They are losing respect in their communities as they 
                  end up looking like miserable people.”  
              He 
                called on government to raise teachers salaries, enough to enable 
                them to buy food and sustain themselves. 
 BlackCommentator.com 
                Guest Commentator Godfrey Mutimba writes for The Standard, Zimbabwe’s Sunday newspaper. |   
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          | October 16, 2008 Issue 295
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          |  is 
              published every Thursday
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          | Executive Editor: Bill Fletcher, Jr.
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          | Managing Editor: Nancy Littlefield
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          | Publisher: Peter Gamble
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