I’m home, taking a walk around Kwa Jombo village in Mwatate,
Taita, on Jamhuri Day. I encounter a sudden piece of paradise, children blissfully
playing soccer on a dry riverbed, completely oblivious to all that hullabaloo
about Kenya@50. No celebratory bells have tolled for them.
A child's paradise, Kwa Jombo, Mwatate, Taita |
The land is a gentle green, the air so fresh you could grow an
extra set of lungs just breathing it in, the hills show off crowns of mist as
if waiting for me to bow down and pay homage, not a spec of the dry dust that
chokes up the hopes of many a farmer’s beaten brow.
It has been raining, but the waters haven’t come this far down
the riverbed yet. Only a month ago, the tongues of Taita mothers were feverishly
ringing up a host of prayers for the rains. The hills responded with a steady
downpour, making the season more festive that the ritual ceremonies of a
certain nativity tale, more hopeful than the suspect promises of a nation’s
jubilee.
I instinctively raise my camera. I love this Jubilee
generation, age 0 to 15; they have no problem being photographed. In fact, they
invite the camera with gusto, unlike the older Kenyan generation that can smite your sorry neck and its attendant head right off of your shoulders for taking a random harmless picture
of them. I go click-click, imbibing the moment, thinking; a child’s paradise
in the midst of Jamhuri day's shadowy revelries dotted with a nation’s uneasy successes, squeezed out
of festering wounds left unattended for 50 years. These kids will make it alright.
The next day, I walk by the same spot to see what Kenya looks like the day after its 50th birthday celebrated with international pomp and cheap spectacle. The riverbed is flooded! The daily rains have burst its banks. The place is
impassable. People are gathered on either end, discussing the furious waters,
their about-town business suddenly truncated. The pikipiki taxis can’t take
their passengers any further, and the fare has to be renegotiated. I stand
there and start going click-click, the children’s forlorn faces looking on at
the loss of their riverbed playground that had made a perfect field only
yesterday. I call my mother.
The dry playground now a raging river |
“Mao, I’m stuck across the river. I can’t get home.” Even
grown women become babies when they know mama is around to solve the
impossible.
“Wait just a little while, the tide will ebb enough for you
to cross.”
“I don’t think so, the waters are furious at something,” I
say.
“No more than half an hour. The accumulation from the hills
comes in a flood but disappears pretty quickly beneath the sand in the
lowlands.”
My mother was confident, unmoved by my concern. So were the
people around. One woman had earlier lost her shoes to the river, but she was
still poking the river belly about with a stick, as if she were agitating an
errant python to give up her footwear. In a moment of surreal expectance, I
watched for a minute, half expecting the river to vomit out a pair of Bata
sandals from its riparian jaws.
Shoelesss Superwoman river-crosser poking the river belly |
Stories flew about, of a drunken man who went gobble-gobble
down this very river, fished out dead-sober the next morning, never survived to
tell the tale; a woman who lost her footing at this very spot because she did
not know she needed to wade through the sandy bed without raising her feet, and
down she went flailing frantically, primordial instinct calling out to the
ancestors at a moment of deathly crisis. Had she called out to Jesus, one woman said authoritatively,
she might have survived. Nuh-uh, I wasn’t crossing this beast, for I too would
most certainly call out to my ancestors.
I wanted to tell the children that it’ll be alright, that
those who have been here before them know the ways of their land, their rivers,
their hills, their winds, rains and scorching suns. They know that any disaster
will eventually dry out at its tyrannical source or dissipate beneath the protesting
sands that receive its rage, eventually pouring out the waters of discontent
into the oceans.
The children, contemplating turning the waters into another paradise |
I thought, many are the waters of a present national discontent,
and like the river sands, the people, heavy with unresolved burdens, will rise
up to quiet down that which brings death, damage and disappointment, leaving only
that which nourishes. They must look up, even as they flail about trying to
keep a steady footing, and notice that the farmlands are still the greenest
green, the dry northern bellies bubble with oil and buried lakes, and right
here in Taita, the wilderness teems with gemstones, the ranches await joyful toiling,
the hills stand steady, a fortress of protection and cultural privilege.
It wasn’t long before the first person dared a crossing, a
lady at that, while the men looked on in trepidation. I even dared a young man
to cross, told him if he’s washed away we would know not to cross. He didn’t
think it funny, and he spat out the crushed pieces of his twig toothpick with umbrage. I kept my dry river humor to myself. After the daring lady triumphed, an influx of men followed, crossing the river chest forward, wading through the waters with
exaggerated sumo-wrestler waddle, acting as if they started it all. Miss
Missing Shoes crossed to the other bank, looked back at me, and asked:
“Would you like me to come back and cross you over?”
“Yes, sure.” I said. I indulged Superwoman and her shoeless
self to display her heroism. From the moment I arrived at the river bank, my
mind had been racing a thousand miles trying to figure out how I could mobilize
this community to build a new bridge. It was a doable task, but I knew it would
take a heck of a lot of people-tact and unwavering leadership. I learnt later
that dad had actually initiated that very move, bringing a truck-load of stones
for the bridge’s foundation. But he’s old, and he needed the young leaders to
take the baton and run with it. They never did.
After being crossed over, with Superwoman holding my hand and no CNN to capture the moment, I looked back and saw that the
children had now jumped into the river, not to cross but to play in it. The
waters had ebbed, and they created a new game with what the heavens had
wrought, a child’s paradise.
December 12, 2013
The mountains respond to mothers' prayers for rain. This is the majestic Rock of Mwangoji, one of five humps that make up the glory of Taita Hills |