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Archive for March 7th, 2010

Meeting your ex and your replacement!

Posted by jambonewspot on March 7, 2010

By Maureen Ojunga,

March 2, 2010 – Just the other day my friend stormed into my house spitting fire and hot pebbles, cursing like a sailor, pacing up and down, and huffing and puffing like the big bad wolf! Reason; she had just had the strangest encounter with her ex and…drum rolls please… her replacement!

The “replacement” was not even the reason for her flipping out. What she had looked like at the time of the encounter was. I’m thinking, if she looked anything like she did right then (at my house) then that was a BIG deal!

I’m talking busted sandals, tired shirt, unsightly mani-pedi and her hair…Well, it would be best if I just didn’t go there. Plain truth, she looked busted! Oh yeah, plus she had a huge pimple right in the middle of her forehead – but I decided not to bring her attention to that.

It had been one of those days for her. So many errands to run, so little time. Nothing going as expected and if that is not bad enough you bump into your ex. Him, looking all hot and with a beauty by his side and you… like you just completed a marathon you were ill prepared for.

According to my pal, the replacement had seemed way too mature and not necessarily prettier but oozed style and grace, which made her feel even worse. Hers was not those kinds of situations where you rush to the bathroom to powder your nose. No. Instead, it was one of those where one wishes they could just keel over and die!

The whole thing was just funny. Seeing her all upset like that was the end of the world, made it even more interesting. I could not help but wonder what I would have done if I were in her shoes. Would I have cared as much? Would I even lose sweat over it? What I have always known is that when you break up with someone you are supposed to move on.

Feeling bad and crying about it was not going to help her at all and I figured laughing at her was not going to make her feel any better. Therefore, we came up with a wacky plan to “get even”. I wonder why though because I’m sure he had not intended to bump into her that day.

Girls do stick up for each other at all times…and if she felt like she needed some support then support would be me.

We had a plan. First, we were to get her a fierce looking man to masquerade as her handsome knight. There is the luscious Lucas; the gorgeous George…the list is endless.

Second, put her in some hot little number and have her looking tres glam such that all the men will be drooling over her. Then, have her and her yummy man hit her ex’s main joint – of course we know it

However, we will do all this after the dust settles because we do not want him decoding our little secret. I’m hoping that this will make her feel better…

Meanwhile, I can’t help but wonder, do men really care about such stuff?

-Capital Lifestyles

Posted in Sex and Relationships | 3 Comments »

Reflect Dear Kenyans, Reflect

Posted by jambonewspot on March 7, 2010

By Chris Kirubi,

Once upon a time there was a local activist who employed unique tactics to get Kenyans to hear his message.

He chained himself to the gates of Nyayo House and caught our attention.  Nonetheless, we all wondered if his style was effective in disseminating his message.  He heckled dignitaries and suffered the consequences of such audacious actions; we all pitied him and his family.

Today, he is easily granted a permit to hold a procession on our streets… and neither is he tear-gassed along the way.  Now, when he talks, our leaders pay attention.

Though it is not my nature to use such techniques, I have learnt from the said gentleman that tenacity pays off.  I speak of him with respect for gaining credibility as an activist and for the lesson that we must never tire of doing good.

I tell this anecdote as a prelude to saying that I will maintain my passion for the youth agenda, although some may question my voice.

Earlier this week I attended, as a speaker, a youth Summit dubbed ‘Kenya Youth Empowerment and Employment Initiative (KYEEI)’; thanks to Nazarene University in collaboration with USAid and other partners.

The purpose of the summit was to identify challenges and come up with possible solutions to getting our youth trained and employed.

In my interaction with young people, I often get to hear their dreams and goals for their lives and this country.  I say, with utmost respect, that our government fails them by treating them like babies.

In coming up with a youth program (such as the widely hyped Kazi Kwa Vijana), there ought to be greater consultation with the users instead of the unsustainable spoon feeding that we see today.

If you ask young people to come work for a quick buck… they will show up in droves, and leave when the well runs dry.  But if the same money was channelled towards programs vetted by the youth for their singular benefit, you would be assured that they would work harder to ensure the longevity of that source of income.

In my opinion, there is still a lot of room for running public-private partnerships that cater to this age group which constitutes a third of our population.  For example, every employer will tell you that there is always more demand for labour at the work place.

However, financial limitations do not allow them to become a training ground for new job market entrants.  So the problem persists with ninety percent of the unemployed youth unable to acquire vocational skills.

Suppose the government shouldered a large portion of the financial burden for placing youth in organisations where they can get on the job training, coaching and mentoring?  Wouldn’t that satisfy the need for training and in turn fulfil some goals of vision 2030 as well as meeting the MDGs?

The financial burden is no doubt huge for a country on the recovery process, but there are other alternative forms of rewards and financial incentives like tax credits and rebates that would accomplish the underlying goal.

Another area where we have enormous potential for meeting the needs of our youth is in promoting a certain level of nationalism.  Because we desire to be a global economy, we must put into operation practices that neither harm our global outlook nor destroy job opportunities for our youth.

I am told for instance, that you might find our brothers of Asian-origin hawking their products in some parts of Nairobi.  Whereas we are indebted to them for the speed and innovation with which they make our road infrastructure, I fear that we are allowing them to take over opportunities for our young people.

We can create employment in this arena, for example by putting in place measures that foreigners who wish to operate in Kenya must employ a certain percentage of locals.  They should also be prodded to purchase some non-core work tools and items from the local market so that we are not relying extensively on imports to run our economy.  Why, for example, should these brothers be able to import everything from trucks to wheelbarrows?

Having said that, we as Kenyans must learn the art of adding value to our local products so that they compete favourably in international markets.  Herein also lies an opportunity for setting up government funded incubation centres that enable the youth to learn the processes of adding value to products and eventually take over the running of such enterprises.

Invariably, opportunities for meeting the needs of our young people exist but we must work together (youth, government and private sector) to harness them.

Personally, I will not tire from singing this song… till we see progress and renew the hope of our youth.

Capital FM BLOGS

Posted in Analysis and Opinion | Comments Off

In death they find love…

Posted by jambonewspot on March 7, 2010

By OLESI NYAMORI

Recently, while chatting with a group of friends, the conversation turned to a recent newspaper article where the writer talked about jobseekers who peruse the obituary pages – not because they feel sorry for those who had passed on and the families they left behind.

According to the writer, these pages serve as a forum for job seekers to know who has left a vacancy! It all sounded like a sick joke until one of the girls commented that there was yet another set of people who bought the newspapers because of these same pages.

That is when I decided to give the pages some attention.

I literally scrutinised the adverts for several days to find out whether what my friends had observed was true. The thought didn’t cross my mind again until another friend, quite different from the first one, mentioned something rather curious about ‘the album’ as the obituaries are sometimes referred to.

It seems quite a well-known fact that for some women, this is the place to find a husband. No matter how morbid this may sound, there are woman out there who look for love in the most unlikely places.

This special breed of woman views the death pages as a handy and accessible husband finding resource.

She will peruse the obituaries looking for ‘interesting’ widowers like other women stake out churches looking for men of God, or like those who turn to the internet looking for men of the moment.

They pounce just when the bereaved man is at his most vulnerable. This is how it goes: The woman quickly scans the death announcement for times and locations of the funeral meetings.

If she’s lucky, the meetings will be held at the man’s home. If she’s luckier, that home will be in one of Nairobi’s ‘leafy suburbs’ or some posh location.’

She will then begin attending the meetings, presumably to condole with the man and his family, but really the main aim is to wind herself insidiously into the fabric of the man’s world.

But here’s the kicker. The most lethal of these women are not strangers to the home. The ones most likely to get a foot in the door will usually have been good friends of the deceased. Perhaps even her relatives.

Her cousins. Her sisters. Women who are not new to the home. Women who are trusted by the man and his children.

They are the ones who meet the family at the door, hours after the wife and mother has passed away, wailing like their lives depended on it. Displaying grief that would appear to be even more genuine than the bereaved themselves.

This is the kind of woman you will find at the centre of funeral proceedings, making the teas, clearing tables, washing dishes and generally being a very helpful little foot soldier.

In the evenings, when the house has quieted down, and the man is alone and desolate, surrounded by little more than his grief and a few relatives from the village, she will fuss over him making sure he has eaten and that the house is running properly.

Being a close friend of the family or relative, this may not look out of place in the circumstances. She tolerates his need to speak endlessly about his departed wife, offering him a willing ear.

Her ultimate aim is to fill the void his wife has left before he gets his wits about him and either decides to remain single or to marry a woman more suitable. She needs to get in there before others of her ilk begin the hunt.

Nabbing a man during the funeral period is expedient because a woman will already have her foot in the door by the time many others even realise that he is single again.

More often than not, this calculating woman has been hanging about trying to make herself useful if the deceased was ailing, more or less like a wife and mother in waiting.

Nerima lost her mother three years ago and she recalls with distaste a certain aunty who was the picture of sweetness and light while her mother was ill.

“She would come and pray with Mum all the time. She was always around, massaging Mum’s feet, cooking special dishes and generally fussing over her.

Aunt Penina* would always be the last one around even when Mum was sleeping. There was even a period when she stayed with us for a while.

“Late at night, she would sit up with Dad, chatting and preaching about the healing power of prayer and how her ‘sister’ would be fine.

“She’s a nurse by profession, so she was a handy person to have around because she had some medical training and there were times when Mum was so badly off that all of us would be afraid to touch her in case we made it worse.”

Aunt Penina became a fixture in Nerima’s home, transitioning easily from the months when Nerima’s mother was ill into the mourning period after she passed on. Even when we went to the village to bury mum, she was the person who all other mourners referred to for direction.

“Even then,” Nerima says, “I just thought she was going out of her way to comfort us because Aunt Penina and Mum were very close. It was only when she started haggling over Mum’s personal possessions that I began to get a bit suspicious. The next thing we knew, we got a message from the other aunties proposing Aunt Penina as Dad’s new wife. I couldn’t believe my ears.”

And Aunt Penina would have managed to foist herself on the bereaved family where it not for the fact that Nerima’s father was too saddened by the demise of his wife to start thinking about getting a new one. The way Nerima tells it, he was not ready to let go of the memories.

But other women have succeeded where Aunt Penina failed. Over an 18-month period, Jennifer and her family were caught up in a vortex of sickness and disease that ultimately claimed their mother’s life.

“That year and a half is like a blur. From the moment we learned that Mum had cancer, our lives changed and life has never been the same again,” she says.

“And even before the dust has settled, we now have to deal with the evil stepmother.” Just like Aunt Penina, Jennifer’s mum’s good friend Njoki , who was a neighbour a rock for the family during her illness and after her demise.

“She became a de facto mummy, taking care of my little twin sisters and making sure that we didn’t lack for anything as a family. At the time when mum was ill, the last thing on our minds was ourselves.

Njoki made sure that we didn’t sink completely into depression. Dad was a mess, so she took over, literally running our house.

She would drop by to bring fruits and vegetables which she knew our mum used to love buying, deal with the househelp when there was a problem and even occasionally take my young sisters to her house to play with her children who were more or less the same age.

Before long, we were all running to her whenever we had an issue to resolve, dad included. I guess by caring for us, she was caring for him too.” The family was grateful to her.

But what the children didn’t realise was that Dad was perhaps more grateful to her than all of them put together. Njoki was so much like his wife – they had been friends for so many years – that it was easy to see her playing that role for life.

“About nine months after we buried mum, Dad announced that he was going to marry Njoki. My brother and I were shocked at this turn of events and even felt dad was betraying our mum by marrying her friend, but the twins had gotten so used to her.

I think they were beginning to see her as their mother. Anyway, to cut a long story short, my brother and I haven’t spoken to Dad since her married her. In fact we didn’t attend the wedding. Dad and Njoki live with the twins but Joshua (my brother) and I moved out.”

As with all things, there are often several spanners in the works when it comes to issues of re-marriage. Widowers will come with baggage that they have been packing for the better part of their lives.

They’ve been married. They have kids, sometimes grown children. They are for the most part, pretty set in their ways. The quintessential ‘old dog, new tricks’ scenario.

Fitting into an older man’s life is not as simple for a woman as she might imagine. Especially if he is a widower because widowers come as a package – the man himself, the lingering memories of his wife, his lifelong habits and perhaps most importantly, his children.

What women fail to acknowledge is that when a matriarch departs, her seat is not left empty for long. It is quickly filled by her children as they gather around the King.

Children, especially girl children, are the first to witness the vulnerability of the leader of their home and while it may not be obvious to many, they stand guard, well prepared to repel what they believe are ill-intentioned advances from women who do not meet the standard set by their mother.

A man’s grown children will not take kindly to interlopers who shoulder themselves into the heart of the family intending to seat themselves on the throne. No one will ever be as good as their mother; they can only hope to come close. And even that is not an easy task to meet.

As Ruth puts it, “For my sisters and I, our mother could do no wrong. She knew my Dad in and out having been married to him for more than 40 years. Which other woman can take care of him the way she did?

We are not opposed to Dad getting married again but we won’t sit by and watch as some gold digger tries to take her place just so she can get her hands on our property!”

Ruth, her brother and four sisters are all grown and together they have made sure that their father recovers from the death of his wife.

“We want Dad to be happy but mum just passed on six months ago. He’s not in the right state of mind to decide on a new wife. Yes, we realise that he is lonely and misses having a woman around but we have resolved as his children to be there for him until we think he is ready to move on.

Some of our relatives think we should not be involved in such matters but we think the closest family should come first in situations like these.”

Children aside, some women will imagine that a man is wealthier than he actually is. Half page, full colour obituaries are not a true indicator of a man’s wealth. Neither is his area code.

During a funeral, many genuine well wishers congregate to assist. A lot of that assistance is in monetary form. So a man may be flush with cash over the funeral period but that doesn’t necessarily mean he has millions in the bank.

Even if he does, perhaps he’s not the type to dole it out to a woman whose only goal is to live life in a manner to which she is not accustomed. He will also have picked up certain habits over his time.

Everything he does, he has done for years…and years. This man is not for turning. What he wants is a woman who can live with him, not a woman who wants to change him.

And perhaps therein lies the money maker. The quid pro quo. The man offers financial security and social standing and the woman agrees to take him as he is, matured warts and all. Sounds perfect on paper but in real life, it isn’t long before a new woman wants to mould an old man.

But it’s not all doom and gloom for women and widowers. It all comes down to intention. If you’re after a man for his money or social standin, you really ought to be satisfied if money is all that you get.

However, if two people come together out of genuine attraction, mutual respect and a nurtured and nurturing love, then who knows? The woman may have found a love that will last her a lifetime and the man might get to live happily ever after…again.

But you know what they say, lightning rarely strikes the same place twice and even when it does, it is an act of God, not the result of feminine guile and manipulation.

satmag@nation.co.ke

Posted in Features | 3 Comments »

When I became a man, I put away my toy gun

Posted by jambonewspot on March 7, 2010

By Charles Onyango Obbo

A picture of Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni visiting mudslide victims in military uniform and an AK-47 strapped across his chest has created quite a buzz in the blogsphere.

To critics, it is the best representation of the ham-fisted military-cum-civilian regime that runs Uganda.

One blogger asked if he carried the gun in order to shoot survivors of the mudslide.

President Museveni, who came to power at the head of a victorious rebel army in 1986, declared with quite some fanfare that he was hanging up his military uniform and “putting on a civilian tunic” after he was elected in 1996.

However, his life as a civilian president has not quite brought him the prestige and credibility as did his role as the leader of the first home-based guerrilla movement to overthrow an independent African government.

Corruption, nepotism, expansionist misadventure in the Democratic Republic of Congo, and the nastiness that his security services have had to resort to keep opponents in check, means his post-bush era is more tainted than his days as a liberator.

Because of that, Museveni has found it hard to put the military behind him.

Whenever the country is caught up a political crisis, he dives into his military fatigues, takes to national TV, and bangs tables and warns opponents.

What is more, despite his “retirement”, he has continued to promote himself. Now he is a lieutenant general.

Museveni is not the only military man turned civilian president in East Africa and the wider region.

There are no less than four in our immediate vicinity: Ethiopia’s Meles Zenawi, Rwanda’s Paul Kagame, Sudan’s Omar al-Bashir, Southern Sudan’s Salva Kiir.

In most respects, they all fought a more bitter and trying war, or a longer campaign as guerrilla leaders, but when they came to power, they put away their guns and uniforms forever.

Because he is nearing the age of 70, Museveni cuts a rather ungainly figure in his military uniform, and with his AK-47 he looks like a grown man who will not let go of his boyhood toys.

However, it would be an oversimplification to see only that psychological explanation — because dress and talismans seem to play a role in African politics that they no longer do elsewhere.

In the past, most African presidents liked to bring their own style to dress; hence to Zambia’s Kenneth Kaunda, we owe what is now known in as the “Kaunda suit.” Tanzania’s Julius Nyerere gave us the “Nyerere suit.”

The Congo’s thieving strongman Mobutu Sese Seko had a unique hat, suit, and stick.

However, because he was so despised, he has not been emulated.

Kenya’s Jomo Kenyatta had his flywhisk, and Daniel arap Moi, the rungu (staff).

In addition to his military uniforms and guns, Museveni will often carry a big stick, and at his farm he will have a double-headed spear.

The African Big Man needs to have his hands full of props in order to continuously reproduce the feeling that he is holding on.

Also, because they rule in developing societies with large rural populations that are still superstitious, the people usually believe that magic powers reside in their flywhisks and spears.

That usually translates into a large body of peasant fear and obedience, and therefore, precious political capital.

It is an old-fashioned approach, but nevertheless represents an important element of continuity in the continent’s politics.

Charles Onyango-Obbo is executive editor of the Nation Media Group’s Africa Media division; cobbo@nation.co.ke

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A young girl’s fight for freedom from family, religion and society

Posted by jambonewspot on March 7, 2010

By HANNINGTON OCHWADA

Maurice Amutabi’s novel, Because of Honor is a work of fiction set somewhere on the Kenyan Coast, focusing on the life of Amina, a young Muslim girl.

Amina and her family live in Chelani village where her life is characterised by intrigue and conflict with her family and later society at large.

Early in life, Amina negins to wish she could be freed from the shackles of religion and patriarchy, which have imposed female genital mutilation, forced and arranged marriages and deny girls the right to education.

She learns that going contrary to society expectations, her family included, results in honour killing, which she witnessed and traumatised her.

Amina nevertheless chooses to reject the existing order, setting herself on a collision course with her father, elders and society.

Knowing that her rebellion will mark her for life, she decides to escape and ends up in Mombasa, where she completes high school and goes to college, imagining that her dream at last has come true.

She soon however realises that her struggle has just begun.

Born a Muslim in a world not controlled by secular law but by Islamic law, she must behave and act as a Muslim woman is expected to.

The author is very descriptive and the characters, topography and social activities leave no doubt that the book is set in Africa.

The story commences and ends in Africa without belabouring the post-modern ambivalence, ambiguities and intellectual voyeurism that attend many novels in Africa where Europe and North America must be featured in order for the plot to appear to be intricate and the story fashionable and relevant.

Amina’s life provides the reader with invaluable insights into how Islam has evolved in East Africa.

For instance, the narrative successfully tackles the thorny issues of marriage, female genital mutilation and the vestiges of patriarchy in society.

Using a clear narrative and humorous style, Amutabi incisively and pointedly analyses historical conditions forced on women by faithful allegiance to religion and tradition.

The book also provides an extended commentary on the passive role of the government, leaving anachronistic tendencies to curtail women’s rights.

The book is insightful for readers who are interested in indigenous cultural encounters with Islam in East Africa.

Amutabi ably uses history in his fictional exploration of the impact of Islam in Africa in a uniquely personal way that most novels seem to gloss over.

It is important to state that some readers will perceive Because of Honour as an engagement in some kind of sardonic lampooning of Islam.

But the novel is well researched and contains enough accurate historical facts to be characterised as a great historical novel.

Characterisation

The balance between female and male characters is very engaging.

Of the many characters in the novel, there is Isa and Chiku Babu, Amina’s parents who have over 10 children.

Indeed, the success of any work of fiction that features numerous characters like Because of Honor, depends on the author’s ability to develop the main characters, a task that Amutabi successfully accomplishes.

It is also imperative in a problem-set novel such as this, to constitute some form of solution or to arrive at a resolution in which the seemingly contrasting factions lead to a meaningful closing.

As the novel comes to a conclusion, Amina calls for a need to rethink and purge Islam of anachronisms.

She also calls for a renegotiation between women and Islam.

For example, as her father lies on his deathbed, Amina and her siblings ask for a new beginning in social relations.

Amina says, “Finally what I want is to invite all of you to join me in a serious interrogation of society in general, especially what can be done to make us live together as humans without seeking to perceive others through the prism of male and female dichotomies, and other identities that bring about tension.”

She also seems to reconcile with her father when she says, “Isa Babu is a hero. I choose to remember the good memories I have of him.”

Although already a vegetable and near his death, Isa Babu surprises everyone by asking his children for forgiveness.

He says, “I have listened to you [my children] the whole evening. I am really sorry for everything [that I did to you].” This statement is a form of resolution, and closure.

For a Muslim man to ask his children for forgiveness is metaphorically and symbolically significant.

The novel’s dramatic conclusion with the death of Chiku and Isa Babu provides a strong example of how religion can make or unmake families; create happiness or sadness.

Their death could also be symbolic and metaphorical to mean the end of an old order and the beginning of a new one.

Because of Honour would benefit everyone, especially students and teachers of African history, culture, religious studies, sociology, anthropology, Islam, gender and women studies.

It provides the reader with an understanding of what goes on behind closed doors in ordinary Islamic homes.

It also equips one with knowledge of the power of religion in undermining and bringing about positive social change in communities.

-The East African

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