I’m sorry to hear this fam. Keep searching for jobs
Try teaching maths in the meantime (not sure if it’s something you can do )
Research on scholarships too and try to leave ..
Greetings you beloved, ndokumbirawo repost🙏
🙏I now understand that God had a purpose for my pain, mudikani. There was a time in my life when I almost gave up on myself. Growing up with albinism was not just difficult it was painful, lonely, and traumatising. I lived with severe sunburns and untreated skin lesions because sunscreen, protective clothing, and proper medical care were simply out of reach. To many people, lacking sunscreen or a sunhat may sound like a small thing, but for a person with albinism, it can mean constant pain, permanent skin damage, and even death. As a young girl, I endured isolation and stigma every single day. At school, very few children wanted to play with me. Most of the time it was only my close family who made me feel accepted and safe. The physical pain was unbearable at times. When you go to sleep nursing raw, unmedicated sunburn wounds, there are moments when you genuinely begin to question the value of your own life. The nights were always the hardest.
Growing up in the village, you would know one or 2 fellow brothers and sisters with albinism in the village. You would suddenly hear whispers pachobhorani or gatherings
“uya akafanana nekamwana ako arwara …”
“The wounds are getting worse…”
“They now stay alone in a separate room…”
“His husband or family has abandoned him/her because they cannot manage because of the smell of the wounds…” then eventually, “They have passed away.”
Those moments cut deep into your soul. Today, after doing this work since 2019, I now fully understand why God spared me. My pain became my purpose.
Every awareness campaign, every sunscreen donation, every screening programme, every patient we assist it is personal to me because I know exactly what it feels like to suffer in silence and feel forgotten. Skin cancer cannot continue winning against persons with albinism.
I pray that in my lifetime, we will see a future where skin cancer no longer causes preventable deaths, pain, disfigurement, trauma, and hopelessness within our community. In our own small way, we are fighting back through awareness, lifesaving screenings, access to sunscreen, medical referrals, and surgery support for critical patients.
I am deeply grateful to the incredible medical practitioners who continue to stand with our community and offer their services pro bono, including Dr Mutangadura, Dr Mutukwa, Dr Makondo, and Dr Wayne Manana through the Global Cleft and Cranio Facial Organisation. These are people using their skills and compassion to restore and touching lives.
APPEAL FOR SUPPORT
On 23 May 2026, we will be returning to Masvingo Provincial Hospital with our medical team to assist critical patients with albinism who urgently require major surgeries and medical intervention. To make this possible, we are hoping to raise at least US$2,500 to help cover:
🟢Transportation for patients travelling for treatment
🟢Meals and basic support for beneficiaries
🟢Logistics and support costs for the volunteer /programing teams
🟢Analgesics and histopathology support
I am humbly appealing for your support. No amount is too small. Your contribution could help save a life, prevent further suffering, and give someone another chance at dignity and hope. If you are unable to donate, please help us by sharing this message in your network maybe a donor is in your circle.
Donate via the link below: https://t.co/SERrooq6fK
Together, we can protect lives, restore hope, and remind persons with albinism that they are not forgotten.
PLEASE SHARE🙏 | Help Natasha Fight Cancer and and Achieve Her Dream of Becoming a Medical Doctor.
Natasha Chikosha is a 24-year-old final-year medical student at the University of Zimbabwe who is currently fighting a serious form of cancer called ALK-negative Anaplastic Large Cell Lymphoma.
Natasha has spent years working tirelessly toward her dream of becoming a doctor so she could dedicate her life to caring for others. Instead of preparing for graduation and beginning her medical career, she is now facing the fight of her life.
Her doctors have confirmed that her treatment can be curative, giving our family hope. However, one of the most important medications in her chemotherapy treatment, Brentuximab Vedotin, is extremely expensive and currently beyond what we can afford.
As a family, we are doing everything we can to support Natasha through chemotherapy, hospital visits, medication costs, transport and ongoing care. Unfortunately, cancer treatment in Zimbabwe is financially overwhelming, and we are now reaching out for help.
Natasha is kind, hardworking, resilient and deeply loved by everyone around her. Even during this difficult journey, she continues to smile and hold onto hope.
We are asking anyone who is able to support, whether through a donation, a prayer or simply sharing this fundraiser, to please help us give Natasha the chance to continue her treatment and fulfil her dream of becoming a doctor. Every contribution, no matter how small, truly makes a difference.
Thank you for standing with Natasha and our family during this incredibly difficult time.
Go Fund Me Link Available below. Alternatively if you are in Zimbabwe you can contribute using these details:
Account Name : M & D Chikosha. Bank : Agribank Nelson Mandela. Acc Number: 100004483558. Ecocash: 0772737943 Mazivisa Chikosha
PLEASE SHARE 🙏🏾 | Sad story as woman attending a funeral loses US$800 in Gweru theft
A Bulawayo woman, Constance Makhubalo, was robbed in Gweru while preparing for her grandmother’s funeral.
On 18 April, she and her sisters stopped at Metro Peech to buy groceries. While shopping, Constance suddenly felt dizzy and went back to the car to rest, leaving the door open for fresh air. A man later approached her and claimed one of the car’s tyres had a puncture.
When she stepped out to check, it turned out to be a distraction. While she was looking at the tyre, another suspect quietly opened the car from the other side and stole her handbag and cellphone.
She only realised what had happened when she returned and found her bag missing. The suspects then walked away and got into a gold Toyota Mark X and drove off. The car was using registration number AGD 1199, which was later found to belong to a vehicle stolen in Kwekwe last year.
She lost about US$800 (including US$650 confirmed), along with her National ID, driver’s licence, medical aid card, and phone. The money was meant for funeral expenses, making the loss even more painful.
The matter was reported to Zimbabwe Republic Police at Gweru Central Police Station under Case Number 6593533.
Members of the public are urged to stay alert, especially in busy areas, as criminals are using distraction tactics to target unsuspecting people.
Anyone with information can contact:
+263 783 958 656
+263 772 430 812