HARARE, Zimbabwe — Liquidity as affection and trash as a symbol of enduring love. From bouquets fashioned from dollar bills to heart-shaped gifts forged from recycled scrap metal, romance in Zimbabwe is taking strikingly inventive forms, reflecting life in an economy where cash reigns supreme and sustainability gains new social value.
You can't buy love, the saying goes. But from florists in traditional markets to social media sellers angling for attention on TikTok, dollar bills rolled and pinned together to resemble a floral bouquet are increasingly rivaling fresh flowers as Valentine Day's most coveted tokens of appreciation in the southern African country.
''Please God, make my lover see this,'' commented one TikTok user under a video advertising glittering cash-and-flower arrangements. ''May this bouquet locate me in Jesus name, amen,'' wrote another.
Cash as courtship
At a decades-old flower market in the capital, Harare, Tongai Mufandaedza, a florist, patiently assembled one such ''money bouquet.'' Using adhesive and bamboo sticks, he folded crisp $50 notes into decorative cone shapes, weaving them with stems of white roses.
As Valentine's Day approaches, he expects business to surge.
''The market has improved because of the money bouquets,'' said Mufandaedza, who has worked at the country's biggest flower market for three decades.
''On Valentine's Day, we are going to have more, more, more customers, because this is something which is trending. Everyone wants to impress,'' he said, then patched the arrangement in bright red wrapping and ribbons.