Awave of anticipation and collective pride surrounds Zimbabwe as Julie Kaitlyn Mberikwazvo Tungamirai, recently named Miss Teen International Zimbabwe, embarks on her journey to Jaipur, India, to represent her nation at the Miss Teen International 2025 competition on 31 August.
At just 19 years of age, Tungamirai represents a generation of young Africans whose lives are marked by both global exposure and deep-rooted cultural connections. She is pursuing a degree in mechanical engineering at Albany State University in the United States, balancing her studies with a commitment to athletics and social advocacy. Her life story reflects resilience and intergenerational determination. Raised by a single mother, she draws inspiration from the sacrifices of her family and the enduring legacy of her late grandfather, who was honoured as a national hero in Zimbabwe.
In a message to Zimbabweans and the global Miss Teen International community, she emphasised the symbolic weight of her representation:
“Hallo makadini, linjani Zimbabwe and the whole Miss Teen International family. My name is Julie Kaitlyn Mberikwazvo Tungamirai, and I am your Miss Teen International Zimbabwe. Representing Zimbabwe is deeply personal for me. My country is a land of breathtaking beauty, but it is our people who are the true jewels. I am proud to carry our courage, our unity, and our dreams with me to Jaipur.”

Her platform extends beyond the stage of an international pageant. As a Brand Ambassador for Youth in Action, Tungamirai has been instrumental in projects that establish scholarship opportunities for disadvantaged children through sport. Her personal background in athletics — including tennis, track, and swimming — has informed her broader vision of using sport not only for personal development but as a structured means of social transformation.
Patience Lusengo, Director of Miss World Zimbabwe, praised Tungamirai’s achievements, framing them as part of a wider continental narrative of youth advancement:
“Julie represents the best of Zimbabwe: intelligence, courage, humility, and purpose. She is not only stepping onto the international stage for herself, but for every young girl back home who dares to dream. This is a moment of immense pride for Zimbabwe, and I encourage all Zimbabweans to support Julie as she carries our nation’s story to the world.”
Since its establishment in 2016, the Miss Teen International competition has sought to position itself as more than a celebration of aesthetics, with increasing emphasis on advocacy, cultural pride, and intellectual engagement. The 2025 edition, hosted in Jaipur, convenes participants from across the globe, offering young women a platform to articulate their visions while highlighting the diversity of their respective nations. Within this context, Tungamirai’s involvement signifies not only an individual accomplishment but also a collective expression of Zimbabwe’s dynamism and resilience.
Her participation also resonates with broader Pan-African discourses on the positioning of African youth within international cultural arenas. Beauty pageants, while often associated with external ideals, have become spaces where African women assert agency, reframe stereotypes, and project multifaceted identities. For Zimbabwe, and by extension Southern Africa, Tungamirai’s visibility in Jaipur underscores a shift from externally defined narratives to self-determined cultural expression.
Across Africa, pageantry has historically carried contested meanings, sometimes criticised as imitative of Western models, yet increasingly reconfigured as vehicles for advocacy, education, and continental solidarity. Tungamirai’s journey exemplifies this transformation, situating pageantry not as an isolated spectacle but as part of a continuum of African youth engagement on global stages.
As she departs for India, Zimbabweans at home and in the diaspora continue to express solidarity. Many view her journey as emblematic of perseverance, innovation, and courage, values encapsulated in the national mantra “Shinga – Be Brave.” Whether on the stage in Jaipur or through her ongoing advocacy, Tungamirai stands as part of a generation of young Africans reshaping how the continent is represented and understood internationally.







