#IAmKenyan, death, Deep and overstood, Kenya, Life, Politricks, War

FAREWELL, JAKOM


Friends, patriots, children of this Kenyan soil, lend me your ears.
I come not to praise Raila, nor to curse him.
But to lay wreaths of truth upon his long, arduous road.

He was Jakom, the people’s leader.
Son of Odinga, heir to the unfinished dream.
When Moi’s shadow fell like a drought upon our tongues.
He rose, flame in hand, with Matiba, Rubia and others beside him.
Their names carrying in whispers within cells that had no light.
He fought for our voice, when words were contraband.
When to speak was to disappear, he was my hero then.
Freedom arrived, laced with the smell of tear gas and the scent of hope.
As the second liberation marked our warriors in bruises; mental and physical.

But tell me friends, what becomes of heroes when they sit to dine with the kings they once defied?
When he clasped Moi’s hand, I felt my heart stammer between betrayal and belief.
For I had learned resistance from him.
How to endure, how to dream, how to dare.
I was dumbstruck as I watched his iron will bending into hot negotiations.
Disillusioned by freedom’s father, a child, I lost faith in the breaking dawn.
The people grew up to love and hate him as these words will be.
But just like a work of art, he still hang around as the public’s mirror.
To some, the fiery fire of freedom; to others, ambition’s smoke.


They tried to read his soul, see all the cards Agwambo held.
Liberator, dealmaker, the proverbial prophet.
But how do you predict a storm that keeps returning, even within the calm?
Villains only rise when people view once through hero-stained glasses.
When they confuse mourning all the memories with worship.
That’s why I dare to embrace him and still confess his undoing.
He who won wars without a crown, routed regimes with rallies and resolve.
He who left footprints where presidents feared to tread, from the ballot to the barricades.
Always a breath short of power, always a heartbeat away from victory.


His last walk, his last stroll, he fell into his last deep sleep on foreign soil.
Another Kenyan son lost abroad, as her womb labours under broken hands.
So today I weep not only for Baba but the national dream that limped beside him.
I remember him as our fight, our fault, our forever flawed argument.
He changed the shape of power, even when it refused to wear his name.
What is his legacy?
Perhaps it is the loudness of this silence we now share.
Half gratitude, half grief.
Perhaps it is the knowing, that we may never see such defiance again.


Go well, Jakom.
You walked through prisons and parliaments alike.
And though your crown was made of promises unmet.
You wore it with the dignity of a statesman.


Sleep, son of the soil,
For even in contradiction, you were ours.

#IAmKenyan, Culture, Deep and overstood, Hip hop, Kenya, Life, Politricks

UKOO?


Naamka asubuhi napiga dua for vigeti, sala more natumia mama kwa kibeti.
Big fish kwa sahani ndio maana nashusha neti, ligi soh natafuta hizo zangu senti.
Pay per clue ama stage haijalipiwa, donda wa flow change yangu ni kitu pure.
Sticks and stones nikitusiwa, nabreak bones kama gwiji wa rap akiwapa kitu sure.
Colour kwa face, akala mpaka base, nakala ya case, nitashinda usitie shaka.
Maisha naichase, boots zangu nazilace, 7 am nishaset goals natoka kuzisaka.
Naruka mvi nastep on a Gen Z, usishangae water cannons zimejaa kwa nchi iko dry spell.
Wanasting kama Hessy, nabii ana appetite ya promises but hafurahi tukiskia dinner bell.
Tutazidi kufinya kama nyash kinky, 1-2 sio mic test bali ni kupunch more than lines.
Makanga amelewa na whisky, dereva amesema halali but you can see the signs.
Nina akili na nywele, locked kwa target wakirusha my comrades kwa boot.
Nauli ya hapo mbele, watch them split hairs trying to tap your root.
I’ll keep spitting truth through pain like my dentist was a priest.
Armed to the tooth because they freed a beast they thought didn’t exist.
My creations destroy and burn, no wonder I keep grilling them on my cage,
Walidhani I wouldn’t return, they should have braced themselves for my rage.
Usiku kabla nilale napiga goti bila kupaniki, Maulana  alinibariki hakunilaani.
Tajiri ama maskini ana siku ya kufariki, leo jina kubwa kesho yake FULANI.

#IAmKenyan, Deep and overstood, Kenya, Life, Love, War

Open poem to the PORK


Mr President, I’m not a revolutionary, I’m a poet.

I shall try my best to not have my words sound like bars that could be perceived as enemy lines.
I’m afraid that I’ll raise a storm that could brew a kickstart to knowledge at lightning speeds.
Mr President, I’m certain I would not skim any parts of the historical scams or telltale signs.
I would delve deeper till I rooted out what was fertilizing corrupted seeds.
But remember Mr President, I am just a poet.
I titled my poem open because my verses will be holding such a conversation.
My fears though they ring true will be nullified by the dreams of a generation.
Mr President, for clarification purposes, I don’t write poems, they write me.
I feel a nation’s migraine building up and threatening to explode if I don’t document the aura of this age.
Slowly, my anxiety builds up as my restless thoughts clamour for the right to be.
My pen gets smarter than the sword and the blood of the slain inks this damp page.
Mr President, I’m sad and mad, that means my tears keep mixing anger and grief and I’m starting to accept this recipe for depression.
I’m sobbing for a nation Mr President, because I’m hoping my tears at this altar can bargain their way to a red carpet where acceptable justice prevails.
Mr President, open hands welcomed full streets during campaigns, peaceful demonstrations were served closed fists, bullets and batons of oppression.
We the people, we came in peace, came to voice our minds but ended up picking brains and taking young dreamers to early graves.
I’m not a revolutionary, I’m a poet, Mr President.
Just a son of the Kenyan soil, a law abiding resident.


Mr President I’m not a criminal, I’m a poet.

I used to write verses about love before I couldn’t afford one on loans.
I used to write about baddies Mr President not bad deals and bad bills.
I grew up to watch the game played by civil masters, the careful selection of pawns.
The number of moves countered, when those laying down can’t stand up to confirm the kills.
Mr President, a placard is worth a papercut not a trip to the emergency room, a voice is worth a meeting of minds not a bullet to the head.
I’m not a criminal Mr President, just a poet trying to articulate the life of the dead.
As a poet Mr President, I deal in reason in my rhymes, smuggle smarts into select conversation, and forge new styles to the way I steal status quo that’s past its time from closed minds.
I whisper my emotions into my letters, wrap my words with my true feelings and throw my meaning to my audience as the scene rewinds.
I hear the cries of the unnamed, tear this curtain for them so they can have a peaceful sleep.
They died for the shamed, those with futures uncertain, they are soaring through an eventful trip.
I’m just a Millenial poet Mr President, one who is unable to unsee the horror yet not hear the apology for the betrayal in our cities.
I’m just trying to get some shut eye, and as a way to pass away my time through my recent insomnia, I find myself counting scorned deities.
I’m writing this in long pauses Mr President, thinking back on how many years parents keep burying their children in this nation.
Each single time and regime, when the people raise a questioning hand, the corporals end up punishing their offspring.
A digital movement, something that could have been debated without confrontation.
Before the next bell tolls, maybe you could make a point of picking up on the first ring.



Mr President I’m not alive, I’m a dead poet.

I’m not sure how I got here really.
Maybe it was that poem I wrote when red-eyed, or that Ex with a passionate grudge or maybe my DIY noose finally worked and that’s why I am floating.
Any of them could be perceived as deadly by the right audience on the wrong side of history
Or I could have starved to death, I think artistes and Kenyans, especially Kenyans do that.
I don’t know where I am Mr President, it’s a new place for a poet.
It’s dark and peaceful. Everything I probably always wanted.
You know? When you took away my purpose.
When everything I created in destructive conditions was taxed till the government was content.
When I moved back home so you could have several homes.
When my social media post not meant for views got me in trouble for reporting the current news.
When that tick-tock ended up being my clock winding down on me without my consent.
When I marched to the end of the line and they cut mine.
I don’t know where I am Mr President.  I didn’t want to end up here.
I thought you’d listen. I created the most informative poster. You’d probably not have been proud, but I was.
Now I can’t hear my comrades.
I’m calling out to them, they said the water would just itch. Is that why I can’t scratch away this lonely feeling?
I carried that flag and water bottle for the teargas like the poster said right? It must have worked, I’m not coughing.
But… but I am alone Mr President. Mr President? Mr President? Mr President? I guess this is the end of our conversation Mr President. If you can still hear me.
I only need to know: Where am I? What happened?Did I make a change Mr President?
I was not just a poet Mr President.
I was a Kenyan.

#IAmKenyan, Deep and overstood, Kenya, Life, Politricks

THE ANTHEM, AND THEM.


Oh God of all creation, poor or rich, from the wet sands of the Coast to the dry sands of the North.
Bless this our land and nation with rains for our fruits and sun for our growth.
Justice be our shield and defender, even when judges won’t defend us.
May we dwell in unity of all tribes as one, recognizing the origin of the fuss.
Peace and liberty be truly felt than just words on paper.
Plenty be found within our borders, more than enough meat, for our newspaper.

Let one and all arise awakening the mind from its colonial slumber.
With hearts both strong and true finally punch our number.
Service be our earnest endeavour to our neighbours and strangers.
And our homeland of Kenya be protected from all dangers.
Heritage of splendour from our farms to our seas.
Firm may we stand to defend from the mountains, never again on our knees.

Let all with one accord to leave our country better than we find it.
In common bond united from the chosen to the misfit.
Build this our nation together without qualms or complaints.
And the glory of Kenya fly free of any restraints.
The fruit of our labour improve our standard of living.
And if we ever forget, fill every heart with thanksgiving.

Original parts of the Kenya National Anthem included written by: Graham Hyslop, G. W. Senoga-Zake, Thomas Kalume, Peter Kibukosya, Washington Omondi, 1963

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#IAmKenyan, Politricks

Meciria


mzee-jomo-kenyatta-nipate genchina tumblr_inline_mta8tcZiH71qjlvoh
Wakaratha ngûkûratha na nyama ciaku îkûheo Njaû ûrîa wateire mûka.
Ngûcoka ngûhûrithie ihiga ta nguo cikîhurûo nî njûka.
Ndigiri cia Warubaga ti njirû ta cia Rîmuru.
No mîrigo cikuaga oroûmwe cia mwega na mûru.
Ûkîjûî ndî mbia ta mbîa ya kanitha îhong’okete îkagûa casino.
Îgaikia mîthirimo mbere ta taratari cia kariko.
Mwomboko ti witû thikû tûrî.
Nyîmbo maraina ta kîmero maranengererio bure.
Gûkû nîkuo ûkwenda gûikara?
Ndûreke ngûhûre kibiriti ûcure ta ikara?
Thuthaini nîmegûgwakîra mwîcûhio.
Merage ciana cia ciana ciaku ûrîa warî mûhiû.
Kîguoya kîanûkîire nyina.
Norîû we tiga ngui îno yaku ndûrî kîna.
Ndikuona ukîhonoka haha.
Thoguo athie kûrûa, nyûkwa ombirwo nî ngati.
Narîu megwîtharîkîire nginya ni matarûra cati.
Marakwîra ûritîte ta gîthana.
Na mareciria nî guoya nîkîo ûrathithina.
Irimû nîo tondû matirona kîrîa ubangîte.
Gîkuû gîaku gîgûciara mbara ona ûtanungîte.
Warî gîko matanakunîka maniûrû maku na bamba.
Narîu wariûka ûrî njamba.