Shafi
cannot catch enough fish from Lake Malawi to supplement his
family's diet (p8931)
Shafi
with his three younger brothers. Since the death of his mother,
he is now the family's breadwinner (p8933)

Shafi collects Red Cross food aid from a distribution centre.
Households headed by AIDS orphans are among the priorities for
Red Cross assistance (p8935)

Shafi prepares a meal of nzima maize porridge. (p8930)

To raise some much needed money, Shafi often weaves mats (p8932)
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Helping hand for Malawi's orphan
breadwinners
23 January 2003
by Pia Casperson in Mazengela, Malawi
In his worn out red T-shirt
and yellow shorts the 15-year-old Shafi is easy to spot on the shore
of Lake Malawi. With his bare hands he is digging for worms that he
will be using as bait for fishing.
This is the third largest lake in Africa and was once an important
source of food and income for many people in Malawi. But this is a
country where too many people have to share too few resources. One
of the consequences has been overfishing – and it is getting
more and more difficult to catch fish in Lake Malawi.
Shafi wades out until he is knee-deep in the water. With a simple
fishing rod he tries his luck, but after half an hour he decides to
give up. His day's catch is disappointing – two tiny fish -
nowhere near enough to feed his three younger brothers who are waiting
for him back in the village.
Shafi is one of many Malawian kids, who have become the breadwinner
of their families. In the last three years, he has lost both parents.
He and his brothers, aged 12, 10 and five, are among the growing number
of orphans left by the HIV/AIDS pandemic. In some areas of Malawi,
as many as 25 per cent of the adult population is infected by the
disease.
"You will not find anybody here who has not lost a loved one,"
says the Secretary General of the Malawi Red Cross, McBain Kanongodza.
"More or less every day you will meet somebody on his way to
a funeral. The people dying are not the old or the weak ones, but
adults at their best age. The worst thing is this huge number of orphans
left behind."
Shafi's world changed when his mother died four months ago. His father
passed away three years earlier. Now he is the head of the family.
"I just accepted what happened. I knew that I was the eldest
and that I should take care of everybody," he says as his five-year-old
brother cuddles up to him.
They are sitting outside a square clay hut in Mazengela village. Shafi
opens the door and explains that they sleep on mats directly on the
ground, and even if the thatched roof needs to be repaired it gives
them shelter from the rain. Apart from a few kitchen items and a clothes-line
with shirts there is nothing to see inside the hut.
"I usually weave mats and sell them to get some money to buy
food for my brothers. But sometimes I have no money – no food
– and then we have to go to sleep without anything to eat,"
Shafi explains.
Malawi has suffered from a chronic lack of food for years. Now this
situation has worsened due to the drought and the AIDS pandemic, which
has resulted in a serious shortage of manpower. More than three million
Malawians are facing starvation. Many of them are now being supported
by International Federation and other relief organizations.
"Of course it is not possible for us to reach everybody who needs
assistance. We have to focus on the most vulnerable. That means the
elderly, the disabled, families affected by HIV/AIDS and the many
child-headed households," Kanongodza says.
Shafi and his brothers are among those who receive a food ration every
month. They have just fetched a 50 kilogramme bag of maize from the
Red Cross distribution point near Nkhotakota. Now it is time for Shafi
to cook nzima, the maize porridge that represents the basic food for
all Malawians.
Within a few seconds Shafi has lit the fire. He adds maize meal to
the boiling water in the pot and stirs gently. In the meantime his
two other brothers have entered the yard behind the clay hut. Asked
about their family's plight, 10-year-old Makata adopts a serious expression.
"Compared to other families we are okay, because we eat nzima,"
he says. "But we don't have enough clothes because the money
that our brother earns has to be spent on food."
With his faded green shirt full of holes, Makata does not have to
say any more about their lack of clothes. He helps his older brother
to prepare the meal, explaining: "We share responsibilities.
I can clean the plates, and I am also the one who usually draws water
and sometimes also pounds the maize so we can prepare the nzima."
But even if Shafi is trying hard to keep his family going, it is difficult
for him to find casual work or other ways of getting money. The only
relative he can ask for help is an aunt living in the village, but
he prefers to be on his own.
"Sometimes my younger brothers just keep quiet – and when
I ask them I find out that they are sick and then I take them to the
clinic. That is how I manage to take care of my brothers," he
says.
The three older brothers are still going to school. But after grade
seven – the class Shafi is in – he will have to pay a
fee, and that means he will have to leave school.
"I would have liked to continue at school and find a good job
as a driver or teacher so I could earn money and feed my brothers,"
he says sadly. "But there is no way I can get money to pay for
school – so I will never get an education."
With his big, trusting eyes, Shafi still looks like a child. But the
way he talks and the way he acts reveal a child forced to become an
adult over night. One of the neighbours explains that even if it looks
like Shafi is able to take care of his family, it is very difficult
for him. And the question is for how much longer the 15-year-old boy
will be able to cope with the food crisis.
"I often think of my parents, because I feel they could have
been advising me," he says. "Now there is nobody to advise
me and I just have to sort out things myself. Sometimes I really wish
they were still here."
Related links:
Malawi: appeals, updates
and reports
Southern Africa food crisis
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