Last year, Kenya hosted President Obama, Pope Francis and the
World Trade Organisation (WTO) in a manner that showed the world what it
can do when it wants.
However, gloating over these
successes can give the country an exaggerated sense of achievement and
be used to conceal the obvious cracks that need urgent attention if
Kenya is to soon develop into a middle income country.
Selective management of once off events should never be mistaken for good governance.
Would you rather Kenya was known as a global event’s organiser or a country of justice, freedom and equality?
Why can the country shine before a global audience but fail to even collect its garbage or repair potholes on a regular basis?
In other words, why can the country perform so brilliantly when it chooses but fail to make good choices a daily habit?
Is this tendency of pulling out all the stops for the visitor while neglecting the fellow Kenyan a legacy of colonialism?
Then
again, the esteemed visitors didn’t just come because they like the
country, its people and climate or to praise their hosts.
They
came bearing challenging messages for the political and religious
establishment on the triple vices of endemic corruption, ethnicity and
poverty.
But did Mr Obama or Pope Francis make any real impact on the nation beyond the feel-good factor?
Are
politicians and religious leaders really convinced of the urgency to
address these evils or are both sectors living comfortably in
partnership?
CONSIDER THE POOR
The Catholic Bishops have promised a ‘comprehensive pastoral response’ to the Papal visit but perhaps the Pope was demanding something more that would impact on the whole of society and not just confine itself to the Catholic faithful.
The Catholic Bishops have promised a ‘comprehensive pastoral response’ to the Papal visit but perhaps the Pope was demanding something more that would impact on the whole of society and not just confine itself to the Catholic faithful.
There has been a noticeable silence
from the church on corruption yet Francis’ views on land grabbing,
evictions and poverty in Kangemi are consistent with his belief that
slum dwellers are treated as ‘half or non citizens’, urban remnants of a
society that has globalised indifference.
Any
response to Francis challenges must be radical, new and subversive,
viewing life from the perspective of the poor, not from the viewpoint of
the powerful, elites or media.
In the words of
liberation theologians, there is no salvation outside the poor, and the
poor are a crucified people who can easily identify with the child Jesus
born in a stinking stable in Bethlehem.
That is not
to deny progress made in the country but there is an urgent need to
reverse history and to place the needs of the poor as the starting point
for any meaningful development.
The hierarchy should
not be seen then to be identified with either Cord or Jubilee but must
take the side of the poor, dispossessed, unemployed and sick.
That is what prophetic leadership requires.
Will it happen? Bishops are rarely appointed because of their boldness, courage or defence of the poor.
The first requirement is usually a safe pair of hands.
Yet,
recall that Oscar Romero of El Salvador was about as conservative
choice as one could imagine, but circumstances made him a hero and
martyr.
Francis, too, had a Damascus moment that propelled him to greatness and service. There is still hope.
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