11 things you didn’t know about Kenya’s First President Jomo Kenyatta

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Kenya’s official history keeps citizens ignorant of the real Jomo Kenyatta by masking nuances of his life that would enable citizens to critically appreciate the founding father of the nation. Below 20, or so things you didn’t know about Kenyatta.

1. Missionary teachers at Thogoto Church of Scotland Mission Station thought Kamau wa Ngengi who was born in Ng’enda, Gatundu, in the early 1890s, was only good enough to be a mason on an account of his poor grades. He defied them and pursued a career in politics.

2. In 1914 missionaries wanted him to baptised John Peter Kamau but he defied them and added “stone” to the John hence Johnstone Kamau, Kenyatta’s early name

3. Kenyatta escaped to Narok to avoid conscription into the Kings African Rifles (colonial army) to fight in World War 1 working as a clerk in a ranch.

4. He would be nicknamed Kinyatta, after kinyatta — the beaded Maasai belt you see him in his early photographs. And the name stuck. Kinyatta would later become Kenyatta.

Image result for Kenya's First President Jomo Kenyatta5. By 1921, Kenyatta was a stylish water meter reader swooshing about Nairobi in a motorbike. He would get himself a wife, Grace Wahu, then a student at the Church Missionary Society girls’ school in Kabete whom he wished to wed in “privacy” to avoid paying dowry.

6. Not amused, the church  accused him of  “committing sin with a girl whom he is buying as a wife, and as a result of which she is with child,” writes Kenyatta’s biographer Murray-Brown, quoting church documents.

7. The church was also concerned with Kenyatta’s drinking. But what did it expect of a man who ran Kinyatta Stores at Dangoretti where he sold the stuff? For that he was suspended from receiving the Holy Communion, ex-communicated and strongly advised to live with Wahu only after getting legally married.  Brown writes Kenyatta agreed to a customary wedding but refused to stop drinking.   The missionaries even refused to recommend him for a job.

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8. Later as a  wage collection clerk, Kenyatta earned  Sh250 taking home more than  European clerks, he would built  a hut for Wahu and their first born son, Peter Muigai, a former MP for Juja who died in 1979

9. Brown writes, “The hut doubled as a shop, which he called Kinyatta Stores, a “rickety place of fun never before seen in Kikuyuland”. It was the port of call for Goans and broke Europeans who patronised it for shots of Nubian gin, music and women.

10. Until 1926, Kenyatta showed no political inclinations until Joseph Kang’ethe, the then secretary-general of the Kikuyu Central Association (KCA) urged him join KCA because of his command of English. He obliged.

11. John Cook, the Thika colonial water engineer would now fire the radicalised wage collection clerk water meter reader after Kenyatta became the editor of Muiguithania, (The Reconciler), the association’s mouthpiece.

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