Rank: Elder Joined: 6/17/2008 Posts: 23,365 Location: Nairobi
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tycho wrote:McReggae wrote:I was in Std 7 in some village school in the then Siaya District exactly twenty years ago this morning. I got to school at around 6:45 a.m., my classmate met me at the door with the news that Adonijah Jaramogi Ajuma Oginga Odinga lay dead at a hospital in Kisumu. The 'sun had closed its eyes'. The man of many myths and many nicknames, Ogwal Bade Chieko, the greatest that ever lived, was no more. Strange enough even at that young age, the pupils looked orphaned and during breaktime, we were in small groups listening to other pupils narrate the myths about Jaramogi which they heard from their parents. Some even thought he was not really dead
Twenty years later, it is Not Yet Uhuru, even though we have become wiser and tougher. A lion never really dies. The spirit of the Legend lives on. And his struggles continue. Long Live Jaramogi!!!! It's sad, that we now glory in a struggle in which we fight not the real enemy. Otherwise when will a man of judgement proclaim, 'Uhuru!' 50 years after? 100? I remember reading 'Not yet Uhuru'. And I couldn't but sniff traces of betrayal in between the lines. He kept denying the fact that the politics that he had helped create, was the reason there was and is, no Uhuru. And that was the deception. The consequence was a history of pseudo gains involving multi party politics, and a constitution that's constantly under pressure of reversal. Like now, what's his son doing and saying? Instead of leading Kenya towards a stable and efficient constitution, he's embarked on an unstoppable quest for the Presidency. Betrayal again. Let's take our Fathers as humans and learn even from their mistakes.  Blue helps you achieve red, ama ni goggles???? ..."Wewe ni mtu mdogo sana....na mwenye amekuandika pia ni mtu mdogo sana!".
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