I
have heard, I have seen and read and above all I have always known that He was
consecrated Bishop of Garissa a few years before I was born. Tanaa calls him “Askof
wa bisquiti”. Here I am seated right next to him as I type this very text. I
sit here because in spite of so much authority vested on him, a certain profound
easiness in his presence is. I sit here because I am sure he is not going to
intimidate me by virtue of age and power. I sit here because his presence is evident
that life is possible anywhere including the volatile Garissa. I sit here
because he shows trust to people around him. He says less –which
is good for my typing. However, the fewer words he utters linger. I remember
some ‘magical’ words he uttered after I murmured a prayer after a meal with
him. “I didn’t hear what you said apart from that ‘your bounty’. Well, we
believe you and whatever you have said must be fine with us and God” and then
he smiled and I laughed.
Saturday, 30 November 2013
Sunday, 24 November 2013
Br. Mutuse J.
‘The
Spaniard Mkamba,’ that is what he told Fr. Louis. To the kids, he is simply all
that every child would wish in an uncle.
He says, “I am there and I am not there! You see, I really don’t know what
is happening to me, I think I am getting old. I don’t get to know what is
happening around. I have been here for almost three months now, I have been sitting
right next to this freezer, yet I don’t even know what it contains. I don’t
even know what those colourful torches are doing there. Since I came they have
been right there – moja ya blue na moja ya red. Na sitaki kujua zinafanya nini
hapo. Sitaki kujihusisha na mambo yasiyonihusu!”. Now, this is hilarious if not
strange. In this house, it has been just the two of us, yet he doesn’t know
what is obvious. That in that freezer, is where we keep nyama ya dikdik, samaki kutoka Tana. In short, our food na Githeri ya masister. Now I agree with him, he is there and he is
not there in a great way!
Monday, 18 November 2013
Br. Fahari
We call him BB, second B is for Boy,
but as for the first B, you can put whatever you wish. This is one brother I
call crazycrazy!
Not crazy in the sense of “grhhhhh mad”, but crazy in a pleasant sense, comical crazy. The last time I heard Pope
Francis say something to the youths I thought about Fahari, it was about
saints. He said “…We need saints among youths… we need youths who wear jeans
and still be saints…” Now, I guess the pope must have known Fahari in person. I
am yet to see him in anything else other than jeans. I remember Fahari telling
me, “mimi nguo zangu ni hizi za kihunihuni, sina zingine.” Well, that does not
contradict the pope’s thinking, does it?
Saturday, 9 November 2013
Br. George
Many wonderful things that happen among the capuchins, one of them is the coming together for evening
prayer. Brothers living in the big cities understand just how almost
impossible that is. The cities are noisy, prayers often take place at sunset, right
when the cities are coming to life, someone is stuck in the traffic (I suspect
someone was once held at the Westgate, he appeared after the hostages were
released and he looked equally scare and fatigued). simply put, there are
whole lot of reasons why the environment in the city is basically not conducive
for these evening meetings.
However, there are a few times I was in the same
community with George - in Westlands and Starehe - and it was different! I tend to think community prayer is
the one thing that counts most, according to him. One time he told me,
“Brother umecheza football? Umetoa jasho? umefurahi? Sasa mwili uko sawa kwa sala? hiyo ni sawa.” Now, that was a funny relation, football and praying? Back in
Lusaka, during the annual visitations, while all other superiors went out there
to make great times around Lusaka, George was always seated in the chapel for
Evening prayer. During such days, I, a member of the lot that is usually a few
minutes behind starting time, made it in time - trying to emulate my superior.
Students from other jurisdictions would say, “ah! this superior of yours is
praying too much, he is setting the standards too high for you Kenyans. Most of
you won’t make it!”
Sunday, 3 November 2013
Br. Monima
A
person should not and cannot be defined by his origin and past! I have known
Monima for a while now. I have also known “the Barracks” - Hola Boys. There is
not even the slightest trace of the gloomy face of “the Barracks” in Monima,
yet that is where he schooled. He is a brother who happens to give a kind of
exact the opposite of that face. One fascinating thing with him is his ability
to articulate his power of reason at an amazing ease and even at times
funnily.
While travelling with him once,
since I have a taste for troubles - if I don’t get myself into one, one will
get itself into me – I encountered one in form of an immigration officer. The
officer kept talking and magnifying the issue. I was even convinced that I was indeed
on the wrong. Fortunately, Monima intervened because he realised I was helpless,
“Excuse me, please, try to understand, this man does not know how to travel, he
has never travelled, this is his first time he has travelled, please forgive him
and when he goes back he will correct that”. The office was that easily
convinced. I ended up with a mixture of laughter and anger; Angry, because
Monima portrayed me as one alien idiot. Laughter because the officer had been
so easily fooled!
When the officer was gone Monima
hilariously said, “shida imeisha, hao ni hongo walitaka”!
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