Panashe Blantina Rirwa
Born 6 June 2000
Panashe lives with her grandparents, she was orphaned at a very young age. First her mother passed away, so her father had her come to live with his parents. He soon followed his wife in death. Panashe lives in this 4 room house with 10 other people. There are lots of young cousins to keep her company.
In this picture you can meet her grandparents and an aunt and some of her children who stay together in this house.
Every time I meet Panashe she has a big smile for me.
She wants to be a soldier when she grows up. Panashe is in the 6th grade and enjoys reading.
I was asking what size of foot she had and she and her grandmother (Gogo) said 4 or 5. I didn't believe that, her foot looked the same size as mine, so I took off my shoe and put my foot next to hers. When her family saw my white foot in contrast to hers they all started to laugh and say something in Shona (their native language) that I didn't understand. They were all quite amused!!
The two young men next to her grandfather in the picture aren't related to the family but have lived with them as family members for a few years. They were homeless boys that Brother Rirwa took in. He has provided a home and school fees and even given them the blessing of the gospel in their lives. There certainly wasn't and isn't room in the house nor in the pocket book for more children to care for but they are doing the Savior's work. I thought of these scriptures in Matt 25: 35-40, when brother Rirwa was telling us about the accomplishments of these boys since being in his home.
Like all the other girls we have visited, Panashe's chores include sweeping, hoeing the vegetables and cooking sadza. Everyone eats sadza! It's nearly everyones favorite food too.
Below are pictures of one of the games kids play here. They call it pada. It's very much like hop scotch. You might have to ask your mom what that is. These girls are very good at it. They are smooth and very coordinated in their movements, they make the game look very easy.
This cook shack is in front of their house and is used everyday, even when they have electricity, because sadza cooks easier on the fire. They only use four sticks of wood and it's a small flame. They enjoy a well equipped kitchen when they have electricity. It's a very tight space, only room for one cook at a time. Because electricity is so sporadic people really don't keep food in the refrigerator, it's used more like a storage closet than a cooler.
Their yard was full of vegetables growing and very skinny dogs sleeping.
Panashe is standing next to her Aunt who is the Rirwa's youngest natural child.
Thought you might enjoy seeing the neighbor's preparing their dinner. When you walk through a neighborhood in the evening you feel like you are on a camping trip, for everyone is outside bent over a fire, preparing or eating dinner.
There is a lot of theft in Zimbabwe so everyone has a fence around their home and property, with a gate that is kept locked. When you come to visit you bang on the gate and wait for someone to come out to invite you in. When you leave you are always walked at least to the gate, sometimes even part way up the road. We always are made to feel like honored guests.
Elder Jefferies posed for this picture with the Rirwa's because it honored their family and made Brother Rirwa very happy. Brother and Sister Rirwa have only been members of the church for about 5 years. He is on the District High Council.
Panache attends the Chikanga Branch. I dropped by their primary one day and snapped this picture. It is the desire of the church leaders to help primary in this part of Africa become more like Heavenly Fathers design for his little children.
Panashe is in the corner with other girls her age.
This is the Chikanga Chapel pictured after sacrament meeting. Notice only two cars in the parking lot and they belong to missionaries. Most people have no transportation.
Nice chapel. Two Branch's meet here. Gracious and Rutendo's branch meets here too. They live in Sakubva, a neighbouring community and can walk to the chapel in less than a half hour when the water is low in the river. During the rainy season they need to walk around the river which then takes twice as much time to come to church.