Sunday, July 10, 2011

The Yunis Ali Foundation


A foundation created to honor the legacy of the Late Mzee Yunis Ali (1936-2003), The role he played in his entire adult life, in the social political development of Kenya from early days of independence and the struggle for liberation of the marginalized communities in Kenya is admirable and worthy of narration.


For more information, please visit the foundation website;

http://www.yunisalifoundation.com/

Saturday, July 2, 2011

Malasen Hamida - A youthful activist rearing to go


Malasen Hamida - A youthful activist rearing to go
By Fatuma Mohammed
Activism and advocacy are not easy tasks. Most of Kenya’s top political leaders have cut their teeth on activism and advocacy exposing themselves to imminent dangers from governments of the day.
President Mwai Kibaki and Prime Minister Raila Odinga, the two principals who steered the country from the brink of collapse after the last botched elections, are two towering figures of activism for democratic change during the former president Moi’s regime.
The new Chief Justice Dr Willy Mutunga’s past is grounded on activism and as he assumes office most Kenyans hope he will shake the judiciary into action. It is hoped his tenure will be a break from the past given his record of agitating for human rights.
But Kenyans are yet to break away from the fear that activism and trouble go together.
Malasen Hamida Twahir is an activist and community leader in Kibera’s Makina area. She says that although things are changing for the better, most people consider activists as trouble makers and usually avoid them unless they have their issues to be tackled.
While the youth are willing to get involved in issues, she says, the old guard distances themselves thus denying the youth the highly needed counsel on how to undertake an issue.
“The old guard fears the youth,” Malasen says interpreting what she encounters in the course of her everyday life in activism in Kibera. “They feel the youth are a threat.”
The 32-years old mother and wife works with the Nubian community in Kibera to address her community’s plight especially on land rights and education.
Malasen works with a Nubian rights forum called Zidugua that is pursuing economical, social and political rights of Nubians whose marginalization is denying them land ownership and a voice through which to express themselves. She is also a member of advocacy groups in Kibera.
The threat posed by youth to the old guard is cultural as well as political. While the old are not enthusiastic about having things changing too fast, the youth are yearning to get things done in the shortest time possible.
This is because majority of youth have no jobs and they see their lives waste away in the sprawling slum. To alleviate their situation, youth have formed groups with objectives of making an income as garbage collectors, water vendors and car washers.
The resources that their families hold are not enough to support the upcoming generation leaving them with no capital to expand their group activities let alone starting their own businesses.

SOURCE: http://www.thenewdawn.info/

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Reason to smile for Nubian community


Sheikh Issa Abdulfaraj leader of
Nubian council of Elders.


Reason to smile for Nubian community

By Iddi Musyemi

NAIROBI: The Nubian community in Kibera had reason to smile on the first Friday of this month. This was after receiving 10 computers and 20 sewing machines from Eldoret North MP William Ruto who visited Madrasatul Fallah Kibra after an invitation by the Nubian Council of Elders.
During the visit, Ruto was accompanied by more than 8 MPs including assistant minister in the Ministry of Special Programs Mahmoud Mohamed among others.
The main purpose of Ruto’s visit in the constituency of his political arch rival Prime Minister Raila Odinga was to donate educational facilities to help in the establishment of a technical school at Makina mosque that will provide technical education and empower youth to create self employment.
“From my experience, such undertakings offer solutions to the problems majority hopeless youths are facing in this country”, said Ruto who was formerly Minister of Higher Education.
Several problems faced by the Nubian community were highlighted including land issue, identification cards document and unemployment.
The legislator also promised to assist in tackling the water shortage problem in the area by organizing afundraising drive in future.
Ruto emphasized that leaders be voted according to they have done to their people. “Kenya needs leaders who are development minded so as to solve current crisis”, he said.
The visit came while the area MP Raila Odinga was at another function in Kisii to officiate at a tree planting ceremony.

http://www.thenewdawn.info/

A Nubian wedding






Culture and religion define...
A Nubian wedding

By Iddi Musyemi- The New Dawn http://www.thenewdawn.info/

A jovial procession brings to a standstill the many activities that have been going on in the alleyways of Kibera. Men are singing on top of their lungs trying to be at par with loud drums accompanying them.
Long ululations come from women. People gather around the procession and in few minutes the alleys are blocked. Human and vehicle traffic come to a halt. “What’s going on,” is the question onpeoples’ tongues. Apparently such occasions are few and far between. And when they chance, curious onlookers will take the opportunity to satisfy their curiosity. The occasion is the final event of what has been going on for two weeks as two families have been engaged in talks on behalf of their children. Proposals have been made and demands have been met.
On this day, Muhammad Gituma Gikunda and Siama Ajabsidu Yusuf are going to be pronounced husband and wife. It is a Nubian community wedding and like all other weddings, there are some cultural aspects that are in place in this one. The whole family is at the centre of the event and there are clear cut roles for each and every member to take. The most important role is that of a Res. It is a role given to a mature person in the family of the husband-to-be who can be either a male or female.
Salama Ibrahim, 54, is the Res on this occasion and she is assisted by Naima Ibrahim, 58, among other women. They are both in charge of the ceremony and their role is to ensure that everything concerning the wedding goes according to plan.
“It’s an important role because it makes one responsible for the event from the time it begins to the end,” Salama says. It’s a role they have assumed for three days towards the wedding.
Salama admits that so much has changed in the Nubian culture and that the current wedding does not strictly follow the Nubian culture.
Bride Price
In the older times, it was the responsibility of the parents to find their child a wife. Emissaries would be send to a family with a suitable girl and talks would be opened.
When all was agreeable a bride price would be paid and a wedding followed. “Nowadays the boy and the girl meet and agree by themselves before approaching their respective parents,” Salama laments. “In such a case, the parents have no option but to accept.”
“After that, a letter will be written by the parents of the boy to the parents of the girl proposing a marriage.”
The letter is a recent introduction into the Nubian culture and it is as important today as the sending of emissaries in the old times.
“The letter will declare the love of the couples for each other and proceed to request for the demands from the girl’s family,” Salama says. The family of the girl will deliberate on the proposal letter and ask the acceptance of the wife to be. On agreement, the reply to the letter would include the bride price, demand for listed gifts for the girl’s parents. This is sent to the family of the boy for deliberations.
Naima recalls that traditionally everything was easy and simple and the bride price was not as expensive as it is nowadays. It was money for both parents and simple gifts which would be conducted between parents of the couples. “It would be Shs600 for the father and Shs300 for the mother,” Naima says.
“Clothes too would be sent to the girl as a present.”
“Nowadays the money can be as much as Shs50,000 and above,” Naima says.
Nubian community is divided into clans and inter-clan marriages also determines the process. It takes more time for two people from different clans to get married than it would people from the same clan.
“This is because the other clan will consider their cultural practice which they want observed and it may make the whole process more expensive and time consuming as haggling takes place between the two clans,” Salama says.
The gifts for the bride may include clothes, incense, shoes, henna, candles, soaps, razor blades and blankets and are only sent after the proposal is agreed on.
Wish them well Muslim wedding practices have been adopted by Nubian community and they are evident in this wedding.
The girl is the one who says what mahari, (bride price), she wants and on payment or satisfaction of the girl’s demand the wedding can then proceed.
Mohamed Ibrahim, known as Sheikh Ismail, is the Assistant Registrar in Kadhi’s office and he is the one who officiated the ceremony according to Muslim practice.
Sheikh Ismail offered advice to Muhammad Gikunda on how to live with Siama Yusuf, his wife. Duas (prayers) were also recited by the Imam of the mosque to wish the couple Allah’s blessings and guidance.
Men are not left out of the wedding plan. They have a role of ensuring that whatever is demanded from the girl’s family is provided. “As long as the marriage has not been finalized, men of the family have to be on their toes,” the brides uncle, Mohamed Hassan, says.
In a packed Kambi Ulum mosque in Kibera, Sheikh Ismail announced Gikunda and Siama man and wife. “We wish the young couple all the best in their marriage,” Sheikh Ismail said.
At this point other celebrations may follow, but the wedding ceremony has been completed.

What was given out to the bride and her parents?
According to Mohamed Hassan, the bride’s uncle, the following are some of listed gifts (right) to
the bride and her parents.
Just to make sure things don’t go wrong, Hassan and relatives have to be present to make sure the items requested are there. The following are the gifts:-

1: Four round sisal trays containing different items to the bride. In them is: Heena, a night
dress, pair of lesso, perfume, shoes (out and indoor), candles, coconut oil, incense, matchbox,
razor blades, mirror, sewing thread among others
2: A pair of blankets for the bride’s parents.
3: Several kilogrammes of beef meat.
4: Clothing material.
5: A bale of maize meal and wheat flour.
6: Cooking oil.
7: 50 kgs. Maize meal.

http://www.thenewdawn.info/

Saturday, October 2, 2010

Kenya's ostracized Nubians

By David McKenzie, CNN
September 29, 2010 -- Updated 1923 GMT (0323 HKT)Kibera, Kenya (CNN) --

Sixty-eight year old Naima Shaban can't access health care, open a bank account, or even get a death certificate in Kenya. Like thousands of Nubians living in Kenya, she is effectively stateless.

Shaban lost her national identity card 10 years ago. For most Kenyans it takes a few weeks to get a new one; she is still waiting. She has a faded copy that she has kept all this time.

"I don't know why they don't just give me my I.D.," Shaban told me, "I filled out the forms, I am angry."

She can't even improve her mud house. Most Nubians can't get land title to their plots. If they build a formal structure it will be torn down.

Nubians came to Kenya as an accident of history. The British Army began recruiting them out of modern day Sudan at the turn of the last century. They formed part of the King's African Rifles, a regiment raised from the British territories in Africa.

Nubians helped expand the empire and fought in both world wars. To reward veterans, the British government gave families land in a forest near Nairobi. They called it Kibr, now it is Kibera, Kenya's largest slum.

A recent photographic exhibition by Greg Constantine highlights their long history in Kenya.

Check out the online exhibition

Since Kenyan independence in 1964, Nubians have struggled to find a formal place in Kenyan society. Despite living in Kenya for three, sometimes four, generations, Nubian families often struggle to get recognized by the state as Kenyan citizens.

"Obtaining a passport or identity card as a Nubian," says Adam Hussein, a leading Nubian Advocate, "requires that you go through a different process than the rest of Kenyans."

Hussein should know. It took him ten years of struggle to get a passport. He was a member of a rugby team - he couldn't travel. He was a trained chemist - he couldn't get a job with the government.

Read Hussein's blog

According to the Open Society Foundations, there are some 15 million stateless globally. From Thailand's hill tribes to Dominicans of Haitian descent in the Caribbean, stateless people are not recognized by any country.

While some Nubians have become true Kenyans by virtue of luck or patience, in recent years the situation seems to be getting worse, not better.

A senior immigration official told me that the Kenyan government vets many Nubians, regardless of how long their families have been in the country. Immigration, home affairs, and even intelligence gets involved, I was told.

Nubians are even asked for their grandparents' birth certificates to get official I.D.

"Stringent measures aren't aimed at any particular community," the official said. "They have to prove they are Kenyan. Stringent measures need to be put in place to ensure that people are Kenyan."

Nubians do live in other countries in East Africa, but Kenya's Nubians are, in many ways, the first Africans settled in Nairobi. Still, many can't truly feel it is home.

Hussein said: "When a Nubian begins to say we have been here for four generations, this is almost a century plus we have been in this land. [And] the first question that comes from authority is 'are you a Kenyan'"?

View Video at source-

http://edition.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/africa/09/28/kenya.nubians/index.html

Kenya's Nubians fight for rights

The Nubian community in Kenya traces its roots to the Nuba Mountains in central Sudan. In the 19th century, the British forcibly brought them to East Africa as part of their colonising army. But after fighting for Britain in the first and second world wars, the Nubians were demobilised without any compensation.


The British also left Kenya with no plan to settle the Nubians or send them back to Sudan. Today, Kenya looks upon the Nubians with suspicion because of their role in the British conquest of East Africa.



The government does not recognise them as one of the country's ethnic groups and will not give them Kenyan citizenship. There are more than 100,000 Nubians in Kenya. They have no voting rights and cannot purchase land, or serve in the army or police force.


As part of its coverage of stateless people around the world, Al Jazeera travels to the Kenyan slum of Kiberia to meet one man who says he has spent most of his life fighting for work and for the right of his own land.



This is his story in his own words.



My name is Youssouf Abdallah, I am 73 years old and I am a fifth-generation Nubian living in Kenya.


Our lives here in Kiberia are hopeless because there is no freedom, not like the freedom the Kenyans have.






There are more than 100,000 Nubians in Kenya, yet they have no voting rights
We are not entitled to own land and if we are ever evicted, there is no redress in court.



The problem we have is that the young Nubian generation does not have jobs. They ask for it in the army and police but they do not get it ... so there are many who are unemployed in Kiberia for simply being Nubians ... and we all know you need a job to survive.


We feel like Kenyan citizens but there is no escaping the discrimination against us. We are not even recognised and in the census we are classified as "others".


The government has a budget for other people. Indians and whites feature in it but not us. There is no budget for us.



For a group like us that moved away years ago, it really is difficult to be recognised under international law.



The Sudanese government says we are Kenyans and that we represent Kenya's internal problem.



"Our lives here in Kiberia are hopeless because there is no freedom, not like the freedom the Kenyans have"



When we came here, there was no Kenya, no Nairobi, we contributed to the creation of the state but in return we got nothing.


We just give thanks for being alive.


What we need is land, to know that you own it and that it is yours. Now we have to get a permit to even build a toilet. That is the biggest injustice we face. We want to build property but we are not allowed to.


We get identification cards (IDs) now but we are still marginalised. It does not get you anywhere. If an ID was a true symbol of being a Kenyan, then why are we not entitled to land rights as well?


We have no land and cannot vote. We have no representation and no voice. But we have to fight for our rights here. We will not give up. We will die here and we will be buried here. We are Kenya.

Source- http://english.aljazeera.net/news/africa/2007/08/200852517380140544.html