Two broken
marriages, transition from village life to the ghetto, a miscalculated sojourn
into the diaspora, failed investments, a broken youth life, all carved the
character of this man.
This is not a script for a movie but when his epitaph is
written, Michael Munhumumwe, Thomas Makore, Thomas Tapfumaneyi and Thomas
Chikawa, will refer to Thomas Mapfumo. They will all refer to the man known by
his legion of Chimurenga Music fans as Mukanya, a sobriquet derived from his
totem, underlined by the baboon.
A lot has been written and said about Mukanya; his fiery
temper, lack of diplomacy and his music career but today, we will take you
through the untold side that could have carved his attitude and all.
Go to the registrar general’s office today and look for the
name Thomas Mapfumo and you will not find Mukanya’s. You will probably find
someone else, but definitely not the musician.
The name on his national identity documents is Thomas
Chikawa but, again, that is not his biological surname. It is a confusing
puzzle.
Who is Chikawa? Who is Tapfumaneyi? Who is Mapfumo? Who is
Munhumumwe? Who is Makore? How did Mukanya get involved with all these
identities?
Well, it took the man himself to unpack the mystery on
Wednesday night. In a conversation that lasted about two hours at his aunt’s
house in Waterfalls, Mukanya revealed many secrets of his life, including the
puzzling identity.
Who is Mapfumo’s real father?
Mukanya was born on July 2, 1945, in Marondera to Janet
Chinhamo of Chihota and Tapfumaneyi Makore of Mupinyuri village in Guruve. However, the two did not
stay together and Janet went on to get married to John Kashesha Mapfumo.
Makore relocated to a farm near Beatrice where he got a job
as a tractor driver.
“I lived with my grandparents from my mother’s side for
some years of my childhood in Chihota. I did not know my father. My mother got
married to Mapfumo, but I was then known as Michael Munhumumwe. I was using my
mother’s surname,” said Mukanya.
He, interestingly, noted that Munhumumwe was not his
mother’s real father. Like him, she had grown up with a step-father, but he had
to inherit his mother’s adopted surname Munhumumwe, as the stepftaher who had
taken care of his mother.
When it was time to get a national identity card, Mukanya
had to change his name. His uncle (maternal grandmother’s brother) took him to
Marondera to get the document.
“I went to the district office with my uncle Chiwara. He
was my grandmother’s brother. He used his name to facilitate the processing of
my ID. That is how I became Thomas Chiwara. I have not changed the name since
then. It is the name that is in national records,” said Mukanya.
Mukanya lived with his stepfather Mapfumo and his mother
and most people knew him as Thomas Mapfumo. It was the name that became popular
in the neighbourhood and among relatives. He had to use that name when he
started music in the early ‘70s. However, at the age of 17 Mukanya decided to
look for his biological father.
“I enquired about his whereabouts around farms in the
Beatrice area. One day I made a journey to the farm with my friend from the
band Cosmic Four Dots. That was the group I worked with that time. We went to
the farm on bicycles. I used my mother’s bicycle for that trip.
“We found his wife at home and she told us he would come
for lunch. We waited for him and he arrived, as expected, driving the farm
tractor. I introduced myself and he was so touched. He actually cried.”
From that day, Mukanya kept in touch with his father and
visited him regularly until his death in 1973. But the musician did not attend
his father’s funeral.
“I was based in Mhangura when he died. I only got
information about his death some days after his burial. He was buried at his
rural home in Guruve. I did not immediately visit the rural area to see my
father’s grave.
“However, unfortunate things began happening in my life and
I had to go for traditional consultations. I was told that I was supposed to go
to my father’s rural home and unite with my relatives.”
Mukanya made his first trip to Guruve to see his paternal
relatives. It was also his first time to see his father’s grave. Since then, he
has kept in touch with his relatives in Guruve and visits them every time he
comes home from his United States base.
To honour his father, he has given his son the name
Tapfumaneyi. He has also made his father’s totem, Mukanya, a moniker that goes
with his music.
Lessons Mukanya got from stepfather
Mukanya is full of praise for his stepfather. He says he is
happy to be known as Thomas Mapfumo because the name honours a man who took
care of him when his real father abandoned him.
“My stepfather Mapfumo was a man with serious direction in
life. He feared God and made sure that we lived a Christian life. Although I
now follow the African traditional religion, I have a way of revering God that
I learnt from VaMapfumo,” said Mukanya.
He said his mother also became strict in Christianity and
their upbringing was blessed.
“My mother and my stepfather clicked well. They taught us
the good ways of life. As children, we were required to religiously attend
Sunday school. We went to church every Sunday. It was the day we would drink tea
after church. It was a rule that anyone who failed to attend Sunday school
without a good reason would not drink tea. Because no one wanted to miss tea,
it became inspiration to go to Sunday school and the teachings helped us as we
grew up.”
Mukanya’s wives and children
As the music life made him popular in the streets of Mbare
where he lived and pursued his art, the Chimurenga musician decided to get
married. He met a girl of Malawian origin who was called Emily. They stayed
together for some time and were blessed with a daughter called Charity.
After a few years they broke up and Charity went away with
her mother.
“Charity and her mother are both late, but my daughter left
children and grandchildren that live in the country. My grandchildren now have
their families and I am now a great grandfather. They visit me when I come
home.”
After separating with Emily, Mukanya got a second wife
named Elizabeth. She lived in Epworth before their marriage.
Elizabeth had two daughters with the musician – Janet and
Charmaine – before the marriage also collapsed.
“We had two daughters that are now based in the United
Kingdom. Their mother recently returned from England. She had gone to see them.
She is based here. Our daughters are doing well. Janet has a white husband and
she is a designer. Charmaine works in a bank and she is not yet married.”
When Mukanya’s marriage to Elizabeth ended, he married his
current wife Vena. Vena grew up in Bulawayo, but she is originally from Mutare.
She gave Mukanya his first and only son. They named him Tapfumaneyi after his
grandfather (the musician’s biological father).
After Tapfumaneyi came two daughters Chiedza and Matinyaya.
Mukanya moved with his whole family to the United States.
Tapfumaneyi followed his father’s footsteps in music, but chose
to pursue hip-hop because of American influence. He also runs a car sales
company. He is married to an Afro-American woman and they have two kids.
Chiedza graduated with a degree in Accounting from
University of Oregon and she works for a big company in the US. She is married
to a Nigerian and they stay in Canada. They do not have children yet.
The last born, Matinyaya, is studying for a degree in
Medicine and she is expected to graduate in May this year.
How Mapfumo lost properties back home
There was a recent trending story about how Mukanya was
booted out of his lodgings in Harare after failing to settle the bill. The
story exposed the musician. He does not own a house in Harare.
This writer has it on good authority that Mukanya had about
four houses in Harare that were sold due to marital misunderstandings and
miscalculations by his former management.
Mapfumo in the early
days of his music career
However, Mukanya was only prepared to talk about a house he
owned in Mt Pleasant.
“I bought the house for about $9 million (Zim dollars) in
the late 90s. It was a beautiful house and my family has good memories of the
place. When we left for the United States, we assigned someone to look after
it.
‘‘However, when we realised that he was not taking good
care of it, we decided to sell the house and invest in a new business,” he
said.
He was later to buy a plot in Domboshava where he has built
a small homestead.
As news of his disgraceful exit from his lodgings spread,
the Harare City Council intervened and availed a residential stand for Mukanya
in Glen Lorne. He also managed to negotiate for another piece of land in
Domboshava where he wants to build and arts centre.
It is inescapable that Mukanya’s lyrical content, his fiery
temper, music artistry and anger was all carved from this broken past. Given
his history, one would forgive him and feel that it was really a struggle to
get to where he is today. But pointers are there that he has fallen on hard
times. Herald
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