Saturday, October 25, 2014

Autistics proving disability is not inability



Autistics proving disability is not inability
A
s they swung on merry go round, Mr. Makewa observed that one can rotate the machine at the highest possible speed, the learner can stand without staggering or falling since his/her brain does not get disturbed by the circular motion.
The Kitui School for the Mentally Challenged and Autism Unit.  A long name and a big title.  No one knows better the responsibility belying this special school situated in the outskirts of Kitui town than the Principal Mr. G.M. Makewa. His is not your regular school. He is a steward of one of the most unpopular institution in the society. May be it is because he has a big heart.

            When we visited his school, the workers were sweeping the environment. The pupils were excited and happy. They smiled and greeted us. Clearly, there is a certain fondness the special children attach to guests however humble. They are not used to guests coming over and they don’t take it for granted.

          One unspoken rule of speech in this school is euphemism. The vocabulary is loaded with political correctness lest you hurt the fragile sensibilities of the learners. You cannot say retard. You say mentally challenged or handicapped. You don’t say dumb, you say verbally impaired.

          And so Mr. Makewa has mastered the art of customer relations. He is patient with his pupils. He listens to their murmured speeches and decodes their instincts. He teaches the mentally handicapped. He said his class is easier to teach than the autistic one because his portray clear and distinct behaviour patterns unlike the former which require advanced technique in teaching.

          The school was founded in 1987 and is a public one. Apart from the government funding, it accepts grants from well wishers who volunteer to support the needy children.

          While displaying a confident grasp of special education, Mr. Makewa classified the mentally challenged learners into three broad categories. The first is the Intelligent Quotient (IQ). This, he said his pupils are sub average therefore are termed as mentally challenged. Two, there is social adaptation. The learners have problems in adjusting to social settings they find themselves in. For example, they cannot differentiate how to conduct themselves in a church and in school or at home. To them, the environment and behaviour are uniform. Lastly, he said that the mentally challenged pupils must be under 18 years to be regarded so. He said that they study mental development of children compared to “normal” ones by way of observing growth and development milestones such as sitting, crawling and standing to determine whether the children are special.

           For the autistic class, Mr. Makewa referred us to teachers who studied the subject at the Kenya Institute of Special Education (KISE), the only one of its kind in the country. Meet Ms. Lucy Kibiru and Mr. Maurice Mutuma, the autism teachers and proud diploma holders from KISE.

          We were ushered by the two into the autism class in session. The autism block is new and hosts five classes from elementary to vocational level. The building was funded by the National Fund for the Disabled-Kenya (NFD-K). There is also a standalone class which is yet to be commissioned and is sponsored by the Kitui County Government.

          Mr. Mutuma said that the real cause of autism baffles scientists but they believe a number of pointers such as when the mother develops sickness during pregnancy and this may infect the foetus in the womb. As a result, the baby is born with disabled brain and the symptoms shows clearly after age of three years. The baby develops speech and interaction impairment. He advised the parents to accept the condition of their children and seek help from professionals like him, doctors and psychologists.

  Ms. Kibiru said that the special education has few instructors compared to the number of disabled children thus the ratio of teacher to pupil is wanting. In their case, each teacher attends to 21 pupils but the recommended ratio is at least 1:2.


           The autistic learners exhibit bizarre behaviours and need special care so that they do not injure or even kill themselves. Some bite themselves; others bang their heads on objects and tiptoe dangerously to restricted areas like toilets and boreholes. Each case is different. No autistic exhibits similar behaviour like the next. For the mentally challenged, they can be controlled because there condition is less severe.

           Both streams are merged in the vocational level in order to empower them to generate income despite their impairment. They are taught carpentry, beading and dress making so that they may make furniture, ornaments and clothes for sale in order to improve their standards of living. Indeed, disability is not inability.

          Interestingly, there is a rare strain of autism that borders on genius. Some autistics master counting, drawing and singing so well that they give those who are not disabled a run for their money. Mr. Mutuma showed us one such pupil and added they are few and uncommon as their gifts.

          Mr. Mutuma vouched for early identification of autistic cases. He blamed parents who lock up their kids at home or take them to regular primary schools and only bring them to the special centre when it is too late to correct them. Some are admitted as old as 18 years after they fail to cope with the mainstream education.

  On her part, Ms. Kibiru said that autism is a mental disorder that comes in a broad spectrum. Like a rainbow, the autistics have different shades of behaviour patterns in terms of speech (echoic), spatial (space) and sensory (sight, smell, kinaesthetic and tactile). Some autistics repeat sounds they hear. Others have super sense of smell that surpasses that of ordinary human beings. Still, others have strong sense of touch that they can hold an object and no one can disentangle it against their will.

          As they swung on merry go round, Mr. Makewa observed that one can rotate the machine at the highest possible speed, the learner can stand without staggering or falling since his/her brain does not get disturbed by the circular motion.

          Physically, the autistics have small heads (microcephally) while others have big heads (hydrocephally). What happens is that the abnormal heads are pressed by fluid in the brain that worsens the autism. The brain fluid is periodically drained to ease the pressure in the head. The surgery is expensive and thus unaffordable for majority of the parents with autistic children.

          The autistics are on special fish diet which calms hyperactivity. Mr. Mutuma said that they are not supposed to be fed high carbohydrate food like biscuits, bread and chapattis which trigger hyperactivity and restlessness. They also do not drink milk.

          We also encountered autistic children living with the Down’s Syndrome. They have flat face and reclined necks and slit eyes. Despite their perceived weakness, they were determined to keep their phalanges still to join beads with threads in a beading class. Perhaps it is this resilience that makes Mr. G.M. Makewa wake up every day and come to teach and manage the Kitui School for the Mentally Challenged and Autism Unit.

Tuesday, October 21, 2014

Mazrui’s legacy will live forever



Mazrui’s legacy will live forever
I will remember Mazrui as a hero who left indelible footprints in the sands of time. His legacy will live on
BY MUSYOKA NGUI
Last Monday morning I was attending a 7 a.m. lecture on Kiswahili Seminar. My lecturer Mr. Enoch Bitugi Matundura received a rather sad call from a colleague in Germany confirming bad news. Matundura does not pick calls in class. This one was exceptionally important given the way he excused himself to answer the call. Just like that he broke the sad news that Prof. Ali Mazrui, renowned scholar had passed on.

We knew the news before the media confirmed it.  Now, many scholars and students mourn the death of the Kenyan international intellectual who not only pushed the Kenyan story but also peddled the African narrative.

INTERNATIONAL INTELLECTUAL
I celebrate and admire Mazrui for a number of things. First of all is his intellectual prowess that saw him named among the top 100 intellectuals in the world by Prospect Magazine (UK) and Foreign Policy Magazine (US). He was the 73rd most intelligent individual according to the in 2005 Global Intellectuals Poll.

Mazrui came across as a deeply patriotic son of Kenya given that he resisted pressure from the US to denounce his Kenyan citizenship and take up American one. This should be a lesson to our athletes who discover greener pastures elsewhere and dump their Motherland for good.

Mazrui was born in Mombasa and in his will he stated that he would wish to be laid to rest in Mombasa Old Town where he was born. Clearly, Mazrui is connected to his roots in life and death.

The political science professor and writer on South-North relations, African and Islamic studies will be immortalised by the publications he has left behind.

DEEP PATRIOT
The fact that he served as the first non-president Chancellor of Jomo Kenyatta University of Science and Technology under Kibaki regime and despite having a busy international schedule speaks of a patriot who slotted his country high in his priorities. It is a challenge to Kenyans in Diaspora to emulate him.

Another interesting turn of Mazrui’s academic life was that he was denied entry into Makerere University for “not meeting the entry marks”. Despite this setback he bounced back by studying in Manchester University in 1960 where he graduated with a distinction and studied hard enough to come back to Makerere not as a student but as a lecturer. He further did his masters at Columbia University in New York in 1961, and his doctorate (DPhil) from Oxford University (Nuffield College) in 1966.

It is after obtaining his doctorate degree that Mazrui returned to Kampala, Uganda to teach Political Science as well as heading the Faculty of Social Sciences.

INDELIBLE FOOTPRINTS
As I pick his 1995 book Swahili, State and Society: The Political Economy of an African Language [with Alamin M. Mazrui] (Nairobi: East African Educational Publishers) to do my Kiswahili Seminar assignment, I will remember Mazrui as a hero who left indelible footprints in the sands of time. His legacy will live on. The challenge is for the current and future generations of Africa to take up the mantle and advance his intellectual prowess for posterity.

Rest in Peace Professor Ali Mazrui.
The writer is a Final Year BA Communication and Media student at Chuka University and a blogger at musyokangui.blogspot.com (Youth Issue)

Sunday, October 12, 2014

“I have left. Stay strong”



I have left. Stay strong”
BY MUSYOKA NGUI
Having bowed her last, here is my final respects to grandma
In a space of 112 days the cruel hand of death has twice visited my family and taken two members. It took a husband and wife, leaving behind a trail of orphaned children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren. On May 22, it nipped Titus Musyoka Mutwouvyu and in a little over 100 days later it came for his wife Rhoda Kasyoka Musyoka aka Mikang’i.
When susu was admitted in hospital I knew she was a fighter. She won the Tseikuru battle. The she was referred to Thika. There, the battle was upped several notches higher. Having braved the draining life from the veins drips, it is certain that her children wanted to give her the best medical care they could afford.
When we came to burry your husband you were literally groping. With fading eyesight and frail frame I recall your premonition: “You have come to bury him, tomorrow it will me”. Then things seemed to have lulled until you were admitted with severe diabetes.
I regret to have known so little of you. I guess it’s the nature of today’s world. Being in the city and you in the village offered little opportunities for us to meet.  The naughty nicknames you gave each of us will surely be treasured. The explicit and honest thoughts you offered about life, sex and relationships will linger eternal. You urged us to be more and never be contended with less.
As your descendant, I can assure you that I will be strong. I will be strong for you and grandpa. The same is with the rest of my siblings, cousins and aunts and uncles. You loved education and gave your children the best standard there was. The improvement has been made tremendously. Your demise shared a month with the first ‘husband’, Mutati which means “he who tries”. He is joining the disciplined forces.  You should have lived longer to taste his first military package.
I thank you that you did not bid us a bang like goodbye. Your departure was gradual. Like US Army withdrawing from Afghanistan. Like KDF pulling out of Somalia. It was strategic. The premonition. Now you have rested. Your journey was and still is and will remain a great memory. The milestones will forever be marked.
How does it feel up there with your beloved husband? They say life never ends. That death is a transition to another life. Are you remarrying again in spirit? I would love to witness the posthumous reunion. Where do you guys go for honeymoon up there in heaven?
These are the questions we grapple with in our times. By now you know the answers- I guess.
As expected Mum is devastated. She hasn’t been able to send me a formal text or a call to announce the sad news. Nonetheless, I understand. Having stayed with you throughout your last days she expected to return home with you. But on 2/10/2014 at 10 am you bowed your last. I learned a day later despite the advancement in technology. Perhaps the time was supposed to let the wounds heal but even if it took ages the impact will still be as fresh as a nail on flesh.
On 11th day this month we will lay you to rest. May your soul rest in eternal peace.
The writer is a Final  Year student of Bachelors of Arts Degree in Communication and Media at Chuka University and a Blogger at musyokangui.blogspot.com
Email your thoughts to musyokangui02@gmail.com

Thursday, October 9, 2014

Hey, WhatsApp?



Hey, WhatsApp?
W
hatsApp enables users to send and receive free photos, videos and text messages. It saves the users from regular mobile service provider expenses like high tariff calls and SMSs.
BY MUSYOKA NGUI
Mobile technology has simplified the way we communicate with each other. The WhatsApp mobile application enables the users with Android Operating System supported mobile phone or tablets to send multimedia messages for free.
The WhatsApp enables users to send and receive photos, videos and text messages. It saves the users from regular mobile service provider expenses like high tariff calls and SMSs.
Active WhatsApp users are visible to their friends and family. The user need to have saved the latter’s numbers in their phonebook. It helps to upload one’s profile photo to identify the user. Further, the profile photo attracts the other users to chat with you rather than a profile without a photo at all.
It’s fun to have this application because users share cartoons, exclusive photos and Photoshopped pictures. They are also able to generate their own content and modify animated ones.
People with similar interests can form WhatsApp chat groups. Again, to form and administer the chat group is free. Members can join and leave chat groups at will. They can also change the group icon and subject. One WhatsApp group can accommodate up to 50 members. It is freedom of expression taken to a whole new level.
The downside of WhatsApp is that one requires a smart phone running Android Operating System. Getting a good smart phone supporting this App is costly for the average person.
Sometimes WhatsApp may not download and post heavy files such as videos and photos if the user has not subscribed to data bundles. However, the text messages can be sent at zero credit. You may find WhatsApp invaluable software particularly if you are the social type.
The writer is a Final  Year student of Bachelors of Arts Degree in Communication and Media at Chuka University and a Blogger at musyokangui.blogspot.com
Email your thoughts to musyokangui02@gmail.com