PASSED LIKE A SHADOW
By BENARD
MAPALALA
FORM ANALYSIS
PLOT SUMMARY
Chapter
1
Introduction of Adyeri’s family
Daddy comes back home very drunk, wet and dirty and
the whole atmosphere changes. He orders his food and as Abooki carries it to
him, Atwoki unfortunately crashes into her, sending the meal down. It was a
hell of a mistake. Daddy laments and fumes. Both Atwoki and Abooki are
frustrated and frightened because they know a cane will soon follow. He calls
Atwoki twice and gives him a classic slap in the face. Amoti appears from Virika
hospital where she had gone to fetch water. She attacks Adyeri for beating her
son a man-sized beating. She regrets for marrying him and calls him a pig.
Amoti was good at a war of words since she believed they hurt her husband
deeply.
Adyeri gives her a sound beating. Atwoki goes to help
her but he receives a furious kick in the stomach. At last Adyeri leaves the
house not to come back that night.
Chapter
2
Vicky
comes with a fiancé.
Vicky who had gone to Kitangwenda several months ago,
comes back with a stranger (Munyamahanga). Vicky was a daughter of Adyeri’s
late sister. She was forced to move from home due to harsh treatment from both
her uncle and aunt –Amoti. She met a rich man who owned a garage at Kamwenge
and wanted to marry her. He was called Akena. They receive a cold welcome from
Amoti who reports their arrival to Adyeri. Adyeri doesn’t react rudely, instead
he welcomes Vicky politely. On hearing that Akena owns a garage Amoti becomes
jealous and complicates the matter that Vicky cannot marry a Munyamahanga. For
Adyeri, as long as the bride price is settled it doesn’t matter who/what
marries Vicky whether it is a person, a cow or a donkey. He meets with his
drinking pals and they put a proper breakdown on the bride price as follows.
15
heads of cattle. 8 goats
50,000/=
shillings for buying back cloth.
15,000/=
shillings for buying Daddy’s walking stick and
2
jerry cans of beer.
At
the end, the meeting ends without a consensus between the two parties. (Adyeri’s side and Akena’s side)
Chapter
3
Uncle
Araali pays the visit.
We are told of Atwoki who is very intelligent and good
footballer when young, which suggests that he would be a good footballer in the
future. He makes prophesies with his fellow children about their future. We are
also told of Abooki (Atwoki’s sister who is in the same class with him). One
day their uncle (Araali) comes to visit them and brings them sweets and
biscuits. He finds the children very hungry and they have no firewood in the
house. He gives them money to buy all the needs in the kitchen. Then Daddy
comes staggering and singing his favourite song. He is told that uncle Araali
has come and is the one who bought the domestic needs. He feels ashamed to see
the visitor footing the food bills in his house.
Chapter
4
Vicky
is introduced to a bad company.
Vicky is back from Bundibugyo where she went to pluck tea in a
neighbour’s plantation. She is now chatting with Tusiime and Kunihira (Lacking any comfort and guidance at home,
she had increasingly felt drawn closer to the two.pg 16). They advice Vicky
a lot of things including running away with Akena or getting involved in
commercial sex because they are doing it. These two friends of hers were both
the worst by-products of Fort Portal education system. Tusiime led others in
the burning of the mattresses at Maria Goretti Secondary School and was
discontinued. Kunihira was expelled in the third year from Kyebambe Girls
Secondary School. She spends a lot of time with them and takes many of her meals
at their place. Vicky changes and becomes a polished lady and men begin chasing
her. She begins footing the food bills and brings drinks (beer) for her uncle.
That silenced both Amoti and Adyeri. She then elopes with a man from Kasese and
leaves the house.
Chapter
5
Adyeri’s
background. (flashback)
One day Adyeri was invited at Kinyamasika Primary
School as one of the pioneer teachers of the school. The children of class five
sang the song that struck deep in his heart strumming painful memories of his
whole life. It is this song that bears the title of the book. It needs people
to reflect on their lives when they are still alive and think of what will be
left behind when they are gone, lest they pass like a shadow. Adyeri decides to
rise and go back home.
We are told of the story of Adyeri’s concubine
(Birungi) who was his secretary and how he squandered the school funds to build
her a house at Burungu. He then moved to live with Birungi after being fired
from his job. He sold his land and financed a shop she had opened at Mugusu
Trading Centre. He began to deteriorate and was admitted for having HIV/ AIDS
and wondered who might have infected him with the disease since he had many
concubines (He was a maniac). After the TB treatment he goes to shelter himself
at Birungi’s house but she chases him away.
Chapter
6
Atwoki
becomes famous and successful.
Atwoki becomes famous and successful. He scores two goals that send his
team to the African Cup of Nations. He becomes famous all over Uganda. He is
Nicknamed “Fort Portal Bullet”. He
receives gifts and money from his fans and the President offers him a brand new
car plus fully paid holiday trip to the Queen Elizabeth National Park in
Kasese. Adyeri lives miserably but has categorically stated that he will not kneel
and ask any financial assistance from Atwoki. Amoti is happy
because of the tragedy that has befallen her husband and says let him learn. An
old woman comes to beg her to forgive him but she refuses. Then the football
fans of Atwoki bring Adyeri in a stretcher. One man speaks for the group and
begs Atwoki to forgive his father.
Chapter
7
Atwoki’s
life in Kampala.
Atwoki has been invited by his friend David in Kampala. Before going
home they go to a restaurant where David influences Atwoki to have a girlfriend.
Atwoki refuses since he has never slept with a girl in all his 22 years of age.
David even tells a girl named Edda to kiss him. Reaching home, Atwoki receives
a warm welcome. After lunch they gather to watch a film that is full of sexual
scenes. Then Atwoki is given a room in the visitors’ quarters full of
pornographic magazines and pictures of half naked women. David tells Atwoki ‘if you cannot change the world allow the
world to change you’. pg 33. He is given another offer at the Sheraton but
before going they watch a TV programme on AIDS. The victim narrates his state
how AIDS has affected him. He also says how he suffers from stigma from his
friends and relatives. As the announcer educates on the ways HIV spread from
infected person to another, David’s father ignores him calling him
old-fashioned. They go at the Sheraton and David’s father picks girls at their
presence. We are told that David is a Makerere University reject, he influences
Atwoki to take beer and he fees nice. From that point he begins reflecting on
Edda. At the end Edda gets hold of Atwoki.
Chapter
8
Vicky
and Aliganyira Visits the witchdoctor.
Aliganyira and Vicky are eating supper when her husband suggests that
they should go to visit the witch doctor in Kihina to find out why they don’t
get a child 10 years since they got married. At first she refuses, but due to
the pressure from her husband she agrees. The pressure was coming from his
folks especially his mother that if Vicky is unproductive he should throw her
out and bring in a replacement. They leave in the midnight. Finally they reach
the witchdoctors house. They find six sick people laid down on the floor. Two
were very thin and had lashes. When their turn comes Aliganyira and Vicky are
asked whether they want a boy or a girl. They prefer a boy. He tells them that
to make one boy costs 1 million or else they go home. The witchdoctor uses a
small sharp knife to prick Vicky’s stomach and tattoo it with his wizardly
doze. Vicky remembers the TV programme she had watched on AIDS which warned on
the danger of sharing sharp instruments. Vicky was desperate and in need of a
baby but now she was receiving something else.
Chapter
9.
The
death of Adyeri and Sickness of Amoti.
Adyeri has passed away. His drinking mates say a lot about him. They
even have a discussion on whether the bazungu (whitemen) are also dying of
HIV/AIDS. They talk about the origin of AIDS. Some say it originated from Zaire
through green monkeys, some say it was brought by bakombozi soldiers from Tanzania during the Idd Amin war. One said
that the virus was manufactured in the genetic laboratory in California. They
concluded that the problem with AIDS is not where it came from but rather where
it is going. That is to say “it is going to finish Uganda”
Back in Katumba Abooki is alone nursing her sick mother. He has sent
several messages to Atwoki but he is tied up to Edda and is rarely seen. She
decides to go to Kasese to seek financial assistance from Vicky only to find
her as sick as her dying mother. Nevertheless, Vicky advices her not to go for
money because it will kill her. Then Vicky gives her enough money to help her.
Then a man named John becomes her best friend in need who helps her in taking
care of the sick mother. One day he invites her to his house. He offers her a
coke and when she goes out for a short call he drops a valium tablet in her
glass of coke. She becomes drunk and wakes up in the morning and finds herself
naked on John’s bed.
Chapter
10
Abooki’s
frustration sends her for test.
Abooki is frustrated and confused. She thinks of having got HIV or
unwanted pregnancy. She gets thinner and thinner until her mother is shocked.
One night she gets the idea of going to Virika hospital for blood test. She
meets Dr. Jonathan who counsels her on the precautions to take when contacting
the victims. She narrates the story of why she suspects to have acquired the
virus. Then he takes her blood sample and asks her to come for results after
two weeks. The results are good and she takes a pregnancy test which also
proves nil. She is happy for that then
Jonathan gives her a post-test counselling. In the process the two fall in love
for each other.
Atwoki comes back suddenly and finds that his mother has already died.
He is sick. His friend David, David’s mother and their house girl are also
sick. David’s father has perished already. Vicky and Atwoki go to visit uncle
Araali at Kitangwenda, Ilunga village. Uncle welcomes them warmly and tells
Atwoki, “My son... my dear son... welcome
home, East or West, home is best...”
INTRODUCTION
Title of the Book
“Passed like a shadow” is a symbolic
title. It represents most of the events that take place in the novel. It can be
viewed in the following light.
(i)
It
is a representation of human life capitalizing the need to do good things that
will be left behind as a beautiful memory of you when you are gone. Living a
worthless life on earth that leaves no any memorable mark is to Bernard
Mapalala the same as having passed on this earth like a shadow. It is like you
never existed because no one will remember you. You become like a shadow that
vanishes away when the sun disappears in the clouds. Look at the following song
sung by pupils of Kinyamasika Primary school on parents’ day; pg 22
What
have I done in this world?
What
memories shall I live when I’m gone?
If
memories I shall leave are only those…
Of
having eaten and drunk;
I
shall be ashamed; there is no honour in that;
And
remembering you for the debts you leave behind;
It
is curses which precede you on your journey;
Many
people who die in anonymity;
They
die in anonymity because the glorious thing they did were eating, drinking and
sleeping.
Then
they crown their glory with death, a deed which is not hard even for the young
on a breast.
That
is having passed on this earth like a shadow….
(ii)
It
also presents Adyeri’s family that suffered a tragedy of AIDS pandemic and
passed from the scene of life like a shadow leaving behind only one family
member (Abooki) who is HIV free.
(iii)
It
also represents the fact that AIDS pandemic has invaded the whole of Uganda and
washes people away in large numbers and within a very short time. This is
compared to the shadow that disappears quickly when the sun disappears in the
clouds. Refer to how the following people pass away in a short time; Adyeri’s family,
David’s family, Aliganyira’s family, Birungi etc.
(iv)
Apart
from these families the whole society in Uganda and Tanzania AIDS is killing
people so quickly. Most people have acquired the disease unawares and
ignorantly spread it unknowingly. The whole community is passing away like a
shadow.
CHARACTERISATION
Adyeri
Ø
He
is the father of Abooki and Atwoki and a husband to Amoti and caregiver to
Vicky.
Ø
He is an ex-headmaster of St. Leos High school; he loses his job as a result of a financial scandal
for the money he steals to build a house for Birungi at Burungu.
Ø
He is a heavy drunkard and greedy. He becomes a
hopeless heavy drunkard after losing the job. He also sets high bride price
that makes Vicky’s marriage to Akena impossible
Ø
He is hot tempered. He is extremely hot-tempered and treats his family
in as a dictator. He beats his wife and children often over just slight mistakes.
Ø
He is an irresponsible father. He fails to provide for the family. Due to his
drinking habit he fails to foot the food bills in the house. That’s why uncle
Araali comes and finds children with no food and foots the food bills.
Ø
He is a reputed womanizer and a distinguished
sex-maniac. He engages in
extramarital affairs with his concubines who eventually make him acquire the
dreadful AIDS pandemic. He is deserted by his family and goes to get shelter to
Birungi’s home but she throws him away.
Ø
He is a victim of HIV/AIDS. He remains hopeless and dies miserably of the
disease passing like a shadow.
Ø
He
is not worthy being emulated.
Amoti
Ø
The
wife of Adyeri and a mother of Abooki and Atwoki.
Ø
She is a responsible and caring mother. Despite Adyeri being a heavy drunkard and a womanizer,
she remains stable and takes care of the children. Despite all her weaknesses,
Amoti has a positive side. She manages to take a good care of her children even
after family separation. We are told that until they reach High school, Atwoki
and Abooki have never engaged in sexual affairs.
Ø
She is jealous. We are told that Amoti does not want Vicky to marry
Akena because of jealousy. As a result she puts an obstacle that Akena is a
Munyamahanga (a man from another tribe). Also she is jealous of the wife of the
rich shopkeeper.
Ø
She is a tribalist. She denies Vicky to marry a man from another tribe
calling him a Munyamahanga.
Ø
She is revengeful and unforgiving. She turns away from her husband at a time of
disaster. Even when she is pleaded to forgive him she is so reluctant and
believes that it should be a lesson to him.
Ø
She’s suspected to be unfaithful in her marriage. We are told that she loves going to Kinyamasika in
the mornings possibly she has an extramarital affair. Pg 18
Ø
She is superstitious. Amoti believes that the sickness of her husband is due
to witchcraft. She says that her husband has been bewitched by Birungi.
Ø
She is a gossiper. Amoti and Abwoli are seen gossiping against the wife
of a rich shopkeeper. In page 3 the author says,
“Of course, she
had spent more than one hour just gossiping against the wife of the rich
shopkeeper whom she intensively hated and was jealous of. They had laughed and
laughed with Abwoli, who was her best
friend.”
Ø
She is a victim of HIV/AIDS. She is also wiped away from the scene by the
pandemic which she contracted from her husband and passes away like a shadow.
Ø
In
some cases she is not worthy being emulated but in others, yes.
Atwoki
Ø
The
son of Adyeri who suffers poor upbringing from his heavily drinking father.
Ø
He is a
handsome and famous football star. He is nicknamed “Fort Portal Bullet”
when he is in high school. He plays for the national team and scores a goal
which makes the president reward him.
Ø
He builds his mother a house. He makes a lot of money and manages to build a house
for his mother at Katumba near Kachwamba. Pg 25
Ø
He is easily forgiving unlike his mother. He forgives his father when he is brought home by
his fans at a time when Adyeri was seriously sick.
Ø
He is a victim of peer pressure. He is influenced by his friend David in Kampala and
begins chasing girls. Following his behaviour he gets HIV from his girlfriend
{Edda} and is soon to die of AIDS.
Ø
He has a changing behaviour. At first we are told he is so disciplined and
faithful. But later he changes and becomes a reputed womanizer like his daddy.
Ø
He is a betrayer/traitor. He betrays his sister and his mother. When his
mother is sick he does not provide any
financial help to the extent that Abooki has to go to Vicky for financial
support and relies on the support given by John which later turn out to be a
trap
Abooki
Ø
She
is a daughter of Adyeri and Amoti
Ø
She is a good adviser. She advises Atwoki to be careful when in Kampala
lest he dies.
Ø
She is a faithful and disciplined girl. she managed to remain virgin until she reached
high school.
Ø
She
unexpectedly falls into a trap of a hypocrite known as John who tricks her and
sleeps with her out of her consent.
Ø
She is caring and loving. She takes care of her sick mother and brother. Although
Atwoki deserted her when he was in the hall of fame, she never revenged when he
needed her help.
Ø
She falls in love with Dr. Jonathan. After confirming that she is HIV and pregnancy free,
the two fall in love and start honourable relationship.
Ø
She is forgiving. She easily forgives her brother Atwoki when he comes
back from Kampala despite neglecting her in his better days.
Vicky
Ø
She is an Orphan and Adyeri’s niece who lives with him after her
mother’s death. She is not given good parental care.
Ø
She
exiles herself from home and meets Akena who wants to marry her. But the issue
is complicated by her uncle who demands high bride price.
Ø
She is exploited by Adyeri’s family. We are told she went to Bundibugyo to pick tea in
the plantation but the money was prepaid to Amoti who used it to pay the school
fees for her children and Vicky got nothing from her seat.
Ø
She becomes a prostitute temporarily. She decides to go for commercial sex as a result of the
influence from her friends Tusiime and Kunihira.
Ø
She marries Aliganyira but they are not blessed with a
child. Her husband
pressurizes her to go to the witchdoctor where she gets HIV/AIDS. She becomes a
victim and dies of the same.
Ø
She has no stand. She leaves Akena because of the complications made
by her caretakers, she engages in prostitution following the advice from her
friends and she agrees to go to the witchdoctor despite her knowledge of the
potential dangers involved.
Ø
She is a good advisor. She advises Abooki not to go for money. It’s better
she gets married to a beggar provided they love each other.
David
Ø
He’s
a son of a rich and important man both in government and Kabaka’s Council in
Kampala.
Ø
He is Atwoki’s friend and a university dropout (reject). He is the one who invites Atwoki to Kampala and
influences him negatively.
Ø
He is a womanizer like his father. The author says he was his father’s perfect replica. He
influences Atwoki to start hunting for girls.
Ø
He
gets HIV/AIDS and spreads it intentionally.
Ø
He is a bad advisor. He advises Atwoki by misleading him. He says for
instance “Look Atwoki, if you can’t change the world, allow the world to change
you” pg 33.
Ø
He
dresses expensively and his greatest hobby is to chat with girls.
Ø
He
is not worthy being emulated.
Birungi.
Ø
She’s
Adyeri’s concubine who lives in Burungu.
Ø
She is very beautiful with attractive hair. She manages to get hold of Adyeri despite all the
defences he put.
Ø
She is a prostitute and exploiter of men. She exploits Adyeri who steals the school funds to
build her a house and sells his plot of
land to finance her shop.
Ø
She is a former secretary of Adyeri when he was the headmaster of St. Leos High school.
Ø
She is
ignorant of the disease called slim/AIDS and spreads it unawares.
Ø
She is a betrayer. She betrays Adyeri by throwing him out when he
needed her help while they spent good time together. She takes another
boyfriend just the second day who takes over Adyeri’s place
SETTING
The setting of the book is specifically Uganda though in a broader and
general sense it represents the whole of Africa. Furthermore down the line the
setting can be subdivided into Urban and rural settings.
Rural Setting.
The rural setting occupies the most part of the book and is evident in
the following ways/scenarios:
i.
Witchdoctors
in Kahina- this is common in rural areas.
ii.
Spouse
beating- this is also common in rural than in urban areas. Eg Adyeri beating
Amoti.
iii.
Uncle
Araali is living in the village (Ihunga) where they are using bicycles as means
of transport.
iv.
Names
of Villages like Karambi, Bundibugyo, Kalimba, Burungu etc also sum up the
rural setting.
Urban setting
i.
People
like Akena own a garage. This is common in town.
ii.
The
mentioning of urban centres like Kampala city, towns like Kamwenge, Pallisa,
Kachwamba, Kasese etc.
iii.
Presence
of restaurants, bars are common in town.
iv.
Prostitution
(commercial sex) is also a feature of urban setting.
Other settings
Ø
There
are also school setting which is not clear whether in town or village. Eg St.
Leos High School, St. Maria Goretti, Kyebambe Girls Sec School, Kinyamasika
Primary school etc
Ø
Hospital
setting where Abooki goes for test.
STYLE
The novel is very rich in its style.
a.
Point
of view. The writer has used all the three persons. However 3rd person is the dominant one.
This is to say the author narrates the story.
b.
There
is also frequent use of dialogue among characters.
Eg the conversation
between Adyeri and Amoti when Vicky comes with Akena.
“I have told you that Vicky has
come with a visitor”
“A visitor”
“Yes a visitor”
“Is the visitor tall or short?” Asked Adyeri....
c.
Also
there is the use of monologue / soliloquy. A speech in a play or movie in which a character who
is alone speaks his thoughts aloud.
Look at Adyeri in pg 15 “this
visitor has really caught us when we are dead broke” he lamented to
himself. “What a pity”... I wish I was a
rich man or millionaire...”
d.
There
is the use of songs as in pg
15. Adyeri sings when drunk;
“God bless Uganda Ohoo
Forward Uganda forward
Bravery, honesty, peace ...”
Another song is sung by Kinyamasika Primary Pupils on parents’ day. Pg
22
e. The novel has also used a flashback style. Pg 22 Adyeri’s background. “The story was that he had this lady called Birungi .....” the
narrator tells the story of why Adyeri was sacked in from his job as a
Headmaster and eventually became a heavy drunkard. Then in pg 24 Adyeri
reflects his past “A film rewinded
Adyeri’s mind about the other partners he had had at the local drinking club.
He had become some sort of a maniac and was picking women at random whenever he
was drunk...”
LANGUAGE USE.
The language used is simple, straightforward and easy
to understand. Moreover the novelist has employed many idioms, sayings and
literary devices as we are going to look very closely.
FIGURES OF
SPEECH.
Simile.
Ø The man will die like a dog. Pg 27
Ø But don’t worry, Vicky men are like buses you miss one
today another comes tomorrow. Pg 16
Ø She walked to him as fearless as a lioness. Pg 3.
Ø The new disease was spreading like bush fire in the
whole of Uganda. Pg 24
Onomatopoeia.
Ø
Uwi-uwi- the sound of crying. Pg 4
Ø
Ha ha ah! – Sound of laughing. Pg 7
Reiteration. To repeat something that you have already said
usually to emphasize.
Ø
I really regret... I really regret I have married a
pig. A pig. A pig I have married a pig mawe! Pg 3
Ø
Uncle Araali, Uncle Araali has come pg 14
Ø
Knock, knock, knock, knock. Pg 27
Ø
Hurry, hurry, pg 14.
Metaphor
Ø
I have married a pig. Pg 3
Ø
For them marriage is just business. Pg 17
Personification.
Ø
Money will kill you. pg 42
Understatement- a statement that makes something seem less
important.
Ø
“You must be the most poorly dressed girl in
Fort Portal’. Pg 18
Barbarism – using more than one languages.
Ø
The
novelist has used a lot of words from other languages other than English. E.g.,
bazungu/muzungu, bakombozi, munyamahanga,
matoke, waragi, oburo
Symbolism
Ø Pig = a useless man
Ø Slim= AIDS
Sayings and
Idioms
Ø
“Like father like son” pg 39.
Ø
“East or West home is Best” 49
Ø
“In fact marriage is an institution for blind” pg 17.
Ø
“Building castles in the air” pg 19
Ø
“To hook a big fish” pg 19
Ø
“To add salt to the wound...” pg 23
Ø
“Exchanging hot potatoes with Adyeri” pg 23
THEMES IN THE
NOVEL.
The main theme in this book seems to be AIDS pandemic
nicknamed ‘slim’. Most of all other themes seem to be revolving around building
up the main theme.
AIDS
PANDEMIC.
Ø
AIDS
pandemic is a disease that has invaded the society and spreads like a bush
fire, sweeping people in large numbers. However, the author shows that it
spreads rapidly because of people’s ignorance and superstitious beliefs that
the traditional society is caught up with. Even the title of the book itself
seems to suggest that a lot of people; young and old, children and parents, women
and men, poor and rich perish miserably and within a very short span of time.
Ø
A
lot of people/characters have fallen victims of the pandemic. These include;
Adyeri, Amoti, Atwoki, Vicky, Aliganyira, Birungi, David, His father, mother
and their house girl. The author reveals some of the incidents that expose them
to the pandemic.
Ø
Moreover,
the author gives education on HIV/AIDS: on transmission he uses the TV
announcer to educate the society that; AIDS is transmitted from one infected
person to another through exchange of certain body fluids (semen, blood,
vaginal secretions). This exchange stems from immoral activities such as
fornication, sodomy, intravenous drug abuse etc. On prevention he uses Dr.
Jonathan to educate the society that the 100% guaranteed protection against
AIDS is abstinence for unmarried people, mutual love and loyalty among the
married couples, premarital and extramarital sex should be discouraged at all
costs.
PROMISCUITY/INFIDELITY.
Promiscuity is a situation of someone having many
sexual partners who are not legally married to him/her. Infidelity is a
situation of having other partners than your wife. This is a situation that
Adyeri found himself included in. He has a concubine called Birungi beside his
own wife. He also sleeps with a lot of women that he picks in the streets. He
couldn’t even identify whoever might have infected him with the disease.
“A
film rewinded Adyeri’s mind about the other partners he had had at the local
drinking club. He had become some sort of a maniac and was picking women at
random whenever he was drunk...”
Then he infects his wife and they both die of the
disease. Apart from Adyeri other characters who are infidel or promiscuous
include the following;
Ø
David
is promiscuous; he picks girls at random and gets the disease as a result of
this behaviour.
Ø
David’s
father is both infidel and promiscuous; he’s married but he picks girls at the
bar and in the streets and even his own house-girl.
Ø
Birungi
is promiscuous as we are told that she had other men apart from Adyeri.
Ø
Muzungu
(Tusiime’s boyfriend) is infidel and we are told that he is married but visits
Tusiime secretly. Pg 19
Ø
Aliganyira
is also sex maniac because we are told he had married and divorced 2 wives and
now has got married to Vicky. Pg 35
Ø
All
big people who could help Abooki demanded body pleasure before they could do
anything. This is a sign of promosquity.
Ø
John
also is promiscuous because he drugged Abooki and slept with her without her
consent.
PROSTITUTION.
ü
This
is a situation of doing sex for sale or in other words it is a commercial sex.
We are told that one of the chief reasons for this behaviour seems to be
poverty. The young girls who involve in this dangerous behaviour are motivated
by the fact that they want to meet their basic needs and cope up with their
peers.
ü
Tusiime
and Kunihira are a case in point. As they get involved in this and are capable
of handling their lives they don’t care about the dangers associated with it.
This makes them capable of influencing Vicky who comes from a disadvantaged
background/ family. Vicky also becomes a prostitute and foots the bills in Adyeri’s
family. This activity is also dangerous as it may expose the person to AIDS
pandemic.
ü
Birungi
is also a prostitute as she exploits Adyeri the throws him out and takes
another boyfriend just the next day
ü
Edda
is also a prostitute as she exploits Atwoki and makes his loose his control in
life.
PEER
PRESSURE AND INFLUENCE.
Peer pressure implies the influence one gets from
his/her friends, age mates, colleagues, or family folks on different decisions.
In the novel the following people have fallen victims of the peer pressure.
Ø
Adyeri
falls a prey to Birungi seductive approaches. He squandered the school funds to
build a house for her in Burungu. This results to his dismissal from his job.
Ø
Vicky
also becomes a victim of the peer pressure from her friends Tusiime and
Kunihira and begins to engage in prostitution. They say to her “you must be the most poorly dressed girl in
Fort Portal” pg 18
Ø
Atwoki
is influenced by David, when in Kampala. He introduces Atwoki to beer drinking
and girls and even finances their affairs. This makes Atwoki to become bold
with girls and leads him to get HIV/AIDS.
Ø
The
pressure from Aliganyira’s relatives exposes both Vicky and Aliganyira to the
disease. They go to the witch doctor in search for a baby but as the witch
doctor makes small cuts on Vicky’s skin he infects her with HIV. The author
says; in pg 36
“So much
pressure had been mounting from his folks, especially from his mother. They
said that if she is unproductive, then he should throw her out and bring in a
replacement”
IGNORANCE
AND SUPERSTITION.
Ø
Most
people in this novel seem to be ignorant. They are not only ignorant about the
disease but also don’t know the ways the disease spreads. In pg 27 the author
says something about Amoti;
“All
in all, she was ignorant about the real disease her husband was suffering from,
neither was she aware that herself was already infected with the same virus,
healthy though she was.”
·
In
the same page he shows the Amoti associated her husband’s illness with
witchcraft. “Whatever it is, your father
has been bewitched”
Ø
Vicky’s
husband takes her to the witch doctor in order to get a baby, instead she gets
HIV.
Ø
The
victims of slim are taken to witchdoctors
with a belief that they have been bewitched.
POVERTY.
Because most people are unable to afford basic needs,
they use any other possible means to meet their needs. Some of these methods
are not good because they are likely to expose someone to the possibility of
getting HIV. Poverty is portrayed in the following scenarios.
Ø
Vicky,
Tusiime and Kunihira are forced to engage in prostitution in order to meet
their basic needs including food and clothing.
Ø
Abooki
falls prey to John’s trap because of her poor condition at home and John offers
financial support. She responds to his invitation knowing that if she refuses
she might as well lose the financial support. This makes her lose her
virginity.
Ø
Due
to poor condition at home, Atwoki is forced to move from home to Kampala. He
goes to live with his friend David who comes from a rich family where he is
influenced to city life and eventually gets HIV.
Ø
Adyeri’s
family is so poor to the extent that sometimes the visitor (uncle Araali) foots
the food bills in the house.
Ø
Poverty
is also evident among the government officers. Aliganyira laments in pg 36.
“These hungry
government officers...they are simply professional beggars. I wonder why they
think I can finance them all the time...”
Ø
Poverty
also makes people trust that witch doctors can make them rich; as thus they go
to witchdoctors in search for richness as Aliganyira tells Vicky. Pg 37
“This
man is very powerful...he has very powerful juju. His charms have made people
rich”
CONFLICTS
FAMILY
CONFLICT.
Family conflicts also play a major and significant
role in exposing both parents and children to the chances of getting infected
with disease. Let’s look at the following family conflicts.
Ø
The
conflict between Adyeri and Amoti makes them separated. This forces Adyeri to
remain with his concubines where he acquires the infection.
Ø
Atwoki
is forced to move from home due to constant conflicts with Daddy and poor
upbringing. He acquires the disease in exile.
Ø
A
conflict between Vicky and her husband’s relatives forces her to visit the
witchdoctor in search for a baby, instead she gets HIV. Talking about Vicky the
author says:
“She
felt very much threatened by his relatives who were always eyeing his great
wealth.”
INTRAPERSONAL
CONFLICT
Ø
Abooki
suffers intrapersonal conflict after being raped by John. She wonders whether
she has contacted HIV or Pregnancy. As a solution she goes for blood test which
confirms that she is HIV and Pregnancy free.
Ø
Vicky
also suffers intrapersonal conflict first when living with her uncle who
mistreats her. She runs away from home to get comfort somewhere else. Also she
suffers intrapersonal conflict when she marries Aliganyira and fails to get a
child. She is worried if her husband will throw her out and bring in a
replacement. As a result she goes to the witchdoctor in search for a baby but
she gets HIV.
PARENTS’
INFLUENCE ON THEIR CHILDREN.
It is generally said “Like father like son”.
Parents play a big role in the future behaviour of their children. Parents
ought to be good role models to their children or else they will become bad
models. If it happens that they shape their children in a negative way, it may
increase their chance of getting HIV as in the following cases from the novel.
Ø
David’s
father influenced David negatively by giving him too much freedom. He also goes
to the bars with his father, drinks beer and picks girls without any reprimand
from the parent.
Ø
Atwoki
also experiences poor upbringing from his heavily drinking and sex maniac
father. He eventually picks up his father’s behaviour and exposes himself to
HIV.
Ø
The
jealousy of Amoti influences Vicky to engage in prostitution and later finds a
husband as a way of getting her basic needs. This makes Vicky acquire the
disease.
Ø
However,
Amoti’s influence on Abooki is a positive one. She takes good care of her and
we are told that Abooki was a much disciplined girl.
POSITION
OF WOMEN.
Women occupy different positions in different
societies. Some authors portray women in a positive way while others portray
their negative aspects or both. In this novel, women occupy the following
positions;
a.
Women
as portrayed as tools for pleasure by men.
Most men use women just to satisfy their sexual
desires. The following examples illustrate the point. Abooki by John, Edda by
Atwoki, Birungi by Adyeri, David with his father were using a lot of women and
girls for the same reason. This increases their chance of getting HIV.
b.
Women
are portrayed as prostitutes.
In the novel we see some women/girls engaging in
commercial sex as a solution to poverty. These include; Vicky, Kunihira and
Tusiime.
c.
Women
are portrayed as weak and have no say.
A woman is shown as a weak vessel that men can
manipulate the way they wish. Amoti receives constant beating from her husband.
Also Vicky is denied the chance of marrying Akena by her uncle because of bride
price which she has no say about.
d.
Women
are portrayed as superstitious.
Women also believe in witchcraft. Amoti believes that
the sickness of her husband is due to witchcraft. She says that her husband has
been bewitched by Birungi.
e.
A
woman is portrayed a jealous person.
We are told that Amoti does not want Vicky to marry
Akena because of jealousy. As a result she puts an obstacle that Akena is a
Munyamahanga (a man from another tribe). Also she is jealous of the wife of the
rich shopkeeper.
f.
Women
are portrayed as gossipers.
Amoti and Abwoli are seen gossiping against the wife
of a rich shopkeeper. In page 3 the author says,
“Of course, she
had spent more than one hour just gossiping against the wife of the rich shopkeeper
whom she intensively hated and was jealous of. They had laughed and laughed
with Abwoli, who was her best
friend.”
g.
Women
are portrayed as parents and caretakers.
Despite all her weaknesses, Amoti has a positive side.
She manages to take a good care of her children even after family separation.
We are told that until they reach High school, Atwoki and Abooki have never
engaged in sexual affairs.
h.
A
woman is portrayed as a betrayer.
We are told that Adyeri loses his job because of the
financial scandal that he squandered the school funds to build Birungi a house
and sells his plot of land to open a shop for her. Yet when he is sick she
throws him away.
i. As a good advisor. Vicky advised Abooki not to go after money it will
kill her, Abooki advised Atwoki to be careful when he was going to Kampala.
j. As a responsible person. Amoti takes all the family responsibilities while
Adyeri is enjoying life with his concubines. Abooki also takes care of her sick
mother while Atwoki is enjoying the city life with girls.
INFLUENCE
OF POWER / MONEY.
Sometimes the position one has in the society or his
financial status may influence or expose him to the risk of getting HIV/AIDS.
The following examples from the novel are cases in point.
Ø
Adyeri
(The headmaster) is trapped by Birungi (his secretary) because of her seductive
approaches.
Ø
Atwoki
falls under Edda’s control because he is a famous football star and many girls
are hunting him.
Ø
David’s
father uses his money and position to trap girls.
Ø
David
also uses his Daddy’s money and wealth to win girls’ love and exposes himself
to HIV infection.
Ø
John
uses his money to finance Abooki and uses that loophole to rape her.
Ø
Aliganyira
marries and divorces two wives and forces Vicky to visit the witch doctor since
he is rich and Vicky agrees simply because refusing could mean divorce and go
back to hand-to-mouth kind of life she had before she hooked him.
Other themes include;
Ø
Irresponsibility,
Adyeri is an
irresponsible father and leader. As a leader he failed to do anything for which
to be remembered for. As a father he fails to provide for the family basic
needs. Due to his drinking habit he fails to foot the food bills in the house.
That’s why uncle Araali comes and finds children with no food and foots the
food bills. He also fails to take good care of his niece and leaves her to get
engaged in prostitutions and he doesn’t care.
Ø
Tribalism,
Amoti has a spirit of
tribalism. She denies Vicky to marry Akena saying he’s a man from another tribe
calling him a Munyamahanga.
Ø
Bride
price,
Bride price is a
stumbling block for African youths to get married to their loved ones. Parents
and caregivers usually complicate the matter by setting high bride price beyond
the youths’ financial ability. For Adyeri, as long as the bride price is settled
it doesn’t matter who/what marries Vicky whether it is a person, cow or a
donkey. The greed of parents has led to loss of humanity.
15 heads of cattle. 8 goats
50,000/= shillings for buying back cloth.
15,000/= shillings for buying Daddy’s walking stick and
2 jerry cans of beer. At
the end, the meeting ends without a consensus between the two parties. (Adyeri’s side and Akena’s side)
Ø
Wife
battering/spouse beating.
Adyeri is a hot tempered husband who beats his wife
just for a slight mistake. This is not good as it may lead to family conflict
and hatred among the married couples. As a result it leads to family
separations as in Adyeri’s family. This is a bad custom but it is common among
African societies.
Ø
Stigmatization.
ü This
is the act of treating somebody in a way that makes them feel that they are
very bad or unimportant because of some circumstances like disability, diseases
etc.
ü An
AIDS victim narrates on the TV how his friends have run away from him, even his
relatives detest him.
ü But
also Adyeri is stigmatized when he attends a parents’ day at Kinyamasika
Primary. Nobody chats with him. Amoti also treats her husband with stigma not
knowing that she is also suffering from the same tragedy.
ü It
is not good to stigmatize people with HIV but we can interact with them while
taking the necessary precautions.
Ø
The
influence of the mass media,
Like fire, the mass media
can be a good servant or a bad master depending on how they are used. The mass media
have a great influence on people’s behaviour. David’s family seems to be
affected by improper use of the media. They watch television film which is a
romantic tale full of sexual scenes and enjoy. Atwoki is given a room in the
visitors’ quarters which is full of pictures of half-naked women and pornographic
magazines. This in part contributed to moral pollution that Atwoki became in
the future.
Ø
Betrayal
Birungi betrays Adyeri but throwing him out at the
time when he needed her help. We are told that Adyeri loses his job because of
the financial scandal that he squandered the school finds to build Birungi a
house and sold his plot of land to open a shop for her at Mugusu Trading Centre.
Yet when he is sick she throws him away.
Atwoki betrays his sister Abooki and his uncle Araali
for neglecting them when he was in the hall of fame.
MESSAGE
a)
It
is important to spread HIV/AIDS education to people about its infection,
transmission, prevention and treatment. Many people seem to get the disease
unawares and spread it unknowingly.
b)
Multiple
sexual partners increase the chance of getting HIV/AIDS.
c)
People
should be careful in choosing friends and selecting the advice from friends.
Peer pressure seems to have a strong influence in personal transformation.
d)
Family
conflicts and poor upbringing create a detrimental future for the children.
e)
Spouse
beating is an outdated culture as it may lead to family separation.
f)
People
should do good things when still alive so that they can be remembered for good
when they are gone lest they pass like a shadow.
g)
We
should use the mass media fruitfully for getting valuable information and
education.
h)
It
is not good to treat HIV victims with social stigma.
RELEVANCE
Ø
The
book is relevant in any African society as it clearly depicts some common
issues that are prevalent in African context. Issues like; AIDS pandemic, Superstition,
Ignorance, Infidelity, Family conflicts.
Ø
The
influence of peer pressure especially among the youngsters is also common.
Ø
Bride
price and the related complications are common in African societies.
Ø
Stigmatisation
of HIV/AIDS victims, Irresponsibility and Betrayal among members of the society
are common phenomena in Africa.
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