WELCOME TO THE KENYAN ARTS REVIEW
Formerly MARGARETTA'S JUA KALI DIARY
(Do i admit that technology is not my forte so i had to start all over again, a little wiser and slightly more tech-savvy than when i started my Jua Kali Diary a few years back. My blog had stalled for quite some time because of a whole range of issues, but now i am going to try again)
Rather than tell you about myself, i am sharing a story written by a wonderful Kenyan writer about me. Gakiha Weru wrote because his editor Eric Obino asked him to. I can add to this story but i love it as it stands.
Sunday Nation story by Gakiha Weru July 6th 204
Posted Sunday, July
6, 2014 | by- GAKIHA WERU
Margaretta wa Gacheru: My 40 year love affair with Kenyan art
In the media and arts world, she is
known as the slightly built white woman ever in a fast stride, moving from one
assignment to the next.
Yet her name has misled hundreds of
thousands of newspaper readers who have followed her writing career over the
last 40 years.
“When I meet one of my readers for the
first time, the shock and surprise is always evident. You see, over the years,
most of them have built this image of some Kikuyu mama because of my name.
“Imagine I’m the only person waiting at
a reception and the boss comes to collect me. He finds only this small mzungu.
He turns to the receptionist and asks, where is she? The bewilderment is always
something to see,” she tells Lifestyle.
Her byline is Margaretta wa Gacheru, a
name that is as local as it can get. To her colleagues in media and friends in
the world of the arts, she is simply Wa Gacheru. On Buru Buru’s route 58, she
is known as mama Migwi. Migwi is her son.
EXCHANGE STUDENT
Margaretta does not just have a local
name. Everything about her is local. Like many other Kenyans working
in Nairobi she travels in matatus and loves Eastlands where she has lived for
years. Her current abode is in Kariobangi South.
Her 40-year-old love affair with Kenya,
the Kenyan people and Kenyan art stretches back to 1974 when she first came to
the country on a student exchange programme. She arrived as Margaretta Swigert,
which was her maiden name. She was being funded by Rotary Club and in return
she would work for them as a speaking ambassador in the country.
And she had everything worked out – or
so she thought. See some bit of Kenya, get two years of study for a Master’s
degree in African Literature at the University of Nairobi and then fly back
home.
She didn’t expect problems getting
admitted at the university. She had already obtained Bachelors and Masters
degrees from universities back home. But things didn’t work out as she had
expected.
The head of the Literature Department,
Ngugi wa Thiong’o, didn’t think her Bachelor’s degree in Sociology and
Comparative Religion had given her the ideal foundation for graduate studies in
Literature and politely told her to take a walk and try her luck down the
block.
Still determined to pursue the course,
she sought out Prof Micere Mugo who was also in the department, asking her to
intercede. Prof Wa Thiong’o relented but then threw in a rider, “First she
undertakes the undergraduate Literature programme then we can take things from
there.”
“He left me no choices. So I enrolled
for bachelors programme. I read day and night. Somewhere in between, the
university was closed for five months and I took the opportunity to study on my
own. It was perhaps the most intensive study time I have ever engaged in. I
finished the three year programme in just over one year.”
So she went back to Prof Wa Thiong’o,
who, happy with her efforts, admitted her to the department. But whereas she
was more interested in Pan African literature, the professor had different
ideas.
He recommended that she takes
African-American literature based on the writings of Malcom X. She turned in a
thesis on the house nigger – a pejorative term for the black slaves who worked
in the master’s house as a reward for their docility as opposed to the farm
nigger, the more rebellious one who would be sent to slave in harsher
environments in the fields.
Her journey in learning did not end
with the second Masters degree. She went on to earn two more masters degrees
capping up all with a PhD in 2011. With seven degrees under her belt,
Margaretta could easily be the most educated woman for miles around.
Her stay at the University of Nairobi
changed the course of her life forever. The Literature Department was a vibrant
place which besides Wa Thiong’o had on the faculty such names as Micere Mugo,
Okot p’ Bitek, John Ruganda and Jonathan Kariara among others.
PRIVATE JOURNAL
She was instantly drawn to the robust
drama scene at the university. “I made my debut in the play, The Trial of Dedan
Kimathi. With me on stage was, Stephen Mwenesi, Kenneth Watene and Sibi Okumu.
I was later invited by Ruganda to join the university’s travelling theatre.”
In the travelling theatre she had great
friends who went out of their way to help her through cultural transformation.
Some simply didn’t like her, a fact she attributes to unconscious xenophobia.
Some just wanted her out of the travelling theatre.
I used to keep
a journal in which I recorded things happening around me. On a trip to
Nyahururu, a colleague I won’t name broke into my suitcase and took out the
journal. He read the journal to the rest of the group. I had recorded
silly little things like who was flirting with whom in the group. He made it
sound so bad that I came across as a racist,” she recalls ruefully. “Then some
members of the group suggested they burn the journal in my presence to signify
that the travelling theatre was basically finished with me. I considered a
journal very private and it was a very painful experience. I would probably
have left the theatre but when I told Ruganda what had happened, he forbid me
to quit.”
By the time she completed her Masters,
she had decided she wasn’t going back to the US. Something else had happened.
She had fallen in love with her college-mate, and graduate student, Gacheru wa
Migwi.
“Gacheru was the most humorous guy I’d
ever met. He was fine tuned to the social, cultural and political circumstances
of the times and he opened up a Kenya I could not have possibly seen on my
own,” she recollects.
They got married in 1978. Exit
Margaretta Swigert and enter Margaretta wa Gacheru. By the time she got married
to Gacheru, she had largely adjusted to living within her means. When she was
the Rotary ambassador, she was entitled to a car, a Mercedes. She was also
living in Westlands.
When the contract with the Rotary
ended, she had only her fellowship stipend to fall back to. The first thing she
did was to acquire a motorbike on which she explored Nairobi. It was on this
motorbike that she discovered Eastlands, spending many happy evenings in
Jericho and Makadara estates.
With her studies complete and the
decision to stay final, she started looking for a job ending up at the Nairobi
Times, where the publisher, Hillary Ng’weno, was looking for an arts reporter.
Back then, there were few journalists
interested in the arts and the few expatriates concentrated on European
theatre. From her experience in drama at the university, Margaretta knew of the
existence of a robust African theatre and she threw all her energy into it,
giving it the deserved space on the national stage. She has never looked back.
While at the Nairobi Times, she got a
job at UNESCO as a communications officer and quit after one week. “I found
that it was a secretive place where everybody was busy trying to manipulate the
systems to make some money. I went back to Nairobi Times.”
WOMEN'S DECADE
Thereafter, Margaretta was invited by
Mary Okello, the pioneering woman banker, to start a regional magazine for
women in banking.
In 1985, she got heavily involved in
the women’s decade conference whose main agenda was to mainstream gender
issues. It is during this time that she met and worked with leading lights
such, Edah Gachukia, Maria Nzomo and Wangari Maathai.
In 1992, she moved to the Nation
newspapers where she was assigned to write a series on women in leadership
featuring Charity Ngilu, Martha Karua, Agnes Ndetei and Beth Mugo and also
write three weekly columns on theatre and movies. Many of her articles have run
in this magazine.
This was also the time when the first
multi-party elections were around the corner and she was involved in organising
the Women National Political Convention at KICC. Among the speakers were Monica
Wamwere, mother of politician Koigi wa Wamwere who was in jail at the time.
Her marriage to Gacheru did not last
long, ending in 1982. She believes both of them got too involved in their work
and simply drifted apart. They mutually agreed to go separate ways with their
only child, Migwi, remaining under the care of his father.
All this time, Gacheru had never met
Margaretta’s parents and for two good reasons. One, his complete disinterest in
going to the US. And then, Margaretta knew something he did not know. Her
father, a medical doctor, had deep rooted prejudices against Africans and she
knew he would never approve of the marriage.
She kept the marriage a secret only
writing to one of her brothers with the plea that he was not to tell anyone. He
didn’t keep the secret and when she next visited her family, it was her mother
who saved her from being strangled by her enraged father.
In the 1990s, Migwi decided he wanted
to live with his mother in Buru Buru, a decision Margaretta welcomed. Ever the
busy journalist, she had no clue what her son was doing in her absence.
“Unknown to me, he was cutting school
and working as a tout on Route 58. The only thing I had noticed was that his
grades at Rusinga School were deteriorating. When I discovered what was
happening, I shipped him off to the US where he rejoined high school. ’’
In the US, Migwi thrived through high
school and university graduating with a degree in IT engineering. He went on to
join the US army and served in Iraq and Afghanistan. He currently holds the
rank of a major.
Margaretta’s passion remains in the
arts, a subject she is currently writing on for the Nation Media Groups’s
Business Daily. “I can assure you I will be writing on Kenyan art for a long
time to come.”
She is currently constructing a house
off Thika Road.
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