Chuka’s centenary celebrations
“I have
not even told you a half of the story. Thing is, I don’t know where to start
but I believe the best way to write is not for a writer to lead a story but the
story to lead the writer.”- Musyoka Ngui
Wednesday marked the end of this semester’s syllabus.
All the lectures are now over. It is the striker like scenario. You see a
striker evades the rival’s midfield, defense until he is left face to face with
the goalkeeper. It is how he deals with this ultimate challenge that defines
the player and the team’s history.
We are in such a situation. Though one challenging
assignment on website design is yet to be handed in the exam season is here. So
is the end of year. I found myself being caught flatfooted literally. After
revising thoroughly for IT sit in CAT it came to pass without me knowing
whether I would garner at least zero two out of fifteen.
I took a break and went shopping at Chuka market, the
headquarters of Tharaka Nithi County. No sooner had I disembarked from the cab
than I noticed the excitement in the air. People were whispering that the next
day the president will tour Chuka.
The workers were polishing a monument erected near
Equity Bank. It looked much like the twin cement monuments of Meru and Embu. In
1998, I saw them in a calendar my dad bought and hung on the wall. I asked him
“Daddy whose hands are those?” He
replied, “It is presidents Kenyatta and Moi’s hands”. The two are immortalized
in the concrete waving a club and a tail of the horse. These artifacts came to
define the early presidents’ symbols of power.
I went to Jatomy Supermarket and did my usual shopping
despite the economic crunch. When I was passing near the monument I noticed it
looked quite similar to the one at Meru and/or Embu. However, this one did not have
‘hands’ of the founding president and his successor. It had a black head and
four pillars resting on a wide base.
I went straight to Posta to send my mum a
congratulatory card as she was graduating and clearly I could not join her but
we were together at heart. The statue would today (Friday) be the symbol to
mark the existence of Chuka Town as we know it. President Uhuru Kenyatta
officially opened the stone. He later launched a road project for the entire Chuka
municipality effectively putting Chuka on the prophetic path it was destined to
go since Jerusha Kanyua prophesied many years ago.
I have not even told you a half of the story. Thing
is, I don’t know where to start but I believe the best way to write is not for
a writer to lead a story but the story to lead the writer.
Friday started in a patriotic tempo. What with walls
being covered by national flags around the university and more flags waving
freedom on high hoisted masts? The police were controlling the crowds. The
usual searches degenerated to long and winding queues of frisking. The red
carpet stretched far and wide. The main square of the campus was a nightmare.
The queues wasted time for morning class students.
Soon the Recce Squad of GSU arrived. Clad in their KDF
like uniforms, to say that they were in charge is a gross understatement. They
jumped from their lorries with an antelope’s swiftness. Their red caps and
juggle green uniform bayed for trouble makers to come on.
The regular police where there too. This is not a
confession. The traffic boys in blue do not have any other picture in my mind
rather than that of taking bribes. The administration police (AP) reminded me of
my local chief and his bakuli hat. The guy who brandishes a black stick
used it quite sparingly to push back Wanjiku from getting nearer the pavilion.
The event was meant to celebrate 100 years since the establishment
of Chuka town. Chuka University VC Prof. Erastus Njoka articulated the key
development milestones of the Chuka community. He said that the town has grown.
To me, the most significant project is the establishment of Chuka University.
It is causing ripples around. Jobs are sprouting everywhere like mushrooms.
From mama mboga to landlord to multimillion contractor things will never
be the same again.
The president promised to end the mud nuisance by
carpeting the town with tarmac. Meru Senator Hon. Kiraitu Murungi recalled how
he used to go to Chuka Boys’ on a muddy path. This will change. The Tharaka
residents will also benefit from irrigation scheme to ensure food security.
Scientists and researchers will also gain from soon to
be constructed technology center-a first of its kind in Africa-if the designs
of local architects and technocrats get to see the light of the day.
I was thrilled by the unity of Mt. Kenya East
residents and leaders. The counties of Tharaka Nithi, Meru and Embu are one.
The good neighborliness and concern resonated well with the Nyumba Kumi Initiative. They are their brother’s
keepers. They devise joint development plans and execute them with admirable
support. The visiting leaders could only envy the unity exhibited by these
counties. They are also peaceful people who welcomed us here since freshman
year. I am yet to document a key case of xenophobia. The villagers are only
shocked when some provocatively dressed campus girl strut her stuff before them
or when a male student pierces his ears and eyelashes in protest. They cannot
decipher the drive of these youths adhering to rocker life and Western dress
codes. All the same they tolerate.
The villagers too embrace their culture. This is best
exemplified in their indigenous songs and dances. Chuka dancers are famous for
their synchronized dance moves and thundering drum beats. They swing their
waists like they do not have bones. Their sisal regalia fly around them as if
to fan their bodies which by now are dripping with sweat due to vigorous
action. They are the John the Baptist who went before Jesus. Salsa Dancers can
only up the bar since the standard is set.
From the beginning the university pavilion was set to
be the theatre of political actors. It was the playground on which politicians
traded their rhetoric and hit out at their real and imagined rivals.
To their credit, they dismissed the official opposition,
Cord as mere hypocrites who do not own the House decisions yet they vote for
such laws. They attacked their Jubilee colleagues who go to the press to discuss
issues rather than bringing those issues to the parliament. They took a swipe
at those who let petty differences and politics divide them. Collectively, they
admitted that they are giving wananchi a raw deal by bickering and not working
on their manifestoes.
I particularly like what Tharaka Nithi Senator Prof.
Kithure Kindiki said about leadership. He argued that the elected leaders
should not be obsessed with titles at the expense of the mandate that they have
been given by the electorate. He said that the electorate can call him
Mheshimiwa or Professor if they want but he is comfortable with being called
just Kithure because he is a people’s person. In him I could see honest
humility and appreciation of the call of duty. He lamented his diary is full
and wondered how the president juggles his daily routine. His was a sincere
appreciation of the president’s visit. Just to recap how the president’s diary
was he said that Uhuru was down at the Coast to launch a standard gauge railway
line and Jomo Kenyatta International Airport Nairobi to launch an expansion facility
for the JKIA to enable more intake and turnover of passengers.
Being journalism major, I was keen to hear the take of
various leaders on the new media law and generally about the topical issues.
What I sensed was like being stepped on the toe by an elephant. The pinch and
pressure was overwhelming. I felt sad. I mourned the rhetoric of politicians.
My stomach churned. My gas pipe blocked and finally I was stifled on the throat
by a killer grip of anger. The air around me disappeared. I breathed heavily.
My eyes watered.
The sun was scorching. Journalists from the mainstream
media camped at the foot of the pavilion stairs. The MPs slammed journalists
for what they termed as lies. They said that the journalists misled the public
by reporting that the stiff penalty of the new media bill is KSh. 500, 000. The
politicians corrected this ‘misconception’ and said it is only KSh. 100,000.
They literally and figuratively pointed fingers at the reporters. The cameras were
heavy and the lecture was harsh. I sympathized with my mentors who carried
heavy cameras on their shoulders to cover the same people who called them
liars. I crossed my fingers praying that the scribes will not drop their pens
and pads and protest as they did this Tuesday. They kept their cool despite the
harsh criticism from MPs.
The president’s comment that the government has no
intention of gagging the media made me pause and think. He posed the question
of why someone would be alarmed by a prohibitive penalty if they have no
intention of violating the law. He quipped that the fine does not apply to a
responsible scribe. Could the journalists be running away from the long arm of
the law? Are they masters of impunity? Do they present a picture that is not
what is on the ground? I may disagree with Mr. President when he gave an
analogy of the journalists’ actions as like that of a robber of violence
bargaining to have his life sentence waived to one year so that he is released
to go and rob again but I agree with him that journalists require regulation. They should not mislead the
public who hold them in a deity trust.
The Deputy President William Ruto underlined the
importance of free media and said that the government has no power to gag the
press rights especially when they are enshrined in the new constitution.
One myth that this high level visit debunked in my
eyes is that Uhuru Kenyatta is light browner than the way newspapers photograph
him to be. Ruto is light and swift. He is not even very tall. Both have an
eloquent tongue which is a major plus. They are great orators. That has not
come out clearly in the mainstream media. I guess I had to witness it myself to
believe.
I was alarmed by my president’s disclosure that he
does not read the newspapers in the morning. I felt I missed a big reader and
immediately thought about writing for the president’s taste. How I hope my
president could read even if it is the headline only. I get it that he is busy.
However, Your Excellency please read us. We write for everyone including you. I
feel you when you say that watu wa magazeti insult you yet you don’t say
a thing. You have a big heart of forgiving them. Translate this forgiveness too
to reading them. I long for a day when you will have a regular newspaper vendor
deliver news to the State House for you.
The legend lives on
Thursday night Nelson Mandela died. It was long time
coming. Having been hospitalized severally for lung infection and being on life
support machines, Mandela prepared the world for his death. At least he has
rested in peace.
He did not surprise us as victims of road carnage and
gun shots do. I suppose it is because of his iconic status. What if you woke up
one day and heard that Mandela died? Of course you would be shocked. You could
even cause your own death in mourning.
This is because Mandela was and is not anybody. He is
the most respected person on earth in life and death. He achieved more than all
who ever lived before him. He changed the course of history forever. If I start
counting his achievements I would bore you.
Anyway, I will highlight some of the most phenomenal
lifetimes of Madiba. The most indelible reminder of Mandela’s life is his
ability to forgive his enemies. He is one person who taught the world how to
forget and move on. He forgave his oppressors despite having a chance to hit
back. Most of us would agree that if we were released from prison and ascended to
presidency we would kill our enemies.
Mandela shamed the Dutch by incorporating them in the
Rainbow Nation. He united the Blacks with the Whites by letting them embrace
Rugby when most Blacks were suspicious to the Whites.
Mandela held the highest office in the land and never
salivated for a second term when most African strongmen clung to power like a
tick sucks a cow even when it is dead. Mandela bore humility which restrained
him from the greed and arrogance that come with power and authority.
People understood when Mandela divorced and remarried.
Well, you may say it is patriarchy, but Mandela is one guy who loathed
unfaithfulness. The 27 years he endured in jail made him search his soul and
achieve an inner peace with him and 0thers.
When Mandela was the president of South Africa he
battled with poverty, corruption, housing and unifying his country. These
problems still afflict South Africa but he did his best and peacefully handed
the mantle to Tambo Mbeki. Today, Jacob Zuma is leading the most developed
country in Africa. The independent party Mandela founded, ANC is sliding to unpopularity
and irrelevancy.
South Africa has the dubious distinction of having the
highest HIV prevalence rates in the world. But trust Mandela to demystify anything.
He went ahead and told the world the truth that his son died of HIV/AIDS. This served
as a relief to the stigma faced by people living with AIDS. Mandela taught us
to tell the truth.
Whichever way South Africa and Africa goes it will be
guided by the servant leadership of Mandela who selflessly gave all he got for
the sake of humanity. He made the world a better place than he found it.
Mandela, the world does not mourn you. It celebrates
you. Your legacy will live on. Smile down at us always. We will miss you. Fare thee
well.
PS: Below are some of Mandela’s famous quotes. Sample the
nuggets of wisdom.
On fighting
apatheid
“During my lifetime I have dedicated
myself to this struggle of the African people .I have fought against white
domination, and I have fought against black domination. I have cherished the
ideal of a democratic and free society in which all persons live together in
harmony and with equal opportunities. It is an ideal, which I hope to live for
and to achieve. But if needs be, it is an ideal for which I am prepared to
die.”
On imprisonment
‘Look into yourself. “People tend to
measure themselves by external accomplishments, but jail allows a person to
focus on internal ones; such as honesty, sincerity, simplicity, humility,
generosity and an absence of variety,”
On his dream
about South Africa
“Never, never and never again shall
it be that this beautiful land will again experience the oppression of one by
another and suffer the indignity of being the skunk of the world,” “Let freedom
reign. The sun shall never set on so glorious a human achievement! God bless
Africa! Thank you.”
On persistence
‘A winner is a dreamer who never
gives up’
On romance
“As I passed a nearby bus stop, I noticed out of the
corner of my eye a lovely young woman waiting for a bus ..her name was Nomzamo
Winifred Madikizela .... and I knew that I wanted to have her as my wife.”
“My dearest
Winnie, Your beautiful photo still stands about two feet above my left shoulder
as I write this note. I dust it carefully every morning, for to do so gives me
the pleasant feeling that I’m caressing you as in the old days. I even touch
your nose with mine to recapture the electric current that used to flush
through my blood whenever I did so. Nolitha stands on the table directly opposite
me. How can my spirits ever be down when I enjoy the fond attentions of such
wonderful ladies?”
On determination
"NO power on Earth can stop an oppressed people
determined to win their freedom."
On stepping down
"I step down with a clear conscience, feeling
that I have in a small way done my duty to my people and my country."
The
writer is a 3rd year student of Bachelors of Arts Degree in
Communication and Media at Chuka University. He blogs at
musyokangui.blogspot.com
Email
your thoughts to musyokangui02@gmail.com
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