Kenya , before the thieves showed up . Down memory lane

I rarely do a piece on a weekday but being a Friday please allow me to pen one and join me on a nostalgic trip.

A few weeks ago I met a chap who is my agemate but he comes from a rich family where the dad was a very senior goverment official. To this day they are wealthy .

I took time to give him a history of Kenya and how we had most facilities working . I told him that while we are forced to celebrate some overpriced SGR we indeed had the old railway that connected East Africa big time let alone Kenya .

I told him we even had a line to Nyanyuki to help ferry beef cattle for export via Konza and Athi River holding grounds. Kenya was famous for live cattle export which is not easy to do .

We even had a railway line from Voi to Taveta and KBS bus Mombasa to Taveta to boot. Many would not remember until late 80s we had scheduled KBS bus service Likoni to Diani Beach.

We had steamers on Lake Victoria. Families in Kisumu had folks in Bukoba , Entebbe or Mwanza. Your cargo gets to Kisumu from Mombasa you load it onto water steamer across to Bukoba. Trade was huge . We had a proper working port in Kisumu.

Growing up in Marsabit I never saw a railway line but I knew there was a line that connected most towns in Kenya moreso in the rich agricultural area to Nbi and port of Mombasa. Drawing railways connection in Kenya was part of our syllabus.

We had a working very successful airline owned by Kenya Uganda and Tanzania before greed and one mad Idi Amin Dada self declared generals of all generals made us to divorce . To some degree Kenya equally played a role to kill EAC hence todate TZ are wary of us Kenyans , once bitten twice shy.

You wont believe this but EU came to benchmark with East Africa on how an economic block can work . Since then EU took off with single currently and open borders driven by single visa.

We had a working thriving garment industries from Rivatex. ( Rift Valley ) Kicomi ( Kisumu) Mountex ( Mount Kenya) . We had our meat canning factory in Kenya meat commission, we had the Athi River plant and even Mombasa plant. Almost all household goods were manufacured in Kenya . We even assembled Sanyo radios made in Kenya, legends would recall ” Sanyo Juu Sanyo Tops ” Radio programme. My friend was left in awe . I was speaking to him like a bearded grey haired 90 year old sage .

Well while I went to ordinary school and managed to learn about our history my friend went to one of those ” fine” schools . Maybe they don’t get the opportunity to learn these things . I have no idea but I also loved history and geography.

For us to drool over a single line by the Chinese is really not a miracle . We had this and many more but looks like very few of us know about it or even remember it.

Kenya we even hosted All Africa games in Nbi and our football team lost narrowly to Egypt in the finals. We had world class players who would have been snapped by any European league today.

Health system worked very well where all hospitals were fully kitted and original medicine from Germany .Italy etc were prescribed. I still recall that the hospital would have the records for our family in one place for ease of reference. Doctord would be dressed in their immaculate well starched white jackets.

We never had all these useless private health centres where majority are owned by goverment employed doctors selling medicines meant for public hospitals. Folks , private health centres is a clear sign of a broken system. It is NOT development.

Talk of education goverment schools all worked . I had the same books at Marsabit Primary school just like a pupil at Moi Avenue Primary school Nbi. We had no private schools all claiming to be academies save for community schools like Oshwal and Aga Khan . Again I repeat these many private schools proliferation is a clear sign of a broken system. It’s NOT development. Rwanda is doing the opposite . Fix goverment owned schools and the so called academies are shutting down .

In late 80’s, 90% of Nairobi had piped water so were most other towns including Embu and Meru where i wnet for O & A levels respectively. After a football march we drank to our fill straight from the tap and we were promised by year 2000 every home would have piped water. Nairobi is curenty getting water through trucks and Mikokotenis in 2019 and Mombasa ain’t any better .

Folks I can go on and on. We may have been poor but the goverment of the day gave us dignity . Basic healthcare, education , water was in plenty. When basics are in place security takes care of itself.

I am sharing this to educate younger folks that Kenya was indeed a force to reckon with before the real thieves set in and made nonsense of a working system . Well I still remain optimistic that we can get our groove back but maybe not in my lifetime but I will do what I can in my small way.

Now you know and I wish you all a happy nostalgic weekend .

As always I choose to remain an optimist

Mohammed Hersi
Mombasa.

19 responses to “Kenya , before the thieves showed up . Down memory lane”

  1. I know and appreciate what you are saying since I was about 8 years old at the time of our Independence. Comparatively, things are so very pathetic now.

    Thanks for sharing this and bringing back memories of better days.

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  2. In primary school everything was provided at zero cost to the parent.Free text and exercise books, P.E kits and uniforms, Milk,pens, pencils, geometrical sets,chalk, dusters, Big Radios for daily scheduled education programs, everything.
    Healthcare was free and medicine was available.

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  3. Such a great history lesson. Indeed, Kenya was better. Kenya will be better again.

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  4. Them days, as much as I would to remain optimistic like you but things/systems just like smoke once gone never comes back. Thanks to almighty for making me live the experience. I was born on an island but thanks I was privileged to enjoy everything you have enumerated.

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  5. William Kiviu Nzau avatar
    William Kiviu Nzau

    In Primary school books were free, remember….. Equipment scheme????

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  6. Albert Otieno avatar
    Albert Otieno

    I remember a season when ALL the above existed in KE.
    A time when KBS offered scheduled services right up to the late 80s.
    The City Council dispensary in Highridge off Parklands 3rd Avenue worked and was stocked with medicine (Now some rich dude grabbed the site and is putting up a commercial building)..
    I remember going through City Council Schools and getting quality education.
    Kenya Power and The Kenya Posts and Telecommunications actually provided reliable service.
    Truly, corruption made our Nation sick.

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  7. morris kiburi avatar
    morris kiburi

    They milked our country dry , and once they died they lay in state and state burial to boot! They enslaved us with their rotten education system, we cannot choose good and bad leaders, we elect according to our tribes, regardless, it will take a miracle to rescue our motherland.

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  8. I went to school in Eastlands Nairobi, we lived in Jericho Estate. Throughout primary and secondary we were provided with exercise and Text books. In primary we even got pencils and a ruler. Dispensaries were well equipped, students who used Kenya Bus had students passes. When did the rain start beating us? Kenyamy country

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    1. In the estates social halls, the council provided milk and cookies for chekechea children. in high school we paid for some miscellaneous 200 per term for two terms per year, third term used to be free. The only other fee I remember was the 4th form exam fee. Everything else was provided, text/excercise books, lab equipment, metal/woodwork workshop including materials to work with. Actually private schools were frowned upon, you were considered a failure of you attended a private school.
      Hersi can remember, at Utalii we paid zero fees and had a boom of 240 monthly.

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  9. These monsters even ate up the railways system across east africa. Then made our towns pig stys. And then they TAUGHT their pig manners and thievery!
    Lets from a group to sgare views on how we can get something back or some level of sanity for posterity’s sake.

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  10. There was something called LMD for livestock farmers. The ministry of Agriculture was working. The extension officers were alive and well, visiting the field in Landrover short chassis. Siku hizi fertilizer ni politics.

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  11. Mokandu Onchiri avatar
    Mokandu Onchiri

    Went to school in Nairobi, Dandora 3 pry school, when Queen Elizabeth visited Kenya in 1983,she used the train which was passing through Dandora.

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  12. James Kamotho avatar
    James Kamotho

    Population gree too fast and everything became a competition. Imho.

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  13. Charles Githaiga avatar
    Charles Githaiga

    Greed blinds even the well meaning. Corruption (institutionalized greed) is now premium in Kenya culture that was engrained via “harambee”. The day we allowed government to collect taxes and come back for “harambee”; we created corruption where taxes were diverted to government officials private endeavours while financing of community services reverted to proceeds of “Harambee”. It is no wonder communities where economic activities were limited (by weather or proximity to consumers) to this day have 18th century infrastructure. When we celebrate and applaud gullible stories of rags to riches in place of credible & gallant community relevant heros; we miss the point. It is my cry that better future days lie in deliberate re-think and enforcement of a culture of collective progress as opposed to the current rot of 1 billionaire amidst a billion beggars. We need to strongly criminalize greed in the new Kenya.

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    1. To top up!
      The defunct KCC used to deliver milk in bottles and leave it in front a customers doors and nobody could steal it till the owner woke up and picked it up!
      Today it’s not even possible to leave an empty bottle outside your door!!

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  14. Woiye Charles avatar
    Woiye Charles

    Very true. Indeed Kenya was Great in the past. Lived in the outskirts of Nakuru where the government provided proper housing to the workers. We had a Primary school within the estate and government provided social amenities. We had playing grounds with swings, see-saws, merry go-rounds and other facilities. No fees, only needed school uniform. In Secondary school, you only needed to report with an empty box and everything else was provided in school. Tribalism was unheard off. Mutua, Onyango, Kamau, Wanjala and Kibet played together. Had breakfast/lunch or dinner in any of the playmates houses and even had a sleep over without necessitating a heartache to the parents.

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  15. I am young, but there is so much hope in the past. The future? I don’t think so.

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  16. Indeed, the piece is quite nostalgic!

    I benefited in the the Schools Equipment Scheme and the various School Clubs that focused on Agriculture, Home Science, Art &Craft, Debating, Drama, Music, P. E. etc.

    Takeaway message, “when basics are in place, security takes care of itself”

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  17. I have loved how you’ve candidly taken us to the golden days. Thieves came and killed the vision that was there before us.

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