It was a big dream; owning a car.
It
was big because the year was 1931 and the dreamers were two young
hawkers lugging bags of assorted vegetables in the Asian districts of
Nairobi.
It was an even bigger dream considering that
transport in Nairobi then was mainly by hand-pulled rickshaws and
ox-drawn carts mostly used by whites.
No African owned a
car then and that is why Mr Gerald Gikonyo Kanyuira and his friend were
in a class of their own when they pooled Sh150 each to buy a Sh300
Austin.
100TH BIRTHDAY
It was this ambition that has defined the life of Mr Gikonyo, who celebrated his 100th birthday last week.
Even
with a century under his belt, Mr Gikonyo remains actively in charge of
the day-to-day running of his business empire as the chairman of a
section of the Rwathia group of companies, which has over 500 employees.
The
companies boast such investments in Nairobi as Magomano Hotel, New
Kinangop Hotel, Timboroa Hotel, Alfa Hotel, Rwathia Distributors — a
beer distribution company — and numerous other businesses, especially in
real estate.
Despite his age, Mr Gikonyo still walks
with a robust gait as he moves around the corridors of Alfa Hotel from
where he directs his large empire put together through decades of hard
work and dogged determination.
With a vivid memory, Mr
Gikonyo laces the story of his life with refreshing wit and humour. He
admits that he is polygamous, having married four wives. Of the four,
only Wangari survives.
FOUR WIVES
With his four wives, Mr Gikonyo sired 23 children.
Naturally,
it follows that he has numerous grandchildren, great grandchildren and
great great grandchildren. So how many are these?
“They are probably 200 or 300. I can’t be sure.
They are so many that you would require an auditor to verify the actual number,” he tells Lifestyle.
His first-born is Mr Stephen Karanja, born in 1936, while his last-born son, Mr Javed Kamau, was born in 1972.
The
companies he co-founded with friends and relatives mainly from his
Rwathia village in Murang’a County started with his first salary of Sh4.
“My mother died in 1918 when I was only four years old.
My father died four years later.
I therefore had to find ways of assisting my foster mothers in my upkeep and that of my younger brother.
I first moved to Nyeri to live with a maternal uncle.
FIRST JOB
It
is from there that I went to the Mathari Catholic Mission where I got a
job as a farm-hand on their coffee plantation,” he recalls.
Back then, Sh4 was a princely sum.
With his savings he invested in goats, which he would later sell to facilitate his relocation to Nairobi in the mid 1920s.
In Nairobi he secured employment with Kenya Planters’ Co-operative Union with a salary of Sh20 per month.
It is here that he unleashed the industrious spirit.
“I would report for duty at 4 pm and work through to 1 am.
I
would then make coffee for sale to my colleagues up to 4 am, after
which I would proceed to Marigiti (now Wakulima market) to buy
vegetables to hawk to mainly Asian families.
I would knock off at 2 pm. That would leave me with two hours to sleep before reporting for duty,” he said.
HAWKING
In
1931, he left employment for full-time business. He partnered with his
village mate Solomon Karanja to secure a hawking licence.
The same year, he put up a shop back home at Githioro in Rwathia, in partnership with his step-brother Gikonyo Muthuri.
They entrusted the running of the shop to a village mate and his brother Gichimu.
In time, they diversified from hawking to selling charcoal and wattle barks.
His big break came in 1947 when some friends approached him to contribute capital to start a hotel in Majengo.
“The required sum was Sh3,000. I had only Sh700 so I had to borrow the balance from friends.
My partners were Wacai wa Muhu, Gatu wa Kirubi, Kimani wa Gathere and Macharia Kirubi.
Wacai and I were put in charge of the hotel on a full time basis,” he explains.
The business flourished and the group opened a second hotel in Eastleigh.
At the time, Africans were restricted by colonial laws to living and doing business in Nairobi’s Eastlands.
But even as the partners from Rwathia village were laying the foundation for a thriving business, winds of change were blowing.
But even as the partners from Rwathia village were laying the foundation for a thriving business, winds of change were blowing.
Africans,
disillusioned by being treated by colonialists as third class citizens
in their motherland, were beginning to agitate for independence.
The following decade turned out to be the most tempestuous since the establishment of the Kenya colony.
Like other Kenyans, Mr Gikonyo and his partners were caught up in the tumultuous events of the 1950s.
“Every Kenyan had suffered the indignities that came with discrimination, dislocation and disenfranchisement.
MAU MAU WAR
When the Mau Mau war broke out, many Kenyans went to the forest from where the war against the colonialists was being waged.
Those of us who had the means gave financial assistance to the fighters,” he says.
In 1952, a state of emergency was declared.
The colonial authorities arrested and detained thousands of Kenyans. Mr Gikonyo was among those detained at Manyani.
The colonial government then decided to move women and children from the city to rural Kenya.
It was under such circumstances that his first-born son, Karanja, found himself in a train headed for Central Kenya.
Once outside the city, the teenager decided he wasn’t going back to the village.
He
jumped from the moving train, dodged bullets fired in his direction by
police officers on guard in the moving train and disappeared into a
thicket.
Karanja was to later become the first university graduate in the family.
UP IN FLAMES
Many of the businesses Mr Gikonyo and his friends had established went up in flames as Kenyans fought for independence.
The first to go was the shop in the village which was burnt down by home guards.
The investors also lost the business in Majengo and Eastleigh in Nairobi.
“We had to start all over again after we came out of detention at various times.
The attainment of independence opened opportunities and we were back on our feet again.”
Contrary to a widely-held belief, Rwathia is not owned by one man.
They are several businesses owned by people from mainly the same village with cross- cutting shareholding.
For instance, some hold shares in a particular hotel while they might hold no shares in the next.
Shrewd businessmen, with more than 10 hotels along River Road, all establishments have names from all parts of Kenya.
“We wanted to create a sense of ownership to all communities from around the country,” says Mr Gikonyo.
He
has mentored many successful businessmen including Equity Bank chairman
Peter Munga, who at one time worked in one of Mr Gikonyo’s hotels as a
casual labourer.
IMPORTNAT LESSONS
Decades in business have taught Mr Gikonyo many important lessons.
For a start, he appreciates the importance of vehicular transport even though he dislikes cars.
“The first car that we had bought in the 1930s was a disaster.
We were using it to ferry passengers to Kirinyaga.
It was an ancient machine that kept on breaking down and eating away at my savings.
When it finally parked in for good during one trip to Kirinyaga, it had wiped out all my savings.
Any money I had left was only that held in debt by my various customers,” he says.
For the next 20 years after that, nobody could persuade him to invest in a vehicle.
However, in 1948, he and his partners bought a Ford whose main purpose was to fetch water for their hotels.
NO HAPPY MEMORRY
He was to engage in a bus service in the early 1960s.
They owned two buses called Mwijoyo and Kayu and he doesn’t have a particularly happy memory about that venture.
“Transport is very risky business with so many unseen variables.
I’d rather invest my money in a building.
A building will never knock down a pedestrian”.
And just to demonstrate his aversion for cars, he has never driven one because he doesn’t know how to.
It has been variously stated that a good diet is the key to a long life, but Mr Gikonyo disagrees.
He says the only thing he cannot eat is metal. That, and roast meat.
His love for roast meat washed down with beer rewarded him with gout.
“These
days I only eat boiled meat. I also enjoy traditional foods and
vegetables. Something else; I don’t eat because it is time for lunch or
dinner.
I eat when I’m hungry,” he says.
And he no longer takes alcohol. Well, not completely.
On Christmas he enjoys two bottles of Guinness stout.
A bit of the Kikuyu traditional drink, muratina, can be thrown into the mix.
He has one other vice. Snuff.
He has been unable to shake off the habit of sniffing ground tobacco, which was popular with people of his generation.
And it came with a price.
“To be allowed to sniff tobacco, I had to give elders a goat and a pot of beer.”
Unlike men of his means, he doesn’t have any hobbies like golf.
He has never taken a break from business — okay, once a year he retreats to the village for a month.
But even then he would still put all his energy to farm work.
All those years, he has never rented a residential house.
He sleeps where his business is.
This saves time that would be lost in commuting and ensures he keeps a constant eye on things.
His current abode is in one of his hotels in the city centre from where he keeps the wheels of his companies humming along.
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