By Selemani Shekonga,The Citizen Reporter
In Summary
- At that tender age Jerry believed that East Africa was an open vast field of opportunities. He was one of the few Tanzanians who knew he would make it in countries like Kenya, where aggressiveness and competitiveness is the order of the day. He had the East African dream and dared put it into action.
Dar es Salaam. Jerry Mruma
dreamt big. At 23, and still a university student, he was the founder
and CEO of Kilimo Yetu – an agri-business company whose performance set
to make him one of East Africa’s fastest growing millionaires.
At that tender age Jerry believed that East Africa
was an open vast field of opportunities. He was one of the few
Tanzanians who knew he would make it in countries like Kenya, where
aggressiveness and competitiveness is the order of the day. He had the
East African dream and dared put it into action.
His target, he had vowed, was to make the Forbes’
list of billionaires by the time he celebrated his 28th birthday. But
that big dream would now not be for Jerry’s distraught parents and
friends bid him farewell yesterday on the last day of his earthly
journey.
Jerry’s father Mr Isaack Mruma said he was aware
that his son had formed a company and will do everything in his power to
ensure that the company was well managed. “I will take over the company
and it will be family-led. We will make sure our son’s dream lives on,”
Mr Mruma told The Citizen after the burial of his son at the Kinondoni cemetery in the city.
The young and ambitious Jerry was an MBA student
at the United States International University (Usiu) in Nairobi. He had
taken his undergraduate studies at the same university and graduated
with honours. Jerry’s life was cruelly cut short last week in
crime-prone Nairobi where he studied and was running his barely one year
old company that was making the headlines on Television, radio and
newspapers. His killing by unknown people, on Friday, after attending a
night function for Tanzanian nationals in Kenya is a subject of police
inquiry, but one which has galvanized East Africans to mourn the passing
of a brilliant mind
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