Discomfort Food

Comfort food? What a gimmick! Which food can be both comfortable and unjust to your health at the same time? Here is an example of dishonest food. The plate looks very nice and well decorated but here in lies a bane of unsustainable culture.

This plate you see is a reflection of our failures as a people more than anything else. Think of all the ingredients used to make this plate, the inputs used to grow those ingredient, the capital intensity of the equipments used, the fossil fuel used, the labor used to harvest all the ingredients, the cooks and servers who prepared the food, the cost of the facility and the health outcomes from those who are affected by each and every step of the process all the way to the consumer.

You will quickly realize that there is nothing comfortable about that plate and much of the conventional food we consume. In any case, we will have to ignore all the suffering we cause to other humans, the animal kingdom and the environment. How then can we derive culinary comfort from such impious acts and still hope to be human ? Ours must be food of discontent.

Homage to a Granary

My people traditionally had "Granaries of Ngai" (Ngai is the high deity)dotting the walking highway between villages so that strangers could travel without fear of hunger. That is the only structure that I am aware of that associated with a deity in its name. Granaries were known to be the private property of a family and was respected as such.

 It was therefore a serious crime for anyone to violate the private space insde the granary. My people knew that your stomach was more private than any anatomy below it. There was no cheating around this matter of life and death. You couldn't have that aspect of life wrong. 

They know that is how life had always been and it is unlikely to change any time soon. You can have women in power or men in power and the primacy of food would still remain. The women folk can identify themselves as feminists or "husbands" of other women, as they in fact did practice,  and the primacy of food would remain.

Then the White colonists arrived along with their religious venom.  The buildings that were built by these people was to extract resources for the primary purpose of spreading the very ideology that was damaging their way of life. In other words the new "granaries" were in actually and literally for a deity. This was a great contrast to the traditional public granary whose main focus was the larger community or humanity. The same colonialists called my people primitive.

Over a hundred year later, some of the former colonists have become "primitive "  in regards to the primacy of the stomach. I wonder if the same court would rule that there are grounds of coveting your neighbors wife in case you had issues obtaining sexual favors for whatever reason.

Now it gives me hope that the church will soon or later go "primitive". For I partly take issues with the conceptualization of religion due to it's impact on our stomachs.

But yet some will point an accusing finger at me and claim that I "fight" the church. My fight is not against anyone but for everyone's stomach. The church is dangerous for it's introduction to a concept that consumes so much of our energies for concepts that are geared towards the only life we know during a time when we are in dire need for any energy we can amass to be used in improving those things that we know will make life.

In so many words, paying homage to the granary is my defense against the pantry. The pantry is a symbol of processed food and the granary a mark of sustainable and sovereign food.

Blackism and BLM

To say Black Lives Matter is essentially a philosophical statement first before it is a political statement.  It could be the natural progression from the shortest two-word  proclaimation of Black Power of Kwame Ture and the other vanguards of African freedom struggle of the 1960s. 

Looking back, the statement was a great place to start. Just consider for a minute how difficult it has been even to find an appropriate name for people of African descent in America. 

 How can you solve a problem that you can't define. Africans are indeed a special breed in the eyes of those in power going back to the founding of this country.  Just about everybody else who migrated to U.S were only one step from being full citizens even though some foreigners received derogatory names like the Japanese and the Jews that reflected the prejudices of time. While those prejudices are still around, none is as prevalent as the prejudice against African Americans. 

The term for Africans in America has moved from Africans captives, then to slaves to negro, Colored then to Black and now to African American. This is a clear indication of the tenuous conditions of African lives in the U.S.. The problem has now metastasized into a variety of problems. 

Two are most obvious and pernicious. 

First, the problem is that Americans created the very people that it now consideres as a problem. It is understandable why America would act in such a manner.  You see, Americans were the first to spot black power. The only difference is that they didn't shout or march. 

They took it and converted it into wealth and comfort for themselves. That means that for America to openly believe in Black power in its entirety, they would have to view a large part of their wealth as Black. I I don't need to elaborate why such thinking would be suicide for White America. By the way, this is a great place to remind you that Africans in America is such a problem that their citizenship is the only one that conditional. African Americans are free as long as they are not guilty of a crime.  That is a crime that compounded the original crime. The first crime was to enslave the Africans and them criminalize them after exposing them to severe crime at yout.

Secondly, the African who is in transition and in an extremely distabilized condition only knows black power by proxy. Where is the example of what an African is or was. How erroneous can we be to think that we are such special people, blessed and elect of the most high, after all the suffering we have experienced at the hands of white and arab terror and still be "normal"? That's a cardinal crime. Soldiers go to war nowadays for a few years and have to be treated for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. Yet slavery, colonialism and postcolonial stresses are somehow lesser crimes.

It's for this reason I think that Black Lives Matter has to be, by necessity, a philosophical statement.  That would deal with all the exegesis and veracity of what being a captive, slave, negro and so. Only by understanding the complexity of the problem philosophically can we then proceed to deal with necessary political ramification of Black Lives Matter.  

Black Lives Matter as a slogan of protest is more or less a joke. It ignores the fact that making Black lives into something that matter is antithetical to white domination.  As long as the structures of white domination remain intact,  the stars can turn black in support of the Black cause but nothing will change. 

Black lives matter stopped being a truism so that White lives could matter. Do you then think we can march and protest whites lives out of their dominant position? Did white people themselves march their way into power or rather marched around the proverbial wall of Jerico until they found themselves in position of power? History answers that question very clearly. Black people are the poster book example of the cost of White power.

In the exploitation of Africans, three systems had to be designed. The first to break the African system. The second system was to imbue the African with a slave consciousness in order to be a useful tool for creating white power. Thirdly,  a system to keep him distracted and therefore unable to liberate himself from being a tool for the creation of white power.

It's easy to purge those things instituted in the Africans to allow for his and her exploitation. All those things promoted as solutions by those in power can't be useful in our liberation. We can't be free in Jesus, Muhammad or any the other foreign religions. We have to exist outside all those boundary set by the enslavers. If those religions had the power to liberate us and maintain our African systems, the enslavers would have never allowed such religions amongst slaved ancestors.  I have first hand how religion and all other systems of education and institutions of socialization obstruct the creation of African systems.

Don't ask me how I know or why I make such a big deal out of it. The British made my people "Subjects of the queen". Wouldn't it make sense to make our selves the "subject" of Black Lives Matters? 

Let all manner of political science,  philosophy,  rhetoric,  logic, geometry and any other subject make itself amenable as tool to solve this persistent dilema of African suffering and dehumanization.

Edible Poetry

I recently posted a story of my first experience of my taste buds first experience of America. To my big surprise, many people shared their feedback. I really shouldn’t have been that surprised by again I was. The biggest surprise of all was that of Carol Akui, a poet I greatly respect. She shared the following poem about my work. It was a pleasant surprise on two accounts.

while I am not well known to the poet, she seemed to describe me better than my own sibling might have done. That is the power of the artist, one who is able to capture the essence of life and display it to us that which exists but is hidden from us by our own inability to perceive it. The artist then becomes almost like a 6th sense or at least an enhancer of the senses that already exist. Along with joy, love, kindness, courage and memory, art makes life, well, life. Along with art, the previous acts accentuate life and make it worth living.

Secondly, I am a lover of poetry and have had many discussions about all types of aspects of poetry. Whenever I travel, I have a bit of searching out for bookstores, mostly local and those that carry used books, and spend some time browsing books, hoping to learn about an author or poet I might not have known. For that reason, whenever I remember my travels, I can’t help but have big sections of those memories tied to poets, authors. In my younger days musicians and visuals artists had equal pull but as I age, time becomes more precious and I tend towards poets and authors.

Since Akui lives in New Zealand, I hope to visit the country one day and walk into a book store only to find a book that knows me. Especially a poem that know about me through my taste buds.

The poem captures all that I think makes life what it is and also why some work tirelessly to preserve the best aspect of it and to shout down those angels of the gloom that delight it making those stars that makes life bright ever dimmer.

EATS WITH HIS MIND 

He came, he saw, he conquered

Yes, that son of the soil, grounded

By his tongue, eats with his mind

He writes his story on his palate

His words loud, clear & audible in a plate

Clearly owning it, cooks it in true identity pot 

His narrative well done in nonconformity

Discarding the stale ingredients of inferiority

And bland seasoning of stereotyped pity 

In the new world, they wanted the lion recipes 

Expected juicy jungle cooking tips 

But this person of the house, brought his wits

They didn't know that lions live in his mouth

Roaming wild and free in his mind

When the pride roars, lions echo his intellect

They command culinary respect 

They make a cultural statement

In the new world, he's a proud African giant

A well nourished son of the soil 

In his core essence, he's in touch with his soul

Channeling the greats of the African soil

©️ C Akui 2020/09/4

#Carolsinsights

#ThatAfricanGirlPoetry

Indigenous Taste Buds

On September 4th, 1989, I landed at LaGuardia Airport in Queens New York at around 4.35 pm.

 My first flight in my 20 years had taken me almost a whole day to fly from Nairobi, through Frankfurt,  Germany, then New York and finally to the Southern city of Memphis, TN as the final destination. From Memphis,  two students  picked me up and we drove for about 2 hours to a small white  rural town of McKenzie. The only thing of consequence in the old town was Bethel College. Bethel college would be my first address away from home for a long period of 4 months hence. It was my inauguration to homelessness of both taste and soul.

How a village lad found himself in a rural college town that looked like a monastery is a story for another day. 

More important was how I showed up, what I saw and what I did.

I am getting ahead of myself.

The two young fellows who picked me up from the airport were like characters in a play. One was quite gigantic and the other quite thin and tall. The tall lanky youth took the first turn driving the huge white Cadillac. It was around 9 am when we left the airport headed to campus. 

 As a welcome to America, they pulled into the first gas station we saw and asked me if wanted a coke and a hot dog.  I passed on the hot dog but yielded on the coke. What I got was beyond shocking.  The short chubby guy walked inside the store and  came back with two hot dogs and three huge cups that would have been enough to be used as hard hats on a construction site.

 I took sip hoping to get the usual coke buzz from the Kenyan version of the evil drink. I was confused. Did I just get a serving of mouthwash? Well, I am practicing some kind of imaginary etiquette here. In my village that I had just left slightly over a day before,  i am not that dull in creativity but the content in my mouth tasted like the pee of the village donkey. Not that I had tasted it while in the village , but I had smelled it many a times as it strained to carry the heavy load to and from the nearby market. I was now even more confused for a split of a second. i knew white folks had done a lot of things but inventing the taste of my village donkey’s pee was giving them a bit too much credit. But even if they could do that, you know you can never tell for sure with an empire, how could one serve it with such a straight face? I swished the coke in my mouth in the version of a mouth and without knowing I opened the door and spewed out the content from my mouth.

For one flitting second, I received 9 different messages to the auditory part of my brain. The voice of the evil taste was somewhat discernible. So my first sense was that those guys were racist. I had ordered a coke and they brought me tobacco juice or mouth wash.

Before I could even process that idea, another idea suggested that the guys were honest, they were postulating before my taste buds". That seemed to make sense. Who eats a dog, hot or cold anyhow? How odd would it be to eat a hot dog with a cold coke? I wondered.

 The other seven sounds were too intense for my insular cortex. I would later find it odd that Americans love dogs more than coke and pies. How someone could have gotten away with food that even insinuated that one was eating a dog is beyond me. But again, in the age of Taste, food conquers all.

Not to be outdone, the voice of Taste prevailed. It clouded the other voices slightly. I could hear Reason and Taste nudging me. They exulted themselves above my doubt and fears. I could clearly sense the inferior path I was now sliding towards. I was judging others without evidence. It's called prejudice. I preemptively decided not to strike the first blow. That wasn't what had brought me to America. So I obliged. No judging their souls for the awful taste was truly refreshing. 

 The driver had taken a few minutes to gobble down the , so we were still in the parking lot.  I could tell that the pair wasn't amused.  I couldn't tell for sure if it had to do with my spewing the disgusting content on the parking space or my wasteful and ungrateful behavior. But the son of the soil wasn't having it. 

I politely asked if the drink was flat. They both had not had a chance to try theirs as they were eating. They each tested their own drink in unison and then gazed at each other. They shuddered.  It was clear that they found nothing wrong with the drink. 

I explained that the test was rather strange and that I wouldn't drink it.

The act sparked a conversation about the culinary traditions of the two countries represented. Unlike the usual questions about Africans running from lions in their lightly clad thin bodies, my first debate was about food and my own running away from a fake taste. I had reversed the bigoted narrative. 

The rest of the evening was just as eventful. It is as though I was getting a preview of what laid ahead in the diaspora.  

In any case, as I look back to where my journey in the new world started, I can say that my love of food in all its vicissitudes has been the one consistent thing. If I had a choice of one place to be today, I would choose New York. I would walk over to where Lady Liberty majestically seats and whisper in her ear. " not all who show up on this shores are swine door or huddled masses yearning to be free, some are rich in taste bugs that liberated appetites that are not easily conquered.  

In the spirit of Fella Kuti, Dhambozi Marechera, Thomas Payne and Voltire, I wittingly label this is the age of Taste. No more things falling apart or  house of hunger.

Our taste buds  are fast becoming our new shackles.  I choose to make my taste buds my "Grand African Collossus."

In the end, may be, just maybe this "emanciated" kenyan might free the taste buds of a few souls living under the gaze of the empire. If all else fails, I will save my own.

Coronavirus, Food and Historical Injustices.

I have heard a lot of people rebuking those who are going to the store and buying everything and leaving little for others. I posted here about the dangers of the widening gap between the have and the have nots. The honest truth is that we did not get here in a day or in the blink of the eye. It therefore sounds logical to argue that the best time to argue about the growing income gap is not now or yesterday.

Gentrification, racism, classism and other systemic problems that discourage sustainability, social responsibility and social equity have been getting out of hand as those in authorities, voters and many with the power to make a difference have taken a shortcut and therefore shortchanged the struggle for a more equitable society. I am reminded about the tax that Franklin Delano Roosevelt proposed a 100% income for any income above $25,000 back in 1952. Congress was up in arms and they bitterly opposed this otherwise stupendous proposal.

A compromise was reached and 91% and 92% tax rate was applied for the next 11 years. The purpose of the income was obviously and explicitly aimed at equity and not revenue. F.D.R would turn out to be the longest serving president and ruled over a era with the closest income gap in the U.S by holding office between 1933 to 1945. That era turned to be one of the most egalitarian periods in American history. Had the issue of racism, sexism and the military industrial complex been a part of the deal, things today would have been very different.

Those in congress knew that they had to do something about that and one of the things they did following his death, was to reduce the term limit. Racism still kept a lot of African descent locked out of the major government programs but that is a story for another day.

Successive administrations have pushed the neoliberal agenda that prioritized corporate profit as a government policy while neglecting the struggling individuals or rather victimizing them as policy. Ronald Regan for example took office in 1981 when the national debt of the country was 900 billion since the founding of the U.S but the debt had risen to 2.6 trillion dollars by the time he left office in January of 1989. Yet many speak about Republicans as the party of small government.

It is therefore hypocritical for those who have been supportive of the above administrations to now expect those who have profited from neoliberal policies to offer pittance to the victims of the system. Things are not the way they are because of an accident, but by deliberate design. There is absolutely nothing wrong with someone being a conservative or whatever else one chooses to be, but at least own up to the consequences of the choices that you make. When things break down, admit that choice has consequences. The consequences of the systemic problems are the cause of the horde buying. The system is mainly working for a tiny minority. The larger part of the country is struggling. That is one way not to build a country.

We are either for a more progressive policy that lifts the citizens and offers an social network for all citizens. As it is, the biggest beneficiaries in this society today are the super rich.

To not buy everything in stores when you have most of the money does not necessarily mean that the struggling masses will be able to buy what is left. This has serious health consequences to a country as hunger is likely to influence the rates of infections as well as the ability to overcome the Coronavirus. Food is at the heart of everything. There is no shortcut to healthy organic and local food. George McGovern was one of the most infamous agricultural secretaries, having said that small farmers should either get big or get out. Now we can reframe those words and redeem the negative spirit in which they were uttered by changing them to get healthy food or get taken out.

159 On My Mind

Congratulations to Eliud Kipchoge and all his family, community members, his manager and his running team. Thanks to his chef and farmers who fueled the body that ran in record time.


Kipchoge becomes the icing of the cake of the Kenyan story. No politician should be allowed anywhere near the facility as they are the exact opposite of the the spirit that Eliud Kipchoge has displayed.


Kipchoge has demonstrated not only what hard work can achieve but more importantly what recognizing talent can mean. Corruption is paying those without talent while killing those with talent. Those involved in global neoliberal politics should be allowed but should be made to walk backwards and face away from the stage as a symbol of what damage exploitation, racism, bigotry and austerity causes to mankind.


It is a great reminder of the millions of talents we destroy every year because of selfish interests and cowardice amongst the populace. Thanks also for the Blackness of the skin that continues to counter the racist narrative of Africans and indigenous people as inferior and beggars of the planet. This is a sweet victory for all men and women of good will.


Yet, I can't miss the opportunity to point out the irony of the fact that the record had to be broken outside Kenya. Why do we as Africans produce the best only to it to be recognized abroad? At a time when another economic recession is on the horizon, Kenya would have benefited tremendously from hosting the event in Kipchoge's hometown. Almost all the people in business could have been uplifted from poverty overnight by hosting those many people.

I can imagine the KipBNB's( formerly Airbnb) bill for the event, the boda boda bill and the food. What I would have been most excited about would have been the residual income to the community from the annual races commemorating today's historical event. It could have saved the country a lot of foreign currency from many who had to fly from Kenya, even if a good chunk of the money would have been donated to Kenya churches tomorrow. Wooie ' I wonder how many fundraisers were planned for tomorrow?

O Wa Gatùù

                         

 

 

Like jokes, there are certain phrases that are common among cultures that are hard to translate and even in those cases where some of those phrases lend themselves quite amenable to simple translation, the meaning of the phrases are not as easily translated.  This is not a sign of a new epiphany but I have to say right from the beginning that even I did not realize just how deep some phrases are when viewed in a deeper context. If fact, the underlying theme of my essay being just have to do m with more than a deeper context, but only that it is cloaked in a more digestible idea of the phrase above. I have in mind a very expansive idea of what it means to be an African-born Southerner living in this times. I have always struggled with what my responsibility is/should be. I find it hard to just create context of myself relative to all other Africans who have traversed the vast American South, both past and present. Having a son in the South and knowing the fractured history of race relations in this region makes me act with a lot of trepidation.  That trepidation is mostly for others. I try to imagine the fear and dread that has been experienced by many Africans in this corner of the the subcontinent. I can’t fail to note that many were brought to this shores amid great and traumatic violence, only to be immersed in even greater violence. That part of the story in partly recorded and many historians have done a great job in their attempt to capture a picture, however faint, of the ordeal. However, there is a part of the violence that only the first African-born Africans were aware of. That violence is the the bitterness of the memory of Africaness and of home.

 

As such, I tend to think that we can divide all the Blacks in this country into two basic groups: those with a memory of home and those without. While both groups can conceptually understand their oppressive conditions, only one has a context of how to what extent the group has been damaged by the experience. In other words, the memory of home forms a sort of starting point, or base line. This memory is a double-edged sword, it helps one stay grounded, but it can also be the source of a lot of pain as one compares the wretched condition to those of home, family and community. I just happen to be one Africans with both a home-consciousness  and the experience of away-from-home-African-Southerner. That I even consider myself a Southerner is not a easy admission to make. I know that any of my American-born children will never truly experience the feeling of home that I once experienced before coming to the South. This is no trivial matter. What it means to be an African in South should be a conversation that all people of color in should have with and among themselves. Failure to do so is likely to have some serious ramifications.

When I was in undergraduate, I received a scholarship named in the honor of W.E.B Dubois. While I was happy to get any scholarship, the kind of scholarship I received was probably more important then the scholarship itself, at least in terms of the impact it had in my life e. Without too much prompting by my professors, I found my self dealing with a great curiosity about the kind of person Dubois was. What started as a simple curiosity to learn about someone who seemed like an important person for a freshman to know just because, ended up becoming the guiding light and a fire rod that has light both my path and sparked my brain. I find myself dealing with a lot of the questions that Dubois dealt with. It should obviously go without saying that my family’s history and my experience in Kenya contributed a great deal in the budding interest in the intellectual pursuit as laid out by Dubois.

In that light, I started seeing a lot of contradictions among Africans in the South. Southern Blacks were proving to be just as much of a lesson for me as the books I was reading. I quickly understood that some of the behaviors I was observing among Africans in the South predicted that behaviors that Africans in Africa were moving towards. This was before the age of widespread internet use and therefore I did not have a lot of access to information that would have have deepened my understanding of this crucial topic. At the same time, I was still young and much of what I can see now was still beyond my reach even by a far shot. But that was then. With age, new levels of understanding open up and the various reading one may have engaged in begin to bear fruit. So when I was talking to Nducu Wa Ngugi, the son of the legendary Kenyan writer, Ngugi wa Thiong’o, I picked on a very nuanced phrase that symbolized home-consciousness.  Nducu and I are great friends and we have a great time talking about all matters African whenever we meet up. Being a writer and as son of writer, we talk into the wee hours of the night whenever we happen to be together. He really gets my mind thinking as he is such a great story teller. But yesterday, he got me thinking about how our conversation still carries oblique signs of a people whose food is oppressed. No better phrase captures that fact than the phrase ‘o wa gatùù”. Nducu was alluding to the fact that food is very central to all the things we do. He continued to recount that whenever he finishes writing at the end of the day, the first thing he wonders if what can I get to eat. After various interesting examples of thing that people do and then proceed to get a bit to eat. This got me thinking about the differences between how my grandfather welcomed his guests to our homestead during his times and how Nducu and I are likely to welcome our friends or even offer to treat them to launch.

I have to first tell you about Kamakia,  my grandfather. I have written a bit about him previously but not enough. My paternal grandfather had three wives. Two of them lived in the same compound and one lived about 30 minutes away from our homestead. Kamakia was quite wealthy during his time. The number of wives that one had during those days was certainly a mark of how wealthy one was. He owned may goats and cows. While this was still during the time of British occupation,  the family lived quite comfortably during the early years of my father’s youth. What was amazing was that my grandfather has a piece of land that was tendered to by his wives. He also had goats in his hut that were tendered to by the young boys in the family. The food that come from my grandfather’s plot was his only. Nobody else could walk to his plot and pick anything to eat without his permission. In the evening, he would be in his own hut with all the boys of the homestead telling them stories. There was always a fire in the hut to keep the place warm. The wives would be in their own huts with the girls who were big enough to help their mothers with the cooking. The younger girl would be in their grandmothers hut enjoying stories, songs and family history. What struck me in learning about my grand father is that from time to time, he will order on of the young boys to bring some green bananas or sweet potatoes to roast for snacks as they waited for dinner. The snacks would be roasted at the fireplace in Kamakia’s hut.  During those days, the women and their husbands did not share huts, each had his or her hut. Each was distinctly designed for the different sexes and was build to meet the needs and functions that each sex had to attend to.

The women’s hut was the most complex of all the huts in a compound. It had a storage sections, that was the equivalent of a pantry, it had sleeping quarters for the young girls, a section for cooking, an areas to store cooked food and her own sleeping quarters. She also had her own goats in the same house. The mans hut was much simpler. It was quite open and did not have many sections. The one thing that conspicuous in a man’s hut was a storage for his honey, meat and tobacco snuff. The meat, known as rukuri, was usually preserved in honey and then dried. It was very sweet and a great treat. Only great friends would be offered this meat. Men typically shared tobacco with their general friends and age mates. During special occasions, the women would brew sugarcane bear and the husband and his friends would be hosted in the house of the wife who prepared the brew. The type of brew was known as Muratina, muratina being a loafer-like plant that was used as catalyst. The english name for the plant is African Sausage tree. The brew was quite time consuming. There were areas where the community would construct a community sugarcane press to squeeze the juice from sugarcane and then honey would be added and the mix would be placed by the fireside. After a few days, the brew would be ready and word would go around to the community elders that Kamakia for example was hosting his friends for a night of conversation, known as ndeereti in local language. The enders would come and to the Kamakia’s homestead and head straight to the hut of the wife who had done the brewing. They would all seat around and the host Kamakia would tell his friends why he had decided to brew Muratina. This was customary because people did not always brew for the sake of it. The was always a reason behind a brewing session. Sometimes the elder may brew Muratina because he had an important message to pass to the other elders. One such important message would be the announcement of marriage in the family.  Other reasons would be honoring a friend. There less desirable reason but similarly fun brewing session for one done as a result of a fine by the council of elders. If one elder or his family broke the law, one of the fines could include brewing Muratina for the elders.

Those drinking session were like theatre to an anthropologist. But to a chef, they were something far greater. The one observation about this sessions was that the person in whose honor the Muratina was brewed was the one who would do the honors, no pun intended.  What was amazing is that all the elders would drink from a single horn. The horn of the cow was just no ordinary horn. It among the most precious items that an elder would have beyond his staff, his sword and his seat. This horn was likely to have some decorative marks. I have seen with three carved circles at the tip to represent the highest level of authority among the council of elders. Every circle represented a goat paid a requsit fee to be admitted in the various levels of authority among the council of elder.

Every elder would take a sip of the brew and then pass it to the next elder. By using one horn, the drinking would take a very long time before all the brew was gone. The whole process still had an aspect of theatre even to an anthropologist. All the various characters would be be played on as though on a collicium. One could very clearly learn the existing relationships among the elders. The truth of the matter is that not all elders were created equal and neither all of them were welcome in such groups. I remember tales of elders who were so stingy that they hardly invited elders to “night in” at his homestead but were quite regular in attending the parties at other peoples homes. One such elder might be “dissed” by being skipped as the horn was going around. Such an act was a form of high disrespect. Such an elder would be so furious that he would end up leaving, also he intended result anyway. But the disgraced and humiliated elder would walk out forlorn,  knowing that he was not welcome among other elders. These sessions would last quite a while. There would be many discussions but more on the lighter side. This was a true celebration for the elders. In the end, the elders would leave and walk home at night. It was not unusual for them to sing out loud as they walked home. All the neighbors would know for sure that so and so had been having a good time. The elders would also use the session to brag about whatever accompaniments each was proud of. As they were joking around, one would for example swear with his dad or a famous member of the family such as a warrior or his clan. These were surely fun sessions. It was also a time to let loose. Besides those who may have been deemed to be unfit for the gathering, those in the group could raise sensitive topics without sounding so serious. This often took the form of riddle or insinuations. The conversations were almost like a form of art. The elders would talk in riddles and symbolism. This was true joy and true freedom. I way for elders to be children all over again.

The stories from my father about those days left deep inscriptions in my memory. I could just imagine the kind of consciousness that it had taken over thousands of years to fine-tune such well orchestrated gathering. With so much order, even in what others would view as chaos. This is why Dubois was such a fresh read for me. I could relate to his central message. That the oppressed have a sense that those in power do not have. They live life with a great sensitivity to their environment. They are truly aware of the power imbalance and how the power in the hands of others shapes them. Such is the connection that Nducu and I have. When I visit him in New York, I feel a great sense of joy and intellectual or cultural union that I rarely feel in this country. This kind of jovial feeling is rarely possible with a White person. I am acutely aware of the fact that however much they my try to understand the feeling of being Black in a country deeply stained by system racism.

But here is a way of trying to demonstrate it. Whenever anybody would visit my grandfather’s homestead, his first words after the greetings was to call out to one of his wife’s to make something nice for the guest. In fact, he would rarely use words such as could you please feed or give so and so something to eat. Rather, there was a special word for indulging the guest. He would most likely use the word “ Kugagura” It struck me as strange that that word is never used in any other context. I only used to hear it used relative to kindred soul. I can almost bet that the word was used relative to a guest or whenever my parents were quite happy. Not that there was a rule against using the word, but it just felt awkward is used out of context.  We just can’t avoid talking about context. But that was then. What about now.

I still make the same observation whenever I go back to Kenya, I hear family and friends ask each other “ could we find somewhere we can get something tiny to eat?” Here we go again, meaning lost in the translation. The way they say it sounds like the perfect words that indicate how much our food as people of African descent is still oppressed. The words are quite demeaning if you think deeper about them. For Nducu, for example, being the friend and comrade in social justice, the use of the words “o wa gatùù” reduces both our friendship and our status to that of serfs or slaves. Those very words mean something like infinitesimal. The lowest of the lowest that you can get to eat. How did a people so proud, so friendly, such masters of hospitality, wonderful farmers and great master of family craft get this low?. They while not exactly egalitarian, women could still marry other women in our culture. The arrangement was not sexual and the women who did the marrying would assume the role of a man. I guess “ me too “ would not have worked in their case. The big difference wit the food they consumed was food that it  was grown by the family and no slaves or serfs grew the food. It was therefore local, organic and afro futuristic. It was based on justice, love and community. Is it any wonder that these people were neither obese nor plagued by lifestyle diseases? Yet the process of exploitation in this racist world has in equal measure damaged the consciousness of the African to the point where the highest and finest etiquette of sharing food with family and friends is reduced to an exercise that reminds us that we are eating our own oppression. Failure to recognize this simple fact means that we as people of African descent may be blind to our reality. The result is a consciousness that is false and out of sink. That consciousness should in fact be labeled “O wa Gatùù”. It will symbolize the beginning of the crime against our consciousness. Depending of where you stand, it could also symbolize the beginning of the spirit of blind exploitation of man by man. Many other groups have marked such period of horrors by creating a name for the day of infamy. The Palestinians for example have a day they call All Nakba or the day of Catastrophe.

Among my ethnic group, “o  wa Gatuu” is the most feeding reminder as to why we are still having a problem being ourselves or being human and home.  If we “Kugagura” our consciousness, we just maybe whole again without touching any hem of a garment of the capitalist Moloch that benefit from our toil and suffering. If we do, we may just offer the one salvation that this country deeply needs but does not seem conscious about how our salvation is intertwined. Whenever someone asks me what they need to eat in order that they may lose weight or heal from an ailment. I am deeply disappointed. We don’t suffer or gain weight because we don’t organic food or healthy food, but because we are dishonest and oppressed. Even those perpetrating the oppression are equally oppressed. The very fact that they rely on oppressing others to feel exceptional is a sign of savagery. Yet the very eating in a civil way may be the first step towards taking a deeper look at ourselves and hopefully waking up otherwise the slumber will destroy this country, especially the South.