Conversations with Tyler - Githae Githinji on Life in Kenya
Episode Date: November 2, 2023As a follow-up to the episode featuring Stephen Jennings, we're releasing two bonus conversations showing the daily life, culture, and politics of Nairobi and Kenya at large. This second installment ...features Githae Githinji, a Kikuyu elder and businessman working in Tatu City, a massive mixed-used development spearheaded by Jennings. Born in 1958 and raised in a rural village, he relocated to seek opportunities in the Nairobi area where he built up a successful transportation company over decades. As a respected chairman of the local Kikuyu councils, Githae resolves disputes through mediation and seeks to pass on traditions to the youth. In his conversation with Tyler, Githae discusses his work as a businessman in the transport industry and what he looks for when hiring drivers, the reasons he moved from his rural hometown to the city and his perspectives on urban vs rural living, Kikuyu cultural practices, his role as a community elder resolving disputes through both discussion and social pressure, the challenges Kenya faces, his call for more foreign investment to create local jobs, how generational attitudes differ, the role of religion and Githae's Catholic faith, perspectives on Chinese involvement in Kenya and openness to foreigners, thoughts on the devolution of power to Kenyan counties, his favorite wildlife, why he's optimistic about Kenya's future despite current difficulties, and more. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links, or watch the full video. Recorded June 12th, 2023. Other ways to connect Follow us on X and Instagram Follow Tyler on X Join our Discord Email us: cowenconvos@mercatus.gmu.edu Learn more about Conversations with Tyler and other Mercatus Center podcasts here.
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Hey everybody, this is Sam, one of the producers of conversations with Tyler.
This is part two of the bonus episodes showing the daily life, culture, and politics of Nairobi and Kenya at large.
In this episode, you'll hear from Gatai Gatigji, who is an elder working in Tatsu City, a 5,000-acre mixed-use development just north of Nairobi.
In case you missed it, make sure to check out part one to hear from Harriet Marathi, a young woman working in Tatoo City for a different perspective.
Now, on to the show.
Conversations with Tyler is produced by the Mercatus Center at George Mason University,
bridging the gap between academic ideas and real-world problems.
Learn more at Mercadis.org.
For a full transcript of every conversation enhanced with helpful links,
visit Conversationswithtyler.com.
Hello, everyone, and welcome back to Conversations with Tyler.
Today I'm sitting here in Tatu City, right outside of Nairobi,
Kenya, and I'll be chatting with Kitai Kitingi. He's a businessman in the transport industry,
and he's a Kikiyu elder. He's stationed at Tatu City, where he's a chairman. His roles as chairman
include dispute resolution and also coordinating community ceremonies. His most recent activity
as the elders chairman for the area around Tatu City was planning and coordinating the cleansing
ceremony of a mugumu tree being moved into Tatu City. Gita is 58 years old. He is from the
Agikuyu community. He is born and raised in Mukueni, Neri County, the central region of Kenya.
He resides now in Kiyambu County, where he has also established his business. Kittai, welcome.
Welcome. Thank you for talking with me. Yeah. What is your business? Could you tell us?
I deal with transport.
Transport.
So what does that mean specifically?
I have potatoes and I have small vehicles which I normally deliver for commercial purposes.
And you own the vehicles, you sell them to businesses, to individuals, or who are your customers?
No, I do transport.
Let's see transporting people from Riru to Nairobi.
Oh, so you drive them from one place to?
I don't. I own.
So I am probably.
I am probably.
people who do that business, who do that job. I'm just the manager of, I manage my business, yes.
When you look for good drivers who will do good work, what qualities do you look for in them?
A driver who is competent of what he's doing. But how do you tell if they're good? When you talk to them,
you have an interview, what do you ask, or how do you approach that?
Normally, I do test them personally, see whether somebody has all the requirements to be a driver.
You need to have all the documents that are required by the government,
and then his ability to do that job.
How can you tell who will be a good driver or not a good driver?
It's a person who is qualified in that skill.
So the main thing is the license?
The main thing is the license, because the other government documents,
and whether somebody is sober.
Sober?
Yeah.
Sober it means, you know, you can employ some others who are driving,
who can kiss a lot of things.
You have to look for somebody who is a little bit educated
who knows the possibility of
or a person who can handle that vehicle itself.
Yes, I understand.
Yeah.
The part of Kenya where you're from, that's McCrowenny, right?
Yeah.
What is special about that part of Kenya?
The part of Kenya, Mukhereni, well, as I could say,
I left the place a long time ago.
Yes.
The moment I finished my school,
I came here in Rado.
And that's why I established myself here in Rhyro.
I left my motherhood.
Why did you leave there?
I was just coming to look for good pastures here.
Just for better jobs?
Yes.
When I came here, I was employed here.
So when I get employed there, I got invested here.
Yes.
I got a piece of approach here, which I built.
So I decide here now.
And where you come from?
Do you miss it in any way?
or you're just happier to be here?
No, I just go there visiting.
Just visiting.
Even though I lost my mother and father,
so I just go and visit my brothers who are there.
Why do you think you left and they didn't?
Like, what's the difference?
That is the little area.
We don't have a lot of job opportunities
like we have here in Cuba or in Nairobi.
Even apart from jobs,
if you just think about living there,
is it more exciting to live here
or more interesting to live there?
Well, I would say it's more interesting to live here
Because if I may think of job opportunities or looking for something here, it's more convenient more than the rural area.
And your native language from the family is Kiswahili, right?
Yeah.
And you learned English here or you learned it in school?
Kiswai.
No, but that you grew up speaking, right?
I grew up speaking Kikuyu.
Ah, Kikuyu, okay.
Yeah, Kikuyu is my main language.
Okay.
Yeah.
And what other languages do you speak?
The other language is Kiswahiri.
Yeah.
Yes.
And English, of course.
And English.
How did you learn those?
From school.
When you were growing up as a boy?
Yeah, when I was going to say, I'm boy.
Yeah.
Yeah. I went up to Form 4.
Yeah.
If you think about Africa as a whole, do you think you're lucky to live in Kenya or you wish you were somewhere else?
Or how do you view Kenya within Africa?
Kenya is a good country.
What makes it good?
It makes it good for actually the way we have reference.
here. They have stayed here. I've never seen bad things. In terms of like violence or disorder.
It's no violence. People are here, very peaceful. Yeah. And you think the economy is pretty good for
Africa? Well, I would say it's good. Yeah. Yeah. How did you come to have your role in Tatu City?
In Tatu City, where I decide is just near the Tatu City area. Right. So as the community,
We just have groupings where we go and you are shown how we use.
Our tradition, we normally do.
Right.
We normally do and join and have our own ways of conducting our own selves.
So I joined those was there that I was initiated to that group.
It became so active to an extent that even then they felt,
below I'm praying to them, I need to be their elder and they shows me as the chairman.
Okay.
I understand.
Yeah.
And what makes you good at that?
Like, what's your quality that makes you a good elder?
It's because of knowing how to coordinate people in the best way.
If you are a violent man, I just care I talk with you in a bright way.
Yes.
You understand one other.
I show you how you are supposed to live with the other people.
I show the goodness of peace and such kind of things.
So it's a lot of experience dealing with people.
Yeah.
What would be a typical dispute that you have?
have to decide or resolve?
A lot of them.
But like what would be an example?
What might happen where they need you?
Example.
Yes.
Let's see if there's a fight between a man and a man.
Yes.
If there's a person who have, let's say, got somebody's property,
such kind of things.
We sit down, talk it out, somebody's cheating the other,
domestic violence, all of that.
And what do you do that the court system
does not do, right?
Because you're not police, but still you do something useful.
What we normally do, we as a group, we listen to one another.
Yes.
Very much.
And when one person, this is to that stage, you've been told that you are a man now,
you normally have to respect your elder.
Yes.
Those people do respect me.
So when I call you, when I tell you come and we talk it out with my group,
you cannot say you cannot.
come. Because if you do it, we normally discipline somebody, not by beating. You just remove
you from our group. And when we isolate you from our group, you'll feel that is not fair for
you. You come back and say, I apologize. We take you back to the group. So if you're isolated,
you can't be friends with those people anymore. When we isolate you, we mean you are not
allowed to interact in any way, any business, anything with the other community.
And if it is so, definitely you have to be a loser.
Because you might be needing one of those people to live in a business
or something of the sort.
But when you isolated this man tells you no.
God cleans yourself first with that group.
And does your family reject you also or just your friends?
If your family rejects you, that is a family dispute.
And if it comes to that, we take it in another way because we have to know first.
How does that dispute realize?
Right.
It might be your wife is the one who has a problem.
For that one, we don't interfere so much.
We leave it to the family.
Yes.
Yes.
But if the man has the problem?
If the family have a problem also, we chip inside and we help them to resolve that
dispute.
By talking to both of them.
Yeah.
Trying to get them to agree again.
Yes.
What's the biggest family problem that you see?
The most common one.
The most common one is...
It happens when one man is so drunkos, be the woman, she says the woman,
the woman pushes with other men, call it her daughterly.
When she does that, at least you do normally shape into resolve that issue.
But it's not most common.
That one we normally leave it to their family.
Right.
Yes, not unless the family comes to us and tell us we need the help in this.
We normally don't like so much interfering in the family matters.
Problems with children, you deal with those or not so much?
In form of children, yes, we do normally do.
Because in our group as men, we initiate small boys.
Yes.
From childhood to adulthood, we circumcise.
Yes.
Yes.
When we age, we have groupings where we circumciseise.
So, Kikuyu boys, Kikuyu, able boys from Meru.
Yanni, that is our community.
We call it a community.
The group of that community,
we do have groups where we have our own doctors,
qualified doctors.
Let's say like last year,
we had one in Giduguri.
Right.
Here in Giduguri, primary school.
That is where we bear.
We had 350 boys who initiated.
We helped them, we call them,
we talk with them,
tell them the light of passage
that one person is going,
educate them
and after that
we still with those boys for 10 days
still that boy is healed
Yes
And how old is the boy at this point?
At this point is when he finishes
28.
Okay.
Well now he's going to form 1
Yes.
Yes.
We make sure we mentor that boy
And the same time
after the boy goes
Back to the parents
The following year
We make sure we prepare
seminar. We call them
because we do normally follow
them up to see whether this
boy has good behaviors or whatever.
If she tries to be
misbehaved, let's
pompe and the bear and the list,
we talk to that boy. We make sure that
we are molding somebody who can
be able to come and join the community.
And there's a ceremony surrounding
this initiation?
Is there parties or
people get together or how does that work?
What happens?
where we have the doctors who initiates the boy.
And we have old men,
coordinated by me,
if it's in my readers,
I'm the chairman.
There there were Zezz who talk with these children,
showed them how to live and whatever.
Yes.
Yeah.
And if there was a problem you could fix in your community,
one thing you could improve,
what would it be?
Well, what I would wish very much?
For example, I cue people.
When you come to this place,
just try to help us
the earlier people
try to come
boarding these people
because you have come
you got these people
if you both with them
we also will come you as our brother
yes
yes and which is so good
yeah
and Kikuyu people in Kenya
do you think they're different
from the other groups
or the culture is different
how would you describe that
well all the other groups
has their own kasha
yes
if it's Kikuyu they have their own
If it's laws, they have their own.
And this is something that we met.
It is not something that we are creating.
It is from our old gradfathers.
And how would you describe what is special about Kikuyu culture?
What I would describe about them, they are good.
That is one thing.
Good?
I don't say they are good because I'm a Kikuyu.
Yes.
Yes, I'm saying because they are hardworking people.
Yes.
Yes.
Many people say they're very good at business.
And they are friendly and good business people.
Yeah, they are business-minded.
And they are not lazy people.
Not lazy.
Do you think they're more extroverted, more open?
More than.
Even if you go to any part of this country,
there's nowhere you can go and don't find a kikuyu.
Yes.
If you move from Yat Mombasa, you get out of kikuyu.
If you go everywhere, Kikuyu is always there.
They like interleacting with their other communities.
And the way marriage works for Kikiyu, is it different from the other groups?
Marriage.
Marriage.
Courtship, how you decide whom to marry, the ceremony, everything.
Is it the same or different?
There's no difference because we also marry other communities.
Yeah.
A Kikuyu is allowed to marry a cabba.
Yes.
Yes, we intermarry with those communities.
And you marry at the same age, younger, older, or that's all the same?
It depends with the feeling of that one person.
You can marry whoever you want.
Yes.
Yeah.
You are free.
We don't have limitations that you should marry this or that.
But we do not encourage old men to marry small children.
Sure, of course not.
Yeah, that's not good.
Yeah.
How many children do you think a typical family wants to have now?
In Nairobi.
In Nairobi, most as I can see, now these young people are prefer in two, three.
Two or three.
But in our times, in our old was this, like in my family.
Yes.
My father had eight.
Eight.
Yeah.
Which do you think is better?
According to today's economy, I would say we don't go all that much,
getting 10 children which you won't be able to look at after.
It is better you have three or four whom you know very well.
Yeah.
You are going to cater to them till their adulthood.
There are some countries where families just have one.
I mean, is that weird to you?
But you go to Korea.
people have on average about one a little less actually.
But average of one is not good.
Because you know, accidents do normally happen.
Sure.
If you have one child and he dies, you are left in nothing.
Yeah.
Why?
Get two or three.
Yeah.
Yes.
So in the case of anything, you are left with something.
Because if you have one and he dies and you are old, you cannot get another one.
Do you see you be left with that?
Yes.
No.
Yeah, they do it.
They do.
And that's expected.
It's part of the culture.
It is this.
But we don't force them to.
Yeah.
It will depend with the relationship between your children, you're your own self.
Yes.
Because there are some men or women who do not care for their children.
Yes.
They just get the children and let them go away.
Yeah.
It's good to interact with children.
Show them you are their father.
Show them you are their mother.
These children, we will give you back.
Yeah.
Yes.
The way you bring out a children is the way you...
And today, the grandparents, do they help bring up the children, even if there's only two?
Yeah.
They still do.
Yeah.
And what if the family has moved to Nairobi, moved to Mombasa, and the grandparents are far away?
Like, how do things work?
Four week, for years.
Yes.
If somebody lives from far, we do normally.
they meet, during the holidays, you make sure you go home.
You enjoy them.
How do you get home? You take a bus?
You take a bus or if you have a means, you have a vehicle, you just go there.
Just drive, yeah.
Yes, drive with you, stay with your family for less two or three days, and you go back to your job.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Now, I have read in the newspapers, the cost of living in Kenya is much higher now than a few years ago.
It is.
Why did that happen?
I don't know whether it's because of the population.
I don't know what it is because of...
the development we have here,
but actually for that one,
I cannot really, but it's because of,
you know, we have a high,
what do we call it?
Let's see, if you look in ways or another,
the climate have changed.
Yes.
And when the climate have changed,
we don't have enough wood.
You can be light.
And when we don't have enough food,
you expect the life has to be more hinder.
Because there are some people
who depends with the lane.
You can mean like
From that
If you go to the
Let's say a place like in Nairobi right now
As we're living
The cost of living also is so high
Because in
Let's say let me talk about the sector
In of transportation
The level is very hard
Because of the increase of petroleum
Because if I could say
The price of petrol is too high
And I cannot be able to hike the price
Of the person who I'm carrying
because these people don't have money.
So I have to dig deeper to my pocket
to sustain
what has been added in the petrol.
Yeah.
And what do you think should be done
to change things
because it costs so much?
What needs to be done is now
that is now up to the government
not to know how
they are going to look at their people.
Yes.
Yes.
Because we now are tied up.
Yeah.
But do you know what should be changed
to improve this thing?
Because one, if we see for the climate,
that is our goal.
That is gone now.
We have to fail to go now
to give us good lanes.
Like this year we had good rains.
What we could do is we know why.
We are not having enough rain.
Why?
We plant a lot of trees.
We stop logging.
We plant a lot of tea trees
so that we could get enough rain.
When you go back to the side of the government now,
Now the company is for them to know how they are going to
legurize these prices so that at least the ratio
should be a little bit.
Yeah.
Do you use mobile money to buy things?
Money in your smartphone?
Yeah.
And how does that work for you?
That's easy, that's hard, or how is it?
It is not hard, it's easy.
Because when we get money, we do know.
Nowadays, we even use for.
when you are paying things, it's more better to,
because we don't lose a lot of money when,
even though there's a lot of tax in it.
And do you order things online?
You buy online and someone sends it to you?
Now, for me, I don't.
But younger people do?
But young people do.
What kind of things do they buy online?
Normally they buy things that they don't have.
You don't have here.
Yeah.
Things from other countries.
It's from other countries, like vehicles.
Yeah.
Vacation wares and whatever, even building materials.
They do normally do it.
And why don't you buy online?
Me am a little bit analog.
Do you listen to YouTube at all?
It's rarely.
What do you listen to?
The common radio.
Common radio.
Yeah.
What kind of music?
Benga music or you listen to Congo music?
Traditional music.
Traditional music, yeah.
What kind of traditional?
I like them.
Kikuyu or Lua music, whichever.
I like those ones very much.
And this will be on the radio.
Do you like musics from other African countries?
Definitely, yes.
What else do you like?
Oh, you are talking of...
What you like, yeah.
Nigeria, there's a lot of Nigerian music in America now.
All of countries.
All countries?
Yes.
The only thing the music should.
You know, whichever music, if it's good.
Do you listen to any American music?
If it shows to be in there, I do.
You do?
Yeah.
What do you listen to?
Whichever music.
Whichever is playing on the radio.
You have public utilities, right?
You get electricity, water.
How good are those services?
The services that you have been given by.
That you get.
Your electricity, is it reliable?
Yes.
It is.
It is.
And your water?
Even the water is, we have enough water.
You have enough water?
Yeah, from these bowhows that we are getting from this.
And you get water from a well or from piping or how does your water come?
Let's see in our area, this earlier we have now.
We have people who get, we supply from water from wells and also from the county government.
Yes.
Yeah.
And you feel that safe water?
We could say it's safe causes.
What they normally do when we get this water is already treated so that we can consume it.
What are some of the other expenses for a family in Kenya?
So there's food, right, transportation, rent.
What else is a big problem?
Education?
Yeah.
If you send your kid to school, the kid is 10.
The school is free or you have to pay?
You have to pay.
Even for government school?
In government, you also have to pay but little money.
And you think the schools are good?
Well, I would say it's good because I'm used to those schools.
Have you known how more participants they are better than those?
Yeah.
You normally adapt what you see or what you get there.
Yes.
Funerals, do they cost a lot of money?
No, for the funeral, it depends with the family.
Yes.
Because for the funeral, if the family feels they are going to buy an expensive house or coffin is to them.
That only depends on how the family is.
Because there are some who don't require a lot of money.
There are some who like to use a lot of money.
That one will normally depend on how the family is.
And the family pays for everything or the community shares the cost?
The community, most of the times for the funnels, the community is shipping.
And who decides how much people pay?
Nobody decides you give what you have.
You are not being forced to, you have to give this, you know.
So people who have more money, they give more money?
Definitely, yes.
Do you ever have disputes over this that you have to judge?
No.
Because they always agree?
Yeah.
I'm surprised they always agree.
In my country, they would not.
always agree.
I don't know why.
I think...
In this country of us,
you don't have,
we don't do it like that.
If you could change
something about the government
in Kenya, like, what would you change?
What's the biggest problem?
If you, if I could.
You could change something
about government here.
They would do something new,
stop doing something bad,
change some law.
What would you change?
For that one,
I couldn't say
there's nothing I can or I cannot
change.
Because I depend
with what my government tells me to do.
Yes.
Yeah.
So there's nothing you can change.
And not unless the government's come in and tell me,
change this and change this.
Yeah.
Yes.
They are leaders that we have elected them.
Yes.
So we have to follow what they tell us to do.
But sometimes do you wish they would tell you different things?
We, as elders, we don't dispute with the government.
You don't dispute?
Yeah, we don't.
And you help enforce it in a way, right?
And we don't force them to do things.
Yeah.
We depend on what they tell us.
Yeah.
Women's rights movements in Kenya.
Do you see a lot of that, feminism?
Bigger role for women, more women working?
Well, for women, let's say I can't talk much,
even though they have their own rights.
So what do you think of feminism in Kenya?
Women should work, have equal say as the men, have more rights.
No.
We are equal.
All equal.
Women have their rights and we do have their own lights.
Yeah.
So you think women have equal rights already?
Even though when we come to our community, there are some stages that we limit.
You cannot expect a woman to be controlling a man in home.
No.
Mm-hmm.
Yes.
And in government, how many women are there?
That's what I can't say.
But the president is not a woman, right?
Yeah.
People in the legislature, there are mostly men?
No, even women.
So we created another, let's see in the same,
we have women left so that they could bring that together
to be almost the same.
Yeah.
How was it here during times of COVID?
Was it a big change or not so much?
Well, but by then the life was too hard
because that is something that we are not used with.
Yes.
Yes, we had a very hard time.
Things closed down or everything stayed open?
Things closed down.
We had to stay indoors.
There was a lot of coffee.
The time that you need to work, you are told, no, you can't go.
How many people got COVID?
Actually, I cannot tell you the actual figure, but a lot of people.
Did you?
No, I didn't.
So you were lucky?
Let's see, it's God.
Because I also went for the fascination.
I took the whole medication.
So I thought...
So you took vaccine?
Yeah, I did.
And most people did here?
Yeah.
Which vaccine?
Was it Chinese, American?
Do you know, British?
They were all.
The people were taking all.
Do you know which one you had?
I can't remember, actually.
Yeah.
Yeah.
How was it to stay at home for so long?
I mean, was that hard?
No, it was hard.
It was tough.
Because you cannot expect.
being told at once stay at home and you are not used with it.
Yeah.
It was too hard.
Yeah, I think it was very hard in many places.
And we lost a lot.
A lot of people died.
Not even economically we lost a lot.
And I think that time of COVID is the one that brought even these hardships you have even today.
We have not yet turned to a normal because of that period.
How much do you worry about it?
about crime? People stealing things from you? Is crime a big problem for you? Or do you feel it's very safe?
Well, sometimes back, let's see, in two or three years, there were a lot of crimes, but nowadays,
the government have tried to legalize the crime in these areas of ours.
With more police, or what do they do?
Not even more police, also involving the community.
The government decided to introduce this thing we call New Bakumi.
Yes.
When it was introduced, the Njubakumi, if they noted there's somebody who is not good in that family, they had to report to the nearest so that person could be dealt with.
And it did help a lot.
At the same time, they also used the Azizza and whatever in the community to identify all these thugs and whatever.
And you think crime will keep on getting better in Kenya for this reason?
Yeah.
Why do you think crime is worse in Nairobi than in smaller cities?
Definitely you expect because the life in town is more harsher than in the rural areas.
It's just tougher to live there.
Costs are higher, you need more money.
In town you need money.
And when you need money, you don't have a job to expect yourself to drive yourself to such kind of things.
What do you think is the biggest problem in the slums?
If you go to what, Magengo, one of the slums?
Employment.
Employment.
So not enough good jobs.
Yes.
And future jobs for Kenya, what do you think they will be?
The future job in Kenya.
That's what I was saying.
If we could have people who can help in getting us good jobs and whatever,
trying to help these young people get jobs,
I think we could just minimize this kind of hardships that these young boys get.
When President Obama,
visited Kenya. I think it was
2015. Did you
care? Were you excited? You don't
care? Or what do you think?
Well, for
such a person visiting here.
Yeah. Everybody was exciting because
it was even
being told that she was
from Kenya. So we're happy about
the man coming to visit us.
We see your brother who has God someone
and become a great person.
So he's still very popular here?
Yes, more than, it's popular.
The Kenyans who move to America, what do people think of them?
They're happy, or they view them as totally different now, or what's the image?
For that one, I can't see much, because I've never visited that area.
But you haven't been to America, but people talk about those who leave, right?
At the same time, I don't have a relative who have been there.
How about Kenyans who go to England?
But actually, we normally see when they go there, they get good.
life the place is good or such kind of a thing.
Do you think they're happier or do you think they're happier here, the ones who leave?
Definitely that one, I cannot be able to answer, of course.
That's all I've told you. I've never had a letter to and talk, one in order to tell me.
There was a change in the Constitution of Kenya. It gave a lot more power to the counties, right?
Was that a good idea?
Yeah, it was a good idea, because the help that the government used to give
the community,
when it was devolved to the people,
it became so nearer to the people
more than when it was in the national government.
Because if there is anything like development
and whatever the money is in the county,
it's more easier for the governor to deal with
his work more than it was in the national government.
I'm sure you know many foreigners come here
to see Safari,
to see animals, elephants.
Do you care about these animals?
Are you excited or you've seen so many?
It's just ordinary for you.
What's your attitude?
We do care about.
Because it is even a boost for us for the living.
When new people come, you ship in something.
We spend money here.
You spend money.
They are here and the economy boosted a little bit.
But if you see an elephant, you personally, are you excited?
Or do you say, oh, I've seen a thousand elephants.
I don't care.
I'm also excited because I'm not mostly used with it.
The things that cannot excite me is this thing you are living with it here time and again.
Let's something like a dog, a cat, a horse with it, there's a domestic things.
You cannot be excited for such kind of things.
But when you go get a leopard there, at least you have to be excited.
And which animal excites you the most to see?
For me.
You, hippo.
Something like a lion.
Lion.
Yeah.
Because I'm not used to eat so much.
The lions, if you see one, are you afraid?
Or maybe they're afraid of you.
You have to be afraid because you have the experience that if it chances to get you, it's going to eat you.
Yeah.
Do you ever go on a safari as a guide or do you go to Maasimara to see the animals?
Well, I normally don't because in my area and neri,
I just see these animals openly there.
You just see them normally.
You don't need to go anywhere.
So there's no point of going all that much.
Spading and I could see them and I'm going on my way home.
Have you seen leopard?
Many people say leopard is hard to see.
Yes, I do.
In our area, we have those leopard.
Yes.
And you see all the different birds in your area, or many of them?
Yes, I do see them.
Is that interesting to you, the birds?
It's not much interesting because I'm used to eat them.
Yes.
Yes.
What do you think is the animals?
attitude here towards China, Chinese people?
Do you think they're welcome or there's prejudice or...
Well, what we normally do here in our country,
if somebody is coming to help us,
then we still expect us to be afraid with that person.
But if somebody's coming to bring problems with that,
we'd say, no, that's not a good person.
And you think China has helped Kenya overall?
Well, I could say yes because of us.
have come to help our young boys.
When they come to do the laws and whatever,
the employer, young boys and whatever who are unemployed.
So they build roads, they build buildings,
and that's good for people.
Does America help you at all?
They also do.
What do we do to help?
When they come and they start their projects and whatever,
when let's see we see these people like this,
this you came to Tartu City,
they're also helping us because they are,
well, they come and sell this,
we get this industry here.
This industry is employ our youth, which is a boost to our living here.
Are there groups of people who come, who don't help, who make things worse?
Well, I couldn't say so, because I've not gone to that study so much.
Do you worry about Kenya's neighbors?
So you have a border with Ethiopia, but there's been a big war in Ethiopia.
Do you worry this will affect Kenya?
Somalia, right?
I do worry, but definitely I can do nothing
because you don't know why those people are fighting.
They have their own domestic things there.
So I prefer to mind about my own.
If you help them with dispute resolution,
do you think you could improve it for them?
If it can be, if we can do,
it's good we can help them if we can,
if they can be able to be.
If you can niche there and be able to help them
with the despise and whatever, it's good.
Because it is always good to have
Frederick tries and get your neighbor
without a lot of vitas and whatever,
fighting and whatever.
It's good to have a good neighbor.
Yeah.
A lot of people from India live in Kenya, of course.
And they've lived here maybe 100 years, the families.
Do you think of them as Kenyan,
or do you think still it's like different,
you think they're Indian?
What I believe, yeah?
if you come here, let's say you come here
and you acquire property here
if you get a shout when you are here
I would say that shout is a Kenyan
is you are not supposed to be shaged by anybody
you have decided to come
you're also a human being
I believe I can go and live
anywhere
as long as I'm accommodated there
do you like Indian food
I don't say whether I like it or not
because I've never...
You don't eat it?
I don't eat it.
You eat to Ugali, Kenyan food.
Yeah.
I'm used to my normal food.
And you like Ugali?
More than.
What else do you eat?
For a normal meal, what else do you eat besides ukali?
What is that?
Niamashoma.
It's Niamashoma.
It's the meat from...
The meat we slaughter from our goats and whatever.
Does goat meat here have a special or sacred status?
Is it the best meat?
Well, I would say yes, because when we are doing our sacrifices, we men, we kikuyu,
we normally use those, those labs.
So that's your favorite food?
Not lily.
What's your favorite?
Vegetables.
Well, like what kind?
At my age, I don't prefer eating a lot of meat so much.
I prefer taking these local foods.
What kinds of vegetables might you have here?
Yeah.
Yeah, that you eat.
We do have a lot of them.
But what would you eat, a normal meal?
Dempty days, I do.
Yeah.
The young people, do they eat the same things you eat, or they eat very different things?
Young people prefer taking these junk foods,
from the supermarket, chips and whatever,
of which is not really good for them.
They should eat foods that we were as well as eat so that they can live roger,
and live a little bit healthier.
Yeah.
Are you religious?
Do you go to church?
Yes, I do.
Christian or Muslim?
I'm a Christian.
Christian.
What kind?
Like Protestant?
No, I'm a Catholic.
Catholic.
Yeah.
What about Catholic is more appealing to you?
I was brought up a Catholic from my childhood.
And I came to like it.
Because Catholics are not that much controversial.
Yeah.
And being religious, does that help your work as community elder?
Yes.
How does that relate? How does it connect?
You know, when you are near to God, you are near to people also.
And the people respect you more?
More than.
And you think the religion gives you some wisdom.
Yeah.
Do you watch TV at all?
I do.
What do you watch?
Local things.
Like movies or news or just everything.
Not much or movies not so much.
And what language do you watch in Kikyu or English or?
Any.
Any?
Yeah.
Whatever's on.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And do you like foreign shows or like Kenya shows?
Any.
The only thing is if it's interesting, I do watch.
And what would make a show interesting for you?
Like what should the topic be?
If it's mostly talking about my, how are you?
You know, our way of friends.
in that. I do like it very much course. I do like getting more experience or how to stay with people.
Yes.
Yeah. Your children, they live in Kenya, yes?
Yes, they live in Kenya.
How many do you have? We have two.
Great. Yeah. And what do they do?
One is married. Both of them are girls. One is married. The other one is in school. Yeah.
They live near here. Yeah. Yeah, that's great.
That one I live with that at my place. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
What do you think is the next thing you will try to do for your community?
Well, I would say I would just try to go ahead with give them,
or showing them that we should be living here, living in a piece of a way.
If you compare the views you have now to the views you had as a young person,
what have you changed your mind about in life?
after my mind because now I know how to stay with the people
could live in
so you understand other people better
and you see the importance of helping them
cooperate yeah
do you have any questions for me
yeah I can ask you one
please do you stay in that city do you work in city
or you are just a visitor
I am just a visitor so I'm an old friend
of Stephen Jennings.
Okay.
And I've never been to Kenya before.
This is my first time.
Okay.
I wanted very much to come.
Yeah.
And I knew Stephen here, so I thought I would see him.
Okay.
So I'm here for five to six days.
Okay.
My wife is coming, and then I go on safari with her.
Okay.
That's my story here.
Yeah, that's good.
So, so this Stephen Jennings is a good for that?
He and I worked together over 30 years ago.
That's good.
But I had not seen him in a long time either.
Because he was in many distant places,
and I live in America near Washington, D.C.
Even though he is your friends.
Just go and tell him to help our boys who are here,
who are unemployed.
And how do you think he should do that?
Well, as a community,
he can look for a way if you have employment here,
you can just let us know,
and we ship these boys of us here.
You can also help us with educating some of these young boys who need help.
What do you think the rest of the world should know about Kenya that they don't know?
Well, the only thing in Kenya, the only problem we do have in Kenya is only employment.
You want to see more foreign business?
come, to create more jobs, more Chinese investment, more Americans who work, Tatu City.
If you could have more jobs and you have more investors to come here and invest in us,
when they are coming to invest, we also benefit from the creation of jobs and whatever.
Because we have a lot of young people who are more educated, but they don't have anything
because they don't have jobs. Yeah. And last question. Are you optimistic about Kenya?
And if so, why?
You think the future will be better?
Yeah.
Why?
Because according to my,
according to what I believe,
we are learning how to shape our country
in the best way possible,
whether in hard times or good times.
We have to face all the challenges,
and we have to make our country more better.
And we have also to invite two friends
to come and help us also, yeah,
in one way or another.
Gikai Kiddhi.
Kiddhi, Kinti.
Because east or west home is the best.
Kitai Gidinci, thank you very much.
Thank you also.
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