What you need to know:
We live at the far edge of Nairobi’s Westlands
constituency, where, after a few minutes of brisk walking and even
fewer of running, you are in Kiambu, Kenya’s second-most populous county
— and the one that’s gentrifying the fastest.
We are a mixed bunch, with both Kenya’s most
well-heeled and the masses. On voting day, if you drive around, you see
upper-deck people, looking like they are going to watch a tennis match
at Wimbledon – in pastel colours, wide brimmed sun hats, designer
sunglasses and fans. And the masses are plentiful, uncovered, unbowed,
braving the sun, exercising their democratic rights.
All these classes were in Covid-19 lockdown
prison but in recent weeks, as the restrictions are lifted, they are
emerging. You can tell them by their masks. The upper-deck folks have
the pricier facemasks, light and easier to breathe through. They are
properly covered.
The masses have the cheaper ones, heavier, and
a little burdensome for breathing through. Thus, when they are about
working, sweeping the streets, or walking with heavy luggage on their
heads, they wear them on the chin so they can breathe easier during the
exertion. There has been a lot of mocking of people who wear face masks
on the chin or “like a necklace” – there’s an irritating class blindness
to it all.
Now it’s raining again, and unusually chilly
for this time of the year. On a trudge during a drizzly morning, I find
myself in Kiambu. It was also muddy, so you’d expect there wouldn’t be
many people about. But there were. And they were mostly women, likely
coming from or going to a workplace. In muddy gumboots, they walk in
groups of five or six.
There are also the middle-aged and elderly
Kenyan workhorses, the women who carry heavy luggage, slung over their
foreheads and balanced on their backs. Some years ago, with other
blokes, we hiked for days to Limuru, towards Naivasha, and back during a
long holiday. We ran into rain along Limuru Road, and with soaked
backpacks that had become heavy, struggled badly to climb up hills.
At one point, a group of elderly women came
from behind, with mounds of firewood slung across their foreheads, and
breezed past us. We were both humbled and humiliated. Over the days of
the journey, we were to meet dozens more people carrying heavy things
this way. Not one of them was a man. I couldn’t get over it.
Wade through the mud
Days later, at the office at Nation Centre, I
told a good friend about it, and asked: “Do Kenyan men in the villages
really work?”
He laughed, and literally ran away.
The story is different in the city, of course.
The women wade through the mud, but they are not alone. The ‘knock,
knock’ sounds at the construction sites don’t stop. The men are at it.
They talk politics, make dirty jokes and laugh loudly. I see women,
drenched, carrying baskets and bags, branching into the sites. They are
going to sell food to them.
On this day though, the signs of the toll that
Covid-19 has taken on the informal sector and small-scale industries
are evident. I have seen similar scenes in photographs and television
reports out of Nigeria, South Africa and several other countries.
Although it’s drizzling, along the roads there
are groups of young men, some with their tools, sitting, waiting for
someone to drive along and hire them for casual work. This used to
happen pre-coronavirus too; it’s just that now their numbers are several
times larger.
Friends have told me of a similar picture all
around the city. Times are hard; they couldn’t afford to take cover from
the rain. I pass near one of the groups. The rancid odour from their
woollen caps and damp clothes is very strong. I noticed none of them had
capped a cigarette in their hand, to keep warm, as they normally would.
Maybe, they can’t afford the habit anymore.
There is an ambassador up the road in our
neighbourhood. On many days, distressed people (mostly women and
children) gather outside his gate to get small hampers of charity food.
On this day as I return, maybe because of the weather, the place is
silent.
Then there is a guy, in his turban, who packs
quarter loaves of bread in his car, and hands them out as he drives to
the needy who catch his eye. He warms my heart. I missed seeing him.
There is an old woman, she was regular with her exercises, and sometimes
picked up discarded plastic and other annoying litter. I haven’t seen
her in a while. I hope she is well.
And there’s an old man. He walks, stooped.
Sometimes he wears his face mask fully. Sometimes he wears it on his
chin, especially when he’s pensive. Sometimes we wave. Sometimes we
don’t.
He was sitting on a cement edge under a tree,
sheltering from the drizzle. His face mask was on his chin. He didn’t
look up. We didn’t wave. He looked really lonely this time.
Mr Onyango-Obbo is a journalist, writer and curator of the Wall of Great Africans. @cobbo3
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