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Late 1980s |
ARE YOU
SAYING ZAMANI TEENS WERE MORE ETHICAL THAN TODAY’S? Give me a break.
UNLESS the ZAMANI teens you are referring to
are those before 1980s and 1990s, then you are deceiving yourself and lying to
others. LISTEN,
As a teenager,
I went to boys’ secondary school late 1980s through mid 1990s. Whether this
constitutes the zamani you are referring to or not, I do not know. My interest
is more in sharing what was happening then and you judge whether that was any
more ethical than watoto wa siku hizi:
One: The majority of us sneaked from
school in evenings and on weekends to nearby suburbs and villages (Nzovwe, Kalobe, Itende, etc) to chase
for primary school and village girls to try our lucky for sexual intercourse
favours. Some of us were lucky to have one or two girl friends and had fun
twice or more and sometimes just once. This was really cool. I have no idea
whether we did or did not impregnate any of the fellow teenage girls. I would
not be surprised to learn we fathered a few then. Our girl friends and their
parents might have never had the guts to try tracing us at Iyunga secondary
school.
Two: Then, we had these about two
sweetest months off school twice mid -year, and December/January. During this
time we were back home in our villages. Meen, going to government secondary
schools was surely great. It made us very important people out there. Those
very few of our colleagues who went to Shule za kulipia (private) mattered too.
Many of us
loitered from gurio (weekely market days) to gurio. Promiscuous sexual
intercourse was really trendy. Going back to boarding school without having had
any sexual encounter, was really bad. One was even forced to fake a story of
this cool experience he had with one or two girl friends to avoid scorn from
peers. But then, imagine all that real stuff happening without any condoms! How
many babies we might have fathered?? Lucky us, HIV was just not as rampant as
today. Otherwise, we would have not survived to pomp that we, as teens were
ethical!!Oh! it was by His Grace (Ni kwa Neema ya Mungu Tu!)
Three: Our friends, those who travelled
afar by TAZARA Train. The stories they told us, you would wish there were
technological sophistication to document stuff as is today. You know what? The
boys and girls from different schools, say Iyunga and Loleza, were lumped
together in the congested third class coaches. Even when they were slotted in
separate coaches, they would find ways to come together and explore life. What
they did at night, you can figure it for yourself. These are some of those who
today claim to have been that ethical as teens.
Four: It was during my secondary
schooling as teen when I heard for the first time terms as KUPIGA MANDE or MTUNGO
all referring to GANG RAPE. I bet
such foolish acts were more common then, than now. And my ‘Be Tos’ folks want
to make everybody believe WE were SAINTS.
So what I
am saying is that, let us face today’s challenges; look them on the face with
fresh insights and perspectives; and come up with better ways to tackle them.
Clinging to those blunt methods that did not work yesterday, would help neither us
nor our kids. Turning a blind eye to today’s problems, will do more harm than
good. DIALOGUE WOULD BE A BETTER STARTING
POINT.
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