Named after one of the Masaii tribes in the area, Kaputiei was conceived from Ingrid’s belief that “you can’t move out of poverty if you are living in hell.” The land for Kaputiei was acquired through great travail (and that is a story all on its own) in 2002 and is...
Kenya
Home is where the hope is. Jami Bora, microcredit and the people and communities creating the extraordinary.
The Jamii Bora Team – Power to the People, Men that Roll
Andrew Otieno Andrew grew up in the Kibera slum with a single mom struggling to care for numerous children yet was able to provide him with a loving role model of strength and perseverance. It is the place he has chosen to remain and run a clinic in order to meet some...
The Jamii Bora Team – Power to the People, Women that Rock, Part 2
In our time with Jamii Bora, I have gotten a sense of the difference between pretense and pride. Not a single one of the people I have met has a shred of pretense that I have detected yet each one of them embodies and expresses their pride; in the work they are doing,...
The Jamii Bora Team – Power to the People, Women that Rock
Editorial note: Each of the people we met amazed me and the reason that I have written more about some than others is simply due to the fact that we were able to spend significantly larger chunks of time with some people. Janet Bett Janet is one of the original “famed...
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Our future, ourselves, our planet and our stories, it’s all entangled ― Festina LentÍvaldi*
Jamii Bora – Better than Good
Jamii is the plural of family in Swahili Bora is good, but not just good, better than good Like many beautiful unfoldings, the initial seeds of Jamii Bora were sewn with no idea about what yield would eventually follow. Ingrid Munro grew up in Sweden and had a rather...
Culture Shock Kenya Style, Part 2
Editorial note: In a previous blog I stated that the population in Kibera slum is close to 2 million. There appears to be quite a bit of disagreement and uncertainty on this figure. A 2009 census put the number much lower: around 171,000. That may reflect the many...
Culture Shock Kenya Style, Part 1
Swahili language and greetings lesson of the day: Mzungu-a European, but really any white person Mutatu-Mini-van straight out of Mad Max, people packed in like sardines, a “solicitor” hanging out of the open door shrieking for potential customers, drives on sidewalks...
Back From the Bush
Giraffe trivia, match the following: Maasai Giraffe, Reticulated Giraffe, Rothschild Giraffe The most endangered subspecies, Can interbreed with other giraffe subspecies, The largest subspecies (answers at the end of the blog) The sadness of leaving our new friends...
The Maasai: Fierce Warriors, Gentle Pastoralists
Swahili lesson of the day: Manyatta-House Boma-Family compound Ngombe-Cow Mbuzi-Goat The Maasai people living in the Maasai Mara region today hail from a very old ethnic group of semi-nomadic people located in Kenya and northern Tanzania who...
Welcome to the slum
Where is her mother, her father? Does she even have a mother, a father? When was the last time she ate? Was that the last time she ever would? These questions, accompanied by so many emotions, continue to race through my mind. They keep me awake at night. Such a...
Lions and leopards and giraffes! Oh My! Part 2
Note: Once again, we are so appreciating your supportive, insightful comments. Asante sana! Swahili lesson of the day: Habari?-How are you? Sawa sawa-Ok/Fine Ndiyo-Yes Hapana-No Tafadali-Please Cordiya Breksana-Spinal Injury (just kiddin') Going on...
Lions and leopards and giraffes! Oh My! Part 1
Note: You can click on any of Malcolm's beautiful pictures to see them in a larger format Today's Swahili Lesson - The beauty of Swahili is that it truly is a phonetic language, just sound it out! The difficulty is that anything spoken in Swahili at 1000 miles per...
Black & White Isn’t Black & White
We arrive in Nairobi after 20+ hours of flying and lay-overs on an overcast but still sultry night. Stepping off of the plane, we are transported to a new and mostly unfamiliar position of being in the minority. In some places there is a smattering of white-skinned...
Festina Lente
Make haste – slowly, powerfully, minimally
“Hasten slowly” said Augustus. Oh, this is hard. To imagine what can be created, to hold back, to act; to engage means delving into both despair and hope. That’s where we’re challenged to see the powerful in what we do which is always minimal and micro. Feeling adequate in the face of manifest inadequacy. Weaving together the pieces that hasten, slowly and steadily, benevolution.
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Feature by Julianna Gwiszcz, Creative Commons BY-NC-ND; see individual posts for other picture credits.