Category Archives: Literature

COMMEMORATING THE LIFE OF POET AND STATESMAN KOFI AWOONOR

From: Ouko joachim omolo
The News Dispatch with Omolo Beste
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2013

I watched with great sorrow as hundreds of mourners gathered in the Ghanaian capital Accra to commemorate the life of poet and statesman Kofi Awoonor at the National Theatre in Accra attended by family members and dignitaries. Awoonor was one of the victims of the Westgate mall attack in Nairobi, Kenya.

At 78 Awoonor was still young in mind. He was not only a literary icon in his native Ghana, he was known worldwide for his innovative style that translated the rhythms of his Ewe language into English.

Awoonor had been in Kenya with his son to take part in the Storymoja Hay Festival, a four-day literary event. Awoonor was cremated at a private ceremony last week. His son Afetsi, who was wounded in the attack, attended the memorial service with his hand in a sling.

Awoonor was a renowned writer, most notably for his poetry inspired by the oral tradition of the Ewe people, to which he belonged. Much of his best work was published in Ghana’s immediate post-independence period, part of which he spent in exile after the first president Kwame Nkrumah, whom Awoonor was close to, was overthrown in a coup.

Awoonor returned to Ghana in 1975 and was later arrested and tried over his suspected involvement in a coup, according to a biography from the US-based Poetry Foundation.

He was released after 10 months, and the foundation said his imprisonment influenced his book “The House by the Sea”.

Born George Kofi Nyidevu Awoonor-Williams, Awoonor helped found the Ghana Playhouse and played a key role in the development of theatre and drama in the country. He did not only write and produce plays; he acted in them as well.

Awoonor sought to incorporate African vernacular traditions—notably the dirge song tradition of the Ewe people—into modern poetic form. His major themes- Christianity, exile, and death are important among them.

Awoonor’s other volumes of poetry include Night of My Blood (1971), Ride Me, Memory (1973), The House by the Sea (1978), and The Latin American and Caribbean Notebook (1992). His collected poems (through 1985) were published in Until the Morning After (1987).

The House by the Sea is a lovely tale that follows two stories – one set in the present in Devon and the other in 1966 Tuscany. The novel consists of two alternating stories, one set in present day England and the other in Italy several decades earlier.

The Italian storyline begins in 1966 with Floriana, a ten-year-old girl who lives with her drunken father in a small village in Tuscany. Looking over the crumbling wall of a beautiful villa by the sea, Floriana comes face to face with seventeen-year-old Dante, whose parents own the house.

Floriana dreams of one day marrying Dante and escaping from her lonely, miserable life but unfortunately things don’t go exactly as she planned.

The story then shifts to Devon in 2009 and Mariana and her husband Grey are gearing up for the summer at their hotel on the cliff by trying to find an artist in residence to help entice guests to earn enough money to prevent them having to sell the hotel.

The hotel is in financial difficulties and in an attempt to save her struggling business, Marina advertises for an ‘artist-in-residence’ to spend the summer at the hotel teaching guests to paint.

And so Rafa Santoro, an artist from Argentina, arrives in Devon and proves to be a big success – particularly with Marina’s stepdaughter, Clementine. But as Clementine begins to fall in love with Rafa, she starts to suspect that he may be hiding something.

Fr Joachim Omolo Ouko, AJ
Tel +254 7350 14559/+254 722 623 578
E-mail omolo.ouko@gmail.com
Facebook-omolo beste
Twitter-@8000accomole

Real change must come from ordinary people who refuse to be taken hostage by the weapons of politicians in the face of inequality, racism and oppression, but march together towards a clear and unambiguous goal.

-Anne Montgomery, RSCJ
UN Disarmament
Conference, 2002

Story: The Two Falcons

From: Junaid Tahir

there was a king who received a gift of two magnificent falcons from Arabia. They were peregrine falcons, the most beautiful birds he had ever seen. He gave the precious birds to his head falconer to be trained.

Months passed and one day the head falconer informed the king that though one of the falcons was flying majestically, soaring high in the sky, the other bird had not moved from its branch since the day it had arrived.

The king summoned healers and sorcerers from all the land to tend to the falcon, but no one could make the bird fly. He presented the task to the member of his court, but the next day, the king saw through the palace window that the bird had still not moved from its perch. Having tried everything else, the king thought to himself, “May be I need someone more familiar with the countryside to understand the nature of this problem.” So he cried out to his court, “Go and get a farmer.”

In the morning, the king was thrilled to see the falcon soaring high above the palace gardens. He said to his court, “Bring me the doer of this miracle.”

The court quickly located the farmer, who came and stood before the king. The king asked him, “How did you make the falcon fly?”

With head bowed, the farmer said to the king, ” It was very easy, your highness. I simply cut the branch of the tree where the bird was sitting.”

Moral :-
We are all made to fly – to realize our incredible potential as human beings. But instead of doing that, we sit on our branches, clinging to the things that are familiar to us. The possibilities are endless, but for most of us, they remain undiscovered. We conform to the familiar, the comfortable, the mundane. So for the most part, our lives are mediocre instead of exciting, thrilling and fulfilling. So let us learn to destroy the branch of fear we cling to and free ourselves to the glory of flight..

Junaid Tahir
www.DailyTenMinutes.com

ETHICS:

“Justice is security for equality”
“Civility is facility for solidarity”
“Stewardship for all can be leadership for all”
“Equal opportunity for all can be prosperity for all”
“Relevant information for all can be important education for all”
“The benevolence of education is value creation for community evolution”
“Emotional intelligence is prudence of amicable discussion and cooperation”
“Education is knowledge acquisition and application not mere certification”

Thanks in advance for your
participation and cooperation!

Sincerely,

Directors.
Email: Africanhero-owner@yahoogroups.com

Here is the Mission or Vision of “Africanhero”

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Africanhero/

Poem against terror, Hope Kenya

From: Caroline Nderitu
Date: Thu, Sep 26, 2013 at 9:17 AM
Subject: Poem against terror, Hope Kenya
To: jaluo@jaluo.com

By Caroline Nderitu

CCL would like to dedicate this issue to all Kenyans, especially the families affected directly by the Westgate siege. Our hearts and prayers are with you.

Why does the sun continue to rise
Into the Kenya sky each day?
Why do we get up every morning?
Why is there breath in our lungs?
Why are we still here?
Hope
For hope we live

Not because the path to healing
Stretches nice, wide and easy
Beneath our feet
Not because the skies
Have been calm above our heads
And the winds calm on our sides
But for hope
For hope we live

Hope is the colour in our eye
Hope is the flavour in our voice
Hope is valour in our step
Hope
For hope we live

[ . . . ] Read full poem
http://cts.vresp.com/c/?CCLTrainingandExecut/12d8c8f7ab/38716685b1/7567f4bc3e

Hunting Africa’s Newest Holy Grail – an Affordable Internet and Content Device for the Home

From: Abdalah Hamis

Up until now, the focus has largely been on seeing how the price of mobile phones (whether smart or feature phones) can come down to open access to different content and services to wider numbers of people. But the new Holy Grail is finding a cheap household or “on-the-go” device that can deliver both Internet and VoD content to households. Russell Southwood looks at the kind of projects that are coming forward to tackle this need.

Whatever anyone tells you, Africans buy content. Go anywhere in an African city and you will find a market stall or small shop selling DVDs and VCDs. Take Kenya, for example, pirated DVDs sell for between US46-57 cents a copy and large numbers of people spend several dollars every month on this form of entertainment. The same is true for music DVDs. Even the most remote villages get DVD shops the moment electricity arrives.

A pirate market is simply one that functions at a level people can afford (remember the grey market in VoIP calling) not the one that suits the rights holders. So the commercial challenge is to be able to deliver both Internet and VoD content that works within these spending parameters.

In small markets, the cost of rolling out fibre to households is enormous so there is a “chicken-and-egg” barrier: the market is too small so there can never be sufficient “critical mass” to get prices to a level that is affordable so the market stays small.

However, even in places like Kenya, the practical challenges of delivering VoD content have left some of the best minds in disarray. Jamii Telecom may have built a fibre network and connected people with Fibre-To-The-Home but they have not yet created a convincing VoD content bundle to make use of it.

Enter stage left one of Kenya’s bountiful supply of small entrepreneurs, Kahenya Kimunyu, CEO and Founder of Able Wireless. He has created a modified Raspberry Pi with inbuilt wireless access (via Wi-Fi on 802.11G) that can give Internet access to two devices in a household.

His vision is to get local franchisees to put up local wireless aerials that will service several households locally. Each aerial will be able to service 20-25 people. The aim is to sell the box for KS500 (US$5.73) and to charge the same amount for an unlimited content service. He is looking to launch in November 2013 and reckons that it will be possible to get to 20,000 people by the end of year one.

The weakest part of his launch narrative so far is the content piece:”We’ll work with anyone who will offer a revenue share and our terms are generous.” He has one or two aces in his hand he can’t yet talk about but thus far the content is mainly low cards. A streamed channel of Al Jazeera, curated local You Tube content and the possibility of other local content providers coming in:”We want to get the kind of content people are currently buying at pirate DVD shops.” He may yet solve the content problem so let’s not judge too early in the process.

Another example of a different approach is a project at the “We”nnovation Hub in Lagos. One of its members has designed a piece of hardwire to use Wi-Fi and it can create its own network (within an area like a neighbourhood or a school) that can hold a digital library of content. It would allow users to stream content locally but have digital rights management that prevented piracy and it can be operated just within a local network.

These projects represent are just two examples of the kind of low-end, hybrid content delivery plays that people have talked about to me. They may not succeed but they are an attempt to find a way that suits the local context at a price people are already affording. One day soon maybe one of them will succeed…

Read the original story, with tables and illustrations where appropriate.

http://www.balancingact-africa.com/news/en/issue-no-662/top-story/hunting-africa-s-new/en

USA: Gasland 2

Oscar-nominated filmmaker Josh Fox is teaming up with MoveOn members to screen his new documentary Gasland Part II—a jaw-dropping exposé of the fracking industry. Don’t miss this opportunity to learn the truth about fracking and join the national movement that’s fighting back. You’ll need HBO—or a friend with HBO—to host. Can you host a Gasland Part II Movie Party in Dayton on Sunday, July 14?
http://www.moveon.org/r?r=291160&id=70552-21095459-WVWlpix&t=1

Dear MoveOn member,

Imagine being able to light your city tap water on fire.

That’s a reality right now in communities across the country as the fossil fuel industry pushes our country into an all-out—and dangerous—”fracking” boom.1

Want to learn more about fracking and how to stop it? We’ve teamed up with Oscar-nominated filmmaker Josh Fox for a fun, informative, and sobering nationwide event to watch his new HBO documentary Gasland Part II on Sunday, July 14, and you can have a front row seat—in your own living room!

Fracking for gas and oil has been linked to water so contaminated that it catches fire, illness in residential neighborhoods, unusual earthquakes, dead livestock, and tanking property values. And the methane released by fracking is a far more potent global warming gas than carbon dioxide.2

The hopeful news is that MoveOn members are fighting back—and Gasland Part II gives us a powerful new weapon to grow our grassroots movement. That’s why hundreds of MoveOn members are signing up to host a Gasland Part II Movie Party on Sunday, July 14.

Hosting a movie screening is easy and very rewarding. We’ll provide a host guide with special materials, we’ll help you recruit MoveOn members in your area to attend, and we’ll invite you to join director Josh Fox and thousands of other MoveOn members for a special briefing after we view the film together. Because the film is only available right now on HBO, you’ll need an HBO subscription—or a friend with HBO—to host a movie night. If you don’t have HBO, we may be able to match you up with a MoveOn member near you who does.

Will you sign up to host a Gasland Part II Movie Party in Dayton on Sunday, July 14?
http://www.moveon.org/r?r=291160&id=70552-21095459-WVWlpix&t=2

No, I don’t have HBO, and I’m not sure I have a friend who does.
http://www.moveon.org/gasland2/?id=70552-21095459-WVWlpix&t=3

Like Josh’s first film, which made “fracking” a household word, Gasland Part II is catalyzing a movement—and if enough of our friends, families, and neighbors work together, we can build the large-scale movement we need to stop fracking. Since the original Gasland debuted in 2010, dozens of cities, towns, and counties—from Pittsburgh, PA to Mora County, NM—have passed local bans on fracking, and MoveOn members in 30 states have launched campaigns to stop this dangerous new form of fossil fuel extraction.3

Gasland Part II is only available on HBO right now, so if you’d like to host but don’t have a subscription, ask your friends or family members who might have HBO to team up with you. If you do have HBO, sign up to help MoveOn members near you have the opportunity to watch this amazing film

I had the opportunity to preview the film, and it gave me the chills. I grew up—and my mom still lives—just a few miles from the largest urban oil field in the country, in Los Angeles, where fracking is happening right now. Neighbors suspect that high rates of cancer are linked to toxic chemicals used in fracking—and they’re organizing to stop the fracking from continuing.4

Earlier this week, in his first speech on climate change, President Obama stuck his neck out to reduce carbon pollution from coal-fired power plants, and MoveOn members have applauded him for that. But he also doubled down on propping up the oil and gas industries, even though scientists have shown that extracting and burning gas and oil could be far worse for the climate than coal.5

Banning fracking is the next frontier in the movement to protect our communities and our kids from climate change—and MoveOn members, with Josh Fox, are leading the way.

When people find out the truth about fracking, they rise up to stop it. The MoveOn community of 8 million members has the power to spread the truth, and organize to win.

Visit here to host a Gasland Part II Movie Party on Sunday, July 14.
http://www.moveon.org/r?r=291160&id=70552-21095459-WVWlpix&t=6

Thanks for all you do,

–Victoria, Manny, Bobby, Rosy, and the rest of the team

P.S. Check out the trailer for Gasland Part II here: http://vimeo.com/69061416

Sources:

1. “Fracking’s coming boom,” Salon, April 24, 2013
http://www.moveon.org/r?r=291186&id=70552-21095459-WVWlpix&t=7
2. “Drillers Silence Fracking Claims With Sealed Settlements,” Bloomberg Businessweek, June 6, 2013
http://www.moveon.org/r?r=290800&id=70552-21095459-WVWlpix&t=9

“Campaign to Ban Fracking Heats Up,” Culver City Patch, May 17, 2012
http://www.moveon.org/r?r=290822&id=&t=10&id=70552-21095459-WVWlpix&t=10

“More Evidence Shows Drilling Causes Earthquakes,” Bloomberg Businessweek, April 1, 2013
http://www.moveon.org/r?r=290821&id=70552-21095459-WVWlpix&t=11

“The Fracturing of Pennsylvania,” The New York Times, November 17, 2011http://www.moveon.org/r?r=291187&id=70552-21095459-WVWlpix&t=12

“Methane Losses Stir Debate on Natural Gas,” The New York Times, April 12, 2011
http://www.moveon.org/r?r=291188&id=70552-21095459-WVWlpix&t=13

3. “NY Local Fracking Bans Upheld By Appeals Court,” Huffington Post, May 2, 2013
http://www.moveon.org/r?r=291189&id=70552-21095459-WVWlpix&t=14

4. Ibid., Culver City Patch

5. Ibid., The New York Times

MoveOn Civic Action is entirely funded by our 8 million members—no corporate contributions, no big checks from CEOs. And our tiny staff ensures that small contributions go a long way.

Chip in.
https://civic.moveon.org/donatec4/creditcard.html?cpn_id=457&id=70552-21095459-WVWlpix

REACTIONS ON MY ELEVENTH SUNDAY HOMILY; who was Mary Magdalene?

From: Ouko joachim omolo
The News Dispatch with Omolo Beste in images
MONDAY, JUNE 17, 2013

One of you posed a very concerned issue about Mary Magdalene. He writes: “Fr Beste thank you for your homily of eleventh Sunday-but one thing I would like you to clarify-who was Mary Magdalene? I am asking this because some people who have read the Da Vinci Code are almost convinced that Jesus and Mary Magdalene got married and sired children-what is your take on this?”

According to Luke 8:2 Mary Magdalene was a woman from whom Jesus cast out seven demons. The name Magdalene likely indicates that she came from Magdala, a city on the southwest coast of the Sea of Galilee. After Jesus cast seven demons from her, she became one of his followers.

In John 11 Mary Magdalene is identified as the sister to Lazarus who was sick. He was from Bethany, the village of Mary and her sister Martha. This Mary, whose brother Lazarus now lay sick, was the same one who anointed Jesus with fragrant oil and wiped his feet with her hair. She is believed to have been a reformed prostitute.

Mary Magdalene was one of the women who stood near Jesus during the crucifixion to try to comfort him. Some scholars argue that John mentioned the woman as Mary Magdalene because he wrote many years after Mary’s death. Luke, they say, may have wished to obscure this fact when he wrote his gospel out of respect for the still-living Mary.

The recent fiction novel “The DaVinci Code” makes the claim that Jesus and Mary Magdalene were married. Some of the non-biblical early Christian writings (considered heresy by the early Christians) hint at a special relationship between Mary Magdalene and Jesus. However, there is no evidence whatsoever to support the belief that Jesus and Mary Magdalene were married. The Bible does not even hint at such an idea.

Against the background that U.S. Catholic bishops launched a website, JesusDecoded.com, refuting the key claims in the novel that were about to be brought to the screen. The bishops were concerned about errors and serious misstatements in The Da Vinci Code.

The Peruvian Episcopal Conference (CEP) declared the movie — and the book — as part of a “systematic attack on the Catholic Church”. Both the book and the film were banned in Egypt due to pressure from Coptic Christians.

The film was banned in Jordan where authorities said the film “tarnishes the memory of Christian and Islamic figures and contradicts the truth as written in the Bible and the Koran about Jesus”.

The novel goes on to describe Opus Dei as “a Catholic Church” and portrays it as an order of monks with members serving as assassins, one of whom (a “hulking albino” named Silas) is a key character in the book.

The book claims that Jesus got Mary Magdalene pregnant, and the two had a daughter. The book states: Mary Magdalene was pregnant at the time of the crucifixion. For the safety of Christ’s unborn child, she had no choice but to flee the Holy Land. . . . It was there in France that she gave birth to a daughter. Her name was Sarah.

Later the book claims that this union gave rise to a bloodline that still exists in prominent European families (including one of the book’s main characters, Sophie Neveu). It also claims that the Catholic Church knows about this and has covered it up for centuries, even resorting to murdering Christ’s own descendants to protect the secret: Behold the greatest cover-up in human history. Not only was Jesus Christ married, but He was a father.

It claims that the early Church feared that if the lineage were permitted to grow, the secret of Jesus and Magdalene would eventually surface and challenge the fundamental Catholic doctrine-that of a divine Messiah who did not consort with women or engage in sexual union.

Brown’s book includes a number of other episodes guaranteed to upset the faithful – including a Pope conceiving a child via artificial insemination, thereby circumventing celibacy rules.

Dan Brown asserts that early Christians viewed Jesus as merely a “mortal teacher” and that it was only at the Council of Nicaea in 325, under pressure from the Emperor Constantine, that belief in Jesus’ divinity became official Christian teaching.

This is simply not true.

Dan Brown writes that at the time of Nicaea, there were “thousands” of texts documenting a very human life of Jesus. His story claims there were 80 gospels in circulation, 80 gospels that give the story of the “original Christ” that the Church later repressed.

Even though the gospels do not describe Jesus as being married, the story of The Da Vinci Code asserts that Jesus must have been married because that was the norm for Jewish men at the time and he wouldn’t have been taken seriously as a religious teacher if he had not been married.

If Jesus had been married, given the frequency with which other relations are mentioned, the marriage would have been mentioned as well. There was no reason not to. Furthermore, being unmarried would not have diminished Jesus’ authority as a Jewish teacher.

Fr Joachim Omolo Ouko, AJ
Tel +254 7350 14559/+254 722 623 578
E-mail omolo.ouko@gmail.com
Facebook-omolo beste
Twitter-@8000accomole

Real change must come from ordinary people who refuse to be taken hostage by the weapons of politicians in the face of inequality, racism and oppression, but march together towards a clear and unambiguous goal.

-Anne Montgomery, RSCJ UN Disarmament Conference, 2002

Emerging Africa: How the Global Economy’s ‘Last Frontier’ Can Prosper and Matter (Bookcraft, 399pp)

From: “News Release – African Press Organization (APO)”
http://www.bookcraftafrica.com/bookcraft.JPG

A new book by Kingsley Moghalu, deputy governor of Nigeria’s Central Bank

http://www.apo-mail.org/Emerging_Africa_cover.pdf cover.JPG
ABUJA, Nigeria, June 14, 2013/ — Bookcraft (http://www.bookcraftafrica.com) has ublished a new book by Kingsley Moghalu, deputy governor of Nigeria’s Central Bank.

Logo:
http://www.photos.apo-opa.com/plog-content/images/apo/logos/bookcraft.jpg

Download the cover: http://www.apo-mail.org/Emerging_Africa_cover.pdf

Against the backdrop of a deluge of newspaper and magazine articles about the rise of Africa, and the attendant new scramble for playing space on it, an African policy-maker and academic has cast a keen, searching eye on the continent, cutting swiftly through buzz and hype and sentiment to deliver a weighty, forward-looking and realistic assessment.

From globalization to foreign aid and investment to China to the knowledge economy, and world trade, nothing escapes Moghalu’s insightful critique. In his words: “Emerging Africa sets out to interrogate the prevailing conventional wisdom about Africa and its economic growth prospects, and go beneath the surface of both afro-optimism and afro-pessimism to decode and address what really has held Africa down and how the continent can prosper and matter in the world through far-reaching economic transformation.”

What people are saying:

“Africans seriously analyzing Africa’s opportunities are all too rare. Kingsley Moghalu writes with insight and authority. Emerging Africa deserves a wide audience.”

Paul Collier – Professor of Economics, Oxford University

“Kingsley Moghalu brings a remarkable intellect and his vast experience to this tour de force on Africa’s economic transformation.”

Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Coordinating Minister of the Economy and Minister of Finance, Federal Republic of Nigeria

“Emerging Africa offers a profound perspective on how African countries can achieve true prosperity.”

Lamido Sanusi, Governor, Central Bank of Nigeria

“Insightful and analytical, Kingsley Moghalu’s book, Emerging Africa, sheds instructive light on Africa’s position in the world.”

Shashi Tharoor, former UN Under-Secretary General and author of Pax Indica: India & the World of the 21st Century.

“Kingsley Moghalu approaches Africa as the ‘last frontier’ with the perspective of a savvy Sherriff.”

Rt. Hon. Lord Mark Malloch-Brown, former Minister of State for Africa, Asia and the UN, United Kingdom Foreign Office.

Distributed by the African Press Organization on behalf of Bookcraft.

About the author:

Kingsley Chiedu Moghalu is deputy governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria. Before then he was founder and CEO of Sogato Strategies S.A., a global strategy and risk management firm in Geneva, Switzerland. He spent seventeen years working for the United Nations, at duty stations in New York, Cambodia, Croatia, Tanzania and Switzerland.

For more information – stockists, excerpts, chapter outline and a tour schedule visit https://www.facebook.com/emergingafrica

For interview requests and review copies contact dolugbade@bookcraftafrica.com

or wowe.media@gmail.com

SOURCE
Bookcraft

Kenya: A letter from 2013 to 4013, a letter from the 21st century to the 41st century…

From: Jeremy Kinyanjui

Nairobi, Kenya
11th June 2013

A letter from 2013 to 4013, a letter from the 21st century to the 41st century…

George Orwell published his book “1984” in 1949, and “Prince” released his hit single “1999” in 1982, both men reaching out to the future, a future that came faster than many imagined, and a future that is now 29 years behind us in George Orwell’s case, and 14 years behind us in “Prince’s”. There are those who came before us, and there are those who shall come after us. As we continue to pay homage to our forefathers and ancestors, so also should we seek to reach out to the future in our own way, as did Orwell in 1949, and as did “Prince” in 1982. And with all the fascinating capabilities, breakthroughs & technology of our times, we should seek to be the first generations of mankind to compile detailed transcripts, images, audios and videos for the generations ahead of us, we should seek to be the first generations of mankind to give the future guided tours of the 20th & 21st centuries, we should seek to be to be the first generations of mankind to take the 41st century on guided tours of our times.

Global society is currently going through a transition of Biblical proportions. The global economy is insolvent and has formally been on “life support machines” since late 2008 when Lehmans Brothers went bust in the United States, and after which then US President George W. Bush artificially created US $ 750 billion liquid bailout cash, for the artificial propping up of the US economy. Current US President Barack Obama has followed up George W. Bush ‘s massive artificial creation of liquid bailout cash with at least two of his own since 2009, and across the Atlantic in Europe, massive artificial creations of liquid bailout cash i.e. “economic life support machines”, are now the order of the day. What Governments around the world cannot understandably tell us is that global economy is bust and insolvent, because by doing so, an already bad situation will become much worse. We are now not living a lie, but are a breeding ground for lies.

Capitalism has collapsed and with it, the modern day trans-Atlantic Anglo-Saxon Empire of the United States of America and Europe. Strictly speaking however, it is the United States of America that is the singular Empire of our times, and the rest of us are merely provinces of the modern day Anglo-Saxon Empire, because it is the Marshall Plan of then US Secretary of State George Marshall that re-built severely devastated post-World War II Europe and that equally re-built severely devastated post-World War II Japan. The G-7 group of Nations has traditionally comprised the United States of America, Germany, France, Britain, Italy, Japan and Canada, and as mentioned, it is American capital that built modern Europe and modern Japan, and Canada is part of the Commonwealth Nations headed by Her Majesty the Queen of England, so it is crystal clear at a glance who actually calls the shots in these times that we live in i.e. the United States of America. The overrated China is also just a province of the US Empire, because modern China was also built by Richard Nixon’s America, Gerald Ford’s America & Ronald Reagan’s America, so talk of a Chinese Empire is just a myth. There was indeed the Mongol Empire of Genghis Khan, but this was 1,000 years ago. Chinese companies and Chinese engineers working on all range of projects across the length & breadth of sub-Saharan Africa, are no different for instance, from say Kenya Airways, Kenya Breweries, or the Kenya Pipeline Company, whose names and local labour force can give the impression that they are owned by indigenous Kenyans, when they are in fact Anglo-Saxon owned corporations.

But even the fall of an Empire is not exactly instantaneous, the best example of our times being that of Communism and it’s fall in 1991. Twenty two years after the fall of Communism, North Korea still stands as the last bastion of Communism, even though North Korea now clearly looks likes it’s on it’s final leg. Using the example of North Korea therefore, and using the first massive artificial creation of liquid bailout cash of US $ 750 billion in late 2008 by then US President George W. Bush as the formal reference point of the fall of Capitalism, then the modern day trans-Atlantic Anglo-Saxon Empire of the United States of America and Europe will still likely be standing and still likely be calling global shots 22 years from the year 2008 i.e. the year 2030. But this reign does not look like it can extend beyond the year 2040 at most, because the “life support machines” of Capitalism are operating under tremendous strain and will break down after only a given number of years.

When the Anglo-Saxon Empire does eventually come down with a dramatic thud circa the year 2040 from all indications, then it will be every man for himself globally, and we shall not be spared the widespread strife, chaos and anarchy that follow the fall of any Empire. It looks like for a period of about 200 years after the Anglo-Saxon Empire eventually comes down with a dramatic thud circa the year 2040, there shall be general chaos, disorder, conflicts and wars, that will ease out circa the year 2240, when another dominant Empire emerges. The script that lies ahead of us is one of epic Biblical dimensions clearly. We have almost precisely committed the same sins and same mistakes of our forefathers and ancestors, and shall not be spared any less of retribution than that of our forefathers and ancestors, and this applies to all of mankind.

So now would not be a bad time for us to as much as possible compress and preserve as much history of these times as possible, documentaries, videos, audios, photographs, the works. The beauty part of these times we live in is that tremendous volumes of information can be stored on a microchip. These microchips, if any, should be tightly sealed with instructions in eight of the major most languages spoken in the world today, on the compatible technologies required to retrieve the data from the microchips. Two thousand years after the fall of Rome, Latin is still not an entirely extinct language, so 2,000 years from today, not all languages spoken today shall be extinct.

The microchips, if any, should not be stored conventionally, but should instead be very tightly sealed with sensor emitting signals that will be programmed to begin beaming signals after 2,000 years at the earliest, and then be placed in all manner of diverse anonymous locations i.e. & e.g. the depths of oceans, seas, rivers & canyons, the heights of mountains and alps, the midst of vast remote plains and deserts, the depths of the earth, and as matter of fact, some could even be shot to the moon and other nearby planets, because the Americans still have the capabilities of doing this. The microchips should have welcoming messages, both written & audio in eight major spoken languages, warmly welcoming the audience to the year of our Lord 2013 and these times that we live. The guided tours of our times would then commence thereafter. Why not? We’ve written letters all our lives, why not one to the future? We could even help avert the future from making the same mistakes that we, our forefathers and our ancestors made. Let’s do it…

Here in Kenya where we do not value our history and heritage, unlike the Occident and the Orient, where Manchester United, Nigerian movies & Nigerian accents, South African soap operas and Latin American soap operas matter more than we the nationals and citizens of this beautiful country that Heaven bequeathed to us, easy access should be given to our former colonial masters, the British, to the dusty unused vaults of the Kenya News Agency, the Kenya Broadcasting Corporation (KBC) and the Information Department of the Ministry of Information and Communication, where volumes and volumes of idle videos and idle still images dating back to British East Africa, the East Africa Protectorate, colonial Kenya, the Jomo Kenyatta years and the D.T. arap Moi years . The Government of Kenya should allow the British to catalogue this history for us and digitise it for placement on a master microchip to the 41st century.

A letter from 2013 to 4013, a letter from the 21st century to the 41st century. Why not? It’s time…

KENYA: UNCOVERING NEPOTISM ISN’T HATE SPEECH

From: Ouko joachim omolo
The News Dispatch with Omolo Beste in images
FRIDAY, APRIL 5, 2013

Butere Girls High School drama club and the entire school are so disappointed. Their drama, ‘Shackles of Doom’, which depicts unequal distribution of resources and dominance of top positions by main ethnic groups, will not be staged at the national drama festivals, despite topping the western region contest.

The play was stopped by the Drama Committee even after Butere District Education quality assurance officer Isaac Ngaya said he watched the play and found no offending sections that warranted censorship. The claim was that the play contained hate speech and for that matter it was offensive.

The play acted by two girls wondered whether nepotism will really end in Kenya. Even before Uhuru Kenyatta and his deputy William Ruto have not been sworn in their government has been accused of nepotism.

The girls were wondering why in Kenya any leader who comes to power immediately exercises nepotism. Among the most powerful posts have been awarded to Uhuru Kenyatta’s Central and GEMA as well as Ruto’s Rift- Senate Speaker … Ethuro … Rift, Nat. Assembly Speaker … Muturi … Eastern-the girls were crying and wondering who will represent Western, Northern and Coastal who feel cheated by Rift Valley and Central!

Prime Minister Raila Odinga is not spared either. He made sure his ODM party awarded his elder brother Oburu Odinga by nominating him to parliament after people rejected him during the ODM nominations.

Similar case applies to his sister Ruth Odinga who has been awarded ‘deputy governor’ even after Kisumu people rejecting her. Ruth had known before general election that she was going to be awarded the post of deputy governor.

Celebrating Valentine’s Day a day late with pupils at Shiners Centre in Kisumu town on February 14, 2013, Ruth introduced herself to the pupils and staff as “the Kisumu County Deputy Governor and Raila’s sister”. She signed the visitors’ book ‘Deputy Governor Kisumu County’.

This could imply that even if Raila became the president nepotism was not going to end. Earlier on Raila had been accused for having allegedly favoured his relatives and friends as well as the financial heavyweight Luos in the former cabinet appointment to the grand coalition government.

Dr. Oburu Oginga was appointed an Assistant Minister of Finance. The other centre of controversy was the appointment of Mr. Phillip Onyango Sika as the PS in the Ministry of Metropolitan development. The new PS hails from gem constituency also in Siaya and is the relative of the Gem MP Jakoyo Midiwo whose mother is the younger sister of Raila Odinga’s mother.

Critics blamed Raila for having ignored Migori, Rachuonyo, Kisumu and Nandio districts only concentrating with appointment of people from Siaya and Bondo districts.

Even Kenyatta was not spared either. He used nomination slots to nominate his relatives. He paid back his first cousin Beth Mugo with a TNA nomination to the senate after Mugo stepped down in favour of Mike Sonko who was elected Nairobi senator.

One of the adjudicators at the regional level, Prof Christopher Odhiambo of Moi University, said their role is not to censure but to suggest improvements in case a play contains offending information.

The author of the play, Cleophas Malala is a politician and a scriptwriter, but his play has been adjudged to be politically incorrect. Despite the ban, Mr Malala says his plays are motivated by his desire to fight for the rights of the oppressed, especially the marginalized ethnic communities in Kenya.

In the zonal, district and regional competitions the play by Butere Girls emerged the winner despite the fact that someone loyal to the government thinks it has a political twist.

The play was motivated by unequal distribution of resources in the country. The play depicts a film shot in the land of the ‘Kanas’, who refer to themselves as the ‘True Kanas’. Their land is rich in oil, but they are ignorant of the treasure that lies beneath their soil.

Malala cited an audit by the Commission for Integration and National Cohesion (NCIC) on distribution of public appointments which showed glaring inequalities in public jobs.

“I am just replaying what happens in our society and even NCIC knows that, so what is my sin?” Malala wonders.

The fact however, remains that the unequal distribution of wealth has always been a huge problem in Kenya since independence that has plagued society throughout the ages. Even as forms of governments of Kenya have changed, the unequal distribution of wealth has remained a constant.

That is why the Butere girls’ actress were crying wondering who will save Kenya from these evil ills. They were crying because the unequal distribution of wealth makes the living conditions of the less fortunate undesirable, because the upper class is usually concerned about gaining and maintaining their own wealth first and concerned about others second.

The girls were crying because it is difficult for the poor to rise above the poverty level, because they are dependent upon what the upper class deems is a fair wage for producing the goods that they make.

Against the background that Karl Marx saw conflict as necessary and desirable to bring about social change. This social change would then result in the equal distribution of wealth and resources.

After viewing the suffering of the masses, Karl Marx hoped that they would rise up against oppression and bring about a social change where there would be an equal distribution of resources.

The conflict that Marx spoke about was not necessarily violence. Conflict referred to tension, differences in beliefs and values, conflict of interest and competition. These all exist in every society and according to Marx, they are the basis for social change.

The play reminds me of my own play I wrote in early 1990s when I was the Rector of Keserian Juniro Seminary. The play “But Why” was banned by the Kajiado Drama Committee because it was asking why The Central Bank of Kenya had been used to provide liquidity to politically well connected financial institutions such as Trade Bank, Pan African Bank and Exchange Bank.

Such banks were being used to launder the residential campaign money into convertible currencies abroad. In 1992 alone, the Central Bank printed and released for circulation more than 12 billion Kenya shillings.

This was the time 7 billion shillings was used by Kanu as slush fund to manipulate the electoral process according to Finance Magazine, March 31, 1993. It was also the time 500 and 200 notes were printed, YK’ 92, used most of 500 notes to campaign for bribery and corruption machinery to make Kanu win the elections.

The printing of 500 notes, 200 and 100 was an addition to 2.35 billion. As of the end of September 1992, the amount of currency in circulation in Kenya was 15.85 billion. It was also during this time that Lake Basin Development Authority had been pushed to near collapse due to general elections.

During that time Kenya had been ranked by the World Bank and International Monetary Fund as the 24th poorest country in the world a gross national product per capita of $370 per year-down from the$400 plus attained by the end of the eighties.

The average annual growth rate per capita had therefore been either zero or negative for the eighties. By the year 2000 Kenyan economy was rated negative 0.3 percent according to East African Standard, June 8, 20001.

This was the lowest ever recorded since the collapse of the shilling in 1993 in the wake of the Goldenberg scandal and paper money and the crisis of the 1990’s-instead of answering the question but why the play was banned.

Fr Joachim Omolo Ouko, AJ
Tel +254 7350 14559/+254 722 623 578
E-mail omolo.ouko@gmail.com
Facebook-omolo beste
Twitter-@8000accomole

Real change must come from ordinary people who refuse to be taken hostage by the weapons of politicians in the face of inequality, racism and oppression, but march together towards a clear and unambiguous goal.

-Anne Montgomery, RSCJ UN Disarmament Conference, 2002

THE POPE’S BOOK ON JESUS IS IN ORDER

From: Ouko joachim omolo
Voices of Justice for Peace
Regional News

BY FR JOACHIM OMOLO OUKO, AJ
NAIROBI-KENYA
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2012

Since Pope Benedict XVI released his new book on Jesus of Nazareth challenging Christmas Traditions I have received several requests from Regional News readers if I could comment on the challenge.

Pope’s book says the Gospels do not support the presence of animals at Jesus’ birth. The pope says the Christian calendar is actually based on a blunder by a 6th century monk, who Benedict says was several years off in his calculation of Jesus’ birth date.

According to the pope’s research, there is also no evidence in the Gospels that the cattle and other animals traditionally pictured gathered around the manger were actually present. He also debunks the claim that angels sang at the birth, a staple theme of Christmas carols.

The book, which is being published in multiple languages in time for Christmas, is the third in a series by the pontiff. The previous two volumes dealt with Jesus’ adult life and his public ministry.

The 176-page volume, which comprises a brief foreword, four chapters and an epilogue, traces Jesus’ life up to the age of 12, when, according to the Gospels, he was presented by his parents in the Temple in Jerusalem.

Chapter 1 considers the “question about Jesus’ origins as a question about being and mission, while Chapter 2 is on the annunciation of the births of John the Baptist and Jesus. Referring to the angel’s greeting to Mary, “Rejoice, full of grace!” the Holy Father points out the connection between joy and grace.

One section of the book is dedicated to “Virgin Birth — Myth or Historical Truth.” There, the Pope makes the observation: “If God does not also have power over matter, then he simply is not God. But he does have this power, and through the conception and resurrection of Jesus Christ he has ushered in a new creation.

Chapter 3, on the birth of Jesus in Bethlehem, offers this meditation, regarding the fact that there “was no room for them in the inn”: “He who was crucified outside the city (cf. Heb. 13:12) also came into the world outside the city.

The last chapter of “The Infancy Narratives” includes a consideration of astronomy as context for a discussion on the star that led the Wise Men from the East, as well as a look at who those men were. It addresses the overall question of the historicity of the two chapters of Matthew’s Gospel dedicated to Jesus’ childhood.

“The Infancy Narratives” completes the Pope’s series on Jesus of Nazareth. The first book in the series, published in 2007, dealt with the period from Jesus’ baptism through the Transfiguration. The second volume released before Lent 2011, covered Christ’s passion and death. Both those volumes were immediate bestsellers (Zenit).

To our Regional News readers, the pope is not against the historical critical method at all, in fact, he uses it, and he appreciates it, as Anthony Valle, a professor of theology says. Only that the pope has been open to scientific inquiry in his own study of Jesus’ life. The pope uses “both faith and reason” in his efforts to bring the life of Jesus closer.

In other words, the pope used his writing to explore “the inner meaning of the infancy narratives, showing how they pick up on Old Testament themes and develop them in new and unexpected ways.” He helps us to understand the world where Jesus was born.

According to the Westar Religious Institute in America, it was a monk from Russia called Dionysius Exiguus who was asked by Pope John to work out the dates for Easter. It was back in 527 A.D. when Dionysius formalized the date of Jesus’ birth as December 25 on the Christian calendar, thus making a mistake on his calculations.

As Professor of Classics, Nature and History at Warwick University, Kevin Butcher states, the idea that Jesus wasn’t born on December 25 is nothing new. Churchmen in the 17th century had also challenged the date before.

This discrepancy has been known about for many centuries, in fact. In the 17th century it became quite apparent that the calculations by Dionysius Exiguus were incorrect. The dating basically rests on the New Testament.

Birth of Jesus occurs during the reign of King Herod the Great. And King Herod the Great died in 4 B.C., so if this story about the birth of Jesus is correct, obviously he would have to be born before 4 B.C.

The fact that there were plenty of other dating systems in use is one of the reasons why it was so hard for Dionysius to figure out the date, in the first place. There are lots of competing dating systems. And trying to create some kind of universal one is very hard, if you’re working with lots of other dating systems.

According to popular tradition however, the birth of Jesus took place in a stable, surrounded by farm animals. A manger (that is, a feeding trough) as mentioned in Luke 2: 7, where it states Mary “wrapped him in swaddling clothes and laid him in a manger, because there was no room for them in the inn”.

Popular tradition also holds that three kings or wise men (named Melchior, Caspar and Balthazar visited the infant Jesus in the manger, though this does not strictly follow the Biblical account.

The Gospel of Matthew instead describes a visit by an unspecified number of magi, or astrologers, sometime after Jesus was born while the family was living in a house (Matthew 2:11), who brought gifts of gold, frankincense and myrrh to the young child Jesus, following a mysterious star, commonly known as the Star of Bethlehem, believing it to announce the birth of a king of the Jews. The commemoration of this visit, the Feast of Epiphany celebrated on January 6, is the formal end of the Christmas season in some churches.

Against the background that Jehovah’s Witnesses do not celebrate Christmas. The Bible says there were shepherds out in the fields with their sheep. In Jerusalem it is very cold in the winter and often snows. It is very unlikely that the shepherds would live outside during these months.

Not only was Christmas not Jesus’ birthday but it was never observed by first century Christians. Its origins lie in the ancient Roman festival Saturnalia, beginning Dec. 17 and ending Dec. 25, the “birthday of the unconquered sun”.

In the first century, the apostle Paul warned Timothy that “wicked men and impostors” would slip into the Christian congregation and mislead many. (2 Timothy 3:13).This great apostasy which began after the death of the apostles indicates that many changes in traditional calendars took place around this time.

Fr Joachim Omolo Ouko, AJ
People for Peace in Africa
Tel +254-7350-14559/+254-722-623-578
E-mail omolo.ouko@gmail.com

Peaceful world is the greatest heritage That this generation can give to the generations To come- All of us have a role.

World: Design Thinking for Government Services: What happens when the past limits our vision of the future?

From: Yona Maro

One Laptop Per Child Trials as of mid 2008 View OLPC Trial Schools as of mid 2008 in a larger map

Truly innovative companies, according to Roger Martin, author of ?The Design of Business?, are those that have managed to balance the ?reliability? of analytical thinking with the ?validity? of abductive thinking. Basically, these two concepts try to differentiate two ways to deal with innovation. We can either: (a) use statistics, trends, quantitative surveys, and historical data to produce reliable results; or (b) develop a deep understanding of the basic needs of end users for the specific problem that needs to be tackled and propose a valid solution that would satisfy these needs. The author makes a very good case for validity, which is usually forgotten by companies that prefer reliable results that keep most companies? top executives and stock analysts at ease.

This call for a change on how to tackle innovation has originally been directed to businesses1, and takes the concept of design thinking (that is, borrowing the thinking process of designers) to services and companies in general. However, I believe it should also be applied to governments, more specifically on how governments should take advantage of ICTs to improve service provision internally (within government entities) and to citizens.

Most governments that introduce ICTs in their service delivery structure have basically applied technology to the exact same workflow they had before, replacing papers with emails and signatures with digital certificates. But ICTs in general ? and broadband in particular ? do not just improve the efficiency of governments. They have the potential to transform how governments work, redefining their relationship with citizens and expanding the array of services and transactions that could be provided and implemented.

This, however, is a very risky proposition for governments. And if most private companies rely on analytical thinking due to their overall aversion to risk, governments in most developing countries have a much less functional innovation system (in many cases, equivalent to a ?copy-paste? function to be applied to ?best practices? in other countries).

So what is design thinking for governments anyway? It is not that much different than its private sector equivalent. It is about going back to the basics. And I mean the basics, trying to understand what citizens need from their governments (yes, that far back) and then answering the question: how could governments (hopefully, leveraging the new set of technologies and devices that exist today ? and their spread among the general population) be able to satisfy these needs? Then, it is all about building prototypes, testing, trial and error, and of course a good set of evaluation and feedback mechanisms2.

For governments, as well as for companies, the main challenge is twofold: on one hand, governments watching their public expenses are generally risk averse, and consequently they hardly take any risk to implement services that could fail, more so services that are not requested explicitly by citizens, without any case study, previous experience, and/or statistical analysis to rely on. In some countries, such an adventurous enterprise could even get people in jail.

On the other hand, those governments where new services (truly new services) are allowed to be tried out don?t necessarily know when to stop. Fear to admit failure or lack of supervision lead to an unnecessary draining of public resources that create a bad precedent, funding initiatives that never take off.

In both cases, most governments do not have the right internal mechanisms to allow for the testing of new services and ideas. They either don?t allow any innovative project to be implemented, or don?t provide any incentives (usually by punishing all failures), or allow failures to continue endlessly. Failures should be acknowledged rapidly, and then changed based on feedback from end users to be tried again ? and again.

There are only a handful of examples I can think of (Mr. Martin?s book brings several from the private sector) where design thinking is making a break-through. The first one that comes to mind is of course the idea of giving laptops to all school-aged students. Not a very innovative idea nowadays, huh? Try proposing it before Nicholas Negroponte did, back in January 2005. The concept has now multiple projects around the world (see map above). Is it in experimental stage? It should be indeed. No one can claim (yet) that there is a successful ?best practice? that could be applied to every country. Moreover, governments that are implementing such programs should be ready to detect needs for improvement and not be afraid of changing the approach if they believe it is not working.

Another example, Desdecantera.com, is a brand new way of approaching citizens launched on June 2010 and championed by the Governor of the State of Nuevo Leon in Mexico. DesdeCantera.com is based
Link:
http://blogs.worldbank.org/ic4d/design-thinking-for-government-services-what-happens-when-the-past-limits-our-vision-of-the-future


Karibu Jukwaa la www.mwanabidii.com
Pata nafasi mpya za Kazi www.kazibongo.blogspot.com
Blogu ya Habari na Picha www.patahabari.blogspot.com

MUSLIM WAR IS AGIANST OBAMA NOT MOHAMMED

From: People For Peace
Voices of Justice for Peace
Regional News

BY FR JOACHIM OMOLO OUKO, AJ
NAIROBI-KENYA
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2012

Something very big is going on in the Muslim world and this is not about an inflammatory film on Prophet Mohammed, it is the war against US President Barrack Obama.
[imgag] White House
[imgag] Pres. B. Obama

The Muslims hate Obama for having used diplomatic pressure to oust the Egyptian dictator Hosni Mubarak, clearing the way for the Islamic radicals, led by the Muslim Brotherhood, to win the subsequent parliamentary and presidential elections.

Their argument is based on the fact that using the rhetoric of democracy Obama allied himself in Egypt with the democracy protesters. Yet when there were equally massive demonstrations in Iran a year and a half earlier, aimed at ousting the regime of the mullahs, Obama urged caution and restraint. He refused to embrace the protesters.

Although this could be explained as reflecting Obama’s unshakeable commitment to democracy, but this commitment they say was absent during the massive popular demonstrations in Iran in 2009. Then Obama stayed out, even praising the reaction of the Iranian Supreme Leader, and eventually the democracy movement was crushed.

Similarly in Syria, Obama has shown himself clearly reluctant to get involved, providing only modest support to the rebels even in the wake of a massive military crackdown and tens of thousands of casualties.

In 2009 when Obama traveled to Cairo to deliver apologetic speech to Muslims they say, he did not only invite the banned Brotherhood leaders to attend but deliberately snubed Mubarak, who was neither present nor mentioned.

In the speech they say Obama blamed Mideast hostility toward Israel and the West on “colonialism that denied rights and opportunities to many Muslims.” He also vowed to withdraw U.S. troops from Muslim lands and push for creation of a Palestinian state, proclaiming that the United States does not accept the legitimacy of continued Israeli settlements.

The Muslims were angered by Obama’s action in 2009 to appoint a Brotherhood-tied Islamist — Rashad Hussain — as U.S. envoy to the Saudi-based Organization of the Islamic Cooperation, which works closely with the Brotherhood.

Hussain did not only travel to Egypt shortly after his appointment to meet with the Brotherhood’s grand mufti, but also the Secretary of State Clinton lifts visa ban on Egyptian-born grandson of Brotherhood founder Hassan al-Banna. Tariq Ramadan, a suspected terrorist on the U.S. watchlist, the Muslims claim was warmly received in Washington.

The protest was extended to Nigeria on Saturday where tens of thousands of people protested in Nigeria’s second city of Kano, burning images of Barack Obama and stomping on the American flag to denounce an anti-Islam film made in the US.

A crowd that included men, children and veiled women stretched for several kilometres (miles) through the city, the largest in Nigeria’s mainly Muslim north, condemning the film. They shouted “death to America, death to Israel and death to the enemies of Islam.

The demonstration was organised by the Islamic Movement of Nigeria, a pro-Iranian group that adheres to the Shiite branch of Islam. Some pictures of Obama were set alight, while others were dragged through the dirt and stomped on by protesters shouting “enemy of Islam.”

American and Israeli flags were also defaced and Iranian flags were waved in the air as the group marched towards a palace owned by the Emir of Kano, the top religious figure in the region.

Protester Husseini Ibrahim claimed that the “blasphemy” in the film regarding the Prophet Mohammed is “like an invitation to war. Nigeria’s 160 million people are roughly divided between a predominantly Muslim north and a largely Christian south, and Muslim-Christian tensions have often led to deadly confrontation.

Kano was the site of the deadliest ever attack by the radical Islamist group Boko Haram, blamed for more than 1,400 deaths in Nigeria since 2010. The group killed at least 185 people in the city in January in a series of gun and bomb attacks.

White House officials on Friday asked You Tube to review an anti-Muslim video cited as fueling violent protests worldwide, but according to The New York Times, the Google-owned site doesn’t have any intention of taking it down.

Messages to YouTube, and Google, which owns the site, were not immediately returned Friday. On Wednesday, a YouTube spokesperson said the video “is clearly within our guidelines and so will stay on YouTube.”

YouTube’s Community Guidelines “encourage free speech” and “defend everyone’s right to express unpopular points of view,” but they disallow “hate speech” — defined as “speech which attacks or demeans a group based on race or ethnic origin, religion, disability, gender, age, veteran status, and sexual orientation/gender identity.”

YouTube has blocked the video in Egypt and Libya, and the government of Afghanistan has taken steps to block YouTube entirely. However, it’s still accessible elsewhere in the world as of Friday afternoon. Proxy software can allow access to the video in countries where it’s blocked.

The video is allegedly a 14-minute trailer for a full-length film and has been blamed for inciting unrest in Egypt, Libya and elsewhere.

This is not the first time Muslims have been angered by America. A controversial Florida pastor who staged another Koran-burning ceremony to protest about the imprisonment of a Christian clergyman in Iran is also on the spot.

Terry Jones caused international outrage and violent protests when he filmed the burning of the Islamic holy book last March, set several copies of the Koran on fire.

During the ceremony, where Jones became a ‘judge’ in a ‘trial’ of the Koran, he demanded the release of Youcef Nadarkhani, an Iranian pastor who was jailed for converting from Islam to Christianity.

The church’s website said that a few people left the building as the Koran, which had been soaked in kerosene, was set alight. An image of the Muslim prophet Muhammad was also burned.

The Pentagon had earlier implored Jones to reconsider burning the holy book arguing that the lives of American soldiers fighting abroad could be put at risk.

Recently there was uproar over Pope BenedictXVI’s speech, an inflammatory remark about Islam. The problem began when the pope travelled to Bavaria for six days of speeches and celebrations in and around his hometown, he wasn’t expecting controversy.

His statement hurt the sentiments of Muslims. Muslims demanded the Pope retract his remarks in the interest of harmony among different religions of the world. The leader of Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood, Mohammed Mahdi Akef called for an apology.

A statement on the organization’s web site said the pope’s remarks “threaten world peace” and expressed surprise “that such remarks come from someone who sits on top of the Catholic Church which has its influence on the public opinion in the West.”

Leaders from Turkey to Indonesia made similar criticisms, and the Vatican was forced to try and explain the comments. A statement from the pope’s chief spokesman, the Reverend Federico Lombardi, said the pope wanted to “cultivate an attitude of respect and dialogue” toward other religions “and obviously also toward Islam.” Lombardi added, “What is important to the pope is a clear and radical rejection of the religious motivation of violence.”

“It was certainly not the intention of the Holy Father to do an in-depth study of jihad and Muslim thinking in this field and still less so to hurt the feelings of Muslim believers,” Lombardi said in a statement.

The protests are taking place when the question of whether Jesus got married is emerging. According to new papyrus fragment Jesus got married to Mary Magdalene. The fragment contradicts the theory of the theologian known as Clement of Alexandria around 200 A.D. that Jesus did not marry.

Resources about the fourth-century papyrus fragment available here are images of the fragment and a translation of the text; information (in question-and-answer format) about the fragment; and a draft of Karen L. King’s article about the gospel papyrus.

[imgag]
The Muslims hate Obama for having used diplomatic pressure to oust the Egyptian dictator Hosni Mubarak, clearing the way for the Islamic radicals, led by the Muslim Brotherhood, to win the subsequent parliamentary and presidential elections.

Their argument is based on the fact that using the rhetoric of democracy Obama allied himself in Egypt with the democracy protesters. Yet when there were equally massive demonstrations in Iran a year and a half earlier, aimed at ousting the regime of the mullahs, Obama urged caution and restraint. He refused to embrace the protesters.

Although this could be explained as reflecting Obama’s unshakeable commitment to democracy, but this commitment they say was absent during the massive popular demonstrations in Iran in 2009. Then Obama stayed out, even praising the reaction of the Iranian Supreme Leader, and eventually the democracy movement was crushed.

Similarly in Syria, Obama has shown himself clearly reluctant to get involved, providing only modest support to the rebels even in the wake of a massive military crackdown and tens of thousands of casualties.

In 2009 when Obama traveled to Cairo to deliver apologetic speech to Muslims they say, he did not only invite the banned Brotherhood leaders to attend but deliberately snubed Mubarak, who was neither present nor mentioned.

In the speech they say Obama blamed Mideast hostility toward Israel and the West on “colonialism that denied rights and opportunities to many Muslims.” He also vowed to withdraw U.S. troops from Muslim lands and push for creation of a Palestinian state, proclaiming that the United States does not accept the legitimacy of continued Israeli settlements.

The Muslims were angered by Obama’s action in 2009 to appoint a Brotherhood-tied Islamist — Rashad Hussain — as U.S. envoy to the Saudi-based Organization of the Islamic Cooperation, which works closely with the Brotherhood.

Hussain did not only travel to Egypt shortly after his appointment to meet with the Brotherhood’s grand mufti, but also the Secretary of State Clinton lifts visa ban on Egyptian-born grandson of Brotherhood founder Hassan al-Banna. Tariq Ramadan, a suspected terrorist on the U.S. watchlist, the Muslims claim was warmly received in Washington.

The protest was extended to Nigeria on Saturday where tens of thousands of people protested in Nigeria’s second city of Kano, burning images of Barack Obama and stomping on the American flag to denounce an anti-Islam film made in the US.

A crowd that included men, children and veiled women stretched for several kilometres (miles) through the city, the largest in Nigeria’s mainly Muslim north, condemning the film. They shouted “death to America, death to Israel and death to the enemies of Islam.

The demonstration was organised by the Islamic Movement of Nigeria, a pro-Iranian group that adheres to the Shiite branch of Islam. Some pictures of Obama were set alight, while others were dragged through the dirt and stomped on by protesters shouting “enemy of Islam.”

American and Israeli flags were also defaced and Iranian flags were waved in the air as the group marched towards a palace owned by the Emir of Kano, the top religious figure in the region.

Protester Husseini Ibrahim claimed that the “blasphemy” in the film regarding the Prophet Mohammed is “like an invitation to war. Nigeria’s 160 million people are roughly divided between a predominantly Muslim north and a largely Christian south, and Muslim-Christian tensions have often led to deadly confrontation.

Kano was the site of the deadliest ever attack by the radical Islamist group Boko Haram, blamed for more than 1,400 deaths in Nigeria since 2010. The group killed at least 185 people in the city in January in a series of gun and bomb attacks.

White House officials on Friday asked You Tube to review an anti-Muslim video cited as fueling violent protests worldwide, but according to The New York Times, the Google-owned site doesn’t have any intention of taking it down.

Messages to YouTube, and Google, which owns the site, were not immediately returned Friday. On Wednesday, a YouTube spokesperson said the video “is clearly within our guidelines and so will stay on YouTube.”

YouTube’s Community Guidelines “encourage free speech” and “defend everyone’s right to express unpopular points of view,” but they disallow “hate speech” — defined as “speech which attacks or demeans a group based on race or ethnic origin, religion, disability, gender, age, veteran status, and sexual orientation/gender identity.”

YouTube has blocked the video in Egypt and Libya, and the government of Afghanistan has taken steps to block YouTube entirely. However, it’s still accessible elsewhere in the world as of Friday afternoon. Proxy software can allow access to the video in countries where it’s blocked.

The video is allegedly a 14-minute trailer for a full-length film and has been blamed for inciting unrest in Egypt, Libya and elsewhere.

This is not the first time Muslims have been angered by America. A controversial Florida pastor who staged another Koran-burning ceremony to protest about the imprisonment of a Christian clergyman in Iran is also on the spot.

Terry Jones caused international outrage and violent protests when he filmed the burning of the Islamic holy book last March, set several copies of the Koran on fire.

During the ceremony, where Jones became a ‘judge’ in a ‘trial’ of the Koran, he demanded the release of Youcef Nadarkhani, an Iranian pastor who was jailed for converting from Islam to Christianity.

The church’s website said that a few people left the building as the Koran, which had been soaked in kerosene, was set alight. An image of the Muslim prophet Muhammad was also burned.

The Pentagon had earlier implored Jones to reconsider burning the holy book arguing that the lives of American soldiers fighting abroad could be put at risk.

Recently there was uproar over Pope BenedictXVI’s speech, an inflammatory remark about Islam. The problem began when the pope travelled to Bavaria for six days of speeches and celebrations in and around his hometown, he wasn’t expecting controversy.

His statement hurt the sentiments of Muslims. Muslims demanded the Pope retract his remarks in the interest of harmony among different religions of the world. The leader of Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood, Mohammed Mahdi Akef called for an apology.

A statement on the organization’s web site said the pope’s remarks “threaten world peace” and expressed surprise “that such remarks come from someone who sits on top of the Catholic Church which has its influence on the public opinion in the West.”

Leaders from Turkey to Indonesia made similar criticisms, and the Vatican was forced to try and explain the comments. A statement from the pope’s chief spokesman, the Reverend Federico Lombardi, said the pope wanted to “cultivate an attitude of respect and dialogue” toward other religions “and obviously also toward Islam.” Lombardi added, “What is important to the pope is a clear and radical rejection of the religious motivation of violence.”

“It was certainly not the intention of the Holy Father to do an in-depth study of jihad and Muslim thinking in this field and still less so to hurt the feelings of Muslim believers,” Lombardi said in a statement.

The protests are taking place when the question of whether Jesus got married is emerging. According to new papyrus fragment Jesus got married to Mary Magdalene. The fragment contradicts the theory of the theologian known as Clement of Alexandria around 200 A.D. that Jesus did not marry.

Resources about the fourth-century papyrus fragment available here are images of the fragment and a translation of the text; information (in question-and-answer format) about the fragment; and a draft of Karen L. King’s article about the gospel papyrus.

[imgag]Papyrus fragment: front. Karen L. King 2012

[imgag] ancient doc. & translation

What Karen King revealed on Tuesday was a tiny papyrus fragment with Coptic script on both sides. On one side the fragment includes about 30 words on eight fragmentary lines of script. The New York Times described the fragment as “smaller than a business card, with eight lines on one side, in black ink legible under a magnifying glass.” The lines are all fragmentary, with the third line reading “deny. Mary is worthy of it,” and the next reading “Jesus said to them, ‘My wife.'” The fifth states, “she will be able to be my disciple.”

The papyrus fragment, believed to be from the fourth century, was delivered to Professor King by an anonymous source who secured the artifact from a German-American dealer, who had bought it years ago from a source in East Germany.

As news reports made clear, the fragment is believed by many to be an authentic text from the fourth century, though two of three authorities originally consulted by the editors of the Harvard Theological Review expressed doubts. Such a find would be interesting, to be sure, but hardly worthy of the international headlines.

The little piece of ancient papyrus with its fragmentary lines of text is now, in the hands of the media, transformed into proof that Jesus had a wife, and that she was most likely Mary Magdalene.

The thread that ties all these texts and arguments together is the 1945 discovery of some 52 ancient texts near the town of Nag Hammadi in Egypt. These texts are known to scholars as Gnostic literature. The texts present heretical narratives and claims about Jesus and his message, and they have been a treasure trove for those seeking to replace orthodox Christianity with something different.

Fr Joachim Omolo Ouko, AJ
People for Peace in Africa
Tel +254-7350-14559/+254-722-623-578
E-mail omolo.ouko@gmail.com

Peaceful world is the greatest heritage
That this generation can give to the generations
To come- All of us have a role.

Government Guide to Developing Citizens Budgets

From: Yona Maro

Governments can encourage citizen participation by creating conditions that enable them to participate in a meaningful way. A very important one of these conditions is that all citizens have ready access to government information. Access means not simply physical access to documents, but accessibility. Where the government’s work is highly technical, it is not sufficient to simply make technical documents available. Citizens should have access to information in a language and through formats that ordinary people can understand and appreciate.

http://internationalbudget.org/wp-content/uploads/Citizen-Budget-Guide.pdf


Karibu Jukwaa la www.mwanabidii.com
Pata nafasi mpya za Kazi www.kazibongo.blogspot.com
Blogu ya Habari na Picha www.patahabari.blogspot.com

Events Critical to the Overall Black History

From: JOHN OOKO

Hello,

It’s my pleasure to introduce to your site’s audience my book: REFLECTING ON AMERICA’S FIRST BLACK PRESIDENT: An African Perspective of Global Events Critical to the Overall Black History.

It covers the story of the African peoples in the major regions of Africa, Europe, the Caribbean, South America and North America, in one long and expansive period of over 1,200 years of human history. The book is currently available for online purchase from Amazon (both local and international as Italy etc) and XLibris. Details on it can be accessed online from the links below:

http://www.amazon.com/Reflecting-Americas-First-Black-President/dp/1477140530/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1344906143&sr=8-2&keywords=ooko

http://bookstore.xlibris.com/Products/SKU-0104724049/Reflecting-on-Americas-First-Black-President.aspx

Thank you,
John Ooko

KENYA: MIGUNA’S ATTACKS PRIMITIVE SAYS UHURU’S PARTY.

By Dickens Wasonga

Leaders continued to condemn attacks on Raila Odinga’s former adviser on coalition matters Miguna Miguna by those opposed to a controversial book ” PEELING BACK THE MASK” which he authored.

The National Alliance Party Secretary General, Onyango Oloo has condemned attacks on former Odinga’s aide across the country terming it as primitive and a manifestation of political intolerance among some Kenyans.

Speaking in Kisumu on Monday Oloo whose party is led by Uhuru Kenyatta said the attacks and humiliation Miguna was subjected to in Nakuru, Kisumu and Mombasa was unwarranted and asked those opposed to his views in the controversial book “Peeling Back the Mask” to keep off the meetings instead of disrupting them.

He said every Kenyan had a constitutional right to freely express their opinion, especially on issues touching on leadership and integrity without being harassed and as such, Miguna should be allowed to enjoy such rights.

“Kenya has institutions that can effectively deal with Miguna if anybody feels he has infringed on their rights. The police and other security agencies can be called upon if necessary but hooligans have been left to have a field day visiting terror on the man”, he said.

Oloo said it was unfair for the police to fail to prosecute those who were captured on TV footage molesting Miguna in the three towns he visited in a bid to promote his book.

Since he embarked on his mission to promote the book in the counties a month after it was launched in Nairobi, Miguna has got very hostile receptions across the regions so far visited with Nyeri, president Khaki’s home turf being the only exception.

The TNA Secretary General said Kenya should not be allowed to go back to the dark days when freedom of speech was curtailed through unorthodox means and even state machinery.

He took issue with the Prime Minister, Raila Odinga for not coming out to condemn the attacks on Miguna by people believed to be his supporters.

Other leaders who have since spoke against attacks on the author includes Nark- Kenya presidential candidate Martha Karua, Eugene Wamalwa of New Ford Kenya, William Ruto of United Republican Party among others.

Oloo at the same time called on political leaders to preach peace as the country heads to the general elections, adding that violence so far witnessed in certain parts of the country such as Wajir , Moyale and Tana River areas which left several people dead and others displaced could be traced to careless utterances by some political leaders.

He said it was this kind of charged political environment flamed by reckless rhetoric that saw Kenya plunge into chaos after the 2007 general elections.

The TNA Secretary General challenged the State security agents to be proactive rather than wait until people get killed before they deploy officers to the ground when the damage is already done.

About working as G7 alliance Oloo said his party TNA was yet to enter into any legal merger or coalition with any political party and as such they were strategically placing themselves to capture the Presidency.

END.

Kenya: Network for Pan-Afrikan Solidarity Meeting: Miguna Miguna UNMASKED

From: gordon teti

I promised that I would face Miguna Miguna at the meeting organized by the Network for Pan-Afrikan Solidarity in Toronto, Canada on Friday, August 10, 2012 and I delivered on my promise. There was a high turnout as people came from all over the world. We had citizens from Iraq, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Sudan, Somalia, Canada, Uganda, Kenya to mention but a few. The room was packed and Miguna was salivating hopeful that a dozen copies of his gutter book “Peeling Back The Mask” were gonna be sold. This was the prospect until the true identity of Miguna was unmasked. His family, that is wife and children, set up shop in the room with boxes containing copies of the book toiling to make a few dollars while on “a well deserved holiday” according to Miguna. The family looked more stressed than it would be the case of a family on “a well deserved holiday.”

Miguna received me with a hug and a broad smile. However, things changed so quickly when Miguna came to know who I really was. It was the first time Miguna and I were meeting one-on-one face to face. Our previous engagements were by facebook, e-mail and telephone. “Welcome to the meeting, my name is Miguna Miguna”. Thank you, I am Gordon Teti, I responded. “So you have come here to threaten me as you promised”, Miguna retorted. No, that is not true, I have come here to unmask the true identity of Miguna Miguna, I answered in a quick succession. At this point, Miguna became tense and walked away and came back immediately and told me that “before you attack me can you buy a copy of the book and get the facts”. I confirmed to Miguna that I have read the book in its entirety hence in an excellent position of knowledge about its content. Miguna shouted back and said, “what you have read is a pirated copy and not the original”. I then took a seat at the back row in the room. Shortly, Miguna went out of the room accompanied by the persons that I later came to know as the event organizers and after what I believe was a strategy on how to deal with me, they came back to the room. Within minutes, heads started turning towards me, especially by those who were seating on the front row close to Miguna.

When called to the microphone by the Master of Ceremony(MC), Miguna felt heroic talking about his Pan-Africanism credentials, student activism, detention, political asylum to Canada, academic achievements, law practice and his defence to human rights both in Canada and Kenya. He concluded his speech by telling the audience about his book and why he wrote the book: working for the Right Honourable Prime Minister Dr. Raila Odinga and how he was fired inhumanely; employment is a right and not a favour; the burning of his effigy and burial of his coffin; corruption in Kenya (by those who masquerade as reformist but when in power employ their girlfriends, relatives and friends). Miguna told the audience that it was very difficult for him to keep his mouth full, line his pocket with feather and become fat like those whom he was working with since he cannot be silenced. That Kenya is a country owned by a few rich elites. He sounded angry and vengeful but at the same time acknowledged the presence of a Mr. Njunguna and Mr. Kamau, whom he described as the true great friends who helped him settle in Canada when he just arrived twenty years ago.

It was during question and answer period that things unravelled so fast to the disbelief of the majority in the audience who had come to believe that Miguna was a true anti-corruption crusader and a defender of common citizens. A lady in the audience asked Miguna to tell the audience his theory on good governance since he has had the opportunity to be at the top. “There is no any other theory that Miguna can offer apart from the common liberal American political philosophy that the government is of the people by the people and for people”. Miguna thundered. He went on to say that there was no way he was going to work for those in power and not for the Kenyan people and that is why he fell out with Raila Odinga.

My efforts to catch the eye of the MC came to naught. I was simply being ignored. I could not bear it any longer. So I thundered. Why is it that you are not giving me a chance to participate in this meeting? The whole room roared back in laughter and that is how I got a chance for a ticket to the microphone. But my success was short-lived as when I went to the microphone, I was stopped from responding to the issues raised by Miguna both at the meeting and in his book on a flimsy account of personalizing my speech, which was a fallacy since Miguna’s book is about personalities and character. Miguna had succeeded in muzzling and stopping me from unmasking him.

The strategy to block Gordon Teti from unmasking Miguna backfired on the faces of the organizers of the meeting. The hour of reckoning came when a young Kenyan man went to the microphone and told Miguna to his face that while he was in good books with those whom he is accusing today as a corrupt, he said nothing about corruption and was paid millions of tax pays money. These are some of the questions that the young man asked Miguna:

1. Why is it that you wrote this book after falling out with those whom you are now accusing of corruption and when you were working for them you were full of their praises?

2. Do you think Kenyans are stupid to believe you?

3. How is that when you were working for Raila Odinga you saw many ills about Kibaki and his side of the coalition and after falling out with Raila, your view of corruption in Kenya has changed?

4. Those who were corrupt then are now clean and those who were clean before you fell out of favour with them are now the most corrupt?

5. How can people and especially Kenyans believe you?

6. Are you not just a bitter man on a revenge mission after being fired?

7. Is it a accurate to say that you a gun or a mercenary on hire by the political opponents of Raila Odinga?

8. How come your book, which is about your life has left out such important topics like:
(i) Your sexual assault case in Toronto;
(ii) Your first marriage that never worked out;
(iii) Your firing at the African-Canadian Legal Clinic;
(iv) Your troubled relationship with prominent.

The young Kenyan man concluded by telling Miguna that he has read his book and came to one conclusion that the book is a campaign tool against Raila Odinga.

—– Forwarded Message —–
From: darlene marett
To: gordon teti
Sent: Thursday, August 9, 2012 2:07:23 PM
Subject: Gordon – This is something you may enjoy attending! Former Kenyan lawyer speaks!

WHEN: Friday, August 10, 2012
WHERE: 252 Bloor Street West, OISE/University of Toronto (at St.George subway station)
Room 5-150 (5th floor)
TIME: 7pm

Free event – donation would be appreciated

Panel Discussion:
– Miguna Miguna is a lawyer, Pan-Afrikanist, and former advisor to Prime Minister Raila Odinga of Kenya. Miguna is the author of the recent expose on corruption in Kenya, “Peeling Back the Mask: A Quest for Justice in Kenya” and he will be signing copies of the book, which will be on sale ($38).

– Ismail Adam is from El-Fasher in North Darfur and currently resides in Toronto, Canada. He is the Acting President of the Darfur Association of Canada.

– Daniel Mukena is an organizer with the Congolese Citizens’ Movement.
Other speaker(s) to be confirmed

For further information, please contact: Network for Pan-Afrikan Solidarity – network4panafrikansolidarity@gmail.com

USA: Not learning from mistakes

From: Chuck Watts

Sad but true. We are not learning from our mistakes.

– – – – – – – – – – –

House Democrats Accept GOP Frame On Taxes

The Democratic Campaign Committee sent me a message this afternoon entitled DISASTER. The message: “Did you see Al Gore’s message? We only have a few hours left before tonight’s midnight FEC deadline…”

Groan. Once again, the Democratic Party trashes its credibility by treating liberal activists like nothing more than a crowd of marks, just waiting to be conned. There is no midnight FEC deadline. People will be just as able to donate to the Democrats on August 1st as they are today on July 31st. The DCCC’s message is using a cheap trick, well known to hucksters selling gizmos on New Jersey boardwalks: Create a false sense of urgency with a limited time offer, and suckers will start shelling out their money before their rational minds can catch on to the gimmick.

. . .
[cartoon image;] “If I could just talk llike an elephant, maybe they wouild let me join the circus”, said the donkey.

. . .

Read rest of cited article by jclifford;
http://irregulartimes.com/index.php/archives/2012/07/31/house-democrats-accept-gop-frame-on-taxes/

KENYA: PRESS RELEASE FROM NYANZA COUNCIL OF CHURCH LEADERS

From: Bishop Dr. Washington Ogonyo Ngede

We Bishops from Nyanza do hereby condemn Miguna Miguna’s outburst and advise him to leave the Prime Minister Hon. Raila Odinga alone to pursue his vision of campaigning for Presidency of the Republic of Kenya.

Miguna’s outbursts in his Book Peeling Back the Past; in pursuit of Justice in Kenya are just an afterthought aimed at character assassination.

We as Church Leaders representing over 200 Denominations from Nyanza demand to know why Miguna Miguna did not report all his allegations to the Police if he was sincere.

If his allegations were true, why did he wait until when he was sacked? He should have talked about those allegations when he was in the PM’s office.

We are urging Kenyans not to take his words seriously.
Miguna Miguna is just like Macharia who betrayed the late Jomo Kenyatta with a Colombian Government,

Miguna Miguna’s allegations are just like of the late Were Olonde, who told the security Officers under the late Jomo Kenyatta that the late Jaramogi Oginga Odinga had brought weapons from Uganda and hide them at Mageta Highland, which was investigated and never found.

In return the Rt. Hon. Prime Minister with his good heart of compassion allowed him to return to work.

We received the utterances of Miguna Miguna and its Book with great shock and dismay. We describe him as a spoiler, a betrayer in a high order that Kenya has ever seen.

In employment, you can be employed and you can be dismissed, but in the case of Miguna Miguna, he was sacked and he went to Court seeking to overturn his suspension but Justice Mohamed Wasame rejected his attempt.

Kenyans know very well that Hon. Rt. Raila Odinga is a reformist from the beginning. Therefore we as Church Leaders are appealing to all Kenyans to totally ignore Miguna Miguna’s allegations.

Furthermore, we demand to know why Miguna Miguna has opted to flee the Country back to Canada while the Police are looking for him so that he could shade more light on his allegations.

Signed by: –

Bishop Dr. Washington Ogonyo Ngede Archbishop Julius Otieno oloo
CHAIRMAN VICE CHAIRMAN

Africa – the Danger of a Single Story

From: Yona Maro


Karibu Jukwaa la www.mwanabidii.com
Pata nafasi mpya za Kazi www.kazibongo.blogspot.com
Blogu ya Habari na Picha www.patahabari.blogspot.com

– – – – – – – – – – –

By Paul Carlucci

The greatest enemy of any one of our truths may be the rest of our truths.

Africans have always spun their own narratives, and interpreted others from the broader world. Hieroglyphics described ancient Egypt to modern man. The anti-colonial dramas of Négritude roused passions around the Francophone world. In 1949, after rejecting the Roman alphabet, Solomana Kanté invented the N’Ko writing system, which revelled in the tonalities of West African Mande speakers and was used by devotees to translate all manner of scholarly and religious texts. Julius Nyerere translated Shakespeare’s “Julius Caesar” and “The Merchant of Venice” into Kiswahili.

Painters, historians, thespians, writers, filmmakers and musicians have all uploaded their stories into a greater narrative, some of whom have names which resonate globally, like Chinua Achebe, Fela Kuti, and Chéri Samba. And so have journalists, whether in the vaunted pages of South Africa’s Mail and Guardian or the infamous broadcasts of Rwanda’s Radio Télévision Libre de Milles Collines.

But there has long been a chorus of simplifying, erroneous, corrosive, and misleading narratives informing the popular impression of Africa outside the continent. These stories are historical, journalistic, and artistic. For Western audiences, imagining a true portrait of the continent, one that includes its banalities alongside its sensations, is a reverie too often disturbed by narrative productions suffering shortcomings in structure, spirit, and knowledge. Aside from the prejudices of early Western historians, there are also the conflict-constructions of both journalistic and dramatic storytelling to shade the picture.

All of these narratives – past, present and forthcoming – combine to give the world an ever-complicating impression of an immensely complicated place. They have been created over time by outsiders and insiders alike, as well as people whose identities borrow from both categories, like members of diasporic communities or the children of colonial settlers. They engage in dialogue with each other, holding conversations that enlighten the picture of Africa. But, in the Western imagination, stereotypical stories of famines, cheetahs and bullet-belts eclipse nearly everything. Increasingly, as with any serious effort to understand the world, it’s up to audiences to think critically, compare widely, and suspend their conclusions.

Visible transition: The symbolism of the Kony2012 backlash

Jason Russell could not have seen it coming. The backlash against Invisible Children and their Kony2012 campaign spread quickly enough, but such is speed these days that it seemed glacial as Russell’s video championed 70 million hits in a few days, with a reported $5 million in donations. Not only were the stories of Joseph Kony, Uganda, Sudan, the Central African Republic, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) told through the narrowest and self-aggrandising of views, a broader impression was lent to millions of young people that one could learn enough to contribute to profound events in only a matter of about 29 minutes of brain-dope.

But there was a backlash, maybe on an unprecedented scale. By way of a comparison, the movie Machine Gun Preacher, a 2011 biopic flick based on the life of Sam Childers was another LRA narrative. It sailed into the popular imagination on a raft of misrepresentations, portraying Africa as a stage for monstrous, American criminals to gloriously reinvent themselves, canonising late rebel leader John Garang, promoting violence as the primary solution to a conflict it denuded of all its bulging nuance, and singing the praises of Jesus Christ as saviour. There were plenty of bad reviews, but nothing on par with the denial of Kony2012.

But Machine Gun Preacher, with its $45,000 opening weekend, didn’t have anything like the reach of Kony2012. Within six days of the latter’s March 5 release, it tallied 100 million hits on YouTube. Criticism poured in from major media entities like The Guardian and Washington Post, and Al Jazeera English hosted a Uganda Speaks forum and ran op-eds from preeminent African and on-the-ground voices. A Ugandan group also called Uganda Speaks launched its Kony2012 initiative to “recapture the narrative”. After a while, it seemed that most people who knew anything about the LRA knew that Kony2012 was a phenomenon of reductionist activism for a war already over.

It’s not likely that the critics reached entirely the same audience as Invisible Children. And even though the criticism did inspire a second video – ‘Beyond Famous’ – which sought to incorporate more Ugandan voices into its narrative, the impact of the first one, and really of Invisible Children’s entire existence, found a more prominent place in reality.

An April 29 New York Times article by Jeffrey Gettleman takes readers into the United States’ Kony-hunt in the Central African Republic, where General Carter Ham, head of the US Africa Command, has a Kony2012 poster on his door. An unnamed American official is quoted as saying: “Let’s be honest, there was some constituent pressure here. Did Kony2012 have something to do with this? Absolutely.” About two weeks later, in a positive development, US-supported Ugandan forces captured Caesar Acellam, a senior LRA commander. A layer of moral ambiguity emerges when one learns the chequered history of the Ugandan army, and indeed the ongoing allegations of human rights violations against it. Are entities like this where the world should be building capacity?

Ugwu’s reclamation

In Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s novel Half of a Yellow Sun, written about Nigeria’s Biafran War, the protagonist Richard is an awkward Englishman. Married to an Igbo woman, he finds himself writing propaganda for the Biafran cause, and at the same time struggling with different writing projects; a few failed efforts at foreign correspondence and novels that seem to go nowhere. Throughout the story, Richard struggles to integrate himself into the Igbo community, learning the language and scorning the reductionist worldviews of outsiders. Richard decides his novel will be about the war, but he still can’t complete it.

In the closing pages of the book, he confides in Ugwu, a peasant houseboy with a passion for reading who was conscripted into the Biafran army and participated in a gang rape. “The war isn’t my story to tell, really,” Richard decides; although he says nothing, Ugwu agrees. Richard survived the conflict, penned propaganda for its cause, and ultimately lost his wife to the violence. But the fractured war narrative laced into the broader story is written not by Richard, as the reader first assumes, but by Ugwu himself.

It’s a telling subplot, with tensions outside the text. In the winter 2005 edition of Granta Magazine, award-winning Kenyan writer Binyavanga Wainaina offered up a satirical guide for storytellers setting their tales in Africa. He took aim at that vast landscape of clichés writers go to in an effort to bring verisimilitude to their works: buzzwords like “darkness”, “big”, “sky”, “shadow” and “sun”; characters like prostitutes and guerrillas, props like AK-47s and bowls of monkey brains. Ugwu’s reclamation of story runs all through Wainaina’s subtext.

In 2009, Adichie put a name to these tensions: The Danger of a Single Story. Speaking at an international conference, she recounted her childhood years absorbed in British novels. Her own first literary efforts therefore featured white-skinned characters, with sparkling blue eyes, frolicking through the snow and enjoying apples. It wasn’t until she discovered Achebe – whose novel Things Fall Apart she channels in the first sentence of her Purple Hibiscus – that Adichie realised people like her, and settings like Nigeria, could be explored in the graceful rhythms of fiction. When she studied in the United States, she found a less complete global narrative in her roommate who couldn’t believe she could speak English and was dismayed to learn her favourite music had little to do with bare-chested drum circles. Adichie didn’t fault her new friend, but understood that her view of Africa had been shaped by “a single story of catastrophe”.

“A violent babble of uncouth sounds”

During her talk, Adichie highlighted the journal writings of the merchant John Locke, who travelled to West Africa in the 16th century. His scribbles depicted Africans as “beasts who have no houses”, and suffer from bizarre anatomical peculiarities. The dominance of this type of story also finds its origins in the writings of explorer and stooge Henry Morton Stanley, whose work for newspapers, magazines, and book publishers was rife with the kind of clichés that so amuse Wainaina.

There is a tradition of overturning these narratives, but the cultural penetration seems limited. 20th century historians wrote about colonial conquest as if it happened to a bunch of lackadaisical brutes, too caught up in primordial throes to resist the imperious Europeans. A more complicated picture has recently emerged, detailing a variety of local responses to European domination, ranging from armed resistance to self-interested collaboration. The tit-for-tat continues in analyses of more contemporary events, as in The London School of Economics’ African Affairs Professor Thandika Mkandawire’s 2002 paper, ‘The Terrible Toll of Post-Colonial “Rebel Movements” in Africa’, in which he accuses prominent researchers like Stephen Ellis of racist renditions.

Probably one of the most enduring turn-of-the-century fictions with implications for Africa is Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness, which has a long list of defenders and detractors. Among the latter group is Achebe, who, in a 1977 essay in the Massachusetts Review, categorised the book as “permanent literature”, one with a hallowed presence in Western schools, and its author a “thoroughgoing racist”. Achebe shrugged off any defence of the book, instead highlighting a pattern of racist developments from the nature of Conrad’s contrast between the Thames and the Congo to the author’s apparent reluctance to give his African characters the attribute of language, but instead “a babble of uncouth sounds”.

It’s been 35 years since Achebe wrote that essay. At the time, he identified a phenomenon much like the one Adichie isolated in her lecture. But Achebe added a worrying caveat: The telling of these stories had gone beyond wilful misrepresentation and into the realm of “reflex”.

Literature to the rescue?

While the Kony2012 backlash showed that simple and soaring narratives will not go unanswered, the fact is that a wider balance of stories is indeed emerging. Barbara Kingsolver’s The Poisonwood Bible, published in 1998, is an exceptional piece of fiction, an award-winner and Pulitzer nominee that utterly eschews simplicity in its story of independence-era Democratic Republic of the Congo. In 2006, author Dave Eggers partnered with Valentino Achak Deng to pen What is the What, a form-blending project originally planned as a piece of biographical journalism, but later presented as fiction to fill in the blanks of Deng’s memory growing up in war-torn Sudan. Christie Watson’s Tiny Sunbirds, Far Away, published last year, seems almost pleading in its entrance into Nigeria’s narrative landscape; she labours to bring hearty characterisation to her black cast, while her white characters are tediously trite and mono-dimensional.

But these are not the plots Wainaina is talking about. They hinge on events that typify the Western perception of Africa, namely civil conflict. In his 2011 memoir One Day I Will Write About This Place, Wainaina depicts a Kenyan childhood of choir practices, awkward school crushes, rampant acne, and radio DJs. When coups do surface in his Africa, they happen alongside these less sensational events, rather than eclipsing them. He deals with Private Hezekiah Ochuka’s 1982 coup and six subsequent hours of governance, with resulting body count, in two paragraphs that follow a quick vignette about his cracking voice, two inches of pubescent growth, and Michael Jackson dance moves. The conflict in Wainaina’s memoir is not so much with Kenya or South Africa, where he later sets up shop, but with his own destiny. Will he or will he not become a writer?

Taken together, Wainaina’s how-to and Ugwu’s reclamation are a kind of narrative gate-keeping. But at their most prescriptive, they flirt with xenophobia, especially in the silencing of Richard’s take on the Biafran War. As a character, Richard integrated himself into Igbo society, acquiring language and love, while at the same time promoting the cause. How much further does one have to go to get inside the gate? Why is his conflict with destiny beyond the kind of resolution Wainaina finds for himself? And if his actions are insufficient, then what about the narrative contributions of authors Alexandra Fuller and Mia Couto, two writers with membership in the second generation settler class? The former’s 2001 debut book and memoir, Don’t Let’s Go to the Dogs Tonight, details her childhood in collapsing Rhodesia, and it vibrates with a tension pretty much defined against a backdrop of violence. (Incidentally, she’s a huge fan of Wainaina.) The latter is an award-wining poet, author, and biologist, known for The Last Flight of the Flamingo and dozens of other works; he is on the one hand acclaimed as Mozambique’s most important writer, and yet still accused of elitist urban credentials that segregate him from his lower-caste character material.

But misrepresentation can cut both ways. In her lecture, Adichie admitted to herself holding a similarly parodying story, not about Americans, but about Mexicans, her understanding of whom was both formed and tainted by United States popular media. In One Day I Will Write About This Place, Westerners who donate to African causes are typified as exclusively white and patronising, while the West is a multi-racial domain with a few enlightened minds. It happens elsewhere, too, like in Amma Darko’s Beyond the Horizon, published in 1995, which depicts Europe as a demoralising death trap of the soul for any African who attempts to live there. The immigrant experience may entail, increasingly, a galaxy of exhausting and sometimes fatal challenges, but it is not exclusively that. There are success stories everywhere.

All of this begs the question: Is it right to ask artists to run through a checklist of politically correct indicators before publishing their work? Or are partial truths of one kind acceptable if they lead to greater truths of another? And if conflict drives story, should some conflicts, like the Rhodesian war or resource exploitation and poverty in the Niger Delta, be off limits because they don’t tell the whole story of their true-life settings? Or does the real question, once we exclude actively racist art, have more to do with the receiving audiences, who, in forming impressions of the world, must seek out a variety of stories?

Defining the popular imagination…Or perhaps defying it

Unfortunately, we live in what Canadian author and literary critic Douglas Glover has called a post-literate age. Léopold Senghor, Senegal’s independence leader and champion of Négritude, once said it would be African writers and artists who would rebirth the culture, not politicians. But he did not see the arrival of the media era. As it is, none of the above literature will likely reach a mass audience and bring variety to the African narrative in the West, but the increasingly globalised field of media will.

That Africa is frequently sensationalised in Western media narratives is no great insight. Frederick Cooper, in his book Africa since 1940: The Past and the Present, traces the phenomenon to the Congo’s decolonisation, an image which is doubly reinforced in Nigeria’s Biafran war. It’s the kind of thing that promulgates a dramatic narrative. On the May 13, 2000, cover of The Economist, which carried an image of Africa’s landmass stencilled around the photo of an arms-toting African, the headline read “The Hopeless Continent”. The ghost of this depiction follows many storylines, like the reported misrepresentations in the BBC documentary The World’s Worst Place to be Gay?, and the unshakable prominence of coup, war, famine and dictator dispatches over other kinds of stories in media around the world. Freelance writer Travis Lupick summed up last year’s Horn of Africa famine news swell accordingly: “You know,” he posted on Twitter, “when there’s a drought in Iowa, we don’t write headlines like ‘North America struck by drought’. Africa’s a big place.”

But this is not just a case of the broader world imposing a reductive narrative structure on the continent; African journalists participate in the same melee. The most infamous example is the genocidal radio of early 1990s Rwanda. More benign examples can be found in Ghana’s 2011 media coverage of clashes between Fulanis and other northerners; it was sensationalist at best, and xenophobic at worst. A multitude of other problems, like low remuneration and politically – or ideologically – invested ownership, conspire to breed outcomes like blackmail journalism and hyper-partisan political coverage – and this from the countries that enjoy a free press. In others, pioneering journalism can get a person killed.

But as in the cases of literature, there are also neutralising forces in journalism. Al Jazeera’s “Africa Investigates” series brought African journalists like Sorious Samura and Anas Aremeya Anas to an international audience. In 2010, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation ran a four-part series called ‘Africa on the Move’ in which musical movements were explored alongside the ambitions of entrepreneurs. South Africa’s Mail and Guardian continues what Stephen Ellis has described as a tradition of enterprising journalism in that country. Meanwhile, scads of African journalists find employment with international entities like Bloomberg or Reuters. More recently, the BBC is about to transpose its Focus on Africa magazine to the broadcast realm, with a 30-minute daily broadcast anchored by Ghanaian Komla Dumor.

Conflict as a source of sensationalism

In his 2000 book Reporting Africa, Ellis defines news as “an attempt to represent reality by those employed for that purpose by organisations of mass communication”. He confounds that definition with layers of complexity about sources, subjects, national traditions, and industry economics. From that, one can extrapolate a carousel of particular horses ridden by particular editors, each trying to appeal to a particular audience. The subjectivity of reality becomes undeniable.

One common ground of rendering reality for all journalists is conflict. It may be unsavoury, but it cuts to the very heart of how any story, fiction or otherwise, is told. It’s what compels audiences to follow narratives, and audiences tend to follow certain types of conflict, sensational types, more readily than subtle ones. It’s why Anas and Samura (the latter well-known for his gruesome documentary Cry Freetown) focused on corruption for their Al-Jazeera documentaries, not college basketball. It’s why Aidan Hartley, a Kenyan-born journalist of the second-generation settler demographic, spent a career reporting conflict for Reuters, ultimately capturing his narratives in the memoir The Zanzibar Chest. This work leaves readers with the revelation that conflict stories are not just pernicious forces in the composition of an inclusive narrative, but also destructive to those who tell them. And it’s why editors continue to demand those kinds of tensions from reporters. They think it’s what audiences are geared toward.

For the most part, it seems they may be right. If identity is established not by what a person says about himself, but rather what is said about him, and how often, then it seems the real issue in understanding life is not entirely a question of how narratives are produced, but rather how they are ingested. Adichie has called for a blend of stories. As the number we receive increases, it becomes up to individuals to embrace them.

Paul Carlucci is a freelance writer who has reported from Ghana, Ivory Coast, China, Mexico and Canada. His work has been carried by Al Jazeera English, Toronto Star, IPS Africa, and others.

THE ROOT CAUSES OF SEXUAL ABUSE BY CLERGY IN IRELAND

From: People For Peace
Voices of Justice for Peace
Regional News

BY FR JOACHIM OMOLO OUKO, AJ
NAIROBI-KENYA
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 20, 2012

For more than a decade, advocates for those abused by clergy have been demanding that church leaders in Ireland and at the Vatican accept blame for protecting paedophile priests. The big question here is why such cases do increase almost in daily basis.

[book cover image; An Irish Tragedy
How Sex Abuse by Irish Priests Helped Cripple The Catholic Church; by Joe Rigert]

Joe Rigert’s book, An Irish Tragedy, tries to give the answer to the question. He makes a potentially controversial suggestion that there was something about the background and training of Irish priests that made them more prone to become abusers. Joe adds that apart from the training, social and religious background in Ireland has also contributed to the matter. The story of how Irish immigrants helped to build the Catholic Church, both in Ireland and America. In his investigative reporter Joe Rigert’s search for the roots of the Catholic sex-abuse scandals which led him to Ireland, he found that rigid sexual repression in both society and the priesthood has had the opposite of its intended effect, fostering bizarre and criminal sexual expression. Though a tiny country, Ireland has been a chief exporter of abusers to America, making the Catholic Church’s darkest crisis a true Irish tragedy. Catholic historian Terrance Dosh calls this book “a riveting read with many remarkable insights.” The book details the history of the migration of Irish priests and their unusual penchant to abuse girls and women, and raises questions on the Church’s emphasis on homosexuality as the primary cause of the sex-scandal.

The book is a must-read for those who remain unconvinced of breadth of the scandal; and a useful book for those wanting the history, details and underpinnings of this tragic event. The book suggests that sex abuse by Catholic clergy is not limited to a “church” problem. It is a deeply rooted, complex flaw in society in general because the results impact so many aspects of their daily lives. It is against the background that the problem is not only with priests but nuns as well. In March this year an Irish nun appeared before a special sitting of the country’s Circuit Court on 87 charges of the sexual abuse of primary school girls. Rape and sexual molestation were “endemic” mainly in Irish Catholic church-run industrial schools and orphanages where priests and nuns for decades terrorised thousands of boys and girls in the Irish Republic. According to the report, molestation and rape were “endemic” in boys’ facilities, chiefly run by the Christian Brothers order. The report concluded that when confronted with evidence of sex abuse, religious authorities responded by transferring offenders to another location, where in many instances they were free to abuse again.

[map of Irland]

Some clergy and nuns were considered notorious child molesters. Some of them raped or indecently assaulted over one hundred children, mainly in Dublin where four former archbishops in Dublin – John Charles McQuaid, who died in 1973, Dermot Ryan, who died in 1984, Kevin McNamara, who died in 1987, and retired Cardinal Desmond Connell – were found to have failed to report their knowledge of child sexual abuse to the Garda from the 1960s to the 1980s despite the fact that they were aware of complaints. The Murphy Commission of Inquiry into the abuse of children in Dublin identified 320 people who complained of child sexual abuse between 1975 and 2004. It also stated that since May 2004, 130 complaints against priests operating in the Dublin archdiocese had been made. It is so notorious to the point that the Irish government had to announce the closure of its embassy to the Vatican, starkly illustrating that relations between Dublin and the Catholic Church are at a historically glacial low. The government and the Vatican has always remained in serious disagreement over child abuse by the clergy, with the Irish Prime Minister, Enda Kenny, accusing Rome of trying to sabotage official inquiries. Traditionally, Ireland has been unusually close to the Catholic Church, but its faith was greatly shaken by a series of damning reports on the Church’s alleged indifference to child sex abuse by priests and other clerics. Fr Joachim Omolo Ouko, AJTel +254-7350-14559/+254-722-623-578E-mail omolo.ouko@gmail.comPeaceful world is the greatest heritageThat this generation can give to the generationsTo come- All of us have a role.