'Jomo Kenyatta' (
October 20,
1889 –
August 22,
1978) served as the first
Prime Minister (
1963–
1964) and
President (
1964–
1978) of
Kenya. He is considered the
founding father of the Kenyan nation.
Early life
Kenyatta was born 'Kamau wa Ngengi' in the village of Ichaweri,
Gatundu in
British East Africa (now Kenya), a member of
Kikuyu people. He assisted his
medicine man grandfather as a child after his parents' death. He went to school in the Scottish Mission Centre at
Thogoto and was converted to
Christianity in
1914 with the name 'John Peter', which he later changed to 'Johnstone Kamau'. He moved to
Nairobi. During the
First World War he lived with
Maasai relatives in
Narok and worked as a clerk.
In
1920 he married Grace Wahu and worked in the Nairobi City Council water department. His son Peter Muigai was born on
November 20. Jomo Kenyatta entered politics in
1924 when he joined the
Kikuyu Central Association. In
1928 he worked on
Kĩkũyũ land problems before the Hilton Young Commission in
Nairobi. In
1928 he began to edit the newspaper ''Muigwithania'' (''Reconciler'').
Overseas
In
1929 the KCA sent Kenyatta to
London to lobby for their views on Kikuyu tribal land affairs. He wrote articles to British newspapers about the matter. He returned to Kenya in
1930 in the midst of much debate over
female circumcision. In
1931 he went back to London and enrolled in
Woodbrooke Quaker College in
Birmingham.
In
1932–
1933 he briefly studied
economics in
Moscow at the Comintern school, KUTVU (University of the Toilers of the East) before his sponsor, the
Trinidadian Communist
George Padmore, fell out with his
Soviet hosts, and he was forced to move back to London. In
1934 he enrolled at
University College London and from 1935 studied
social anthropology under
Bronislaw Malinowski at the
London School of Economics. During all this time he lobbied on Kikuyu land affairs. He published his revised LSE thesis as ''
Facing Mount Kenya'' in
1938 under his new name Jomo Kenyatta. During this period he also was an active member of a group of African, Caribbean and American intellectuals that included at various times
C.L.R. James,
Eric Williams, W.A. Wallace Johnson,
Paul Robeson, and Ralph Bunche. He also was an extra in the film ''Sanders of the River'' (1934), directed by
Alexander Korda and starring
Paul Robeson.
During
World War II he labored at a British farm in Sussex to avoid conscription into the British army, and also lectured on Africa for the
Workers' Educational Association. He married Englishwoman Edna Clarke who gave birth to his son Peter Magana in
1943. He later left her to return to Kenya in 1946.
Return to Kenya
In
1946 Kenyatta founded the
Pan-African Federation with
Kwame Nkrumah. In the same year he returned to Kenya and was married for the third time, to Grace Wanjiku. He became a principal of
Kenya Teachers College. In
1947 he became a president of the
Kenya African Union (KAU). He began to receive death threats from white settlers after his election.
Grace Wanjiku died in childbirth in
1950 when she gave birth to daughter Jane Wambui. In
1951 Kenyatta married
Ngina Muhoho.
His reputation with the British government was marred by his assumed involvement with the
Mau Mau Rebellion. He was arrested in October
1952 and indicted on the charges of "managing and being a member" of the Mau Mau Society. The trial lasted for five months. The defense argued that the white settlers were trying to scapegoat Kenyatta and that there was no evidence tying him to the Mau Mau.
Louis Leakey was brought in as translator and was accused of mistranslating because of prejudice, which seemed absurd to Louis. A court sentenced Kenyatta on
April 8,
1953 to seven years of
hard labor.
[1] Contemporary opinion linked him with the Mau Mau but later research claims otherwise. Kenyatta was in prison until
1959. He was then sent into exile on probation in
Lodwar, a remote part of Kenya.
Leadership
The state of emergency was lifted in December
1960. In
1961, both successors of the former KAU party, the
Kenya African National Union (KANU) and the
Kenya African Democratic Union (KADU) demanded his release. On
May 14,
1960, Kenyatta was elected KANU president ''in absentia''. He was fully released on
August 21,
1961. He was admitted into the
Legislative Council the next year when one member handed over his seat, and contributed to the creation of a new constitution. His initial attempt to reunify KAU failed.
KANU won 83 seats out of 124 in elections in May 1963. On
June 1 Kenyatta became prime minister of the autonomous Kenyan government, and was known as ''mzee'' (a
Swahili word meaning ''old man'' or ''elder''). At this stage he asked white settlers not to leave Kenya and supported reconciliation. He retained the role of prime minister after independence was declared on
December 12,
1963. On
December 12,
1964, Kenya became a
republic, with Kenyatta as executive president.
Kenyatta's policy was in the sign of continuity and he kept many colonial civil servants in their old jobs. He asked for British troops' help against Somali rebels
Shiftas in the northeast and an army mutiny in Nairobi (January 1964), a subsequent mutiny in (1971) was nipped in the bud with the then Attorney General (Kitili Mwenda) and Army commander (Major Ndolo) forced to resign. Some British troops remained in the country. On
November 10,
1964, KADU's representatives joined the ranks of KANU, forming a single party.
Kenyatta instituted a relatively peaceful land reform; on the bad side, his land policies deeply entrenched corruption within Kenya with choice parcels of land given to his relatives and friends (the so-called "
Kiambu Mafia") , and Kenyatta becoming the nation's largest landowner.
To his credit he oversaw Kenya admission in the
United Nations and concluded trade agreements with
Milton Obote's
Uganda and
Julius Nyerere's
Tanzania. He pursued a pro-Western, anti-Communist foreign policy.
[2][3] Stability attracted foreign investment and he was an influential figure everywhere in Africa. However, his authoritarian policies drew criticism and dissent.
Kenyatta was re-elected in
1966 and the next year changed the constitution to gain extended powers. This term brought border conflicts with
Somalia and more political opposition. He made the Kĩkũyũ-led KANU practically the only political party of Kenya. His security forces harassed dissidents and are suspected to be linked to several murders of opposition figures, that is
Pio Gama Pinto,
Tom Mboya and
J.M. Kariuki[1] . Some have also tried to link him to the deaths of
C.M.G. Argwings-Kodhek and
Ronald Ngala, but this needs clarification as they both died in car accidents. He was re-elected again in
1974 in elections that were neither free nor fair, in which he ran alone. He died on
August 22,
1978 in
Mombasa and was buried on
August 31 in Nairobi.
Kenyatta was a controversial figure. He is accused by his critics of having left the Kenyan republic at risk from tribal rivalries, given that his dominant Kĩkũyũ tribesmen did not like the idea of having a president from a different tribe. He was succeeded by
Daniel arap Moi.
Nairobi's
Jomo Kenyatta International Airport is named after him.
Quotes
★ "I have no intention of retaliating or looking backwards. We are going to forget the past and look forward to the future." (1964)
[4]
★ "The basis of any independent government is a national language, and we can no longer continue aping our former colonizers ... those who feel they cannot do without English can as well pack up and go." (1974)
★ "When the Missionaries arrived, the Africans had the Land and the Missionaries had the Bible. They taught how to pray with our eyes closed. When we opened them, they had the land and we had the Bible."
[5]
★ "Some people try deliberately to exploit the colonial hangover for their own purpose, to serve an external force. To us, Communism is as bad as imperialism." (1964)
★ "Don't be fooled into turning to Communism looking for food."
★ "The European condemns the Africans for having two wives yet he keeps two mistresses"
Family
Kenyatta had two children from his first marriage with Grace Wahu: son Peter Muigai Kenyatta (born 1920), who later became a deputy minister; and daughter
Margaret Kenyatta (born 1928), who served as the first woman mayor of Nairobi between 1970-76. Grace Wahu died in April 2007
[6].
Kenyatta had one son, Peter Magana Kenyatta (born 1943) from his short marriage with Edna Clarke.
[7]
Kenyatta's third wife died when giving childbirth 1950, however, newborn daughter Jane Wambui survived.
[8]
The most popular of Kenyatta's wives was
Ngina Kenyatta (née Muhoho), also known as Mama Ngina.It was she who would make public appearances with Kenyatta. They had four children: Christine Warnbui (born 1952),
Uhuru Kenyatta (born 1963), Anna Nyokabi (also known as ''Jeni'') and Muhoho Kenyatta (born 1964). Uhuru Kenyatta is today an opposition leader in Kenya.
Trivia
★ Jomo Kenyatta is also the great-uncle of
Rage Against the Machine guitarist
Tom Morello.
★ Jazz trumpeter
Lee Morgan named a song after him ("Mr. Kenyatta") on his 1964 album, ''
Search for the New Land''.
Books by Jomo Kenyatta
★ ''
Facing Mount Kenya '' (1938)
★ ''My people of Kikuyu and the life of Chief Wangombe'' (1944)
★ ''Suffering Without Bitterness'' (biography 1968)
★ ''Kenya: The land of conflict'' (1971)
★ ''The challenge of Uhuru;: The progress of Kenya, 1968 to 1970'' (1971)
Books about Jomo Kenyatta
★ Murray-Brown, Jeremy. (1979), ''Kenyatta'', Allen & Unwin, ISBN 0049200593
Notes
1. Chatterjee, Ramananda. ''The Modern Review'', 2006. Page 344.
2. Lamb, David. ''The Africans''. Page 61.
3. Meredith, Martin. ''The Fate of Africa''. Page 266
4. Post-election statement. Virginia Morell, ''Ancestral Passions: The leakey Family and the Quest for Humankind's Beginnings'', Copyright 1995, Chapter 19, beginning.
5. Walker, John Frederick. ''A Certain Curve of Horn: The Hundred-Year Quest for the Giant Sable Antelope of Angola'', 2004. Page 144.
6. Wahu Kenyatta mourned, ''The Standard'', April 6, 2007
7. Police stop VP's bid for Kenyatta papers, ''Daily Nation'', October 20, 2003
8. Dear Daddy: Letters straight from the heart, ''The Standard'', August 22, 2004
See also
★
Harambee
★
List of African writers
External links
★
Speech by Kenyatta at the Kenya African Union Meeting at Nyeri, July 26, 1952
★
Mzee Jomo Kenyatta