Thursday, June 21, 2012

Kibera to host proposed Nubian Village


By Mohamed Kahiye
The Nubian community residing in Kibera has all the reasons to smile after the government under the Ministry of Lands gave a green light for commencement of the construction of the Nubian Village.
In a paid up advert in local media, the Director of Physical Planning has Okayed plans related to the proposed village and construction is expected to kick off any time.

June 15th.

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

100 years of Nubians in East Africa in black and white

In Kenya’s Nubians: Then and Now, American award-winning photographer Greg Constantine traces the origin of the Nubians to the late 1880s when Sudanese soldiers were incorporated into the British Army and brought to Kenya.
The Nubians and their families remained in Kenya and in 1912, the British government designated some 4,197 acres of land for the Nubians to settle on. In 1917, the British gazetted it as land for the Sudanese askaris and their dependants.
The Nubians named the land — located outside of what would become the city of Nairobi — Kibera, or “land of forest.”
A picture at the exhibition showing Nubians at a ceremony. Photo/Morgan Mbabazi.
 
They played their part in the defence of Kenya and East Africa for they served in the King’s African Rifles during World War I against the Germans, and in World War II in places like Somalia, Abyssinia, Madagascar and Burma.
A recent photographic exhibition in Bukoto in Kampala pays homage to the history and struggles of the Nubian community, which has lived in Kibera for the past 100 years.
The exhibition, titled “Kenya’s Nubians: Then and Now,” was organised by Constantine and the Al Khatim Adlan Centre for Enlightenment and Human Development (KACE).
The black and white pictures — shown from June 2-9 — depict the everyday life of the Nubians in Kibera, one of Africa’s biggest slum.
Mish Mash Art Gallery in Kololo, Kampala, also held a satellite exhibition of selected photographs during the week.
The pictures show traditional Nubian weeding ceremonies, women in their traditional dress called “gurbaba,” family gatherings and photos, garbage collection, kiosks, burial ceremonies and sports events.
Constantine worked with the Nubian community in Kibera to collect rare, historical photographs of the community dating as far back as 1912.
A selection of the photographs was reprinted and combined with Constantine’s own work in an exhibition that not only chronicles the history of the Nubian community in Nairobi, but also documents the consequences statelessness and the denial of citizenship have had on them in their struggle to gain recognition.
“Before Kenya’s Independence, many Nubians carried British colonial passports and had birth certificates that stated their nationality as British. After Independence, they have been one of Kenya’s most invisible and underrepresented communities economically, politically and socially,” Constantine observes.
“Their claim to land in Kibera has been contested by successive governments; the Nubians have been unable to fully participate in Kenyan society. In addition to their struggle to secure land rights, obtaining important documents needed for everyday life like national ID cards and passports has been a challenge,” Constantine notes.
This exhibition, Constantine said, aimed to inform people about the Nubian community’s history in Kibera and its contribution to the development of Kenya. It aimed to help promote the dynamic and rich heritage of a community few are aware of.
The project was exhibited at the Go Down Arts Centre in Nairobi and Kibira Academy in Kibera in 2010. It also exhibited at the host gallery in London and the Open Society Institute in New York.
Besides the exhibition, KACE held a series of events on Nubians in Uganda and cross-border communities in East Africa.
It held a discussion on the general nationhood in Africa and particularly Nubians in Kenya and other communities in East Africa struggling for their citizenship rights, including South Sudanese in Sudan.
A short film — Josphina — about a South Sudanese woman raised in northern Sudan who is stripped of her Sudanese nationality after South Sudan’s 2011 Independence was shown.
KACE is a non-governmental and non-profit organisation established in 2007 in Khartoum, Sudan. It was registered in Uganda in 2010

SOURCE - http://www.theeastafrican.co.ke/magazine/

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Marginalized Nubian community in Kenya demands recognition of their rights


INTERVIEW
Marginalized Nubian community in Kenya demands recognition of their rights 

Having arrived in Kenya from Sudan shortly before 1900 AD, the former elite soldiers of the King’s African Rifles (KAR) today find themselves homeless and the most marginalized community in Kenya.  The New Dawn’s Mohamed Sekenkei spoke to Community Rights Forum of Kibera (CRF-OK) Chairman Ibrahim Athman Amber and unraveled the bitter truth behind the plight of one of Kenya’s oldest Muslim communities. Below are excerpts from the interview.
New Dawn: Would you tell us a bit about Community Rights Forum of Kibera (CRF-OK)?
Community Rights Forum of Kibera (CRF-OK) was formed in 2011 to push for Nubian rights in Kenya. We realized that politics had let us down for all those years so we had to form an NGO to articulate our problems so that a solution is found.
As we have an obligation to fight for our rights we had to teach our people to be aware of the new constitution and how they can articulate their problems accordingly. These are the kind of things that our organization is all about.
Photo-Community Rights Forum of Kibera (CRF-OK) Chairman Ibrahim Athman Amber 

 We have more than 400 NGOs that are active in Kibera but for the benefit of other ethnic communities. Nubians are left out; we are orphans. That is why we went out of our way to form this organization so as to open the eyes of our people to fight for their rights if any is violated. 

New Dawn: Please tell us briefly about the historical origins of the Nubian community of Kenya?
It is ironic that Kenyans don’t consider Nubians to be part of this country. In the early years after independence especially in the 1970s we were considered as invaders from Sudan who came here and grabbed this place to make it our home. We have our origins in Sudan and we were part of King’s African Rifles (KAR) who settled in Kibera. There are other Nubian communities in other parts of Kenya who were taken to districts as guards of colonial government.

New Dawn: Why do you regard yourselves marginalized?
The last census conducted in 2009 states that the Nubian community in Kenya is 15,000. It shows we are 4000 in Kibera. It will take decades if not longer before we have political representation. By denying us the right of having our home land, we have been denied everything under the new constitution. When people are considered from either their constituencies or regions we are not there. We have just been designated as the people of Nairobi. But where in Nairobi? Under the new constitution the marginalized people have a seat in parliament, but are we going to be considered? By denying us that right of being in Kibera, all our basic rights have been violated economically, socially and politically. These are the questions we are looking for answers at CRF-OK.

New Dawn: In 1917-18 the British registered Nubians as occupying forest area about 4200 acres. Now they are left with 780 acres only. Where did the rest of the land go?
In fact the 780 acres no longer exist. It is only 300 acres now. We have been able to document how Kibera was given to the Nubians and we were able to find the first map of Kibera drawn in the 1920 but revised in 1934. The 1934 map shows the 4197 acres demarcated clearly, given to a particular community at that time and given land pass.
 Through slum clearance programs started by the British and continued by the independent governments, Nubians lost lands through development of new estates.
For instance, 45 households occupying at least 5 acres each were evicted from Lomle (now Ayany) to pave way for new house units. When the project was completed they were given only one unit per family and not all households benefited.  The rest were given to people from other tribes.

New Dawn: It is believed that Kenya’s first president Jomo Kenyatta was sympathetic to the Nubians. Did the community seize the opportunity to try and settle the land case?
The case was very simple during his time; just a declaration by word of mouth that Kibera is home of the Nubians would have settled. Why he did not do that I don’t know. 
Kenyatta had a very good relationship with our elders who had refused to support the British against the Mau Mau liberation movement and protected him personally during the state of emergency. In fact they say that while in hiding in Kibera Mzee got wind that he would be arrested and he asked the Nubian elders to let him go.
We, as Muslims, are forbidden to go begging in front of people because we believe the great provider is Allah. I think because of that, the elders, who were proud and former officers of the King’s African Rifles, to go and beg was a disgrace. They knew Kenyatta understood their problems and it was not for them to beg. On the other side Kenyatta was waiting! We cannot blame him.

New Dawn: How was the situation during Moi’s rule?
Moi had very many Nubian friends in Eldama Ravine in Rift Valley whom he went to school with and also worked with. When he was ascending to power we were so optimistic due to the warm relationship between him and Nubians. When he got there, partly because of our own faults and partly because of his own bias, he did nothing for us. In fact it was during his time that things got worse. President Moi was not tolerant to us; he looked the other side on Kibera issues.

New Dawn: The Nubian community has appealed to President Kibaki to legalize Kibera as Nubian homeland.  Do you have any special development plans for the community?
We cannot count the chicks before the eggs are hatched; we need to be given the land first so that we can plan for its development.  We have to coexist with everybody else. Remember, originally the total acreage was 4197. Now it is only 780 acres. 480 acres can be given to all other tribes plus infrastructure.  Nubians can get the balance of 300 acres in Kibera and be compensated for 3197 acres from other parts of Kenya.
Kibaki had promised that the title deed would come before the elections of 2007. Infact, both President Kibaki and Prime Minister Raila who is our MP had promised to give us this place soon as they were voted in. When the government of national unity was formed by the two we thanked God that they had come together, but ever since we have not heard from them.
If we can have a 300 acres land in Kibera registered under Community Lands Title (CLT) we can access funds using the title which we can then use to develop it plus other lands if the government Community compensates us for the lost land.

New Dawn: Have you made use of TJRC to advance your issues? What are your expectations?
 We have already presented our issues to TJRC.  If their report is considered actionable we expect their recommendation on Nubian community to be acted upon. We have engaged Muslim MPs to lobby for the issues of Nubians as recommended by the report led by Sheikh Mohammed Dor.

New Dawn: Have you considered the youth in your projects?
We are forming structures that will be youth-led. But our youth are still skeptical because of the culture of in-fighting and deceit. We are trying to attract the graduates and the idle ones in order to awaken them into a common force geared towards achieving one common good for the community.

New Dawn: In spite of having lived in Kenya for nearly 150 years among diverse ethnic communities, the Nubian people have managed to preserve their cultural identity?  What is the secret?
We are very lucky as a community. Whoever marries from the Nubian community becomes a Nubian. This is because of the beautiful culture, religion, food and dressing. A man who comes to marry a Nubian girl finds himself a Muslim, behaves as other men in the community hence becoming one. A woman will have to adapt and adjust to the Nubian way of food and dress hence absorbed. That is how we have been able to carry these traditions.
During the times of war, Nubians moved with their families unlike today where people leave their wives behind.  This means the whole tradition moved with them. However, we are concerned that our children are not getting to know these traditions especially handicraft due to the changed nature of today’s living.

Source- The New Dawn.
June 1-15, 2012 Issue of the New Dawn
 

Nakuru Kadhi urges couples to register their marriages


By Abdul Fatahou Laye

nAkuru: Muslims who have no marriage certificates in their possession risk imprisonment, Nakuru Kadhi Sheikh Twalib Bwana Muhammad has warned.
Sheikh Twalib said that such a certificate was a very important document which Muslims were ignoring soon after marriage or divorce.
“A jail term of six months or Sh3,000 fine or both are the penalties to those who don’t have the documents” he said.
Also affected are those who have been divorced face a jail term or a fine for lack of certificate indicating their divorced status.
He was concerned with the low records or married couples with certificates which, he said, can inconvenience them when it comes to travelling outside the country as families. A family, he said, needs a certificate to prove they are legally married.
Countering the argument by most Muslims that there is no precedence from Prophet Muhammad’s (SAW) time for certification for couples union or divorce, Sheikh Twalib said that at these times it was necessary to have these documents. “How could inheritance cases be settled in a court of law in case of problems?”
He vowed to ensure that this law is implemented to the letter. He was speaking when he presided over Nikah ceremony at the Patel Brotherhood Hall.

Source- The New Dawn.