THE JUBILEE POMPOUS FAÇADE: It’s time to call their bluffBY EDGAR NAKHGUL OUMAPower and Voice, MS-TCDC, EAC – 2016
A story is told in my village of a man who went to collect his
wife. His name was Wa Kithome, a re-known and respected mason in the area. It
must have been an ecstatic moment for him, for I would imagine he had spent
agonizing hours filled with anxiety and excitement.
The all – important day came. It was
a Saturday. Wa Kithome woke up at dawn. Clad in his Sunday best, he dusted his
recently made “akala” shoes, and embarked on the journey to finally acquire a
“kitchen.”
On his way, he passed through Kwa
Mutula, our local shopping center;
In the first shop, he paid for
two kilograms of sugar, and said he would be back later. In the next one, he
paid for two kilograms of “kimbo” cooking fat and left. Then he paid for
paraffin in the next shop and strutted out.
At the butchery, he paid for a
kilo choice meat, and bounced out, whistling.
Finally, at the “hotel” popularly
known as Kwa Mathuva, he paid for tea and mandazi, and promised to e back
later, to the consternation of the proprietor.
Mission accomplished, and with a
spring in his walk, Wa Kithome melted out of “town” puffing away at his Rooster
cigarette. He punched in the air occasionally, fist firmly clenched, like
Julius Yego does when his javelin throw nearly clocks 90 meters.
The journey must have been a
great success, because by late afternoon, as the sun began to lean over
Kyemundu forest, he re-emerged from the far end of the “town” with a striking
damsel in tow. They were both glistening from sweltering heat, and a sight to
behold.
At this moment, he acknowledged
greetings from friends, not missing an opportunity to showcase his latest
acquisition. Despite the exhaustion from the long walk, he regained his spring
as he waltzed across “town”.
They walked into the first shop;
“Give me sugar!” He snarled. The shopkeeper quickly did it,
and without a word, Wa Kithome marched out, wife in tow.
“Give me Kimbo!” Wa Kithome
barked in the next shop. Without questions, he was handed a two-kilogram tin,
and walked out, without saying a word.
“Give me chapatti flour!” he
roared next, and was swiftly handed a two-kilogram packet.
At a tiny corner shop, he
demanded for a packet of salt, and was given one quickly.
Next, he marched straight to the
counter of a busier shop. “Give me jogoo!”
A two-kilogram packed was hastily passed on to him. You see, jogoo was
unga only for the rich and a status symbol, for the rest of the masses survived
y flour from the posho mill.
Then straight to the butchery,
“Give me meat!”He demanded. He was handed a package, and was assured it was the
finest. He walked out, without a word.
The spree went on, and ended up
at the hotel, where he ordered for tea and mandazi to cool off with his wife.
To-date I still don’t understand how tea in the afternoon worked to cool off
people.
Without a word to the waiter, he
beckoned his new wife, and they left the town. She was perplexed by the man she
had just married. How powerful can he be, really? She kept thinking, thanking
God for his great man, as they walked the aisle towards home.
Before they took a end to lose
sight of Kwa Mutula, Wa Kithome cleared his throat loudly, and gazed into the
eyes of his newly acquired queen, as a lion would at the fat prey it had
earmarked for dinner.
“You see all that town,” he
growled, trying to sound as macho as he could gather.
“Yes….” She giggled back, her
eyes gleaming and dancing, while lightly caressing the large veins jutting out
of his forearms from the weight of the heavy “shopping” in his hands. He was a
dream come true.
“All those shops belong to me.
And all those attendants you saw are my employees,” he said slowly, mustering
the huskies voice he could, a slight smile of contentment breaking out,
striving to make it as casual as possible, not to betray anything.
![]() |
| POWER AND VOICE CLASS 2016 LISTENING TO DR MARCOS |
They finally got home, and she
prepared him a hearty meal. I’m certain the night was steamier.
Now, days went by and they slowly
began to run out of supplies.
The lady would subtly remind Wa
Kithome, and he would mumble something and brush off the conversation. More
days went by, and they ran out of almost everything.
Little did the lady understand
why her husband couldn’t just walk down to any of his shops and re-stock their
supplies?
One evening, she got completely fed up with the excuses he kept giving. She was yelling. If he couldn’t do it himself, she threatened that she would walk right down to town and collects the supplies herself. After all, wasn’t she now the woman of the house?
The thrashing she received that
evening was tectonic. It took the intervention of neighbors to save her. And
that was the last time the discussion ever came up. The harsh reality sunk in.
And that’s exactly where we are
as a country with Jubilee.
I have seen folks foaming at
their mouths as they chant in jubilation, cheering at the juggernaut of a party
launched a few days ago, vowed by machinery and investment. Folks who are
hardest hit by the meltdown that is slowly crippling every sector of our
economy.
I have seen pictures strewn all
over every available space online and offline, of the party headquarters, a
fleet of fuel guzzlers and merchandise to boot, generating orgasmic excitement.
Yet we have police officers
living like vermin in this country. We have patients of cancer for instance,
waiting for two years at Kenyatta National Hospital for “chemo.” Dialysis
machines are as rare to see as the recent solar eclipse. We witness yet, in
this regime open looting of public resources meant for development like the 215
billion Euro Bond, the NYS scandal and more.
Folks, that you splash and brag
about out there is your money, used to impress you day and evening, like Wa
Kithome.
Who will wake you up from that
stupor?

Good meal there, the voice if the wife must not remain silent
ReplyDelete