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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Jestina Mukoko

Interviewed May 4, 2011

My name is Jestina Mukoko. I come from Zimbabwe. I’m born of a family – in a family of seven kids, two girls and five boys. Grew up for, I think, a lot of my time without my dad. He died when I was five, and I’ve really grown up with my mother, especially. And I have a 21-year-old son. I’m a single parent, at the moment. My husband died in 1995 when my son was only four, and I think in all these years, we have really just been the two of us. My career actually started as a teacher. Immediately after college, it wasn’t easy to find a job of choice, so I found myself teaching. But obviously, I wasn’t born a teacher, and I did not last in teaching.

I then found myself working as a journalist with a public broadcaster in Zimbabwe, the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation, where I worked on the national languages desk to translate, edit news from English into the local languages, Shona and Ndebele. But with time, I then found myself also presenting news on the flagship bulletin of the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation, the 8 p.m. news. And I think working as a journalist is really the work that I did in my prime years. And with time, I found myself growing out of – out of journalism. I do miss broadcasting, but I think I’m in the right space at the moment, working as a human rights defender.

I’m a human rights activist in Zimbabwe, and in 2008, I had the most unfortunate experience when I was abducted by state agents and kept incommunicado for 21 days, accused of a crime that I never committed, and then kept at a maximum security prison for 68 days. And then eventually, months later, I was cleared of all the charges.