South Africans citizens have rained curses on
Khumalo, a South African singer and girlfriend of football star, Senzo
Meyiwa, for letting the footballer into her home where he was killed on
Sunday knowing he was fully married. A reporter who writes for
timeslive.co.za who feels the curses and yelling towards Khumalo were
unnecessary because the footballer in an interview earlier this year
already admitted he never told the singer he was married when they
started dating. Below is an article the reporter wrote to defend her...
The police has however said there will be a
monetary reward for anyone who helps in tracking down the killers of the
football star and a purported picture of them have been released.
Am I alone in feeling sorry for Kelly Khumalo?
When Senzo Meyiwa was killed, it didn’t take long for people to start slamming Khumalo.
He married, and she was the “other woman”.
The
“other woman” who was clearly fond on him, who was the mother of his
child, who remembered him singing her songs, who remembered him being
her boyfriend.
Who was the woman he chose to spend his last day of
life with, and the woman who remembered seeing him get shot, dying in
her arms after possibly trying to protect her.
And there was an argument over whether she should get to go to the funeral.
I know adultery is a big taboo, and it cannot be easy for Meyiwa’s wife or family, but they have each other.
Khumalo has the anger of the public, some saying she killed him, and I remember reading one person saying she should be stoned.
The
family have shoulders to cry on, but it is a cold shoulder that society
turns to the “other woman” when this sort of thing happens.
And it isn’t right. Sure, the relationship was not socially sanctioned, but he was the one who was married.
Why do we as a society raise our fists to the one who wasn’t violating any oaths?
Heck she only found out that Meyiwa was married five months into the relationship.
“Kelly
had no idea that I was in a relationship, I didn’t reveal it to her. I
should have known and done better, I have apologised to both Mandisa and
Kelly for this.” Meyiwa said earlier this year.
So why is it that she is treated like it was all her fault?
Is it because he was male, she is female, and somehow it is always easier to blame a woman?
Or maybe I am being unfair, maybe it is simply because she is the one who is still here.
I cannot answer that question, there are too judgements to be made.
I
can however say this; it cannot be easy to be Kelly Khumalo right now,
with the anger of a nation turned against her for loving whom she ought
not to have loved, and for having lost.
It cannot be easy as her
lover’s father does his damndest to add to the pain as he grasps for
every possible asset simply so she has as little as possible to remember
him by.
A picture in an ID book, a daughter to grow up not knowing her father, and memories, those she still has
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