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Rosa Mistika

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A controversial Swahili classic by one of Tanzania’s most revered writers, banned on publication and finally translated into English
 
Teenage Rosa lives with her parents and four younger sisters in a village on Ukerewe Island in Lake Victoria, where she attends the local school and helps out on the family farm. Life would be relatively peaceful if it weren’t for Rosa’s father, who drinks to oblivion and abuses his wife and daughters. Initially relieved to be admitted into a residential school on the mainland, Rosa soon discovers that she’s ill prepared for life outside her village. As she becomes accustomed to the attention—and manipulations—of men, she begins to understand her sexuality as a weapon. But this understanding, born of the need to survive in a world of double standards, comes with a price.
 
Rosa Mistika is a radical narrative exploration of womanhood, maternal love, agency, and authority—and the first-ever Swahili novel to address issues of domestic violence, sexual coercion, and abortion. Through the story of a young woman and her community it poses the enduring To what degree are we responsible for the choices we make, and to what degree are we acted upon by forces outside our control?

176 pages, Paperback

Published June 17, 2025

29 people are currently reading
658 people want to read

About the author

Euphrase Kezilahabi

9 books26 followers

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5 stars
42 (30%)
4 stars
38 (27%)
3 stars
31 (22%)
2 stars
16 (11%)
1 star
12 (8%)
Displaying 1 - 24 of 24 reviews
Profile Image for Anne Lutomia.
269 reviews63 followers
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October 23, 2017
Here, Kezilahabi speaks of the life of a young Tanzanian girl growing up in Northwest, Tanzania. He traces her life from her childhood to her death by drawing upon societal, academic, parental, colonial, economic and religious contradictions that shape and inform her decisions in life. Rich in Swahili vocabulary but extremely accessible.
Profile Image for Benedicta Dzandu.
130 reviews13 followers
October 21, 2025
I loved a well translated book. This book reminded me so much of Jagua Nana.
Profile Image for Tanya.
51 reviews1 follower
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July 9, 2025
Seamless translation! Especially & muchly appreciated the preserved phrases — rather than the lesser (imo) habits of either fully anglicizing a text or babyishly, painstakingly, & condescendingly explaining every word.
Profile Image for Farhan Haq.
129 reviews1 follower
August 29, 2025
A massive disappointment. The author pretends to try to portray an African woman fairly but then comes out with a story with terrible gender dynamics. Unbelievably, the book treats a rapist with more sympathy than his victim.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Sara. A.
28 reviews6 followers
September 6, 2025
⭐️(3.5/5)

Heartbreaking.

A beautiful and tender insight into the lives and culture of people in a small village in Tanzania.

The ending had my heart beating.

It is a social commentary on how our lives are so profoundly and inevitably influenced by the very people we grow up beside. The very 'sins' that we do not forgive others for are not what truly describe them as people.

The storyline follows the life of Rosa Mistika, a girl born to a dysfunctional family in a small village in Tanzania. Rosa is in a constant self-debate over the dynamics of life growing up.

This book also touches on the topic of parenthood. It really has one questioning societal construct and the possibility that most social issues, in the end, start from a place we call home.
Profile Image for Keith Miller.
Author 6 books206 followers
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March 30, 2009
Rosa Mistika by Euphrase Kezilahabi (1988)
118 reviews2 followers
February 28, 2024
😂😂😂😂😂 omg I had to laugh first. This book reads like a Mexican telenovela or a Tyler Perry movie. Over-the-top nonsense to serve an extremely preachy agenda.

Rosa Mistika's intended audience is very very clear.
1. Teenage girls
2. Inexperienced girl dads.

Everyone else will find this extremely laughable as I did. It's those stories that overdo the horror to strongly discourage teenage girls from promiscuity. Ridiculous things happen to Rosa like losing an ear and then committing suicide because a man won't marry her?

The characters in this book were one-dimensional caricatures. Rosa was almost interesting but she was pushed too far to each extreme to the point she made little sense. Her mother was the long-suffering wife. Her father is the stereotypical drunk who cares for nothing but his drink. And it's ridiculous how every town just mysteriously knew Rosa even though they were painted as towns, not small villages. It's ridiculous to imagine that in a relatively large town, EVERYBODY spends their days gossiping about Rosa.

The author was trying too hard to send a message. This is not a novel, this is a sermon. And I don't mean that as a compliment. Way too preachy that the story was ridiculous.

I remember being amused by this book in my early teens. In my late 20s, I see why.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for A.
327 reviews15 followers
November 12, 2025
Very much enjoyed this. Bit of a page-turner, really. A socialist realist Bildungsroman from 1971, follows one girl (Rosa) as she manages her alcoholic, abusive father and younger siblings, then goes to school, discovers sexual desire and has a lot of sex, gets sort of expelled, ends up getting her teaching degree, gets a job, falls in love with her very first love (who her father prohibited her from seeing), he rapes her one night when she is unconscious (supposedly to 'test' whether she is a virgin or not, fucking classic) and then breaks off their engagement in a humiliating and degrading way right after both of her parents have died, so she commits suicide by swallowing crushed glass. Lots of open talk about abortion, sex, and critical portrayals of men of all stripes--fathers, politicians, priests, authority figures in education, boyfriends, husbands, etc. Is the book a warning to the 'new [modern] woman' about what happens if she sleeps around? A criticism of patriarchal culture that places the blame on women for men's fuckery? A solid, serializable story (I wonder if it was printed in periodicals initially...) with a controversial plot? Yeah, really good.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Mary Peterson.
26 reviews1 follower
November 16, 2025
Riveting story. Some reviewers here said the ending is melodramatic--to me, it was perfect, and matched earlier dramas, such as when Rosa's rats out three schoolmates and they later retaliate, or when Rosa's ear is bitten off. Her father's drunken antics aren't funny, and for everything Regina does to mitigate his abuse, she can't salvage the situation for herself or her family in the end. The way the sexual violence was written, I found at moments I needed to summarize a scene in my own words, lest I forget we're talking about e.g. rape or abuse of power by an authority figure. For that reason the book got under my skin, as I believe was intended.
1 review
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November 2, 2022
Euphrase kezilahabi is trying to show us how narture and we'll being of a person may affect him/her as evidently observed through characters like Rosa who is brought up by his strict father Zacharia ends up in crossing the bridge and engaging in premarital sex when he gets the freedom at the college
Profile Image for Tom.
33 reviews
August 23, 2025
I surprised myself with how much I enjoyed this! Such a good and fast paced story/fable - it smacks of Hardy's Tess of the D'Urbervilles (although perhaps not 'faithfully presented as...'). Only the slightly melodramatic ending feels a bit fictionalised to ruin a potentially powerful Tessy-esque Stonehenge moment!
Profile Image for Cynthia.
32 reviews1 follower
April 28, 2023
so glad that i was able to read this foundational and seminal work!
1 review
July 28, 2023
Read this book long time ago but am here to read it again🔥
Profile Image for Grace Knudsen.
115 reviews4 followers
July 30, 2025
Recommended if you like: morality, being judged, judging others, trying to survive, allegory, going out into the world, the ground under your feet, growing up.
Profile Image for Marina S S.
4 reviews
September 1, 2025
A striking story that highlights imbalances and cultural pressure, though I wish it gave a bit more historical context and perspective on boys too.
1 review
June 4, 2025
Rosa Mistika is a book that motivates me daily. It reminds me the importance of family. It enlightens me as a woman to be strong in a world with men dominance.
Profile Image for Zuzana.
194 reviews15 followers
February 29, 2008
The only non-textbook thing I ever read in Swahili. It meant spending countless hours with my dictionary but I was THRILLED to be able to read this given that it was my first (and only) year I took the language. I wish I could still remember at least a half of what I knew then...
7 reviews1 follower
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September 29, 2010
Quite a read i must say, as innocent as i was at the time. It gave me a greater view of things around me
Displaying 1 - 24 of 24 reviews

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