A statue of Mekatilili Wa Menza, a heroine of the freedom struggle at the former Malindi Uhuru Gardens now named Mekatilili Garden. She led the Giriama in a rebellion against the British rule between 1913 and 1914. |
By FRED OLUOCH foluoch@ke.nationmedia.com, Thursday, June 6
2013
In Summary
- Archival records show that Charles Hobley, who was the Coast provincial commissioner from 1912 to 1919, attributed most of the responsibility for Giriama resistance against colonial labour and taxation policies to “an old blind rascal named Ngonyo” who “instigated a half-mad woman named Katilili to tour the country preaching active opposition to Government.”
- But the British were not just sitting by. Mekatilili and a male leader of the Giriama resistance, Wanje wa Mwadorikola, were arrested in October 1913 and sentenced to five years detention.
- Mekatilili was variously described by the British as a “witch” and a “prophetess who gave additional force to the oath in spreading the gospel of violence”.
Mekatilili wa Menza may have been in the freedom
struggle scene for a short time, but her contribution in raising the
African consciousness among the Giriama people of the Coast was immense.
Mekatilili was one of the first women in Kenya to
rise up against the British in 1913. Her bravery, oratorical power and
charisma earned her a huge following and saw her mobilise the Giriama to
take oaths and offer sacrifices to restore their sovereignty.
Initially, her concern was the breakdown of the
Giriama culture amid British influence and she pushed for a return to
the traditional Giriama governance system. By extension, it created
resistance to the authority of the British and the appointed headmen,
the latter whom she accused of betraying the Giriama for rewards.
Mekatilili was particularly against the issue of
labour recruitment. At the time, the British were putting increasing
economic pressure on the Giriama, through taxation, attempts to control
trade in palm wine and ivory, and by the recruitment of young men to
work on plantations and public works projects.
Mekatilili’s anguish was over the growing
disintegration of the Giriama, so she called upon her people to save
their sons and daughters from getting lost in the British ways.
While her rebellion lasted for only one year, from
1913 to 1914, it had considerable impact on the relations between the
British and the locals.
The British won the war against the Giriama, who were forced into a stringent peace settlement.
But, in the long term, the British government removed land restrictions and lightened labour demands.
The Giriama achieved the main goals for which they
had originally fought in the longer term, but the virtual withdrawal of
the colonial administration from the Giriama hinterland may have
contributed to its isolation and economic stagnation to date.
Born in the 1840s, Mekatilili was the only
daughter in a poor family of five children. Historians attribute her
strong feelings on the issue of labour to a personal tragedy, in that
one of her brothers was captured in front of her eyes by Arab slave
traders.
She married but was later widowed, which gave her more freedom to move around as a woman leader.
“We are not to fear the Europeans,” she thundered
in many of her gatherings, which in most cases ended in taking of
powerful oaths that effectively prevented all Giriama from co-operating
with the colonial administration.
Colonial hut tax
Mekatilili opposed forced labour in British-owned
rubber and sisal plantations, the colonial hut tax (forcing every family
to give money to the British), land seizure evictions from the fertile
Sabaki River Valley and restricted consumption of palm wine.
To attract the crowds to her meetings, she used to
move from one village to another dancing Kifudu, a revered dance that
was performed only during funeral ceremonies. The women would follow
her, their men in tow.
Archival records show that Charles Hobley, who was
the Coast provincial commissioner from 1912 to 1919, attributed most of
the responsibility for Giriama resistance against colonial labour and
taxation policies to “an old blind rascal named Ngonyo” who “instigated a
half-mad woman named Katilili to tour the country preaching active
opposition to Government.”
She was instrumental in the most important
meeting held in Kaya Fungo, the ritual centre of the Giriama, in July
and August 1913, where she “led the discussions and complained about
labour demands and the jurisdiction of the traditional elders being
undermined”.
She said the wages which headmen received gave the government the belief that they had a right to demand cheap labour.
But the British were not just sitting by. Mekatilili and a male
leader of the Giriama resistance, Wanje wa Mwadorikola, were arrested in
October 1913 and sentenced to five years detention.
The two were deported to the far west of Kenya,
Mumias, but escaped a few months later and walked back home to continue
with the resistance.
The British were mesmerised by how she could have
walked such a distance through the forest infested with dangerous wild
animals. She was again arrested, this time to be sent north to the
Somalia border area. Again, she escaped.
Gospel of violence
Mekatilili was variously described by the British
as a “witch” and a “prophetess who gave additional force to the oath in
spreading the gospel of violence”.
But her powerful oaths were not to fight the
colonialists, but to try to win back those Giriama who had transferred
their loyalties to the British.
Despite her exploits, Mekatilili, who died in 1925
at the age of 70, was not recognised among Kenyan freedom fighters
until October 20, 2010, the first Mashujaa Day, when her statue was
unveiled at Uhuru Garden — renamed Mekatilili wa Menza Garden — in her
honour.
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