PDA

View Full Version : Pass this along



Traveler
Mar 26th, 2007, 7:12 PM
Dear All,

This was in the “Bulawayo Morning Mirror” edition, dated 26th March 2007. Please consider how you may help these people. The situation is appalling.

May we all remember this timely quote:-

“Evil prevails when good men do nothing” (Edmund Burke)

With love and prayers.

From Christine.



Dear World,

I am a 16 year old person living in Zimbabwe. I think the time has come for a more direct appeal, and so I am writing to you, the world.

Maybe, just maybe, there might be someone out there who can help us...

It's tough here now. The inflation rate is so high that if you don't change money within 6 hours you could get half the amount of foreign currency that you would have originally received.

We're starving now; people die around us. In the last year alone at least ten people associated personally with my family have died despite the fact that they were only middle-aged. Other people don't make it to middle age. They don't even make it past childhood.

Our once-proud nation is on it's knees. We flee or die. This beautiful, bountiful once-rich land has become a living hell. We have dealt with it until now; we have made a plan. That was the Zimbabwean motto: "MAKE A PLAN". But now we can't make a plan. We're too tired, too broken, too bankrupt. We can't afford life, and life does not cost much, not really. We cannot afford to eat, we cannot afford to drink, and we cannot afford to make mistakes, because if we do we die. We don't have the capital to support ourselves, and those few who do, have to deal with the horror of watching their friends and family fall into absolute poverty as they cannot afford to help them.

Here is a poem I wrote on the January 2nd, 2007:

"NEW YEAR"

The rising sun finds us in yet another year,
And we look back over every disappointment,
Every bitter failure,
Every salty tear.

The future sits golden before us,
But we are afraid to hope or care.
We've been beaten down too many times before
And life holds no promises there.

At this very same instant every year
We glimpse the rainbow of hope above the street,
But every one of us nurses the very same fear
And faith lies dying at our feet.

Many men have perished,
Claimed by starvation, disease or another's hand.
A nation knocked down to its knees
Now desperately struggles to stand.

Perhaps this year will be different,
Perhaps a hero will come.
But deep down we know
That this cannot be so,
For if it were it would have been done.

There is no light to splice the darkness,
No dawn to dispel the night,
No one to see our struggle,
No one to pity us in our plight.

Who in this world will save us?
Who in this world will come?
Where will next year find us?
If God's will be truly done?

I think that this poem sums it all up. That's life in Zimbabwe. We're sick of struggling; sick of fighting. We're waiting desperately for a great hand to pick us up out of the dirt because at the moment we are outnumbered by Fate herself, and so we close our eyes and pray. We have fought for too long, and have been brought to breaking point. We simply stand, heads down, and bear it. Our spirit has gone; we are defeated. After a valiant struggle of over fifteen years, we have been broken. There is no will left, no spirit. Like a horse that has been beaten until it cannot fight anymore; we are the same, and, like that horse, we stand dusty, scarred and alone, with dried blood on our sides and lash marks along our flanks. Our ribs too stand out; our hide is also dull. Our eyes are glazed, our throats are
parched, and our knees struggle to support us so that we stand with splayed legs to bear the brunt of the next beating, too dejected even to whimper...

This is my plea. The thought of picking ourselves up again is sickening; one can only take so many blows before oblivion is reached, and we are teetering on the rim of the bottomless void. One more push will be the end of us all...There must be someone out there who can do something. There must be someone out
there who cares! We are a destroyed nation, and the world sits back and watches, pretending they cannot hear our cries. I appeal to you all...

HELP US!

A 16 YEAR OLD ZIMBABWEAN......

lycanox
Mar 28th, 2007, 3:35 PM
For an 16 year old Zimbabwean he sounds pretty educated.

Traveler
Mar 28th, 2007, 6:34 PM
Traditionally the standards have been higher there.

It is based on the British system but they have retained the traditional corporal punishment for discipline purposes.

Also the "O" "M" and "A" level exams for school leavers are sent of to the UK for marking. This ensures that the school leaver certificates will be recognized the world over.

The only problem now is that the majority of people can't afford to send their kids to school and there is also a chronic teacher shortage because they can't get paid anymore.

A 16 year old should be at the "O" level stage so it sounds about right.

loganosborne
Mar 30th, 2007, 1:03 AM
It's very sad what has happened in Zimbabwe since Robert Mugabe has been president. But reading articles I have seen lately he may not be in charge for much longer.

Traveler
Mar 30th, 2007, 8:21 PM
The SADAC countries have backed him and he ha been given a green light to go on.

This is what is happening

There are some things here that you have not looked at, Well at least not from this angle.

The liberation war was indeed a liberation war but what we were really being liberated from has not been stated publicly. So far the west still has not grasped the significance of this which is why they are getting all confused. But it does explain why the rest of Africa will not tread on Bobs toes in the open.

Who provided the finance for the liberation movement and why?

It was the East. Particularity those who are of the communist persuasion. Now we all know that they are opposed to the west and capitalism.

The whites that ran the country were descended mainly from the British. Because of that their loyalties lay with the west and the country would align with the west in any international crisis.

By breaking the power of the whites and driving them out they were in fact breaking the control of western influence and bringing the country under their political wing which was the whole objective of spending all that money and providing all those weapons in the first place.

Now they do not care what Bob does in his own house or how many Zimbabweans he has killed. What they are looking at is, " has he kept the faith? " He told the west to go hang, he is keeping the faith. He will therefore continue to be supported so that the west will not have any influence on the African continent.

In other words the west has been outflanked in Africa and to a large extent, South America. and don't forget the far east. The idea being that when the final conflict comes the west will be isolated and unable to draw support from any of their old colonies.

The only problem here is that you and me are totally expendable and considered of no real value in an individual sense during this play between the two main power groups that wish to dominate this world. We are considered the useless eaters!

The west still think that they are the good guys because they gave lip service in support of many of the liberation struggles but you must understand that they are a little dense and have not grasped what has transpired yet. They still think that it is all about human rights and civilized behavior etc. Now they can't understand why the ideals that they think everybody is supposed to lift up are not getting any attention in the case of Bob and his thugs!

medicvet
Apr 9th, 2007, 1:36 AM
whatever the situation, that is the fucking saddest plea for help I think I have ever read, and I have read quite a few.

UVsaturated
Apr 9th, 2007, 2:22 AM
I am drunk. Should I help this person or pay my utility bills?

equalizer
Apr 9th, 2007, 11:06 AM
I am drunk. Should I help this person or pay my utility bills?

I could not have said it better myself. :jam: