August: I Am a Girl from Africa

by Elizabeth Nyamayaro

Review by Moon Mokgoro

“I Am a Girl from Africa reminds us that none of us are whole without the other.”

About the book and its author

Cover I Am a Girl from Africa by Elizabeth Nyamayaro © Elizabeth Nyamayaro - Jonathan Ball Publishers In her memoir, ‘I Am a Girl from Africa’, Elizabeth Nyamayaro writes about her journey from living in poverty in Zimbabwe to becoming a political scientist - working on the African continent to help combat the rapid spread of HIV/AIDS, working to assist with maternal immortality rates in Uganda and Zambia, becoming a senior advisor at UN Women, and forming HeForShe - a solidarity and gender equality initiative.

the story

As a young girl, during a drought in Zimbabwe, Elizabeth collapsed under a tree as a result of hunger and starvation. She was weak and in and out of consciousness. Moments later, a woman that Elizabeth did not recognise, gave her a meal. That woman was a UNICEF humanitarian aid worker who had gone to the villages in Zimbabwe to feed the people suffering from the drought. She saved Elizabeth’s life. This moment, this act of kindness, the woman telling her that "as Africans, we must uplift each other," led Elizabeth to discovering her purpose. She wanted to be like that woman, she wanted to work for the United Nations.

In a nonlinear narrative that shifts between her life growing up in Zimbabwe and her life in London, the book feels like a walk through and around time. In one part you’re reading about the villages in Zimbabwe where the sweetest guavas and mangoes grow, about Elizabeth's Gogo and the lessons she taught her. In the next, you’re reading about her new life in London, where she moved to make her dream of working for the United Nations a reality. Elizabeth worked as a cleaner in order to pay rent, and faced racism and discrimination based on the colour of her skin, the texture of her hair, and her foreign accent. Her journey wasn't as straightforward as she had hoped, but she persevered either way. Lessons from her stories of Zimbabwe are woven into the storytelling about her new life in London and later on in different parts of the world.

Throughout her journey, Elizabeth faced gut-wrenching rejection and discouragement. Outside voices were telling her that her dream of working for the United Nations was impossible because she was just a girl from Africa. Nothing deterred her. Years into her stay and eventual study, Elizabeth found herself in a job interview at the United Nations with Julia Cleves - an HIV and Aids policy advisor, who later became a friend and mentor to Elizabeth. She was far from qualified for the job until she recounted the story of how in her youth she assisted her Aunt Jane, a doctor, with her work helping HIV and Aids patients in Zimbabwe at a time when the country had one of the highest rates of infection worldwide. This on-the-ground experience gave Elizabeth an advantage, and she got the job as a research assistant. Her hard work and determination led to her working as a senior advisor for Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, a former apartheid freedom fighter and executive director of UN Women. In working for UN Women, women around the world shared stories with Elizabeth that weaved together. Stories that were too similar, that made strikingly obvious the severe inequality women face worldwide. She discovered that no matter the location, women experience extreme discrimination, oppression and injustice. Women are punished for being women. Not long after hearing these stories, Elizabeth, alongside Emma Watson, developed the HeForShe solidarity movement and used

About the reviewer

More informationen

This review is the eighth in the new Book of the Month series from the Goethe-Institut South Africa. A new review by South Africans for South Africans will be published every month, check back regularly. All books can be borrowed from our library, the membership is free. 

All "Book of the Month" reviews

Here you find all reviews of the series Book of the Month. All books are available in Goethe-Institute library in Johannesburg.

Dear Mr. Entrepreneuship - Book of the Month December

It’s simply not good enough to have a great business idea, because that idea needs to work financially. Do you have the ability to make business decisions quickly based on facts, not the heart?

On the left is the cover of Dear Mr. Entrepreneurship and on the right a picture of Puselesto Motsemedi © Goethe-Institut Johannesburg © Goethe-Institut Johannesburg

Mhudi by Sol Plaatje

Mhudi is a historical novel set in the 1800s that tells the story of an African woman living during a war between the Barolong people, Matebele people and the Boers. Mhudi’s tribe, the Barolong, is attacked one evening by the Matebele. Amid the screams, bloodshed, and destruction—Mhudi escapes.

Mhudi von Sol Plaatje © Sol Plaatjie © Sol Plaatjie

Torchbearers - Book of the Month October

The women of 1956 marched to the Union building in unison because the pass laws that were oppressive. These women, from all backgrounds and races were torchbearers to a poet, social and legal advocates. These women, who are as colorful as their backgrounds and professions, share something common: the need to be somebody.

Book of the Month October: Torchbearers By Wendy Maartens © Wendy Maartens © Wendy Maartens

Maru - Book of the Month September

Maru is a story about a Masarwa woman, Margaret Cadmore, who was adopted and raised by a white woman during a time when the Masarwa people of Botswana were heavily discriminated against. Head writes “Masawra is the equivalent of ‘nigger’, a term of contempt which means, obliquely, a low filthy nation.”

Book of the Month October 2024 - Torchbearers by Wendy Maartens © Wendy Maartens © Wendy Maartens

I Am a Girl from Africa - Book of the Month August

As a young girl, during a drought in Zimbabwe, Elizabeth collapsed under a tree as a result of hunger and starvation. She was weak and in and out of consciousness. Moments later, a woman that Elizabeth did not recognise, gave her a meal. 

Book of the Month August 2024: I am a girl from Africa © Author: K. Sello Duiker | Pubulisers: Kwela Books © Author: K. Sello Duiker | Pubulisers: Kwela Books

The Quiet Violence of Dreams - Book of the Month July

Tshepo, a young student at Rhodes, has a difficult time keeping up with his own strange mind. He is absorbed in making sense of a traumatic past in a violent country and so when he finds himself at the Valkenberg mental facility it is perhaps not entirely due to “cannabis-induced psychosis”.

Book Cover: The Quiet Violence of Dreams © Author: K. Sello Duiker | Pubulisers: Kwela Books © Author: K. Sello Duiker | Pubulisers: Kwela Books

Here Again Now - Book of the Month June

Carried by impeccable lyrical writing, the 2022 novel examines themes of queerness, grief, friendship, and family. Set in the United Kingdom with hints of Nigerian life, this enthralling book reads like capricious weather.

Book of the Month: June - Here Again Now by Okechukwu Nzelu © Goethe-Institut © Goethe-Institut

Transcendent Kingdom - Book of the Month May

A book about racism, the tensions between emotional religion and rational science and mental health.

On the left a picture of Katharina Kindsmüller, on the right the cover of "Transcendent Kingdom" © Marcus Sporkmann | Penguin Random House South Africa © Marcus Sporkmann | Penguin Random House South Africa

Land Matters - Book of the Month April

“The book brings the reader up to speed with land's lengthy and complicated process. Assessed interventionist measures on their efficacies that mainly amounted to nought.”

On the left is the book cover of "Land Matters" and on the right is a portrait photo of Tlou Meso, the reviewer. Both pictures in front of the dark Goethe blue. Penguin Random House South Africa | Tlou Meso Penguin Random House South Africa | Tlou Meso

Follow us