Monday, August 26, 2013

A Letter from a Kenyan Abroad

A response to Bikozulu's "A Letter to Kenyans Abroad" http://bikozulu.co.ke/a-letter-to-kenyans-abroad/

For a long time I’ve fought the itch to respond to blogs, tweets, status updates and newspaper articles from Kenyans at home that bash Kenyans abroad for their accents and attitudes. I had decided it’s too trivial. Until today when “A Letter to Kenyans Abroad” arrived on my wall, twice, then twice again, demanding to be read. And I did. Time to scratch that itch.

Bikozulu starts off well, then degenerates into a rant of castigating Kenyans in the diaspora for being o-so-obnoxious. Some Kenyans at home have taken to carrying around a big stick canning their diaspora brothers and sisters at every turn for defiling a certain doctrine of Kenyanness. Thanks largely to Bikozulu’s letter, I have summed up their ten commandments for Kenyans abroad.

  1. You’re not allowed to have an American or British accent. 
  2. Don’t criticize your country’s dirty politics. That’s the way it is.
  3. Stop pointing out the crippling poverty in your motherland. That’s the way it is.
  4. It’s sacrilegious for you to speak of a foreign country as “home.” It turns your ancestors in their graves.
  5. Stop asking for quality time with us when you visit; we’re busy and we’ve moved on from you. 
  6. If you want to make a difference, come to Kenya. Stop that diaspora rights nonsense.
  7. You’re not allowed to use the phrase “when I was in…” or “back in…” with reference to a location in Europe or North America during conversation with a Kenyan at home. 
  8. We are allowed to insult you for flipping burgers and scrubbing toilets abroad because… remind us, didn’t you go to get a PhD?
  9. You’re not allowed to criticize a Kenyan at home for poor work ethic. That’s the way it is here, respect us.
  10. No matter how long you’ve lived in Europe or the US, maintain an authentic Kenyan accent. (A variation of 1st commandment.) 

So let me start with the 1st, 7th and 10th commandments, by far the most irksome to Kenyans at home when broken. A year or so ago, there was a news item about a certain white lady who had lived in Lamu for only a year and mastered Kiswahili perfectly, complete with the Lamu indigenous accent. What was interesting is how so many Kenyans in Kenya, including the journalists, were awed by her effort and achievement, holding her up as an example for other Kenyans whose Kiswahili is questionable. But a Kenyan abroad speaking excellent English with a decent command of the British or American accent is considered arrogant, false and somehow a rejecter of his/her African heritage.

The stuff of inferiority complexes by colonized minds still amazes me. It is what I see every time I see reactions to Kenyans abroad speaking with some degree of a western accent. Yes, some consciously work at it, either because in their workplace they bear an obligation to be understood (I’m a teacher, language is my tool, and to be understood is my responsibility), or because it simply makes life easier to do what the Romans do while in Rome. Some acquire accents overtime, subconsciously, in varied degrees. That does not mean they lose your identity. It is true that Kenyans abroad acquire a deeper pride in their ethnic and Kenyan identity, some speaking Kiswahili for the first time, and those who were born here learning their mother tongue with pride while Nairobi kids could care less.

Now, some claim, with a chest-thumping, that they don’t have an altered accent after living abroad for decades. False. Even a Kikuyu with the heaviest Kikuyu accent somewhere in Boston will subconsciously slip in a “tomayto” here, a “callege” there, a “Canerricat” (Connecticut) too.  There’s nothing to it. And if while in Kenya you slip into your diaspora-acquired accent, don’t ever apologize for it to puzzled Kenyans ready to write you off as a fake. You are the sum of your experiences. Because I’m fully aware of this attitude, before I visited Kenya after a long period of absence some years ago, I warned my family, “my accent is significantly tainted.” I’m also able to switch back and forth between accents, depending on who I’m talking to. I know a lot of diasporans have this dexterity. Did you study Darwin?

And yes, Kenyans do pick up accents from other parts besides Europe and North America. I can point you to Kenyan friends who settled in India, Nigeria and Tanzania and came back with the various accents. But Kenyans at home just choose not to highlight it. Go figure. You don’t even have to look beyond Kenya. My Taita aunts, married and settled in different parts of Taita, now speak with accents from that part of Taita. But do we tell them they’re being arrogant? No. Only if they settled in America and spoke with an American accent, then they deserve our wrath.

As for commandment 7, it belongs to the same category of inferiority complexes displayed by those who think it arrogant for a diaspora Kenyan to speak of foreign (read, Western) places in conversation. See, I’ve told so many stories starting with “when I was in Kakuma refugee camp…” and tell of what I learnt about bravery beyond human comprehension from the “lost boys” of Sudan, and never once did I receive a judgmental look. But the minute I start a story with “when I was in New York…” Kenyan noses are squinted upwards, eyes rolling back into insular heads as if I just farted nerve gas. C’mon Kenyans.

Commandment 2, 3, 6 and 9. Reading Bikozulu’s repetitive tag, “that’s the way it is”, as in, you have no right to change our status quo, is really telling of the “outsider” attitude directed at diaspora Kenyans. Kenyans abroad criticizing Kenya is seen as insulting someone else’s mother. Get over it, Kenyans, we’re Kenyans too, and we too have a fierce responsibility to hold our politicians accountable and our fellow Kenyans responsible for conduct that builds a country. The corruption sucks, the poverty stinks, the matatu menace is barbaric, the roads suck (don't brag to me about Thika Superhighway, a mere 50 km stretch that leaves another 8,900 km of principal highways in need of similar upgrading, and 63,000 km of interurban roads crying for attention; we made one step in the right direction, don't act as if we've arrived).

The insecurity on city streets we once walked is still unacceptable, even more now that we have experienced greater safety in foreign countries. We want the good socio-economic experience we’ve had abroad to be available in Kenya too; uncongested transportation, social services for the poor, clean neighborhoods…and for the well-off Kenyans to care enough about the lives of slum-dwellers in their backyards. Yes, we will tweet and blog and status-update from our diaspora perches until you hear this. Even as we have in our own diaspora midst shameful incidents of tribalism of the worst kind, our failings and foibles do not allow you to exclude us from the privilege of being part of Kenya’s journey, in critical speech and action.

And while we’re on this topic of criticizing each other, there really ought to be a deodorant revolution in Kenya. Why is it that the minute you land in Kenya, the foul smell of human armpits hits you? You walk about the streets or ride a matatu and wish you had a gas mask. Or if an elevator full of people somewhere in the US is reeking of stale sweat, I'll bet you all my diaspora remittances the culprit is definitely the newcomer diaspora African at the corner. Our collective reputation is fouled up. Yup, I said it, yes I did. My African peeps, man. Style up. Please don’t tell me about poverty and choosing between soap and food. Dignity is important. Martin Luther King actually made such a call to his people, told them to stop stinking, that working hard for long hours with little pay does not mean neglecting personal hygiene, and to date, you won't find any black person all funky, even in the heat of summer, the poorest of black folk in America smell good! Heck, Richard Pryor probably said it best, “Don’t just wash you’re ass hole, wash your whole ass.” Let’s take care of the total package of who we are, not just one aspect.

On commandment 6: The world is now a kaleidoscope of each other’s influences, and claiming you don’t want “American” solutions is myopic while America itself seeks all kinds of ways to get stuff from Africa for its own growth, from culture to human and material resources (yup, they harvest human brain power through the green card “lottery” every year). The Romans built their civilization upon a borrowed Greek culture and a borrowed foreign faith that later became Christianity. So diaspora, go ahead with your exposed selves and influence change for the good of our country. And yes, Mr. Bikozulu, I can actually sit in Starbucks and effect change. It won’t come in one tweet, or one blog, or one electronic transmission of funds to Kenya from my cell phone. It will come from a concerted effort of using all the tools I have in the diaspora.  In fact, diaspora has contributed to change and continues to do so.

On commandment 8: Kenyans go through a lot in the diaspora, few have it easy all the way. Don’t gloat over those who go through flipping burgers and scrubbing toilets while working towards their school fees or just to pay rent. It’s these very same Kenyans that send money home, haba na haba. Some have made a business out of it, no kidding. You can find Kenyans running cleaning businesses that have done so well they’ve bought homes. I speak of people I know personally. A Kenyan banker I spoke to recently left his “big” job for a taxi-driving business. Labor which Kenyans at home consider menial can be turned to gold. It's attitude that counts. It’s time Kenyans at home kicked the habit of equating success with white collar jobs. And yes, some of succeed, some don’t. Such is life. A little encouragement would go a long way.

Finally, a touchy one for me, is commandment 4. About calling a foreign country home. I’m a transnational citizen. Kenya is my home, my birth country, the land of my family, extended family and ancestors. I also have a home in the US (not a house, a home). I very easily and naturally, without skipping a beat, speak of “going back home” when I’m in Kenya, referring to the US. I have no apologies for that; I and millions of other human beings for whom the concept of home is not limited to your ancestry, the origin of your name, the sound of your accent, or a certain cultural definition of “home” that is held sacrosanct by your people. We know that in Kenyan cultures, even the cities are not your home, only your ancestral land qualifies for the title. I understand where Bikozulu's emotional but unenlightened chastising is coming from. Brother, some of us long released ourselves from the shackles of that cultural straitjacket that does not allow you to belong anywhere outside of your ancestral home or country of birth.

Kenya is still the abode of my constant agitation. I will care about what goes on there till the day I die. My spirit will continue to roam around the hills of Taita all the waking days of my life. Yet none of this stops me from staying active in my neighborhood committee in Baltimore. This is home. I seek solutions to crime, overgrown sidewalks and career opportunities with as much passion as I do for Kenya. This is home. I cared about the Trayvon Martin case, the Ravens winning Super Bowl, and wonder loudly if Mayor Rawlings-Blake really cares for inner city Baltimore. This is home. I take the train to Washington DC to teach, attend countless meetings and socialize. This is home. America has nurtured me, annoyed me, loved me, grown me. In most likelihood, I will be buried here. This is home. Don’t tell me not to call it home just because Kenya is home too. And should my family move to Italy or Rwanda or China, I refuse to live a suspended existence of non-belonging because I’m not “home”. I will plant and harvest the crop of my dreams there too and make a home in that country. That, my friend, is quintessential diaspora experience. I treasure it.

88 comments:

Ishmael Mitishamba said...

I have an odd tongue full of metaphors so bear with me. Or is it bare with me?! Because what's wide open in this piece is how identity and society are a unit that want to be wished off. I'm certain you've delved into what springs forth a local's reaction upon their encounters with those of us who have been outside. I'm sure after having their manners of dressing questioned, intellect bellitled, financial statuses and their everyday hustle to make it using hawking etc etc, due to a system of society set in place by the people this piece seems to champion, the west, ofcourse they'll turn their noses after a while. I have too many run on sentences but i use them for those that do NOT serve two masters, their birthplace and graveyards as separate homes. It is an injustice for the offspring who will be left without a place to rest their head, alias lineage. Ask black americans what they claim was stolen from them and collectively they'll say, their societal identity and here we are, ahem, you are, supporting a continuous breakup of a family's root. a baobab tree does not and will not have a home in alaska.

Guessaurus said...

I wouldn't have written this any better if I tried (really I wouldn't). Thank you. The constant battle between Kenyans in Kenya and Diaspora about true Kenyanness makes me tired. I have three places I call home: Kenya, London and the US, and have no intention of apologising (Yes, I spell in Brit English still) to anyone for that. Kenya is home, where my parents and ancestors are. I have a home there too myself. That doesn't mean I restrict myself to one country just so I can appease the people there. The world thrives on change. Heck, evolution is change. If you're unwilling to accept or appreciate or move with the change, you get left behind. You won't win any prizes for digging your heels in and declaring yourself mkenya ndamu, while everywhere else the world is moving along nicely and taking all that your country has to offer with it (see China, Britain, US et al).

I nearly fell over when you mentioned the deodorant business. If you listen to my sis tell it you'd die laughing, but I am with you on that.

We all have one life to live, and a whole world to live it in. I normally tell anyone I can, if you can, travel, see the world, live a different life for a while, learn new things, grow, explore, cos you know what? Unless Curiosity stops drawing dick-shaped doodles in Mars and actually brings in anything useful to declare life sustainability in Mars in our lifetime, this is it people. Celebrate each other, our similarities and differences, our uniqueness as Kenyans and our ability to adapt to any environment, from Russia to China to Baltimore (I'm the only living person who haven't watched The Wire, but I've heard stories of B'More lol), and stop whining about those abroad while enjoying an espresso and croissants (Italian and French, respectively) in a Cafe in Village Market, surrounded by all those rich foreigners, because having regular chai na ndazi in a shack in Kenyatta Market is beneath you.

Unknown said...

Thanks for saying what I have always wanted to say but was scared it might offend.
THANK YOU ,THANK YOU

Sandy G said...
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Sandy G said...

Perfect response to an old and tired perspective of what Kenyans living in the Diaspora are really all about. Thank you!!

Unknown said...

Thank you, Thank You! Kenya Living Abroad! Love your response
Surely, are these the issues that are going to lead us (Ooops, ma bad, please read: Patriotic Kenyans living in Kenya) to vision 2030?
I would rather see this writer,(Mr. Biko) dwell on the reasons why the Diaspora money remittance has dropped - Is it because, Kenyans living abroad are fed up with scammers and lazy people waiting for handouts, or is it because Kenyans living in Kenya are becoming more self sufficient?

Margie Kings said...

No need to bash each other my dear Kenyans. Both sides have valid points which get lost in demeaning words describing of the other's situations. I am a citizen of both worlds, one by birth the other by choice. Any kenyan at home who hates on the Diaspora would do anything to be able to freely move in and out of Kenya. So let's not fake it. As intellectuals, lets raise our voices for something positive. Nation Building! Economy, Infrastructure and Education which as both sides now is lagging behind in our motherland, Kenya. Both sides can agree on this. May God Bless us all!

Patrick Wachira said...

What a perfect and well thought response. You've articulated my exact thoughts. For those Kenyans who have never been exposed to other cultures we have to cut some slack and empathize. Many western ideal's can and are lost in translation. As for Bikozulu, it's disingenuous for someone like him who's had the opportunity to travel abroad to write such a biased article. Both articales are a good lesson on Cultural Relativism.

Unknown said...

both are valid points as long as pride does not get in the way we can all get along.

Speshul K said...

I actually like both articles but as a diasporan myself who has lived by this quote right here which is gold for me "I refuse to live a suspended existence of non-belonging because I’m not “home”, I have to say, my bias leads me to love your response. Then again, I've never quite taken to heart the complaints I read about in the article that triggered your experience... and I have always made home wherever I went, whether it was when I lived in London, Paris, Atlanta, DC or New York, and now Chicago.. Why would I ever torture myself by waiting for a home other than the one I am busy making?

Unknown said...

Funny that those seemingly who support this post have traversed the world and those supporting the other seem to be not globetrotters anyway Ill take the humor in both stories and i would like to view both of us still here at home and all those abroad as compliments rather than isolated entities we should not compete rather lets learn from each other to grow ourselves and there are glaring truths in both letters that guys tend to overlook.(e.g the Kenyans who get married in taita or live in t.z for long) that's very true and on the other letter (questions such as is that place safe) yote tisa kumi that was a great humorous letter to the diasporans which got a sober response good day you all

njeri said...

I will leave the same as i have left on Bikozulu's blog this song. To remind each and every Kenyan abroad and in Kenya. Undugu ni Kufaana.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xh9Ux7WH2KE

Sam Kiranga said...

You don't have to take it so personally. It was a light read.

ApondoNET said...

Great piece. Loved it.

Unknown said...

I am right on the fence in this debate- I have lived in Kenya almost all my life, and also lived in New York City for less than a year, a translocation we thought would be for longer but then we had to grab an opportunity that arose in Kenya and leave. I get the protestations about the accent- sometimes one picks up an accent effortlessly as they melt into their community or in an effort to be better understood... Americans particularly have a problem even with the hard British 't' and one may have to soften that to be understood- I have no beef with that at all. I am not sure about Kenyans picking Indian accents though, I have not met your friends, but I have met a ton of people who have multiple degrees from India over seven years. My thinking is that perhaps Indians easily understand our clearer diction anyways and there is no struggle to be understood, and I also bet people actively try not to pick up an Indian accent since they probably consider it 'inferior'. I still expect though, a recent emigrant to the States to be able to switch back, especially in 'shags', to be understood- is the highest purpose of speaking after all. And in spite of your spirited broad defence, some people use their new accents as some kind of marker of status in rather annoying ways that may have piqued BikoZulu's interest. "Burrer", "warrer", deep in Ugenya.. and getting quizzical "eeh? ang'o?" is not communication.
I also agree that home is where you say it is, and one can have two or three homes without being guilted as some kind of sellout, that you do make a difference from wherever you are, and have no reason to be made to feel guilty for your choices, or less entitled to comment on Kenyan issues. The manner of the commentary is important though, and that is the point people might miss. A case in point is your really elitist comment on the smell of Africans- it is humorous but it is not tasteful and betrays a detachment that is exactly what Bikozulu rants about. A more humble view would perhaps be in order- people use less deodorant for sure, it is generally hotter, people do more manual work, some of the people you would share public transport with are coming from building the nation literally with their hands. And people suffer considerable poverty and the concept of personal space where someone will let a lift with five people go and wait for the next one is less socially ingrained. So, if you are getting in a matatu to Lower Kabete with the mama mbogas coming from Marikiti, apply some Vicks under your nostrils and get on with it!

Unknown said...

I love the reactions from both sides, but i have to agree with the diaspora since am one of them,the main reason i agree is because we have both experience i.e living in kenya and outside kenya. I live in MN USA and trust me our accent changes not because we want to but because people you interact with day in day out are from different countries or rather backgrounds and you have to adapt a way you can speak so that they can understand you. Nobody has the time of repeating himself all the time. About scabbing toilets thats a job somebody does to help his family back home, so do you want to say that toilets are never cleaned in kenya? and is it people from other countries who do it not kenyans? Lets be factual and realistic. We have many Kenyans who have decent jobs too. Not every Kenyan who had luck in Kenya if life is working for somebody in another country whatever he does is non of your business, all you should care about is help him invest back home, or at least pray for him to lead a good life. About the usafi man its true our people need to learn how to maintain it, that's the bottom line. Makwapa zinanuka sana mtaani. Atleast when I visited last year I talked to some people about it hope they can spread the message. Lastly home is home what i mean is that wherever you feel comfortable to call your home it is your home, a place that gives you what you want is your home.

Unknown said...

Really it is not that big of a deal...can we all "chill" (Read american accent)...never that serious..

Kemunto said...

Having read both articles, I am of the opinion that there are areas of change on both sides and we must appreciate each other, differences and all

Unknown said...

After all is said and done, what have you done for Kenya as a whole!!

The mention of deodorant is way out of proportion as per me.

Mama Njeri wakes up every morning to walk to Gikomba which is almost 4 hours walk for the matatu fare is a luxury she cant afford, she goes to buy vegetables for selling in her neighbourhood so as her kids will have breakfast and lunch exclusion of supper (dinner). She takes the same route going home and when she nears her place she boards a matatu where by she pays 99% off the asked fare which by now its a luxury she can afford.

Next sited to her is "a Diaspora Kenyan" for a visit to their motherland. The to and fro walk made Mama Njeri sweat and mingling with other people in the market, she is sure is smelling awful and she knows it.

The money she gets from selling her wares will also be catering for water and soap for her n her family for maybe 3 days which i can guess will amount to Kshs 100/= and of course she will take a bath before she does of to sell her wares.

Should she sacrifice the money for the sake of smelling good so as not to offend anyone or should the diaspora Kenyan just buy a gas mask and come with it..................

Seenama said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Unknown said...

You validate Biko's sentiments with your whining and self-righteousness. I understand you pick accents depending on locality (true, a Kyuk will try talking with a Coast accent once he lands there)but throwing that argument about smelly armpits was way overboard. I'm shocked that piss poor black Americans smell so good..then Chris Rock has been lying to us on his shows. You try to vouch for these black Americans and they hate your guts. That's why you scrub and oil their grannies with no shame in your hearts!
Kenya is not perfect,we suffer from all the ills you mention and more,but just like you love or loved your mother with all her faults and smelly armpits,we are content and happy with what we have. You claim you can effect change from your high stool at Starbucks? Hmmm,methinks apart from being overly boisterous, you are also delusional. Just ask Makau Mutua if Kenyans back home(yes,Home)give a hoot what he writes so fervently,week in week out.

kims said...

The worst enemy to Kenya and Africa is not famine, corruption, disease, ignorance, war or lack of infrastructure. Its brain drain. We have brilliant minds out there that could help make a difference at a time. But how many are willing to. Few if at all any is the answer.

Seenama said...

8 Years in US, now in Kenya
1. Poor Man’s Discussion. Have you realized that this discussion only makes sense of the poor section of us? I know guys from privileged families are wondering- “What are they talking about”. Only the poor (including mental poverty) amongst us who can’t afford ticket home stay for years without visiting or miss burials. Only the poor amongst us opt to become economic refugees and when tied up, can’t disentangle. Only the poor talk about sending money home.
2. Development: America and wherever we go are developed. The roads are smooth there is no dust. The system works. BUT be careful how much you lay claim to the same BECAUSE you contributed ZERO in making the system what it is. Therefore, you have no authority to continuously bash the system that you have been part of (your parents and great grandparents).
3. The Villager. I have villager friends (well, I am really not one) like me who went to US. And since they also come from poor background, they are less likely to afford a ticket home if when they want. Then they come after 7 or so years. They are the fellows who talk of being afraid of riding in a matatu. The reality is, they just don’t know Nairobi well hence the fear!
4. Accent. Accents are necessary especially in order to interact. But hey, we also know in America for example, accents are MORE necessary if you work in the lower rungs. Let’s face it. In many universities, Chinese people dominate science departments. They teach in their thick Chinese accent and don’t care. Why do we care so much about changing accent? Your position influences how much you bend. But also be aware of your proximity to the desired accent. Some Kenyans in diaspora still struggle to enunciate English words that they will never manage. Worse still, they don’t change with context. Instead of struggling to say /Wollraaaah/ or whatever while speaking with fellow Kenyan, why don’t you use Swahili or mother tongue which we share. Only people of below average intelligence will insist of what they can’t handle.

5. Pariahs want to be Brahmins: It is always important to be aware where you fall in the society. Most of are in diaspora as economic refugees. We ‘osha tanyes”, take care of “manokis” and study nursing because you can get a job. You fill in hours like crazy just to survive. We drive trucks, work in banks, and teach in leading universities. The thing is, we are never in control. We are not only black, we are Africans. In short, we are the pariahs in the environment we live struggling to survive. Regardless of whether the work pays, we are the ‘nobodies’. This comes with a real need to COMPENSATE. You compensate by trying to feel big among your people. We know this is important for our SANITY but please, let us not overdo it.
6. Family Support: Supporting one’s family has nothing to do with where you are. There are countless stories of our parents who dropped out of school in order to support the education who come after them. They didn’t go shouting about it. And whether you are in Kenya or away, the responsibility doesn’t change. So, whether you pay in dollars or Kenyan shillings, we are all working and helping. I know diaspora sends money and they also buy property and build one-roomed plots. You think you are doing well until you come back and realize most of your friends are living way better life that you do in Section 8.
7. We all stink: My Kenyan roommate who was doing a PhD was a skunk. White people stink. The hippies that I taught in one college never took shower or changed clothes for the whole semester, some didn’t even flash the toilet.

Unknown said...

I read Bikozulu yesterday with a degree of dismay. First, he contradicted himself by saying that Kenya "moved on", but then, admitting that the country really has not (poverty, etc) in the most blase manner. He also contradicted himself by saying Kenyans tweet their leaders, but admitting in the same breath that these same leaders dont really care about social media, etc etc. For me, the most damning thing about his post was the attitude of "this is how it is", really, one that promotes mediocrity. Poverty, corruption and mediocrity are just NOT the way things are and should be. We deserve better as Kenyans, whenever we call "home".

Contradictions and elitist comments aside (the comment on deodorant is unfair- I have lived in the UK for over 5 years, and come summer, white people stink as bad as the mama mboga of Gikomba, if not worse! Sweat and heat do that to the human body, black or white), I want to address the "if you want to change the country, come back" attitude.
I once believed in that. For close to 6 years, I lived in the UK and tried my hardest to not pick up the accent(s), not get too attached, not think of it as "home" because I always intended to come back and make my country a better place. And I did. Armed with a couple of degrees, which I obtained by flipping burgers and working in a care home.
And here I am, nearly one year later, packing my bags to go back to the diaspora I tried to not call home for the longest. Why? Because of all the things Biko blithely said "its the way it is". The tribalism and discrimination I have faced are beyond comprehension. And worse, my going to the diaspora in the first place to gain an education has been wielded over my head like a bad cloud. In other words, I should never have traded my Kenyan "home" for another one abroad, even for a short time, never mind that I never even regarded it as home in the first place. I am a sell-out, and I am made to pay for that through closed doors, tribalism and discrimination. And I am not the only one. So much for "come back home and change things from home". Does this "home" really want to be changed? Or is that just the way it is?
I suppose I will muse those things as I sit in a Starbucks or MacDonalds in Melbourne. I will keep tweeting my leaders (back home in Kenya) who never read their social media. I will continue to mourn the poverty, the lack of amenities. But this time round, I will accept it as my new home. I will dig into the local community, participate in social and cultural projects. And once in a while, if my new home does not post a travel advisory, I will come back to this home to visit. I will not go the champagne bars of K-Street or wherever. I will go to my ocha, inhale the aromas of sweat and dust, and keep them in my subconcious for when I return to my new home to continue with life. And while here for that visit, I will keep saying "back home in Melbourne", just like my compatriots there will have to bear "back home in Kenya". And that will be that.

Unknown said...

Very well thought out response, very genuine and emotional. Real. Here is what I realized, as a Kenyan living in Kenya who has traveled abroad and who has friends and family abroad, whom I love. I realized that as is true to many other things, the reaction one gives to things is more indicative of our own self esteem and own internal structures and belief systems than it has to do with what anyone said or did. Why was I often irritated with people speaking with an accent, why did I think that they were feeling superior? It had almost 90% to do with what I thought of myself. I felt inferior not for the person acting superior or better than me; but for the fact that my esteem and self worth needed a healthy dose. So I decided ot change things around and interrogate myself... what is it in them that I am envious of? How can I learn from them, get to where they are? and so on...this removed my 'they are feeling superior' thoughts to my actual growth.... so, ladies and gentlemen, Kenyans, abroad or in Kenya; interrogate yourself, why are you feeling the way you are about whether someone speaks with an accent or not? why are you so bothered?... and on a light note, Kenyans returning, since you have been bombarded by our collective armpit smell... here is a suggestion, bring loads of the stuff and add bathing gels while you are at it (my favorites, bath and body works, i could give you a longer list)... let us start the armpit revolution... :-)

Unknown said...

Some residing in China and going back to Kenya with American accent????? In 2006, When the then USA Senator Obama went to Kenya, he spent just a weekend in Kenya and was totally on a local accent.Maybe his mentality is different. Conscious minds tend to be oriented as per the surrounding.

Unknown said...

Whether living in Kenya or diaspora, yes (even uganda and Tanzania count) lol, just be true to who you are and who God made you to be, all else will fall in place.

Unknown said...

@Kims, you said
"The worst enemy to Kenya and Africa is not famine, corruption, disease, ignorance, war or lack of infrastructure. Its brain drain. We have brilliant minds out there that could help make a difference at a time. But how many are willing to. Few if at all any is the answer."

I am one of the few who came back with a PhD, yes, one I got through "washing grannies with no shame" as one person has put it. But as I said in my original post, I am going back after a full year of tarmacking and getting nothing but bad attitude, tribalism (na hii jina yako ya pili ni ya watu wa kutoka side gani ya Kenya kweli?) and discrimination (you should have stayed in Kenya, you know you people from the diaspora are hard to employ). My asking "why??" to that last statement have elicited no real answer other than tired stereotypes, some of which Biko highlighted in his blog post yesterday. And so, I ask, does this home (Kenya) really want to change? Perhaps that is another stereotype we have all bought.
Mitishamba says "a baobab tree will never have its home in Alaska". However, if the potato tuber found a home in Kenya, brought over by colonialists, then this Baobab will flourish in the diaspora. In any case, its roots have now been loosened by tribalism and discrimination, no?

At some point in the future, perhaps Kenyans in all "homes" around the world will come together and agree on how to change Kenya, if Kenya wants to change. Perhaps then, we will bridge the gap between "here" and "there". Perhaps my children will live to see that day.

Unknown said...

Like hell we will stop asking Kenyans in the diaspora for money after we sold everything and got loans for you to go get your accent. There's a reason why Mpesa struck a deal with Western Union so hop into one and and let the cash box ring.

Unknown said...

I have not traveled beyond the boundaries that are our Kenyan borders (Except once to Kampala). I must however acknowledge your insight. It is nice to get a different perspective.

Unknown said...
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Santa Mukabanah said...

You said something that I wanna take note of that Kenya stinks... I should put a spin on that. When I go upcountry I can't help but notice the 'stink' of people and even if it bothers me I have learnt to hold my tongue... My aunt may be 'stinking' coz she spent the afternoon digging up the shamba and catching a chicken but when she hugs me I don't turn up my nose. I act like nothing happened and accept her gift

Biko Zulu has done many articles... Always with a satirical angle. Some of which serve for comic relief and others comparison's sake... However if you take it personally doesn't that mean that he has a point

No one disputes the education and experiences the diaspora have... But just the same way I have to acknowledge and live by the rules of upcountry, the diaspora has to acknowledge and live by the rules of Kenya... It sucks yes but that is how societies generally are... Even Japanese people leave their American ways when they step back in to their country

If the diaspora is trying to effect change in the political and economic systems of kenya 'turning your nose up' will not help... Some of the things Biko said I have seen myself. Good example a person refusing to walk in town coz of thugs yet a white girl asked me to take her to Riverroad coz she wants to buy stuff cheaply... Granted white people are adventurous and not all diaspora people are like this but such behavior serves to alienate you from your people... Another example would be to openly criticize people in Kibera yet a tweet can't help. But I do know a friend who runs an organization bringing pads to disadvantaged girls who you could team up with to work in Kibera

Kenyans can be harsh... even brutal... Sometimes cruel... But like every culture there are rules. Unfortunately the middle class you are at war with now has nothing in common with the poor who would now look at the diaspora like they are creatures from Mars. That however does not mean you cannot bring what you've learnt home... Bring it home but adapt to the culture... There will be dust, people stink, others steal but guess what someone in Turkana is sitting on a dusty floor thinking this is the best life has to offer. They are happy and do not feel like there is anything wrong or worth changing... Change will come but it will take time. Some things shouldn't be taken too seriously



Unknown said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Unknown said...

Seriously? What happened to satire? Why are you taking this post so seriously, it was a light read and it's never that serious. There are some valid points in both your posts.

Unknown said...

Seriously? What happened to satire? Why are you taking this post so seriously, it was a light read and it's never that serious. There are some valid points in both your posts.

Unknown said...

Long story Shorrt... it is not a big deal.

Maina Gathirimu said...

What a nice response!

Poetikally Korrect! said...

I agree with you in as far as Biko saying it as if all diasporans are spoilt is concerned. Lakini hii mambo ya kuangalia I-fricans like we are diseased nayo mtawacha. Ukienda kula lunch kwa hao ya neighbour mdosi, usianze kutukana/kushangaa mbuyu wako kwanini ako down. Hata vidole za mkono hazitoshani.

Do you know it took America more than 300 years of 'democracy' for women to start voting in the 1920's. You talk of transport that works, unajua hiyo transi imework for centuries lakini kama si Rosa Parks kuzusha as recently as the 50's nyinyi ma-blacks mko States mngekua mnaichekia tu hewani?

My point? What I-frica has done within half a century of indipendence Amerika couldnt dream of doing for more than four hundred years. Tuko nyuma najua lakini hiyo states imejengwa na whips kwa migongo za Wa-I-frika. Free labour. The west imejengwa from free resources. Walikuja I-frica wakachota gold kama maji, waka-farm on our lands for free tukiwachapia job on the same farms for free. Hii ndio story iliwapatia head start. Sisi tunajifanyia pole pole na challenges zetu na nguvu yetu ndio maana super highway yetu bado ni 50KM.

' We know where we are going. We know where we are from. We leaving babylon . . . going to our father's land!' ~ Nesta

Unknown said...

I'm glad I never had to go abroad to discover deodorant.

Unknown said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous said...

Kenyans living abroad or Kenyans living in Kenya are one and the same and the same thing. PEACE

Andrew said...

Goodstuff both articles were really valid!

Unknown said...

While I agree that some Kenyans from the diaspora can be a little bit over-the-top when it comes to safety and town, I am amazed at the number of people who compare how white bohemians take to the streets vis a vis African/Kenyan people. Please, only compare the two after understanding white privilege, and how this changes the opportunities and experiences of both races. Please.

Sir Mac_key junior said...

Satire yawa!...watu waache ku-catch feelings (interpreted as "it is never that serious")...it was a piece in jest, and taken tongue in cheek. We know there is no need to generalise all this...
About the armpit sweat, I think research exonerates us http://mindblowingfacts.org/2013/02/applying-a-males-underarm-sweat-to-a-females-lips-can-help-women-relax-boost-their-mood-and-help-regulate-their-menstrual-cycle-2/

Unknown said...

Well written. lengthy but well written. I have a feeling human social networks tell us that we are all connected in some way. Even through unexplained causes. If our shared connections are broken or threatened the tendency is to find blame, blame; defined as a way to discharge pain and discomfort. So Biko don't blame the breakdown in our 'Kenyanness' for ineffectiveness of our social behaviour

Unknown said...

It's amazing how we choose to engage with personal issues.Both blogs have very important lessons to be learnt.There's a great saying that goes,if you don't have anything nice to say,don't say it.Someone must have really annoyed Biko for him to generalize people the way he has.
Kenyans have almost given up on national development because our politicians gave up too.You know why our politicians gave up?because the simple mwananchi does not want change,but wants a quick fix to his problems.People sell their ID cards to pass a corrupt leader in parliament.If we can expose bad leadership at the ballot,we're good to go.
Another issue is misuse of funds for various projects with money from donors.
Let's admit corruption is king in this castle called kenya.Let's fight it and we can stretch the rest of 8300 KM road past Thika and boast we are almost there.
As for smelly armpits,i will say this;Cecilia Mwangi saw a problem with jiggers,she fixed it.even this particular stench can indeed be fixed if we do a good campaign.

EUGENE MAGINA said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
EUGENE MAGINA said...

MADONNA SANTA MARIA !!!! WAKENYA , KENYANS, KENYANS .... Interestingly i can not state my residence as ITALIA kwa KITABU SURA and so i am stuck with my lovely budalangi just not to offend BELUSCONI or i will be deported :)) hahahhahhahahahaha . Nice piece ..i drownnn to much you know !! trying to impress TUTTI KENIOTI ...VIVA KENYA VIVA LA DIASPORA VIVA ITALIA HEHEHEEH :)

kareokey said...

This same stinking people who need to apply some deo, are the same guys who changad for your 'college fee and transport' to your 'new home'.

kareokey said...

This same stinking people who need to apply some deo, are the same guys who changad for your 'college fee and transport' to your 'new home'.

Richard P. said...

My dear Kenyans, I am a south Sudanese. This applies to all of us. The author of this article have understood both sides of the world. Both articles are quite educative. I just can't take sides. I enjoyed both of these articles with deep understanding of both cultures. But the author of this articles is more articulate and I just can't find any bias to this as compared to the 'Letter to Diasporans". I thank both authors for revealing us real side of our human weaknesses.

Murugi said...

Our parents went through and are going through this same experience. Born in rural town...shags, educated and left their homes to the big cities such as Nairobi for work and to build their businesses and livelihoods. They bought homes and land away from their ancestral homes. They have brought their children up in the city with occasional visits to shags for their children to know their grandparents. They send money back to their parents, build them homes, help with medical expenses, help improve their livelihood etc. When they retire, they settle in their own homes and are buried in the land they bought away from their ancestral homes or in a public burial place e.g.Langata Cemetery. Such is life and we take it as it comes and you have to be a citizen of where you live and make the most of it. But you should never forget where you came from. Having two homes is not new, we grew knowing that hence the term "home squared"

Biko Zulu may be in Kenya but I am sure he does not own a home, live or work in his ancestral home area nor do his parents. He probably has an apartment/house in the city which he calls home, he may not speak his mother tongue fluently when he visits with grand parents and he may even have kids who do not speak their mother tongue. He probably comments/criticizes the lack of development in his ancestral home though does not live there. If he took a moment to think about it, he would realize he and the diaspora Kenyan have a lot in common, the only difference is the distance. Biko Zulu, when you point a finger at someone remember 3 point right back at you!!

Unknown said...

Well said...my comment on Kenyans wearing deo needs to be addressed. I got into a KLM flight from Amstardam and the non deo smell was tool strong.if you can afford an airline ticket then u can afford deo....let's stop making excuses...the mama mogaka lady can afford a cell phone with airtime...

Unknown said...

I cannot articulate enough just how wonderful it is to hear these thoughts stated out loud. I am soo glad that you have taken the risk and the time to do this. And all I have to say is :RIGHT ON SISTER!!!!

baruastef said...

i have not lived anywhere else kenya for more than 2 months so technically mimi tu msee wa home and i totally agree with this post. cut these people some slack, life abroad is already hard enough, someone says ati the same stinking people are the ones who had harambees for these guys living inthe diaspora to get there in the first place, so? so what? thanks for paying my transport abroad, now what does that have to do accents??? age is no gurantee of matuurity it seesm, watu waache kujifanya fanya hapa and if they got the chance they come back just the same! shame on you kenyans!

baruastef said...

i have not lived anywhere else kenya for more than 2 months so technically mimi tu msee wa home and i totally agree with this post. cut these people some slack, life abroad is already hard enough, someone says ati the same stinking people are the ones who had harambees for these guys living inthe diaspora to get there in the first place, so? so what? thanks for paying my transport abroad, now what does that have to do accents??? age is no gurantee of matuurity it seesm, watu waache kujifanya fanya hapa and if they got the chance they come back just the same! shame on you kenyans!

Donnelly K. Mwachi said...

I agree with you fully. Thats the way to reason!

Húni said...

Good or bad old me, have an accent you can't place anywhere in the world, but feels foreign. Mandam! What you are missing is this, " Been there, done that, got a t-shirt, do not want a refund" Awqy with the "been-to-attitude" Come home as yourself, not as the "assimilated self. You will have a good time.

Unknown said...

This debate is just old school.We need to focus on better issues.The rant by Biko is unwarranted and speaks volumes of the 'Kenyan' mentality.I have noticed some bile Kenyans in Kenya have towards diasporans.
It is almost as if they want them not to be succesfull.The talk...oh kazi yako ni kuosha wamama wazee. While we have all cadres of occupations that Kenyans abroad are doing,even those washing old mamas abroad are probably making more(hopefully saving more) than many graduates in Kenya.Money is not everything though.
I have lived abroad for over 5yrs and the Kenyan social fabric is hard to find in this part of the world.Stms even Kenyans shun each other..lol.
The attitude exhibited by the diaporan response is pathetic-how can one talk of smelly armpits when they land? In all fareness,a mkokoteni guy will be smelly @ the end of the day.Someone suggested using vicks on your nostrils.Better still buy your own car and don't use public transport.This is so condescending it pains..ouch!!
I need not comment about accents-you can speak as you wish,just make sure you communicate.English is a borrowed language.I am yet to find a mzungu so proficient in eg.Kikamba. Mastery of English language does not make anyone inferior(for those opposed to accents) or superior(for those who overdo the accents kutisha wakenya).
Truth is as country and as a people we still have challenges of poverty,disease and underdevelopment.Those are the issues we need to address.

FightOnSC! said...

Oh right on, i read that article jana i was like who the hell does this guy think he is trying to tell people (in diaspora) how to behave or act for that matter. Live your own life damn it

Rebecca Wanjiru Brod said...

Okay, so, when i go visit Kenya with my husband, who is white American by the way, people will look at me as a Kenyan in diaspora because i adapted into an environment that is different from my home country after having lived here all these years? Get over yourselves folks! Then let me be a Kenyan in diaspora with a dual citizenship because bottom line thing here that matters is success and happiness. Life is what you make it to be. You can be successful in Kenya or abroad so stop hating. Another thing, don't blame someone for trying to find out safe locations in a country we all know too well to be not safe. PERIOD.

Sauti254 said...

Hi,
My only response is to the politics and poverty comment.
When you complain about it how are you aiding the situation here?

We have people here educating the poor to make a better tomorrow.
Protests being held by the youth on the streets trying to create political awareness and subsequent change...

After 24yrs of stagnation with a lacking government allow us to be proud of the Super highway that has lead to current ongoing constructions throughout the country, Rome was not built in a day and neither was America, Uk, Australia (or wherever it is you reside)

I have no bitterness to those in diaspora, majority leave for further education and who wouldn't want the best for themselves?

this response and initial blog just break my heart.

don't we already carry enough diving factors?

Unknown said...

If you are this deeply troubled by Bikozulu's article, then it means you have never read his other stories. He does satire, takes a swing at people's eccentricities with his eyes closed. But its always clear that he doesn't mean to offend. Take a chill pill.
He was funny, but you are insulting. Or is it my sense of humour?

Kaka Buyanzi said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Kaka Buyanzi said...

Nice one...wouldn't have written this any better. #DownUnderMassive!

Kaka Buyanzi said...

Nice one...i really wouldn't have written this better.

NYANGWESO said...

Haahaa...nyinyi nyote mko sawa. Haya yote ni maendeleo !

Húni said...

I have to reread this to come up with a decen comment.

skaheru said...

This debate is highly entertaining and much more fun to follow than the Syrian war! Both sides are scoring good marks with lots of aplomb, any my only hope is that this results in a realisation that we cannot continue to define ourselves by the standards of the 'outside world'. The debate up here is as true for all East Africans and perhaps many Africans as well, as it is for Kenyans.
It is indeed important for the diaspora to be aware of what separates them from the people at home, just as it is important for the people at home (eh - the original home) to understand and appreciate the brothers and sisters coming back from the diaspora and why they twang and act the way they do.
Join together for one sensible cause and we will all be speaking our different accents in Swahili or Sheng while making the Thika Highway go a much longer distance without filling the air with a thick stench of sweat!

Unknown said...

it stupid bashing each other on these are valid issues. people are different. we have Kenyans, mababi, who have never flown out but they speak english with some accent and rarely/cant speak their mother tongue. inter-marrieges also contribute to these issues. we live in a free country and you are free to speak the way you want. wacheni wivu. tuvumiliane. we cant be the same or equal.

Kelly Karanja said...

I have worked really hard to blend in and live a life that is not filled with fear and reprisal. So if I fall in either category...so be it, I still have a mortgage to pay.

Francis said...

Well written response. I actually read the same article and got really angry not about what was written but the attitudes expressed! It's utter nonsense to accept a situation just because that's the way it is. It's stupid to accept politics that only enrich a few in the midst of untold poverty. I'm a proud Kenyan in the diaspora and will not be told to shut up and accept the status quo! I will not accept corruption, a government that does not deliver on basic human necessities, campaign promises that are never fulfilled, glorification of laziness or insecurity that never gets eliminated! If the Kenyan economy is so expectant of diaspora remittances then it must be able to be accountable. That's just the way it is and I must say I'm very proud of the attitude that the new government of President Uhuru is trying to encourage. Come on Kenyans, wake up and see that we are now a global family and you don't want to be left in your small time thinking mind!

Poetikally Korrect! said...

& BTW, Uhuru once lived abroad and knows how things work as well as you explain. Now he is the president and the filth is still with us. Hata wewe venye unadai ushaonja usafi ukiwekwa in charge bado hakuna kitu ita-happen. Shida za I-frika sio as superficial as wengi wenu mnadhani. Hii ni some deep rooted ish!

reinharditto said...

blame Raila for this as is the norm in Kenya,hehehe. i wish i would get a chance to leave Kenya for a few years and i would be able to give my own verdict on this debate. otherwise,lemmi stick to my lane,the nairobbery lane.

Kibbstake said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Christine N said...

Nice article. First, I wish that people would stop talking about "Kenyans in the diaspora" as if the mere fact that they're abroad means that they suddenly become one person with one mind set. Second, the attitude of "that's just the way it is" is exactly why things like corruption, bribery, poor roads, reckless driving in which lives are lost daily etc hardly change in Kenya. The sad part is that many people in Kenya are so used to this situation either because they've not experienced anything better or perhaps they think its too difficult to improve. Yes it might be difficult, but its not impossible. Being a patriot doesn't mean that a Kenyan (regardless of where they live) should just accept low standards, not point out what is wrong, not suggest improvements that can me made in Kenya.

Unknown said...

That's true there is always some excuse with Kenyans of how there are poor and can't afford. They should learn how to prioritize.

Unknown said...

Kenya, Kenya, Kenya! mkenya makes Kenya what it is. cant we identify ourselves and our true needs, collect each other and design an economy that works for every one to earn and decently live? baba moi tried to unite the primitively ukabilad Kenya that shows the world that legal genocide is a normal order and the capital city spells it clearly "NAIROBBERY" where human life or living standards means more or less nothing. political frame is rotten and retrogressive. the justice system is held hostage and cant develope independently. language is getting catastrophic as the world is getting smaller and soon we don't have to only speak to our fellow villagers. in the abundance of sun we are held in darkness as prisoners of Kenya power,as if solar system is forbidden in the land.. in the abundance of water, the fool is thirsty.it takes forever to travel 20km.bad roads in ushago meaning poor distribution of food causing unnecessary hunger. maybe the raila devolution idea could have broken the ice but the way l see it, a kingdom with federal provinces operating as full governments with each province submitting a revenue to the kingdom which in turn will force every federal province to create revenue to survive on its own. the leader of the federal must be a smart guy who generates revenues within his federal jurisdiction and have surplus to show. he must be able to issue ,show off and permanently guarantee the DEATH CERTIFICATES OF JOBLESSNESS,LAWLESSNESS,CORRUPTION AND SOCIAL INJUSTICE. when all jobs will pay relatively equal and we all say KAZI NI KAZI, then it will be the birth of a new Kenya. otherwise it is still not yet uhuru. from TOM (Sweden)

Koecharles said...

Let's take a moment to listen to this song on youtube by Roger Whittaker "My Land Is Kenya" to soften our attitudes.

You only got one mama
You only got one pa
You only got one life to live
No matter who you are
You can go the whole world over
Every city has its dawn
But everybody liveth has one place where he was born

And mine is Kenya, so warm and wild and free
You'll always stay with me here in my heart
My land is Kenya, right from your highlands to the sea
You'll always stay with me here in my heart, here in my heart.

You only got one childhood
And the memories that spring
When you see your house, the tree you climbed
And all those precious things
The faces of the friends I had
The images that flow
When I close my eyes in the land I love
The land I was born..

My land is Kenya, so warm and wild and free
You'll always stay with me here in my heart
My land is Kenya, right from your highlands to the sea
You'll always stay with me here in my heart, here in my heart

Koecharles said...

(1) If you get a chance pick the best from both worlds. (2) If all you think of is self and comfort then it doesn't really matter where you live, but if you think your purpose in life is bigger than self, you 'gotta' to reach out to those who need you the most, and not necessarily in Kenya. We have lots of western missionaries who abandoned comfort of their countries to serve the so-called 'stinking' beings in Turkana etc etc. This is a battle of conscience. If the likes of M. Luther left America to escape poverty and discrimination we would not be basking in this glory. People bought these privileges with blood. Wanjiku is busy too paying a future for her children in Kenya amidst the blushing of some shameless, short-sighted, opportunistic escapist. I am in diaspora too. If comfort was what I was looking for, then I already reached where I was going. But there is strong urge in me, a strong moral conviction to step out of the comfort of selfish self and focus my lenses towards humanity. The best from both worlds are my pillars towards the same. So being in diaspora or in Kenya should not be viewed as mutually exclusive but complementary. Otherwise, someone once said "The ultimate disaster that befalls a man is to feel at home here on earth."

Unknown said...

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Anonymous said...

Aha! I am a Kenyan living in Nairobi but grew up in the countryside (Rural-Urban migration). I support both sides but kinda support the people abroad more. Well, I think Humbleness and inferiority complex are the key issues here. I am a very humble person since childhood. I don't believe in bragging just because one is privileged or showing off. Instead I thank God for the little I have or for what I work for. Let's appreciate each other whether rich or poor. Until I went for a certain training at work, I had issues with women who like walking around swinging in the office and seeking attention. I now understood them after the training that they are just like that and I can't change them. Education is important for us to understand each other. Some of our people are just ignorant to their personal hygiene and there is nothing we can do about it. Hygiene can put me off and i really don't understand why someone shakes your hand after coming from the washroom...Wrong wrong wrong. Or even picks nose at a take away joint while they serve you. yuck! for real i am very sensitive but I won't show it. About claiming to do fundraisers for people who go abroad, huh! whoever says they contributed kindly tell us the amount you contributed. I am sure you couldn't even afford to do so. I live in Kenya and I also change accents depending with who I speak to. When I am speaking to the shags modos like whoever is complaining about accents, I speak in their level of accent. When I speak to my boss I have a different accent and when I speak to my British boss I speak in a different accent. I honestly love good English though I know I may not notice my slight Kenyan accent which I wish to fully polish. Why don't you complain to news readers that they have strong American or British accents??? Who wants to listen to some boring shady accent?? NOT ME. Kenyans in America/Britain please speak more in that accent. We enjoy listening to you. We also love the way your kids speak in that very good accent. Just look in your facebooks and see how people show off. People try to pimp their kids to what they would have wished to be. Fake everything. Twitter and instagram is going to frustrate the facebook show offs coz they will not have audience. You will not get a Kenyan in the Diaspora showing off on FB. They will just do what they are and here you are trying to emulate them thinking putting pics of your living room is cool. They are being themselves and you are here in a 3rd world country straining to show off to them. When they come to visit, you want to show off to them your car...Hahahahaha they have seen better only that they keep their cool. Don't embarrass yourselves in the name of showing off to them. How comes they can afford a 250k ticket to come visit while in your whole life time you can't afford a 70k ticket to mozambique leave alone to USA. If you cant beat them, join them. Get yourself a holiday to the Mara and feel like them. Otherwise, shut your mouth and mind your own business. If I can build a better house back here while cleaning the toilets in the USA while you sit in your "office" claiming to have a good job yet you still rent a house, who is better???? Yes I live and work in Kenya but I still have a long way to go to be where some of these people are. Remember they have the best education in the world if they schooled there. So tuck in your inferiority complex and mind your own business.

Unknown said...

This is bullshit from some motherfucking haters who couldn't get their asses out of Kenya yeah we all know if you had a chance you would be on this other side of the computer ..If i can I aint stepping my feet ever again in the land of foolishness and ignorance..Do some other shit like going to the market or wait for matatus in the fucking filthy city that yall have decided unless Obama comeS u aint gonna clean aFTER YOURSELVES AND ACTUALLY NO ONE NEEDS TO MENTION THE POVERTY...THE WHOLE WORLD KNOWS ..Good news aM NOLONGER KENYAN AND HAVE CHANGED MY DAMN AFRICAN MONKEY NAMES BITCHES...

Maureen said...

Kenyans have low self esteem. Especially those who have never had the opportunity to live and travel abroad. That's why they put others down. We are a violent society that brings us up to think its normal until we travel to other countries including our neighbors Tanzania and notice that there people are polite to each other and cordial unlike our own people at home. Diasporas be thankful and proud of your accomplishments and opportunities. Pray for your fellow brothers and sisters in Kenya that the wind of jealousy will pass and they will be forever healed from envious spirits.

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