Mavis Moyo is a veteran broadcaster of Radio Zimbabwe (ZBC Radio 4) and a founding member of the Federation of African Media Women Zimbabwe (FAMWZ 1985).[1] During the 1980s and 1990s she was leading a project, which became known as Development Through Radio (DTR) across Zimbabwe and the entire Southern African region.[2]

Personal life

Women of the Radio Listening Clubs in Seke Zimbabwe receive Radios

Mavis Moyo, born Mavis Zulu on 17 July 1929,[3] lives in Harare and is the mother of seven children, six sons and a daughter. She is still involved in consultancy work and sits on several Media boards .[4]

Early life

Mavis Moyo was born and grew up in Esigodini ("Essexvale"), a village in Matabeleland, 43 km South-East of Bulawayo, Zimbabwe's second largest city. After her education and working as a teacher for about 12 years,[5] she first got involved in the Media in 1954 by chance as a temporary replacement at what was then the Federal Broadcasting Corporation (FBC), and was kept as a part-timer. Initially this work entailed reading inserts in Ndebele for a women's program called "radio home-craft club" (RHC).[6] Later, a vacancy arose, she applied and got the post of an announcer.[7]

Career

Broadcasting career

For many years, Moyo was one of very few women broadcasters, black or white, in colonial Zimbabwe. In 1968 she was the first woman to read the news on the Rhodesian Broadcasting Corporation (RBC) African Service. On 4 October 1982, Moyo was appointed to spearhead the establishment of ZBC's Radio 4 dedicated to education and rural development.[8] In over 50 years in radio, she is credited with pioneering participatory techniques of broadcasting and development through women's programs like RHC. In the late 1980s, Moyo's radio drama Changes came third in a competition organised by the Union of Radio and Television Organizations in Africa (URTNA).[9]

As a broadcaster and an African woman from rural Matabeleland herself,[10] she quickly recognised the power of radio as a means of communication and imparting knowledge among rural communities in Africa and especially for the women who are often the once running the farms and working in the rural area when men migrate to cities to find paid jobs.[11] “I realized that [radio] was a powerful tool of communication. As a teacher, I was imparting knowledge to about forty to four hundred people in the class but with radio I could teach the whole country."[12]

Work and achievements

Mavis Moyo has been instrumental in the formation of the Federation of African Media Women, beginning with a consultative meeting of media women in Lusaka, Zambia in 1977, with participants from, among other countries, Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. The Zimbabwe Media women launched their own national federation (FAMWZ), when in 1985, they went to the International Women's Conference in Nairobi, Kenya with a draft of their own constitution at hand. Moyo says since then, FAMWZ's focus has been the development of media women and other women in the urban and rural areas of the country. The increased local and regional activities and networking among African media women lead to FAMW-SADC being formed in 1992.[13] In 1988, FAMWZ, with Moyo as chairperson, launched the rural radio listening club project DTR.[14]

Development through radio

In an interview with radio continental drift in 2012, Moyo emphasises how what became known as DTR or Development Through Radio grew from the seed of a collaboration and exchange between urban and rural women, initially between the Jamuranai Women's Club in the Harare township of Highfield and rural women from Seke district South of Harare.[15] It was this relation between women across urban-rural divides, which developed into an early precedence of participatory radio in Africa to an unprecedented scale. It is thanks to the leadership of Mavis Moyo, the eager persistence of her and some of her colleagues at ZBC Radio 4, carried on and further by FAMWZ members through persistent outreach training, as much as the very eagerness of the rural women groups themselves, that radio listening clubs could be established all over the country.[16] Support from UNESCO and the Friedrich Ebert Foundation helped to run and maintain the project,[17] which had the backing of the Ministries of Information, Post and Telecommunications, and Community- and Cooperative Development and Women's Affairs.[18]

A 2009 report by the Open Society Initiative, "Public Broadcasting in Africa" makes mention of the project under the leadership of FAMWZ as Radio Zimbabwe's best known broadcasting initiative. "The project created radio listening clubs involving rural women who would gather to listen to programs by and about themselves. It was hoped that opinion leaders would emerge from the radio listening clubs who would then relay this development information to others."[19][20][21]

After leaving the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation, Mavis Moyo worked tirelessly in support of DTR projects across the Southern African region, such as in South Africa's Kwa-Zulu Natal, Mozambique, Malawi, Namibia and Angola.[22]

Personal life

Women of the Radio Listening Clubs in Seke Zimbabwe receive Radios

Mavis Moyo, born Mavis Zulu on 17 July 1929,[23] lives in Harare and is the mother of seven children, six sons and a daughter. She is still involved in consultancy work and sits on several Media boards .[24]

Vision and legacy

Throughout the interview with radio continental drift, Moyo emphasises on the segregation of women out off a patriarchal society, their exclusion from any posts of influence, and from the Media in particular.[25] As she talks, the response of her life's work seems to be the active call for women to unite: for the media women to unite across specialisation and professions; for the women of Zimbabwe to come together across urban and rural divides; for women across Southern Africa to unite across national differences and join hands and voices for media participation of women across their continent and societies.[26]

In the transcript of an interview with Moyo about the history of FAMWZ, published by Kubatana Network in Harare, she concludes with the statement: "we want to see media women taking their rightful places as managers in the media and establishing their own newspapers, magazines and broadcasting stations and film industries. They have the capacity to do this and also to run media training schools. There is a very strong movement of women who have a desire to tap on these fields."[27]

References

  1. Moyo, Mavis (1991). "Development through radio". Community Development Journal. 26 (3): 227–232. doi:10.1093/cdj/26.3.227. JSTOR 44259217 via Jstor.
  2. Moyo, Mavis (1991). "Development through radio". Community Development Journal. 26 (3): 227–232. doi:10.1093/cdj/26.3.227. JSTOR 44259217 via JSTOR.
  3. John Masuku, 2007
  4. FAMWZ, 2002
  5. "Development Through Radio"; interview with Mavis Moyo, radio continental drift, 18 September 2012 (total duration: 22 minutes; c.c.); tracks 1–3 (early life); see playlists (tracks 1–10), (tracks 11–20); see also reference page at Creative Africa Network Archived 16 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine.
  6. radio continental drift 2012; track 4 "radio home craft club"
  7. Federation of Africa Media Women, "Mai Moyo traces the History of FAMWZ", 21 November 2002, c.c. Kubatana archive Archived 26 November 2004 at the Wayback Machine.
  8. John Masuku, "Mavis Moyo: 50 years of lobbying in Zimbabwe”, in: 50 Years of Journalism: African media since Ghana’s independence, c.c. The African Editors Form, Highway Africa and media Foundation for West Africa, Johannesburg 2007, pp.156
  9. John Masuku, 2007
  10. radio continental drift 2012; tracks 17–19; Moyo on the life of rural girls and women
  11. radio continental drift 2012; tracks 5–7; Moyo on her early broadcast experience
  12. FAMWZ, 2002
  13. FAMWZ, 2002
  14. John Masuku, 2007
  15. radio continental drift 2012; track 8 "women's clubs"
  16. radio continental drift 2012; tracks 9-11; Moyo on the start of DTR project
  17. In her 1993 article "Using Radio for Community Mobilization", Nancy A. George gives 1985 as start of the project; and its current achievement as 45 radio listening clubs in 4 provinces of the country. Nancy A. George, "Using Radio for Community Mobilization: Experiences in Zimbabwe and Kenya”, in Africa Media Review, African Council for Communication Education Vol. 7 No. 2 1993; pp. 59.
  18. Mavis Moyo, "Development Through Radio", in: Community Development Journal, Oxford Journals 1991, 26 (3) pp.227–232; p.228.
  19. Public Broadcasting in Africa Series, Zimbabwe Archived 27 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine, Open Society Initiative for Southern Africa, 2009, p.85.
  20. For detailed descriptions on the concept, realization, progress and outcomes of the DTR project see Moyo's own articles at the time of the pilot project's first evaluation (Moyo, 1991); and, "Development Through Radio: the Zimbabwe Experience”, in S. T. Kwame Boafo and Nancy George (Eds.). “Communication Processes: Alternative Channels and Strategies for Development Support”, Ottawa: IDRC.
  21. radio continental drift 2012; tracks 13–14 Moyo talks about running the DTR project.
  22. Radio Continental Drift 2012; track 20 "DTR moving on"
  23. John Masuku, 2007
  24. FAMWZ, 2002
  25. radio continental drift 2012; tracks 10 – 15 Moyo on women's struggle and unity
  26. radio continental drift 2012; tracks 16 and 19 Moyo on successes of women’s struggle.
  27. FAMWZ, 2002
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