By Adonis Byemelwa
Roaming back into Kashasha after years away, I felt the weight of home settling over me in a way that tightened my chest with both comfort and unease. The road that once carried my childhood footsteps now carried memories I hadn’t realized were still alive, tugging at me with the insistence of old songs you hear before you remember the lyrics. Relatives and neighbors opened their arms as if no years had passed at all, their warmth covering me quicker than the dust rising at my feet.
They asked about the political clashes that had occupied headlines, but their worry seemed strangely out of place in a landscape that looked too quiet to match the stories they feared. Kagera felt calm, almost withdrawn, as though it had stepped aside from the world’s noise and refused to be dragged into it. What unsettled me more wasn’t the absence of tension but the presence of something entirely different, rows of elegant homes gleaming above fields that had grown tired and thin.
The contrast struck me like a quiet accusation. These freshly built homes stood tall and confident, framing the horizon with their polished walls and modern touches. Yet the farms surrounding them seemed to sag from years of disappointment, their soil stripped of the generous spirit that once fed entire households. It felt as if wealth had chosen only one side of the village to bless, leaving the land, the true foundation of life here, abandoned like an aging relative no one wanted to claim.
It wasn’t always like this. Lights from rural electrification now shine through windows that once went dark after sunset, and piped water runs in homes where wells once dictated daily rhythms. Internet signals drift through the air as easily as birdsong, giving the impression of progress. But progress feels hollow when the fields no longer whisper the confidence they once carried, when the crops that defined a people lose their grip on the soil they called home.
Bananas, the heart of Kashasha’s kitchen and culture, have slipped from their pedestal, replaced by cassava, sweet potatoes, and masoma, foods that were once humble companions on the breakfast table. It’s strange to see these crops stepping into roles they were never meant to fill, like children forced into adulthood too soon. I hadn’t expected the absence of bananas to hit me this hard, but walking through these farms felt like discovering an old friend had fallen ill without telling anyone.
There was a time when Kashasha’s bananas sailed proudly across Lake Victoria, feeding families far beyond the village borders. Today, the same villagers dig deeper into pockets that already hold more worry than money, trying to piece together meals that feel smaller in every sense. The pride that once lit up faces during harvest season has dimmed, replaced by quiet calculations about what can stretch and what must wait.
One afternoon, walking with Godfrey Amurungi, I could see how much the land’s decline had worn on him. Godfrey has the kind of presence farmers carry when they love the land as much as they understand it, steady, patient, unwilling to lie about hard truths. He told me how manure now eats into savings without promising anything in return, how the bananas he once nursed into generous yields barely gather enough strength to fill a basket. It pained him to say it, the way a parent feels when speaking of a child’s failing health.
The saddest part is how these poor harvests stand beside expensive homes rising from the same ground. It’s almost surreal to see a village lined with houses that would look impressive in any city, yet surrounded by soil that no longer keeps its promises. People whisper that artificial fertilizers killed the land in places like Itahwa and Maruku, stripping it of the quiet power it once held. Whether or not every rumor is true, the devastation in the fields is undeniable.
I remember older generations warning their daughters against marrying into places without strong banana harvests, asking in Kihaya what anyone would eat in such a land. Food wasn’t just a necessity; it was a measure of a family’s stability, a sign of respectability. Now the irony tastes bitter, those same fears echo in Kashasha, the very soil that once defined abundance. Parents in cities now struggle to support relatives in the village, reversing a tradition where the land fed everyone.
City children return home hoping to carry back the pride of produce grown by their parents, only to find empty fields and quiet apologies. The shift is more than economic; it claws at the heart, making the bond between village and town feel strained in ways people rarely voice aloud. Watching this unfold feels like witnessing a slow unraveling of something precious and irreplaceable.
When I spoke with John Katanga, a soil expert who has devoted his life to understanding the land’s moods, his frustration carried a tenderness I didn’t expect. He explained how relentless rains had dragged nutrients deep into unreachable layers, leaving the soil hungry and roots confused. He didn’t blame the farmers; he blamed time, climate, and the belief that the old ways would always work. But his tone sharpened when he spoke about the obsession with fancy houses rising in the middle of withering farms.
Katanga believes in rebuilding from the ground up, literally. He described planting holes large enough to swallow a grown man’s torso, filled with organic matter and mixtures meant to revive the soil’s memory. These holes could be the beginning of a quiet revolution, yet they take patience, money, and a kind of faith many families feel too worn to muster. Still, his demonstration plots carry promise, even if they demand millions to implement on a large scale.
He insists the money exists, only the priorities falter. The same families who pour fortunes into decorative homes could revive their farms if they chose to make the land a partner rather than an afterthought. Local leaders echo this hope, calling for commercial banana farming and promising better markets. The region could bloom again if people believed enough to try.
Agriculture has always been Tanzania’s backbone, and watching Kashasha struggle feels like watching a vertebra slip out of place. Other regions, even across the border in Uganda, have strengthened their banana research and extension services, keeping their farms from collapsing. There’s no reason Kashasha cannot do the same, no reason the soil here should be left to suffer in silence.
Walking those familiar paths, I felt the grief of the land in ways I hadn’t expected. The houses gleam, yes, but the farms murmur a different story, one of neglect, of choices made without listening to the ground that anchors us. And yet, beneath that grief, I sensed a stubborn pulse, a reminder that soil can forgive if given time, care, and a chance to breathe again.
In the end, Kashasha’s future won’t be shaped by the shine of its rooftops but by the hands willing to return to the fields. The land still holds its quiet strength, waiting for those who remember what it once gave and what it can give again. If the people choose the soil over appearances, they may rediscover the abundance that first taught them what home truly meant.