Monday, April 3, 2023

From being a hummingbird to an icon of environmentalism : A Study of Unbowed: A Memoir by Wangari Maathai

                             

   Wangari Maathai’s unbowed is a story of a brave woman who confronted the state of decay of environment .  It has thirteen chapters . The first  four  deal with her childhood, schooling and realization  of her American dream.  Chapters five to seven refer to Kenyan independence and its aftermath. Chapters 7 and eight are related to seeds of change whereas chapters nine to thirteen refer to struggle for freedom and sustain the movement of sustainable development. The epilogue shows the “Canopy of Hope.”  

    She founded and spread the Green Belt Movement which led to the planting of more than forty million trees since 1977.She became a member of parliament in 2003 and an assistant minister for environment in 2003 and the first African woman to have  won the Nobel  peace Prize in 2004.

    While Mandela wrote , “ hope the world will support her vision of hope’’, the famous novelist Ngugi wa Thiong’o says, ‘’it is also the story of Kenya, Africa, and the world . Her life is a triumph of good over evil.” 

    Wangari  was the third child to her parents and the first daughter who was born on April 1, 1940 in Ihithe, a small village in the central Highlands known then   as The British Kenya. She was born in Kikuyu community in the family of peasants who relied on farming and rearing of cattle, goats and sheep for their livelihood.  She  was the daughter of the soil and says, “Even before my breast milk, I would have swallowed the juice of green bananas, blue-purple sugarcane, sweet potatoes, and a fattened lamb, all fruits of the local land.”(4)   At the customs was that the women of the village used to gather the local fruits and the expectant mother would fatten the lamb inside the house .  Her clan Anjiru~, descendants of one of  the ten  daughters of the  mythological couple   GIkuyu and Mumbi and    is associated with leadership . Though the clans were originally matrilineal , slowly the patriarchy replaced it.

    Kikuyus who used to worship Mount Kenya as God were slowly converted to Christianity by the missionaries  and the administrators and traders who followed the missionaries introduced logging, clear cutting forests,  plantation of imported trees , and agriculture and began exploiting local natural  resources . Wangari mentions how this destroyed their traditions.  She writes , “Hallowed landscapes lost their sacredness and were exploited as the local people became insensitive to the destruction , accepting it as a sign of progress.” (6)

   She mentions an interesting story about the naming of  her country and renaming of places and things by the colonialists. The name Kenya was coined when German explorers Johan Ludwig Krapf and Johannes Rebmann heard the world kii-nyaa( intended to refer to gourd carried by guide belonging to  the Kamba community) She also mentions how Nyandarua( drying hide) was called by the British in 1884 as Aberdare  after Lord Aberdare, then the head of the Royal Geographical society.  European powers arbitrarily, artificially and  formally divided Africa among themselves at the Berlin conference in 1885. Consequently  Africa suffered the division of its clans referred to as ‘micronations’ by Wangari  in the most arbitrary manner haunting into the present.

     The missionaries converted the locals by attending to their health needs and teaching them the art of reading and writing replacing traditional method of oral communication among the Kikuyus through the use of the drums, horns , shouting or courier and gichandi , the musical means of transmission made from a gourd became a museum piece in Turin, Italy.

Wangari thus describes how colonial enterprise slowly and steadily entered Kenya and European settlers came to the highlands fertile and free from malaria and with moderate temperature  and relocated the locals to the Rift Valley or transported to other places.  By the 1930’s the natives were confined to the reserve areas and by the 1950’s  thousands  of White settlers who were war veterans came to the highlands.

    Referring to her parents, she tells how the blood of Maasai and kikuyu were mixed in her. While she praises her father’s hard work and legendary strength, her deep attachment to her mother comes out in glowing terms. Her mother was sturdy in her  physique and in character, hardworking, gentle and kind. She remained  an illiterate and a ruralite but cultivated crops till into her eighties and always kept provisions ready  for her family  whether she was well or ill. Here was a special bond between the mother and the eldest daughter Wangari who shared responsibility and communication. “She was  my anchor in life”  (13)

    The British introduced cash as currency in the place of goats and men were forced to migrate and work on the farms for earning cash to pay taxes which necessitated leaving their families behind in villages.  This phenomenon led to  mixed results such as the large number of woman-headed households, prostitution, absent fathers , and sexually transmitted infections which persisted unto the present , that is the time of writing of Unbowed(2007)  .  

    Wangari moved to the Rift Valley along with her mother and two brothers to join their father working on the farm of one Neylan. She mentions absence of schools , forced  labour of the family and meagre compensations paid to his father by the settler Nyelan. She also refers to her pleasant outing to  take cattle for grazing and eating berries grown amid the managu  plants. She regrets the disappearances of these plants  in the course of time due to “overcultivation and the use of agrochemicals.” (16)Her attachment to the soil shows how she had come to look at nature as something inseparable from her.

    Wangari Maathai shows how polygamy was usual and her mother was the second wife of his father. But her father took care of all the children born to him from his four wives and all of them  lived in the same compound. They used to call their mother as maitu and the younger mother as maitu munyinyi and elder mother as maitu mukuru. Children were always taken care of by one or other adult , visited each other’s house frequently and felt amity with one another.  There were occasions  of conflicts when father used to beat his wives but Wangari came to know of it only when as an adult when she listened to their complaints.    Children were also guarded from information and  phenomenon  of death of any relative to save the young minds.  The parents taught her courage , leadership but her father remained strong and imposing  but distant figure. On the contrary, her relationship with her mother was intimate l throughout their lives. She recollects how she could realise the value of health when she saw  the emaciated figure of her father suffering from cancer of esophagus. 

    Wangari relates an incident which tells about her mother’s contentment and  composure. When she began singing some devotional songs from Pentecostal denomination , her mother swept the place around her without asking her to move aside.  He mother’s trait of keeping her disappointments to herself influenced her to develop the same trait in her personality.

     On Mr. Neylan’s farm At Nakuru , Kikuyus worked in fields, Luos as domestic workers and Kipsigis as tenders of livestock and milking . But these communities lived separately and the ethnic biases persisted affecting national unity even after independence.  Wangari observes that the relationship between the master and the servant was unequal but father had more regard for the master and presented a he-goat as a sign of great respect and friendship. At the time of independence, the master gave twenty five acres to father and the  cooperative purchased rest of the land from Neylan.

    Wangari write how utopian’s , Indians and Africans lived separately on the slope of the ridge at Nakuru in houses of different styles. But after independence, the separation in living quarters ended when money began to speak. She also refers to a Young man Thumbi , a son of her grand father and  one of the one hundred thousand Kikuyus who were  forcibly  drafted to fight on behalf of the British  to fight against Germans and Italians in East Africa  in the First world war and die there anonymously. This remains an  open wound in the hearts of Kenyans who became cannon fodder to satisfy the imperialist  ambition of the British did the same thing to many Indians and Asians wherever they ruled.

    In the chapter on Cultivation, we come to know how Wangari reached Nyeri to her uncle’s house to study in school along with her two  brothers who are already studying there. She along with her mother and the  youngest sister Wachatha travelled there. Neylan’s worry was who would pick his pyrethrum. She also writes that due to the conflict between the British colonial government and Mau Mau resistance movement and the state of emergency, none of other siblings could not follow them later to attend school.  Referring to the administration Nyeri, she says that the British initially recruited locals which included even criminals, tricksters, parvenus without proper qualifications. Despite the better candidates joining in the administration at later stage, the legacy of corruption, lack of accountability , patronage and incompetence persisted.  Wangari’s love for nature comes out vividly in the following passage. 

The packed bus rattled along past the waterfall and, , as it did, I glimpsed the fast-flowing waters  that disappeared into the steep fall and heard them rolling down the cliff. We were soon travelling across he open grasslands and interminable scrub on the eastern edge of the rift Valley. Looking out through the bus’s open window and enjoying the cool breeze on my face , I watched the great herds of cattle grazing on ranchland owned by the white settlers. Zebras, giraffes, antelopes, and the occasional buffalo were dotted throughout the plain. Together our little family and our fellow travellers -farmers, businessmen, and visitors returning home -jostled and bumped and hoped that our luggage would not fall off the roof and be lost in the huge cloud of dust that spread out in  a plume behind us. (31)      

She  also refers to the replacement of colourful baskets by plastic bags for transporting goods and described ecological damage.

    “These plastics litter the parks and streets  blow into the streets and bushes, kill domestic animals when they swallow them inadvertently), and provide breeding grounds for mosquitoes. They leave the town so dirty it is almost impossible to find a place to sit and rest away from their plastic bags.” (35)

    Her love for soil is great. While referring to cultivation which was hard but rewarding , she mentions  “Because of the frequent rainfall , the soil of the central highlands was often wet enough that you could make a ball with it , but still porous and smelling fresh. When you rubbed it between your fingers you could almost feel  the life it held.” (37) 

     In the second chapter ‘Cultivation’ we come to know how Wangari leans the cultivation of soil, imagination, hard work and love for nature .  She tells how her mother discouraged her from pulling out seeds from the ground to see how they were growing. She also refer to the deep change by the colonial government which began importing exotic species of plants such as Pines, eucalyptus, black wattle  and encouraged by the building and timber industry , the farmers switched over to commercial plants at the cost of local plants and animals  ‘ destroying the natural ecosystem that helped gather and retain rainwater.” (39)She was mesmerised by the magic of  writing shown by her cousin, the growing of warmth of the central highlands due to climate change, the chirping of birds, the stray elephants disturbed by the people to run amuck .  reverence towards the fig tree, mother’s words that her name  Wa-ngari~ and the name of leopard in Kikuyu language  ngari~ are the same and hence no threat from it ,Arrowroots trees, disappointments at the breaking of the  frogs’ eggs when lifted and the “cultural and spiritual practices contributed to the conservation of biodiversity.” (46) Her experience of falling on the ground along with donkey after getting  exhausted after collecting heavy  sacks of beans, the immorality felt by people by naming children after the departed  ancestors, the riveting and repeated  story telling by her aunt ‘’Konyeki and His father.”  Wangari thinks “ how you translate the life you see, feel, smell and touch as you grow up-the water you drink , the air you breathe, and the food you eat -are what you become.”(52) She was able to enjoy the world without books but stories to tell and where one “cultivated the soil and the imagination inequal measure.” (52) Her intense lyricism comes out in describing her return from cultivating the land. She writes,

 The freshness of the evening air lived the burden of labour off my shoulders. Strips of moonlight threw shadows into the trees’ canopies and down the ravines. Deep in the valleys were many streams that I had to cross as  I  wound my way home.  It was so dark that I had to listen carefully to the water flowing down the hillsides and through the gullies bordered by arrowroots and dense vegetation so I could work out where I was and where I was going. The streams would hiss and whoosh  as they joined the Gura River, which swept along the valley floor until it slid  over a waterfall and crashed onto the rocks below. (47)

    She Joined St. Cecilia’s despite their family’s initial  fears of the possibility of her conversion to Catholicism. Her affection for her brother comes out when she mentions how he shared part of his cloth to make dress for her and how Nderitu  visited the school to enquire of her. She also recollects once incident when  one of the girls’ mentioned in her letter to  her family  the phrase “we are eating fire” which means having a good time in Kikuyu, Sister  Cecilia had arranged charcoal on her plate for telling lies.  This caused much laughter among the rest of the girls. She also mentions how children were discouraged from using mother tongue with fines and forced to speak English. Though this improved their fluency in English language. “Now, as then , this contributed to the trivialization of anything African and lays the foundation for a deeper sense of self-doubt and an inferiority complex.”(60) But she  herself kept her ability to speak in Kikuyu which helped retention of  closer  bond between her parents and herself.  She also cultivated the quality of service by working in hospital, gardening, ironing the church linen  helping other with homework. When she changed to Catholicism and took new name Mary  Josephine and her friends called her Mary jo through out  high school and college.

    While relating the freedom struggle of Kenya she writes of the violation of the oral agreement Between A British captain and Waiyaki ,the leader of the natives , the burying alive of Waiyaki, the  killing and silencing of the natives after the first World War and the awareness of  native returnees form The second World War who fought for the British   in Somalia, Ceylon  and Burma. The Mau Mau movement based on members of Kikuyu, Meru, and Embu communities  began in 1950’s whose main demands were land, freedom and self-governance. She  traces the origin of the word to “Ma~undu~  ni  mau” (in Kikuyu h means  “The main issues are…”) . The children were brainwashed to think of freedom fighter as terrorists, home guards were turned into collaborators and colonial violence grew drawing out violence from freedom fighters. People were forced to choose sides and the young were forced o join home guards causing rift in the families and many deaths and widows in the community.                    

             

She left for New York in 1960 as part of ‘Lift’ programme at the initiative taken by Kennedy and got amazed by blacks which she and her class mate in high school and college. She gets awareness of racial discrimination when they were  denied the room to drink coca cola with in the  small open café. She says  that colonial education has hidden this from her so far. She writes,

 An African has to go America to understand slavery and its impact on Black people-not only in Africa but also in the diaspora. It is in America that words such as “black,” “white,” “Negro,” “mulatto,” “skin colour,” “segregation,” “discrimination,” and “the ghetto” take on lives of their own.(79)

She offers a lyrical descriptions of seasons during her stay in Kansas.

   In her American Sojourn,  she  herself has not faced incidents of discrimination as she confined to her  campus but came to know  some such incidents from others. Her sojourn at mount  nurtured in her  “a willingness to listen and learn, to think critically and analytically, and to ask questions.”  (92). Later she honed her research skills at the university of Pittsburgh but didn’t understand much about Vietnam War and could not decide on taking any side. America  nurtured the spirit of freedom and utilising every opportunity which persisted with her when she returned home.

   Back home she experiences hypocrisy of head of the department of Zoology who first offered and the retracted from giving her job due to tribalism and sexism. But she got an opportunity to join the department of Veterinary Anatomy at the University  College of Nairobi. She went to Germany to work on her Phd and travelled frequently  between university of Giessen and the University of Munich. She also expresses her surprise at cu;tural conflict between African cultural values and Christianity while Europeans experienced  no such thing between their culture and Christianity.

    She also questions the role of women who are expected to be  as carriers of culture unlike men . she had to balance the roles of academician, housewife, host and a public speaker on behalf of her husband contesting to be become  a member of parliament.  She fought  supported by her woman  colleague Mwangi   for gender equality when she was denied  housing  allowance and insurance coverage in university.  But other women did not join her being discouraged by their husbands, remained less ambitious and failed to realised importance of economic independence when they no longer had the support of men .

 Sometimes you have to hold on what you believe in because not everybody wishes you well or will give you what you deserve -not even your fellow women. Indeed, I found myself wanting to be more than the equal of some of the men I knew. I had higher  aspirations and did not want to be compared with men of lesser ability and capacity. I wanted to be me.(117)

    She joined the local board of the Environment Liaison Centre. While doing her postdoctoral research she observed emaciated cows, undernourished people. Soil erosion due to cash crops and felling of the fig trees . The participants and representatives of NCWK  in the First Women’s Conference prioritised the problems of rural women and their poverty and environmental degradation. Pragmatism or solution-oriented thinking took her to planting of trees which provide firewood, fodder for cattle, food, protection of water, bring back birds and small animals   and regeneration of the vitality of the earth.

   She has begun the Green Belt Movement and her initials efforts through Environcare have not beam much successful due to lack of sufficient awareness among people.  Her participation in the forest  UN Conference known as Habitat I reenergised her and led to her entering the Executive committee of the  NCKW .  Her proposal for plantation received response . The plantation programmes at  Kamukunji Park on the  outskirts of Nairobi,  on a farm northwest  of Nairobi  in Naivasha, Nyana near Lake Victoria, Ukambani in Machakos and Kitui and Kajiado to the South of Nairobi  did not last long and she realised the need to mobilize locals to take initiative and responsibility to  sustain for the success.  By encouraging women to use womansense and not bothering much about technical knowledge, she created “foresters without diplomas.” They advocated planting trees of native variety, sustenance of seedlings and containers to retain the soil around the seedlings as they grew and  when they were transplanted. He believed and practised that education soul dot alienate people from the land because they understand what is being lost. She writes that “The future of the planet concerns  all of us , and all of us should do what we can to protect it. “ (138)  Naomi Klein writes, if there is a reason for social movements to  exist, it is not to accept dominant values as fixed and unchangeable but to offer other ways to live-to wage and win, a battle of cultural worldviews.”( This changes Everything 61)  

When her husband left her suddenly, Wangari decided to sweep the past away and start afresh. She was used to independent life of decision making. She endured the pain of divorce trial caused by  publicity and verdict which went against her. She understood that society,  press and lawyers wanted                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                      to project her as spoilt and irresponsible  modern woman . Her questioning back  her husband’s lawyer, “why did you ask me such question?”  in the Court hall was  shown as evidence of her stubbornness and unyielding nature causing hell to her husband. Hen her husband refused to allow her to use his surname  , she  changed her name into Wangari Muta  Mathaai” by adding an extra syllable to the last word in her name. 

    When she commented negatively about the judgement in an interview  , she was again tried for contempt of court and given a sentence for six months. In jail her co-prisoners were initially surprised to know the cause of her imprisonment, treated her kindly and prayed together for the judges to be able to judge fairly and justly. She was released from jail after three days after giving a statement. She understood the jealousy and sadistic pleasure of some people and remained firm in her resolve.

     When she took up  a six-month  assignment  with the Economic commission for Africa for the    UNDP, she left her children with their father . Later she helped them to study in America to rescue them from knowing about her struggles personal as well as political.  She contested twice   for chairmanship of the NCWK  but politics were played by the people in the government to project her negatively. Some constituent associations were pressured to withdraw and attempts to make the main organisation bankrupt financially were made. Wangari has understood that the opposition to her candidacy was “due in part to my ethnicity, in part to my education, and was again partly due to my marital status.”(157) She was elected in her second attempt contrary to the wishes of the government which encouraged another organisation in competition with the   NCWK. She stood firm despite pleasing by some of her supporters who pressurise them no to support  Wangari.  When she wanted to contest for becoming a member of parliament , she was not allowed on the ground that she hadn’t registers as a voter in  the previous election . As she  had to resign her job before contesting she had done so and her place was given to another within a day. As she had resigned on her own, she was also denied the normal benefits such as pension and  healthcare.   She understood the role  politics played. She didn’t visit the department to collect her belongings which remained in storage till her autobiography was published in2007. The same university of which she was alumnus and which ignored her achievements all along gave her doctorate and accolades.  In the chapter “Difficult years” she writes, “I was forty-one years old and for the first time in decades I had nothing to do. I was down to Zero.” (163)

    She believed that ‘We do the right thing not to please people but because it’s the only logically reasonable thing to do , as long as we are being honest with ourselves.”   (165) he lost hopes of getting back into University of  Nairobi and the private institutions  gave polite refusals . She realised

    It dawned on me that no one would employ me because they saw me as an enemy of the political system.  I had been  in a direct confrontation with the government.” (166)

    The Norwegian Forestry Society and later  the UN Voluntary fund for women came to her rescue and provided seed money and small emolument for her and it helped the expansion of the Green Belt Movement. She initially employed women to plant seedlings first at far later near their homes and enlist the support of the males of their family members. In the process she also realised the dishonesty of some young men who behaved dishonestly which made her reflect on corruption at higher levels.

     She trained volunteers, established many groups , encouraged people to speak in their own language rather than Kiswahili or English , conducted  “civic and environmental education” seminars and the seminars examined the recent history of Kenya, and  also issues of democracy, human rights, gender, and power. She mentions how colonialism encouraged commercial crops at the cost of sustainable economy by distorting African culture.

Before the Europeans arrived , the peoples of Kenya did not look at trees and see timber, or at elephants and see commercial ivory stock , or at cheetahs and see beautiful skins for sale” (175).The Movement spread widely and by the  early twenty-first century “they have planted  more than thirty million trees  I Kenya alone. (175)

One finds a close connection between the expansion of the movement through the help from the   UNEP  and laurels and awards which Wangari received for her work. It also changed the perception of Africa in the eyes of all, reduced criticism of her and eventually the separation between the  NCWK and the GBM took place in the interest of more freedom from governmental interference in the latter’s work.

     In her autobiography Wangari also relates how corruption and centralisation of power grew in Kenya, suppression of dissent, killing of dissentient political and student  leaders  and curtailing of independence of judiciary and of  democracy. In 1988, The Green belt Movement also joined pro-democracy activities such as registering voters, pressing for constitutional reforms and freedom of expression. Thus the movement was “not only an environmental , women’s , and human rights movement , but also part of the broader movement for democracy.”(182) The monopolisation of political space by the ruling party KANU continued and a standoff took place between the Green Movement and the govt. over the protection of Uhuru Park.

Her struggle against  the building of a complex in Uhuru  Park as prestigious  The Times  peoject got support from the  common people  despite ignoring the plea and vilification of Wangari by the members of the parliament. The issue of protection of the park mingled with the issue of  democracy.  She writes how Kenya in post-independence became one party state depriving voice to the people, evicting from jobs, Violating people’s rights. Her legal challenge was thrown aside  A lot of criticism from the president , fellow women organisations such as Maendeleo Ya Wanawake and MPs of KANU followed by strangulating financial sources to the green Movement and eviction from the government building from which they have been operating for a long time and the her own residence became head quarters of the movement. She also relates how aa young dissident who took  refuge in her house became negative had instigated the employees to ask for pay raise  and strike necessitating police intervention. Later a new home was provided by  CARE-Austria to get a house as headquarters  in Lang’ata. At last Uhuru park was saved due to support form the press which exposed the mismanagement of resources by the government , withdrawal of support by the donor agencies and  foreign diplomats. The success of the movement and lack of harm to her energised people to speak out and challenge the one party rule in Kenya.

   In chapter ten titled “Freedom Turns A corner” she describes how trees in Uhuru park survived despite vandalism by the supporters of the regime. Earlier in 1990, the people’s pro-democracy rally was attacked by the security forces leading to the death of dozens of demonstrators. She writes, ‘These tress, like Saba Saba (7/7 in Kiswahili , to mark the date of the rally) , inspired me. They showed me that , no matter how much you try to destroy it, you can’t stop the truth and justice from sprouting.”(207)           

  She was arrested for the first time when she along with members  of the Forum for the Restoration of Democracy(FORD) issued a statement urging the President no tot handover government to the Armybut call aa general election. She was charged with “ spreading malicious rumours , sedition , treason , the last of which carried the death penalty.”(213) She received support from Mothers in Action , friends and her son Muta and organisations such as   UNIFEM, GROOTS, WEDO  Called on members of the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee . As a result of  intervention by senator Kennedy , Al Gore and the late Paul Wellstone, the case against her and others was withdrawn by the government . She also describes her constant and valiant fight to get political prisoners released through a sit-in by Mothers of political prisoners. Despite the  persecution by the government , they continued fight from the  All Saints’ Cathedral. The tenacity of their fight and support from religious authorities helped them in achieving their goal of getting the release of political prisoners.  In the chapter ‘Freedom Turns A Corner’, she relates this historic struggle.  She also won the Goldman Environmental Prize,  Hunger project’s Africa prize for leadership in the year 1991. She attended the Earth Summit in  1992 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil  where she had to face the negative campaigning by the official delegation of Kenya. She also encouraged the green movement in Haiti.

   She also relates how she became chairman of Middle ground group after the split of the opposition and organised teach-ins to educate people about democracy. She relates    she used tact to send back police who tried to stop meeting  at her home since more than nine were not allowed to gather as per the colonial law which comtinued even acer independence. She told the police  that the visitors were friends, introduced them to the police and asked the police to introduce themselves and sit there to take minutes of the meeting .

Before 1992 elections Middle Ground Group tried its best to unite the opposition but individual differences among leaders failed their unity.The old president Moi got re-elected. Wangari also observed how the ruling party government created schisms and exploited inter-ethnic differences leading to clashes, During the is time she tried for inter-ethic amity in the Rift Valley but her attempts drew the ire of the government. On  seeing arbitrary arrests, kidnaps and killings of the rival politicians, she had to go underground . Owing to intervention by Gorbachev she could come out to attend the meeting on  Environment in Tokyo. She also received The Edinburgh Medal  from the Edinburgh district Council in Scotland and The Jane Addams International Women’s Leadership Award in Chicago and UN’S World Conference on Human Rights. She also refers to the stealing of the  photos and reports from the exhibition booth by members of the Kenyan delegation and Internally Displaced Refugees  due to ethnic conflicts who were neglected by the government and even the UN commission on Refugees  and could not be  rehabilitated  even in  the early 1990s. She refers to various ethnic groups as micronations . We have our own languages, traditions, foods, and dances ,and our own cultural and historical baggage” (249)   brought together by colonialism to be called as  a nation . She speaks of future and notes, “This  concept of  nationhood became a component of  The  Green Belt seminars after the tribal clashes.’’ (250)She also participated  in the fourth global conference on women in Beijing where she spoke of African barriers for development such as corruption, poverty, debt, destruction of environment and “the respect for basic human rights, justice, equality, and  equity, nonviolence, caring, and integrity.” (253)  .

       She contested for the position of ember of Parliament and presidency but lost due to ethnicity, personality cult and rumour mongering prevalent in the society . She later founded Mazingira Green Party  and in  Kiswahili the word Mazingira means ‘environment ‘ . Her efforts to save Karura Forest In Nairobi brought her  in direct confrontation with the government. She also opposed lang grabbing and allotment of the public property to the private people. She foregrounds solution-centric thinking in her activity. She writes :

 What people see as fearlessness is really persistence. Because I am focused on the solution, I don’t see danger. Because I don’t see danger , I don’t allow my mind to imagine what might happen to me, which is my definition of fear. If you don’t foresee the danger and see only the solution , then you can defy anyone and appear strong and fearless. (272)

The agitators could ward off the persecution by the police through dancing and singing and planting trees . From 2000 onwards, the green movement worked in partnership wit department of forests of Kenya to restore five water ‘’towers’’ in Kenya-Mount Kenya,  the Aberdares, the Mau complex, the Cherangani hills, and Mount Elgon-that control the country’s water systems.  This includes the flow of rivers, rainfall patterns, and groundwater , all of which are necessary for agricultural, industrial and tourist development. The movement has also increased awareness to protect the Congo Basin Forest which is along with Amazon forest ecosystem are considered  “two of the most important “lungs” of planet earth.” (274)

Writing of her mother’s death , Wangari observes and regrets the  degradation of environment and vanishing of rivers  .

 My mother is gone, as are many of those rivers, and with them the trout and a way of life that knew and honoured the abundance of the natural world. Now, because of the devastation of the hillsides, instead of the rivers there are only little streams and the Gura River no longer roars.”(276)

The news of winning the Nobel prize filled her eyes  with tears of joy. While in a hotel after  planting a  Nandi  flame tree  seedling and  facing mount Kenya, she syas , “As I gazed at her, I felt that the mountain too was probably weeping with joy, and hiding her tears behind a veil of white clouds. At that moment I felt I stood on sacred ground.” (293) In her view  the Norwegian committee recognised the link between environment, sustainable management and good governance and awarded her Prize for her work stretching for three decades.

    She writes that trees symbolise hope and peace and spread their roots in soi and yet reach to the sky . They teach us  the value of remembering  keeping in touch with the soil despite winning many laurels and invisible people who help us.

 In drawing an analogy of three-legged stool she sees democracy, sustainable management and peace among cultures and society as the basin or seat. These are of a specific concern to Africa .in the last chapter fittingly titled,  ‘Epilogue: Canopy of Hope’ she says that those who know the degraded state of environment cannot be complacent. “ We cannot tire or give up. We owe it to the present and future generations of al species to rise up and walk!”(295) what is needed by the progressives is, “showing that the real solutions to climate crisis are also our best hope of building a much more stable and equitable economic system , one that strengthens and transforms the public sphere, generates plentiful, dignified work, and radically reins in corporate greed.” ( Klein 125)

   Amitav Ghosh points out that the climate is also a crisis of culture, and thus of imagination”(12)  In  case of  Wangari , her autobiography  unbowed meets this challenge successfully by unfolding the growth of an individual and aa movement that have grown in stature and strength by maintain deep passion for earth, plants and opposition to the private greed supported by the governments of recently independent countries such as Kenya. He , writing of engagement of literature with fiction says the following: ‘ the great, irreplaceable potentiality of fiction is that it makes possible the imagining of possibilities.”(172) Now, a reading of  Wangari’ s Unbowed  inspires one to reimagine a different world free from environmental degradation through conscious action.          

  Wangari Maathai’s humble background, determination to  plant trees, fighting spirit, and eventual recognition fired the imagination of the youth. She specifically refers to her speech to the young in international school of Brunei who  attended a  conference on the “Heart of Borneo”, one of the few large  pristine forests  left in the world. The students who attended the conference from Various countries such as Brunei, Malaysia and Indonesia pledged to plant one million trees in favour of environmental protection. 

     She also mentions mottoinai campaign in Japan which encourages all its members to reduce, reuse, and recycle (the three Rs) and interaction with it which led to the use of locally made baskets in stead of Plastic bags in Kenya. The Nobel Peace prize created a chance for “a huge constituency of environmental, peace democracy, human rights  ad women’s rights activists to come together.”(300)

   She also interacted with the significant people such as Gordon Brown , other women  Nobel laureates such as Jody Williams, the anti-landmine campaigner , the Iranian human rights lawyer Shirin Ibadi  and the indigenous rights advocate Rigoberto Menchú  to form the Nobel women’s  Initiative   and also tried to interact with  the common people. 

She has committed herself to the creation of stronger civil society in Africa, ensuring human rights and governance and avoiding the conflicts which deviate people from development agenda. As apart of the Billion Tree Campaign in Oxford University. She reiterates that the greatest happiness lies in service and retaining optimism about future. At the end,  she refers to the story of a humming bird that wanted to put out  conflagration by  depositing a drop of water on it  and when questioned by others replied, “ I’m doing the best I can!”  Wangari Maathai’s message is also the same. “ And this is what we are called to do, no matter who or where we are , or what our capabilities. We are called to do the  best we can !”(307)   

Primary Source :

Maathai, Wangari. Unbowed: A Memoir. New York: Anchor Books, 2007

Secondary Sources

Ghosh, Amitav. The Great Derangement : Climate Change And The Unthinkable. India: Penguin Random House, 2017.

Klein, Naomi. This Changes Everything.UK: Penguin Books, 2015.      


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