An old structure that was previously used as an administrative office in the pre colonial era in Vanga town, near the border of Kenya and Tanzania.
It's a sunny Tuesday morning, at 9.30 am and Feruz Mohammed just picked up a visitor from the bus stop in Vanga, about 17km from the
Kenya/Tanzania border post in Lunga Lunga.The visitor is new in town. And she may just spend a night or two.
Feruz walks her along a fairly narrow street on cabro blocks.
There is not much activity on the streets. Only a one-storey building can be
noticed at the entrance of the town. It belongs to the Member of County
Assembly for Vanga ward.
“Umetuletea mgeni?” (You’ve brought us a visitor?)
said one old man on the veranda of the old rusty iron sheet shops.
"Our town is small. Everyone knows the other. It's no
surprise that they already know you are a visitor," Feruz, who was born
and bred in the area said.
Kenya's last town
Vanga is a small town with a population of about 10,000 people. It
is located at the farthest end of Southeast Kenya. It is known as Kenya's last
town since the only place it neighbours is Tanzania and the Indian Ocean.
Here, the majority of the residents except for a few
businesspeople, are Muslim. This has made the small town in a fishing port
stick to its tradition amidst a modern world where there is no church, bar,
guest houses or lodging.
There are no supermarkets, shopping malls, banks or taxis as seen
in most Kenyan towns.
A close source said that most of the fishermen were not used to
the saving culture and hence the absence of a bank.
Many believed in fetching fish from the sea, hence not worried
about tomorrow.
'Brother's keeper'
He said the fact that everyone knew each other, even without
streetlights in the seven streets available, the security of the area was still
tight since everyone is their 'brother's keeper'. Feruz further explained that
there were only five known thieves in the town who because of drug abuse, got
into crime.
"Our people are deeply rooted in religion and culture. It is
believed that lodgings promote promiscuity. That is why there isn't one. The
majority are also Muslim and that explains the absence of a church here,"
he said.
Vanga is a strategic town, other than being Kenya's last village,
it is also a fishing port where fishermen dock tens of their boats.
Historical significance
Feruz said the town is of rich historical significance, as it
played host to monuments and historical buildings used during World War II.
By evening, things are much slower in Vanga. A walk along the
narrow streets meets one’s eyes with some women seated out on verandas. Some
are selling Swahili snacks while others are packing the sardines that had been
drying up during the day into baskets. But the evening is also the most
dreading time for any visitor.
First, the last of the countable 14-seater public vehicles out of
the town leave by 6.30 pm. This means if a visitor wants to leave the town,
they may have to take a motorbike to Lunga Lunga town 20km away or choose to
start the hustle of finding a place to sleep.
However, one family decided to use the extra room in their houses
to host only specific visitors that were either in the town to research
environmental issues, or a guest well known by a resident that lives in the
town.
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