Close Menu
  • Home
  • Free Gifts
  • Self Help
  • Make Money
  • Video
  • Hot Deals
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • In the age of artificial intelligence democracy needs help
  • The Promising Future of Biblical Counselling in Africa
  • Rapoo confident ahead of Amajita’s second World Cup clash
  • Silence and retrogressive culture: Femicide in Busia, Kenya
  • Najaax Harun – AFRICANAH.ORG
  • South Africa confirms ambassador Nathi Mthethwa’s death in Paris
  • WTFGO in Politics This Week
  • Hope for Benin, Nigeria as FIFA sanctions South Africa
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube TikTok
Afro ICONAfro ICON
Demo
  • Opinion
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Technology
  • Sports
  • Society
    1. Art and Culture
    2. Education
    3. Family & Relationship
    4. View All

    In the age of artificial intelligence democracy needs help

    October 3, 2025

    The Promising Future of Biblical Counselling in Africa

    October 2, 2025

    Najaax Harun – AFRICANAH.ORG

    October 1, 2025

    South Africa confirms ambassador Nathi Mthethwa’s death in Paris

    September 30, 2025

    Nepal’s Gen Z reckoning

    September 29, 2025

    Rising Political Frustration in Zambia

    September 26, 2025

    10 Mistakes I Made Navigating Theological Differences

    September 23, 2025

    Vacancies: AMALI Research Officer/Senior Research Officer

    September 20, 2025

    Silence and retrogressive culture: Femicide in Busia, Kenya

    October 2, 2025

    Tokyo scores on policy but loses on scale | Article

    September 17, 2025

    South Sudan vice-president charged with murder and treason

    September 11, 2025

    Ignore fake graphic claiming Kenya’s ex-deputy president Gachagua insulted residents during a rally

    September 8, 2025

    In the age of artificial intelligence democracy needs help

    October 3, 2025

    The Promising Future of Biblical Counselling in Africa

    October 2, 2025

    Silence and retrogressive culture: Femicide in Busia, Kenya

    October 2, 2025

    Najaax Harun – AFRICANAH.ORG

    October 1, 2025
  • Lifestyle
    1. Foods & Recipes
    2. Health & Fitness
    3. Travel & Tourism
    Featured
    Recent

    In the age of artificial intelligence democracy needs help

    October 3, 2025

    The Promising Future of Biblical Counselling in Africa

    October 2, 2025

    Rapoo confident ahead of Amajita’s second World Cup clash

    October 2, 2025
  • International
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • North America
    • Oceania
    • South America
Afro ICONAfro ICON
Home»Society»Family & Relationship»Vazhure’s Weeping Tomato: An Intrepid Tale of Interconnected Binary Opposites
Family & Relationship

Vazhure’s Weeping Tomato: An Intrepid Tale of Interconnected Binary Opposites

King JajaBy King JajaDecember 22, 2024No Comments0 Views
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
Vazhure’s Weeping Tomato: An Intrepid Tale of Interconnected Binary Opposites
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Samantha Rumbidzai Vazhure’s latest offering, Weeping Tomato, is a composite four part novella, beginning with the Prologue, then the Weeping Tomato proper, through to the Mudavose’s Return section and the blistering epilogue. Weeping Tomato offers a blend of magical realism tinged with contemporary AI parlance lexicon and the science fiction genre. 

The prologue uses an elaborate language that estimates painting. I know that Rumbidzai Vazhure is a painter of renown, and the prologue takes you to her depths as a painter. Readers experience the world through the sense of sight and sounds erupt from the images on the canvas. Vazhure’s prologue is delicately set in the future 2090, which is over 60 years from now! 

The universe comes in speckled colours. The environment is fused with sparkling diamonds and other minerals. Everywhere there are “wildflowers in perpetual propagation.”  Down and below is the mighty Mutirikwi valley as a special passenger from a western capital arrives to pay her last respects to one Mudavose, who had lived to the ripe age of 118. The magic is evident as they soon travel in a solar powered self flying car. In the houses built in the fashion of the Great Zimbabwe monument, readers find world leading scientists, mathematicians, physicists and biologists, who returned home to Zimbabwe from the diaspora to be part of the Dzimbagwe rebuild. 

In this Zimbabwe of 2090, spirit possession has long become a science and no longer a myth or a dark thing. As people wait for Mudavose to become a mhondoro, the CCTV monitors are set in motion. We are all advised, that “your purpose on earth is to change narratives and create new systems that are aligned with the code of cosmic powers.”

Samantha Rumbidzai Vazhure has scaled greater heights with her latest offering, Weeping Tomato.

The collective consciousness of Vazhure’s futuristic society is constantly reinforced and captured in her refrain: ‘‘This wealth belongs to the people of Dzimbabgwe. All of them! No one here goes without’’ A far cry from the contemporary kakistocracy, kleptocracy world currently obtaining punctuated by unashamed, unbridled, rampant plunder of national wealth and coffers. Perhaps, Vazhure is teasing out her boundless optimism here in projecting a fully functioning and reconstituted Zimbabwe in future years.

The main story, Weeping Tomato, is about Zorodzai, a fifty year old Shona woman based in the UK who desperately falls in love with a 35 year old Zimbabwean man resident in South Africa, Adam. Their trail blazing love affair begins and is played out online through Whatsapp, Twitter and video chatting. Zorodzai is fast quitting her husband James  because he is no longer interested in her. The thrill is gone. Their home, an imposing six bedroom house on a five acre estate in England’s rural Herefordshire is becoming more of a prison. Zorodzai’s questing spirit seeks to break the boundaries of marriage, age, place and distance.  This immensely beautiful segment is built in realism and is rendered in very simple language.

The love between Zorodzai and her toyboy lover Adam is sensational and escapist. Sometimes they chat on the net for six hours with no break. One day Adam asks Zorodzai to call her as she relieves herself in the bathroom saying, “I want to hear the precious trickle of your divine feminine waters flowing into the toilet chamber…just call (me) and wee, ok”

Zorodzai agrees and Adam cries out, “That was beautiful, my love. In the absence of physical contact, that is the closest I can get to making love to you.”

In a somewhat epiphany moment in an Italian hotel after experiencing a surreal sexual reawakening of great magnitude, Zorodzai reflects;

 ‘‘I pause to ponder how we failed our relationship, or how it failed us. Could it be that our voices vanished with the arrival of our children? Not only did they silence our sounds of pleasure during lovemaking, forcing artificial silence where it did not fit, but they also made us stop arguing and disagreeing, forcing us to maintain an illusion of perfection and bliss.’’

Bizarrely, Zorodzai’s incessant squabbling and bickering relationship with her online toyboy lover Adam, evokes Marechera’s equally recurrent motif of erratic couples/ heroes and villains constantly fighting in their troubled relationships. The joys of Fuzzy Goo’s eccentric world is reincarnated here.

Adam contrasts sharply with James who pays Zorodzai very little attention. Zorodzai starts to write a series of love poems for Adam, and they may as well fill up an anthology. As she gets sucked up in this world, she loses her balance. She feels like a teenager. She starts to plan to escape to South Africa so that she meets Adam. When she travels, disaster strikes and that is the climax of this story. When Zorodzai comes back almost empty handed, she gradually disintegrates like a weeping and overripe tomato. She is damaged and oozing out the juices of life. She realizes that she is part of a conveyor belt made up of great matriarchs and that she has capacity to transcend into other states of being. Zorodzai gets ready to morph into Mudavose, a woman who once lived before her. Mudavose splinters into a high order of existence all the way up to the epilogue.

Through the perennial mundane exchanges between the amorous lovers, Zorodzai and Adam, Vazhure vividly paints brilliant, poignant ideas on perception of happiness, money and class. In the background underscoring the place and scope of black immigrants in a largely racist and classist Britain. But the beauty of Vazhure’s prowess is that all this is done with utmost finesse, nuance and dexterity, moving along with the reader onboard throughout.

In Weeping Tomato, Vazhure has scaled greater heights here. This is a stellar contribution to the field of Afro Diaspora Literature whose lasting impact will be felt by future generations.

Bravo Samantha!

Long may her literary prowess continue.

Reviewer Biography

Andrew Chatora is an award-winning Zimbabwean author and noted exponent of the African diaspora novel. Candid, relentlessly engaging and vulnerable, his novels are a polarising affair among social critics and literary aficionados. Chatora’s forthcoming book, Crabs in a Barrel is characterful, topical and compelling, with a narrative which is sharp, relatable and deeply evocative. His debut novella, Diaspora Dreams (2021), was the well-received nominee of the National Arts Merit Awards in Zimbabwe, while his subsequent works, Where the Heart Is, Harare Voices and Beyond and Inside Harare Alcatraz and Other Short Stories, have cemented his contribution as a voice of the excluded. Harare Voices and Beyond was awarded the Silver (2024) Anthem Awards for championing diversity, equity and inclusion.

Follow This Is Africa on Twitter and Facebook to join the conversation.


African Author/Writer African literature Andrew Chatora featured
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email
King Jaja
  • Website

Related Posts

Silence and retrogressive culture: Femicide in Busia, Kenya

October 2, 2025

The failure of centralized power across the planet is upon us

September 18, 2025

Tokyo scores on policy but loses on scale | Article

September 17, 2025
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

© 2025 Afro Icon. Powered by African People.
  • Home
  • Privacy
  • Disclaimer
  • Contact us
  • Terms of Use

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Go to mobile version