August
5, 2017
[out of Evanston, Illinois, USA]
Nancy
Schultz has most generously afforded me a bit of space in her current issue of
The DAR Bugle to revive my column, ‘Margaretta on the Move’.
The occasion
of her offer was our meeting at the Evanston home of the 19th century feminist
reformer and DAR member Frances Willard. Nancy had organized an historic event
in early August which the DAR claimed Willard’s identity as being not only a
great woman leader who helped pave the way for women’s suffrage among many
other progressive initiatives, but also being a committed DAR.
By
raising funds to renovate Willard’s Evanston home (which is now a national
museum) as well as placing a marker at her grave at the Rosehill Cemetery in
Chicago, Nancy did something important not only for the Fort Dearborn Chapter
but for all women. That’s because Willard had been, like so many great women,
almost forgotten by history and the DAR and Nancy’s initiative is serving to
reverse that trend.
I was
so impressed with Nancy’s program and also with my own discovery of what a
brilliant woman activist Frances Willard had been, that I couldn’t turn Nancy down when she
suggested I fill my fellow Fort Dearborn DAR women in on my recent globe-trotting.
My
current home base is still Nairobi, Kenya where I work for the largest
English-language multimedia house known as the Nation Media Group. I write
regularly in ‘Business Daily’ (Kenya’s equivalent of Financial Times) but my
focus is not economics; it’s on the arts. I have several weekly columns in
which I write about mainly the visual and performing arts. It’s my privilege to
do so since there is a lot happening, and a great deal of creative energy is outpouring
in both of these fields.
I write
stories and also take the photos for them, so I am technically a
photojournalist although I do not consider myself a professional. I do earn a
bit of cash (not much) in the process, but it is sufficient to inspire me to
stick there for the time being. Plus I have free passage to all the theatre and
dance performances (many of which feature international artists) as well as to
all the exhibitions and book launches, etc. Plus I thrive on deadlines, so I am
kept busy working seven days a week, both day and night.
The
other big bonus to my job is that I often get to go places where the expenses
including transport are covered. Thus, I have been to the Kenya coast several
times, especially to the picturesque town of Lamu, where motor vehicles are not
allowed on the roads. I have attended several so-called ‘Painters Festivals’,
organized by a wonderful German retired restaurant owner from Hamburg who fell
in love with Lamu island, especially the village of Shela. Most of the artists
are European, but increasingly Kenyan artists have also been invited. I confess
I did a bit of advocacy work to see that the Kenyans also had the opportunity
to spend three weeks with other artists painting picturesque sites all around
the island.
But
then, in addition to traveling to galleries located all over the city and the
outskirts of Nairobi and to theatres situated mostly in the city center, I have
spent a fair amount of time visiting my son who stays currently with his wife
and two precious little girls in Italy.
Mike,
who is a Major in the US Army, is based in Vicenza, not far from Venice. I have
been blessed to have a wonderful daughter in law who is a marvelous trip
organizer. So with them, I have visited Florence, Rome, Pisa, Venice, and all
parts in between. All that is said about the breathtaking beauty of Italy is
true, and I am so grateful to have a family happy to listen to my wish above
all to visit Florence and the Uffizi Museum.
Never
have we had enough time in any of these places, but I am delighted to have had
those few days with family and with fellow travelers. What is also a blessing
is that my editor in Nairobi insists that I write about all of these places so
I have done just that. I have a blog with the stories called Kenyan Arts
Review, but I don’t recommend it since I haven’t had time to include all the
photographs that appeared in the paper to accompany the stories. Nonetheless, I
did start to set up a website, but I advise anyone with such a goal to make
sure you get a trustworthy web designer. Mine never completed my website, but
if you google my pen name, Margaretta wa Gacheru, you will find a few stories
and possibly even the unfinished website.
I am
grateful to have come back to Evanston which is where I am while writing this
brief M on the Move piece. I try to get back to the place I know is my real
home in my heart twice a year. But in the meantime, my base in Kenya is a joy
since I do love the sun and I love my work. But I am happy to reconnect with my
DAR sisters. It was a privilege to see many of them at Frances Willard’s Rest
Cottage, and I look forward to seeing you the next time I am in the area.
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