Martha Mvungi Explained

Martha Mlagala Mvungi
Birth Date:January 19, 1943
Period:1970-2003
Birth Name:Martha V. Mlagala
Birth Place:Kidugala, Njombe
Language:Kiswahili, English
Nationality:Tanzanian

Martha Mlagala Mvungi (born Martha V. Mlagala; 19 January 1943 - 24 June 2017) was a Tanzanian novelist, short-story writer, academic and teacher. She wrote in both Kiswahili and English.

Life

Martha V. Mlagala was born in Kidugala, Njombe, in what was then Tanganyika Territory. She was the second child of Jeremiah Mlagala, a pastor, and Dzitumulike Mhehwa. A member of the Bena people, she received her earliest education among the Hehe. This included time at Ilula Primary School as well as Tabora Girls, finishing in 1961.

Mvungi went on to teacher training college and then the University of Edinburgh. She graduated in 1968 and returned to Tanzania. In 1972, she married, and in 1974 she completed her master's degree at the University of Dar es Salaam. She titled her thesis Language Policy in Tanzanian Primary Schools with Emphasis on Implementation. Her research showed the importance of language in the cognitive and emotional development of children.

As a member of the Department of Education at the University of Dar es Salaam, Mvungi rose to the position of senior lecturer in 1982. In the same year she completed her PhD thesis, The Relationship Between Performance in the Instructional Medium and Some Secondary School Subjects in Tanzania. This continued the theme explored in her earlier work. Specifically, it demonstrated the relationship between proficiency in the language of instruction and educational performance.

Mvungi then joined the UNESCO National Commission as Secretary General in 1982. In 1990, she was appointed Permanent Secretary for the Ministry of Health. She also served as director of the Training Fund for Tanzania Women. In 1995, she founded ESACS Academy, an international secondary school in Dar es Salaam. She ran the school until 2015.

Martha Mvungi passed away on 24 June 2017.

Writing

Mvungi's first published writing appeared in 1970 under her maiden name Martha V. Mlagala. 'Was it an illusion?' featured in Darlite, a students' literary magazine based at the Department of Literature, University of East Africa. It is a story about a young woman who leaves her school in Njombe to follow her lover to Dar es Salaam. But once in the city, her lover abandons her, and she struggles to return home. Forced to rely on the driver of an oil truck travelling the Tanzan Highway to get home, she finds herself vulnerable and terrified.

Her student writing continued with a biography of Lulapangilo Zakaria Mhemedzi, a resident of her home village of Kidugala whom she interviewed in 1970. John Iliffe included this in a collection of Tanzanian biographies.

She went on to publish six books between 1975 and 2003, in both Kiswahili and English. Two further books, The Voice and Writing off a Debt in Ngorongoro Crater, were never published. Her work also featured in several anthologies. This includes Unwinding Threads: Writing by Women in Africa and The Heinemann Book of African Women's Writing.

Heinemann published Mvungi's first, and only, book in English in 1975. Released as number 159 in the African Writers Series, Three Solid Stones is a collection of folktales. Mvungi was the second Tanzanian writer to appear in the series, after Peter Palangyo, and the first Tanzanian woman. James Currey, the series editor, had reservations about the inclusion of oral literature, and felt that Three Solid Stones lacked lustre.

In the same year, Mvungi published Hana Hatia, a detective story designed to illustrate the family crisis in contemporary African society. In her novel, Mvungi tells the story of Petro, who leaves his devoted wife, Maria, for a mistress. Maria, unable to support herself in the city, returns home to an Ujamaa village. There she finds fulfilment as a schoolteacher.

Mvungi then turned to children's literature with Yasin's Dilemma and Yasin in Trouble. Her final book, Lwidiko, criticises corruption in contemporary Tanzanian society.

Complete works

Sources