It’s 3pm on a crisp August afternoon in Johannesburg. Tsitsi Masiyiwa
is seated on a comfy couch in a makeshift living room at her elegant
office in the leafy suburbs of Dainfern, north of the city. I meet her
when she is in a deep conversation with a South African journalist and
one of her office employees. I sit down to join the conversation and
Masiyiwa recounts a fascinating story.
The year was 1996 and Masiyiwa and her husband, Strive Masiyiwa, were
almost penniless. The couple was going through a rough patch, and they
were struggling to feed themselves and their children. “We were so broke. We couldn’t even afford to give our visitors tea,”
Tsitsi Masiyiwa says in retrospect. “We were practically living from
hand to mouth.” But things hadn’t always been this way. Just a couple of years before, Strive Masiyiwa owned
a thriving business. He had founded Retrofit Engineering, an electrical
contracting firm that handled lucrative construction contracts for the
government and had built a considerable fortune. But his fortunes
reversed in 1993 when he decided to establish Zimbabwe’s first
independent mobile telecoms network to rival the government-owned
telecommunications company.
At the time, the Zimbabwean Post & Telecommunications Corporation
(PTC) was the sole provider of telecommunication services in Zimbabwe.
When Masiyiwa expressed his interest in acquiring a mobile operating
license and launching a substitute mobile telecoms network, the
government threatened to prosecute him if he dared to pursue his plans.
The Zimbabwean authorities denied him a license. Refusing to bow to
intimidation, he took the government to court, challenging the
government’s monopoly on telecommunications and seeking the rights to
operate a mobile phone company in Zimbabwe. It was a landmark case that
lingered for close to five years, eventually finding its way to the
Supreme Court. “Our problems began when we sued the government,” Masiyiwa
recollects. “You cannot sue the government and think things will always
be right.”
During that period, the government, which was Retrofit’s biggest
client, immediately called off its existing contracts with the firm. It
had disastrous consequences for Strive Masiyiwa. Within months, he could
hardly afford to pay salaries and he finally had to sell off the
company’s assets to finance Econet’s legal battles against the
government. Before long, the Masiyiwas’ funds had dried up, and they
were on their wits end.
“So we were broke. In trying to understand what was going on around
me, I began to do an intensive soul searching. Then I prayed to God and
made a deal with him. I told God that if he granted us the license to
operate the mobile phone company in Zimbabwe- and he made us successful,
then I will help support as many poor people as possible for as long as
I lived,” Tsitsi Masiyiwa recalls.
Tsitsi Masiyiwa, a deeply religious woman, took a step of faith along
with her husband. “We went ahead and registered Capernaum Trust, a
charity that we decided would give scholarships to needy children. It
was an unpractical thing to do at the time, especially considering the
fact that we had nothing. But as a Christian, you do unreasonable
things,” she enthuses.
God probably answered her prayer because in December 1997 the
Zimbabwean Supreme Court awarded Econet Wireless a license to set up a
mobile telecoms company in Zimbabwe. The Supreme Court ruled that the
government’s monopoly on telecommunications was in violation of a
provision in country’s constitution that allowed for freedom of
communication. Econet launched its services in Zimbabwe in 1998. Growth was rapid.
Within a few months of setting up in Zimbabwe, Econet became the leading
mobile telecoms company in the country. It has maintained that
trajectory in the last 15 years and has grown to amass about 10 million
subscribers spread across Zimbabwe, Botswana, Burundi and Lesotho.
Strive Masiyiwa is now Zimbabwe’s richest man.
As Econet began spitting out handsome dividends for her family
holding company (which owns the chunk of Econet shares), Tsitsi kept her
promise to God. “I gathered as many orphans as I could find from all over Zimbabwe and I threw a party for them,” Tsitsi says. Tsitsi regularly held party-like events in her home for orphans in
which the children always ate to their fill. Many times, she visited the
children in their orphanages, offering them food and personal
mentorship. It was an exhilarating experience for her, but she felt it
was not enough.
“I spent time with these children and I came to love them. I wanted
to keep doing more for them, but I realized that it was not just enough
to keep giving them fish. I had to teach them how to fish. I wanted them
to grow up and fend for themselves and become successful people. I
wanted them educated,” she says. It was at that point that Capernaum Trust began in earnest,
supporting orphaned and vulnerable children by paying their school fees,
and providing funds for school uniforms and stationery. Strive and
Tsisti Masiyiwa dug into their personal resources to fund these
scholarships.
Today, the Capernaum Trust pays the school fees of over 40,000
students, whom Tsitsi calls “History Makers,” across the Primary, High
school and Tertiary levels. Of that number, close to 3,000 of them are
University students with some of them studying in the United States,
South Africa and Australia, where the fees are usually much more
expensive that in Africa.
In February,Tsitsi
and her husband established the Ambassador Andrew Young Scholarship, a
$6.4 million dollar scholarship fund that sends African students to
attend the Morehouse College in the United States. The fund is named
after Ambassador Andrew Young, a former United States Ambassador to the
United Nations, who is renowned for his vanguard role in the
international Civil Rights Movement. Tsitsi is quick to emphasize that beneficiaries of their scholarships
are not mere students, but “History makers.” And the connotation has a
spiritual dimension to it. “Once an orphan comes on the program, he or
she ceases to be an orphan because s/he now has a Father in heaven who
empowers him/her to make history,” she says.
The Trust now has ‘History Makers’ in Zimbabwe, Burundi, South
Africa, Lesotho and Swaziland, and Tsitsi says they are planning to take
on more countries in their programme. “We are most certainly planning to expand to other African countries.
While setting up the Trust was in line with fulfilling my promise to
God, it was also majorly driven by a desire to see major development and
social upliftment in Africa. The Econet Group does business in many
African countries and we are making money from these places. We have to
give back. It’s only reasonable thinking that businesses give back to
the communities in which they do business.”
While the Capernaum Trust traditionally provided only scholarships,
uniforms, food packs and stipends, Tsitsi says they now also provide
career guidance and medical assistance to its beneficiaries. It is a
holistic intervention. The Masiyiwas spend several millions of dollars every year from their personal resources in addition to financial support from Econet Wireless to
support these philanthropic endeavors. Tsitsi politely declined to
disclose how much it spends annually on these scholarships. The
Capernaum Trust is also generously endowed and it invests its resources
in an assortment of sophisticated financial instruments and property.
While the Foundation’s philanthropic work has had several successes, there have been a few disappointments. “It’s not all roses. We’ve had cases where some of our girls got
carried away and became pregnant out of wedlock, and then they had to
drop out of school. We’ve had boys who left our programmes to head
cattle and some girls have eloped to get married early,” she says. But Capernaum’s success stories far outnumber its not-so-successful stories- a feat for which Tsitsi is thankful. While the Capernaum Trust is Tsitsi Masiyiwa’s most popular
philanthropic endeavor, it is far from her only one. Along with her
husband, she is a co-founder of three other charities- the Christian Community Partnership Trust (CCPF),
a charity that provides financial support for church and church
organizations working in the least evangelized areas of rural Zimbabwe;
the National Healthcare Trust Of Zimbabwe which provides financial support for medical drugs, human resources, transport in the event of a health crisis and the Joshua Nkomo Scholarship Fund –
named after the late Zimbabwean nationalist which also awards
scholarships to exceptionally intelligent Zimbabwean children. These
four foundations are part of the Higher Life Foundation, an umbrella organization for all the charity efforts of the Masiyiwas. Tsitsi Masiyiwa serves as Executive Chair.
Why is Tsitsi Masiyiwa and her husband doing all this?
“We’ve been successful, and I feel that people who are successful
have a responsibility to support initiatives that will fuel Africa’s
growth and development,” she says matter-of-factly. “Look around Africa, you’ll see that new millionaires are springing
up everyday. It is good to create wealth, but along with wealth-creation
must come a deep sense of responsibility. Africa’s rich need to
collectively deploy their resources for the good of the people around
them.” Tsitsi Masiyiwa is now at the vanguard in urging rich Africans everywhere to give back. In April this year she joined forces with some of Africa’s most
prominent philanthropists such as Nigerian investor Tony Elumelu, Kenyan
banker James Mwangi and Nigerian philanthropist Toyin Saraki to form
the African Philanthropy Forum (APF), a regional affiliate of the San
Francisco-based Global Philanthropy Forum. The group aims to build a
community of African donors and social investors devoted to fueling
Africa’s growth and development.
“Collectively, we will find the best, effective and most strategic way to pursue philanthropy in Africa,” she says.
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