Land, Freedom, Church, and Oral History: Retracing General Ndaya during Kenya’s War of Independence
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Date
2025
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UNISA
Abstract
This  article  explores  the  delicate  context  of  the  1950s,  when  the  church  was  classed with the oppressor, perhaps wrongly, during Kenya’s quest for land and freedom  (wiyathi  na  ithaka).  Indeed,  the  antithesis  of  the  church  and  its  perceived   engagement   with   the   “intolerant”   state   in   colonial   Kenya   is   epitomised in the life of General Ndaya, the Mau-Mau rebel leader in the then-Embu  District  (now  Kirinyaga  and  Embu  counties).  This  was  communicated  when  his  soldiers  attacked  and  shed  blood  in  an  otherwise  holy  ground,  the  Roman Catholic Church, Baricho Parish of the present-day Kirinyaga County, in  October  1953.  Using  oral  history  techniques,  such  as  storytelling,  archival  sources,  and  personal  communications,  among  others,  the  research  article  focuses on the Kenyan freedom fighter, General Ndaya, whose historicity has failed to gain traction in the national historiographies since the 17th of October 1953,  when  he  was  killed  after  the  Battle  of  River  Ragati,  along  the  Nyeri-Kirinyaga County border. In this article, the lifetimes of the pioneer Mau-Mau rebel general are used as the axis through which the concepts of land, freedom, church,  and  oral  history  are  interfaced  in  our  endeavour  to  understand  the  delicate situation where the “reign of terror” triggered the “guillotining” of the “saints.” Is oral history the right companion in our endeavour to learn from our past errors?
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Gathogo, J. (2025). Land, Freedom, Church, and Oral History: Retracing General Ndaya during Kenya’s War of Independence. Studia Historiae Ecclesiasticae, 18 pages. https://doi.org/10.25159/2412-4265/19777