By Editor Thursday, Oct 6th 2016
Education is linear. From kindergarten, primary, secondary, college. No skipping.
Education was not linear for Bethuel Mbugua. He was hopped from class six to Form Four at Ol Kalou Secondary School where he displayed mastery of human anatomy.
Chief inspector of schools, Tom Sitima, demanded that the seven-year-old return to class two and not sit ‘O’ level exams with the knowledge of biology and little else.
Mbugua’s dad, Paul Mwaura, thought the lecture circuit was more befitting of his child genius.
See, Mwaura had dreams. Big dreams.
After school, father and son would camp at the Kenyatta National Hospital Library and take notes using books on microbiology, acupuncture and human health sciences.
Mbugua would memorise, then repeat the written notes to his semi-literate father.
His power memory, mostly on the physiology of the human heart and brain, mesmerised Kenyans. University lecturers and doctors were also awed as were students and teachers in over 300 schools in East Africa.
Mbugua even lectured at Dar es Salaam University with former Tanzanian President Julius Nyerere and incumbent Ali Hassan Mwinyi in attendance in 1988. He was only nine!
Mwaura (who had separated from Mbugua’s mum), was advised to enroll Mbugua in a school for gifted children.
But the cobbler dad had no dough. There was no such school here. But that was no handicap.
Mwaura had his son sneaked a plea note past the security detail to retired President Moi during a fundraising for the Kijabe Mission Hospital. The picture of Mbugua whispering in the ear of President Moi became front page news.
The father of Kenyan chess whiz kid, Kangugi Karanja, offered Mbugua sponsorship to New York’s Hunter School where Kangugi was.
But first, an IQ test had to be conducted.
Dr David Kabithe, an eminent psychiatrist, declared Mbugua was no genius; just an above average “actor who couldn’t differentiate Hamburg from hamburger!”
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