We used to have what were called traditional birth attendants and they were very good in Africa. You only would refer a woman to go and give birth in hospital if you thought that there would be complications. The traditional birth attendants, when they were looking at you, were able to actually say you have a breach, therefore go to hospital. We destroyed the traditional birth attendants and yet as we speak right now in Europe if you have money you will give birth at home and yet for Africa we were told that giving birth at home showed that you were poor. Now the Europeans themselves are giving birth at home. They have their own traditional birth attendants, but for us we have destroyed that structure of traditional birth attendants. So I think this conversation needs to go beyond just the help and the health facilities to say as an African person, at the very least be proud of your Africanness and celebrate that level of Africanness.
Marijuana is one example. Europe is now asking us to grow mbanje for them because they have now realised it is medicinal, but for many years the white person came here and said if you were caught with mbanje, you would be arrested and yet they themselves are now passing laws to legalise marijuana. This is because it is now clear that it works around chronic illnesses like cancer; it works around issues of anxiety and mental illness, but for the African, nothing happened. Now, what are we doing because we never got ourselves organised around this, we are now being used as the people who grow mbanje for them to then make medicines and we remain poor. So this conversation – this is why I said for me, this is exciting because it gives us a different mindset in beginning to say how do we make our structures purely African and not necessarily go that direction.
In summary, Madam Speaker, I know that there are people who are coming to this House speaking about how we need to go GMO. Again, it contradicts some of these fundamental things that we are talking about. Traditional medicine is by its nature good because it is organic and if there is anything that we need to protect, it is our fields, vana Pfumvudza vatirikuita ivava because that is where the world is going to, but now those that want to make money will come and say go the direction of GMO, yet if you go to the United Kingdom right now and you want to buy eggs, the eggs that are organic are more expensive than the eggs that come from chickens that are GMO fed.
So we need to really start thinking and ask ourselves each time we are given these things what it means about destroying the things that can get us to live. Like I said, Madam Speaker, I am glad that covid-19 has shown us that at least there is something good that as Africans we are able to do, because everybody had taken us to the graves. We were all supposed to have died but yes, God came in. I am sure there is something traditional that got us to survive this epidemic. I thank you Madam Speaker.
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