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I’m writing for @KenyanVibe

I can finally talk about it!

I’m writing about film for KenyanVibe.com, an online magazine that covers things cultural.

My focus is Kenyan films and the atmosphere around film making in Kenya. That means film festivals, releases, trailers, and everything in between.

My address, as always, is cuminwrites@gmail.com if you want to talk film or have a screening coming up.

Let the good times roll!

#CuminWrites366, my year-long attempt to write a post a day. Find the rest over at readability.com/cuminwrites/

Questions, comments, suggestions or film-related tales? Send them to cuminwrites@gmail.com

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Women & ID cards; an addendum

In 1979, the UN passed the Convention on the Elimination of all forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW). While Kenya issued IDs to women in large numbers that year, it did not ratify the Convention till 1984.

This is something I am curious about (especially given the fact that a lot of countries accepted it with reservations) and would like to find out more about.

I don’t know much about the way international Conventions come to be adopted but 5 years feels like a long time to be figuring out one’s reservations.

This is bigger than Women in Kenyan History but it’s intriguing and a thing to explore here and in offline communities. My question then: What does it take for conventions to be ratified? Follow up: How can citizens speed up that process?

Note: This post is part of #CuminWrites366, my year-long attempt to write a post a day. Find the rest over at readability.com/cuminwrites/

Questions, comments, suggestions or knowledge of conventions? Send them to cuminwrites@gmail.com

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Persons Unknown

Imagine not existing. Strange, right? Like something straight out of a dystopian universe.

For Kenyan women, this was their reality for the first 15 or so years of independence. Because they were not existent in the eyes of the state, some of them were even labelled Mau Mau when they were sceptical about IDs being issued to them.

Reading that account chronicling the issuance of IDs to women, I am struck by all the men speaking for women. In Parliament, male MPs speak about how their women being made to take off their headscarves when men aren’t made to remove turbans as their photographs are taken. In none of those accounts do I see a woman speak.

IDs started being issued to women in 1978 when Daniel Toroitich arap Moi, freshly installed as President, directed that women be issued with IDs. The Registration of Persons Act was amended in 1979 to retroactively reflect Moi’s edict. For a small window of time (till 1980 when the age of registration was raised from 16 to 18), Kenyan women over 15 finally had the chance to exist in the eyes of the state.

My grandmother was in her mid-30s when the law was changed and, not having a marriage certificate, took an ID in her husband’s name to signal something. Uniquely, women were working for governments and in the private sector yet because one couldn’t open a bank account without an ID card, their pay would be sent to their fathers’ or husbands’ bank accounts. It’s strange for today’s women to imagine such a situation but it was once par for the course.

Today, because of issues of history and discrimination, some women still can’t get ID cards easily. In a country where most people over 18   years don’t have birth certificates – this will change as they become a requirement for admission to primary school – to continue to be unacknowledged by the state into adulthood is unfathomable. Hard to imagine, but true, that there are women living in the 20th century on this regard.

Less than 40 years ago, anything women would have worked for would have belonged to men in the eyes of the state. I’m curious to know how women who travelled outside the country did it. If you have any idea, please let me know.

Before then, let us not lose sight of the places we have come from and how much more we still need to do to be recognised.

Note: This post is part of #CuminWrites366, my year-long attempt to write a post a day. Find the rest over at readability.com/cuminwrites/

Questions, comments, suggestions or stories about women and the state to share? Send them to cuminwrites@gmail.com

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Telling tales

I am currently reading this book and it’s proving to be an education in telling stories from history with colour and with heart.

I am a student of history and a lover of fiction and I find fictionalised tellings of history fascinating. To conjure a world that happens in a time that the reader may know a little of is an act of courage, and requires dedication that I find amazing.

Tomorrow brings another instalment of my Women in Kenyan History pieces and it puts me in mind of Yvonne Adhiambo Owuor’s Dust, a book that tells the Kenyan story powerfully. Through fiction, we are compelled to confront certain parts of our national character and maybe then to transform them.

Marjorie Oludhe Macgoye passed away about a week ago. That she left behind books that will give future generations a window into what this country once was is a wonderful legacy. It also serves as a reminder of the power of art to raise a mirror in which we can see ourselves as we are.

Here’s to the weavers of yarns, the story-tellers, the historians; keep remembering and reminding.

Note: This post is part of #CuminWrites366, my year-long attempt to write a post a day. Find the rest over at readability.com/cuminwrites/

Questions, comments, suggestions or fictionalised history tales to share? Send them to cuminwrites@gmail.com

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What does your feminism look like?

Mine looks like equal opportunities for girls and boys in education. For girls to know that whatever they want to achieve, the only thing they need is to go for it.

It looks like a good healthcare system. One where women don’t die as they deliver children, where girls and boys can access these services close to them.

It looks like an education system that gives each child a wide range of experiences at no cost. Sports, music, the arts, academics. Because when education is not free, girls may not be chosen for the honour.

It looks like a world where children can play in a public playground. Where we keep these spaces open, available, where private developers don’t claim what should be room to exist away from home; where girls can run and be free.

It means a Basic Income. Because if we all have some money in our pockets every month, we can be able to make certain decisions, certain moves. Because then women – and men – have a chance to take money out of the equation.

It means a variety of things and it’s the reason this post resonated. It’s why I do so much of the things I do: the Ed 10 Consortium, Wajukuu Library, speaking openly about mental health issues, reading policy papers.

This is what my feminism looks like; what does yours look like?

Note: This post is part of #CuminWrites366, my year-long attempt to write a post a day. Find the rest over at readability.com/cuminwrites/

Questions, comments, suggestions or thoughts on feminism? Send them to cuminwrites@gmail.com

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Different strokes

A strange thing happened to me on Tuesday.

A man walked in as I spoke to the doctor and said hello. I said hello back stiffly, to signal my displeasure. He proceeded to turn to the doctor and tell her he was there to sell her some ‘good drugs’. The doctor must have noticed my angry face because she told him to ask for my permission and I declined to give it. He looked shocked; like he would always sell drugs with a patient present, during their consultation.

I have thought about this incident more than once since it happened and especially thought about what it means for health care in a context like the one I was in.

Here I was, in Mathari Hospital, a place whose name is a shorthand for whatever Kenyans perceive madness to be. The sales rep probably imagined that the crazy lady would not be connected enough with reality to object. Well, I was.

There is a notion that poor people want different things when they see a doctor; that they deserve different things. I think that we all deserve the same things: respect, kindness, dignity, honesty, fairness.
I paid, for the consultation with the psychiatrist, KSh 50; same as a person without a college education, a person who is experiencing a psychotic break, a person there for review after being released from a ward.

Today, a friend used a public clinic for the first time. He was astounded by the amount of time he had to wait (4 hours) and by the quality of the medical care (superb) because he had certain assumptions going in.

The way to solve some of the issues that ail our system of health care might then be this: put the educated, the assertive, the privileged in these settings. Task them with interrogating it, testing it, forming it from the inside.

See things change for the better.

Note: This post is part of #CuminWrites366, my year-long attempt to write a post a day. Find the rest over at readability.com/cuminwrites/

Questions, comments, suggestions or healthcare reform ideas? Send them to cuminwrites@gmail.com

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Job hunting

I am on the lookout for a job in one of these fields:

Communications (I have previously worked in advertising. I’m open to going back to it.)
Social science research (I have a BA in Anthropology and SSR excites me).
Education (I have taught and the work of the Ed 10 Consortium keeps me excited, and informed, about the field).

If you know anything, let me know! Thank you.

Do you know of a job? Or looking to hire me? Get in touch: cuminwrites@gmail.com 🙂

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Books and conversations

I’m reading a number of interesting books right now and talking to people who are in some way a huge part of Kenya’s history.

That is to say-everyone.

One of the things that keeps coming up is that it’s dangerous to frame this #WomanxKenyanHistory as a feminist or womanist endeavour. The argument is that these stories are already being told at home, within families.

I think there’s a huge need to document these stories. I know there is. There are only so many people at the forefront of history, so many years they will be alive.

I’ve been swamped at work and would have loved to write a new instalment today but I want to do justice to the tales this nation is full of.

Keep sending me stories, calling, emailing, asking questions to spur lines of enquiry. I appreciate every one of those things.

Here’s to documenting #WomenxKenyanHistory stories.

Note: This post is part of #CuminWrites366, my year-long attempt to write a post a day. Find the rest over at readability.com/cuminwrites/

Questions, comments, suggestions or women’s stories to share? Send them to cuminwrites@gmail.com 🙂

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#Ed10Reads second edition

This post is to remind you to save the date, folks.

Thanks for coming for the inaugural #Ed10Reads meeting at Spire Education last month.

Thanks to His Holiness, we’re pushing this month’s to next week Thursday.  The topic of the next discussion is ‘The theoretical foundation of the 8-4-4 System’. I imagine more than one of us will have a lot of things to say. In keeping with the spirit of #Ed10Reads, we seek to study up and be informed when we get to the conversation. It definitely makes the conversation very enriching!

We’ll probably have it at PAWA254 and we’ll keep you posted if the location changes.

Excited already? Sign up here, study up, tweet using #Ed10Reads and see you on December 3rd!

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Conversations on representation

Lately, I’ve been reading a lot on the need for diversity. Colour, religion (or its absence), gender, orientation, class. If one is on the outside looking in, it feels like all it requires is for someone to hire a number of people who are different, to give them a seat at the table.

I come to this writing as a person who is sometimes an Outsider but also, sometimes in uncomfortable ways, an Insider. It’s the latter that is so hard to question, but also so vital to acknowledge.

Selling my love of podcasts to a friend today, I was assailed by this fact: a lot of the podcasts I listen to are lily white and what diversity they have is in the form of white female presenters.

This is the power of a nudge from a friend: one of those podcasts recently had an episode in which they spoke about actively seeking a diversity of voices among the people you follow on Twitter. The response I had was more “Cool story, bro” than “What does this mean for me?”.

My friend’s challenge was this: do you have African podcasts on your list? As they rejected Africanist podcasts, I felt the gauntlet fall. I had to pause for a moment and confess that no, I don’t. So much for telling our stories. Now the search begins. [ Here’s one for you if you haven’t already subscribed: Beverly Ochieng & I host 2 Girls and a Pod, a literary podcast]

What African podcasts do you recommend?

Note: This post is part of #CuminWrites366, my year-long attempt to write a post a day. Find the rest over at readability.com/cuminwrites/

Questions, comments, suggestions or podcast recommendations? Send them to cuminwrites@gmail.com 🙂