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The Calling

” I will return home to her – many centuries have I wandered –
And I will make my offering at the feet of my lovely mother:
I will rebuild her house, the holy places they raped and
plundered,
And I will make it fine with black wood, bronzes, and
terracotta,”
Think of the poor black mother as our Kenya; she waited so long for her infant son to come of age and comfort her and reapy her for the years of shame and neglect of the colonial era.
Unfortunatley, her son turned out to be a shameless politician out to rape and plunder even the little that she had left.
Is this fair, will we ever go forward?
The generation or our fathers has failed our poor mother, it is now up to us!
I beleive this is one of those rare opportune moments in history when a country’s hero comes forth, to be forever immortalised in song, dance and folk lore for his/her achievments. Kenya needs a hero.
It is a calling you and I should answer. We must save Kenya
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So so Sad

The title is actually taken from a remark by my good friend Kush once he had read the BEST place on earth.
I agrree with him completely. It is really disheartening-in a small way- to read of a centre of excellence such as MIT, Harvard, Yale or even the rest of the more than 4000 colleges and universities in the US yet we in Kenya do not have any centre of excellence. To make it worse, many many high school graduates who qualify for college do not get an opportunity to get to college due to a shortage of universities. On average, only 10% ofthe 250000+ body of Kenyan high school graduates have any realistic hopes of getting intouniversity. What happens to the rest?
The government surely isn’t doing enough to combat this situation but sometimes I wonder, can it really do any more? I mean, it isn’t easy trying to overturn a 40-year economic regression.
Still, I beleive education is the backbone of any country’s future success and as a country wearen’t building a very healthy backbone. However, I think most Kenyans will agree with the fact that in Kenya, there just are’nt enough, if any, opportunitiesto do what you really want to do.Times are hard. It kinda makes you wonder: where are we heading to?
But there is hope, there’s always hope. Indeed there are those Kenyans who do make it, those Kenyans who get an opportunity to excel – yeah, there ARE Kenyans at Harvard. It is important that these Kenyans don’t forget about their country.

If you are a Kenyan, no matter who you are or where you are: Come, let us build the Kenya of tommorow today.

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Project Kenya

I have a dream of a Kenya that is free of corruption, free of all the lies from politicians, free from human suffering, free from tribal clashes, free from tribalism………the list could go on and on….. and on……. Kenya should not be in the pathetic state its in. Its a great country, with great people and should be right up there with the rest of the richest and most developed countries in the world.

A friend of mine once remarked that he could not bear the thought of pursuing higher education in any of the more developed African countries. Why? He said he would ‘die of envy.’ So would I-that is Kenya’s rightful place in Africa

Si inaweza Kewa poa Nai ikikaa hivi:
(It’d be nice if Nairobi was like:)

More Pictures of future Kenya