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From the Blog

A half-built house in Njiru near where I am staying

The growing Eastlands of Nairobi is dotted with half-built houses. As you walk through the brick/cement/stone structures so typical of the developing world, you will see neighborhoods where perhaps 3 out of every 4 houses is roofless and vacant. The doors and windows will be piled up with loose rocks, to discourage squatting. One of my hosts explained that Nairobians build as they have money. So the building process is lenghtly and at times unpredictable.

This was another of those visual reminders of the importance of credit in a healthy economy.

The United States is coming off triggering a massive global recession for the opposite reason: the excess of credit. Multitudes of homeowners were sold mortgages they had no business receiving, without having to prove adequate income.

The density of population here is staggering. And unlike the dense urban centers in the US like New York, there is vastly inadequate infrastructure. That last sentence just doesn’t convey how utterly overburdened Nairobi is, like a bicycle carrying 40 mattresses. Fred Afwai, our Kenyan Country director, explained that the city planning for Nairobi was for 200,000 people. Think Boulder, Colorado. The current population is somewhere close to 5 million. Think the entire population of Colorado.

Bank accounts and loans are only available to those who already have money. To open an account is costly, and simply out of reach of our friends here in the eastern, poorer part of the city. This means that overcrowded population centers in Nairobi will remain crowded while half-built houses remain empty.

This is article one of a two-part series on credit in Kenya

“You will never walk alone.”

It is a rallying cry for Liverpool FC, a soccer team in the English Premier League that is very popular here in Kenya (and the arch rival of my team, Everton FC). It could also be a theme for life here in Kenya.

I’ve been here now for 4 days, and have never spent a moment alone. All of life…traveling, eating, worshiping, they are all community events. As I found out yesterday, so is death. Death is a regular part of life in the developing world.

Several days ago, the wife of a pastor in this community was killed in a failed robbery attempt. After church, a dozen of us packed into the husband’s tiny living room and sat with him as he shared the story.

In America grief, like so many other things, is considered a private affair. So yesterday it felt as if I was intruding in some way. And there were some things about the experience that are confusing, that I am still emotionally processing. However, I realized the power of the presence of others for this man. His community came to be with him. Only one other person spoke, his mentor and  fellow pastor Fred Afwai. The rest of us were just…with him.

Together in life…and in death.

A Kenyan Matatu

Matatu: 1 part dance club, 1 part billboard, 1 part NASCAR, this barely legal form of transportation is the backbone of Nairobi transportation. Coming from the word three (tatu), as they used to cost 3 shillings (a long time ago), they are loud, crowded, and an experience you must have.

Inside and out, they are snapshots of culture, with graphics of Christian inspiration and thug-life…usually a combination of both. 2Pac, Angelina Jolie, Joel Osteen, the juxtaposition is a constant source of entertainment.

It is odd to see which stickers make their way from the US: Sacramento Kings, WWE wrestlers, Philadelphia Eagles, Wesley Snipes. I’ve only seen a couple that maintain a theme over the whole vehicle: one was social media (Twitter, Facebook, etc), the other Liverpool FC. The rest are a mashup of media.

Mzungu: a white person (the plural is wazungu). I feel like my skin is fluorescent orange highlighted with blinking strobe lights. In the places we travel, the wazungu in our party will often be the only white people on a street of hundreds of people. It is humbling, as I really would prefer not to stick out so much (think paparazzi). And yet people are genuinely curious, wanting to know more about us.

We are getting ready to go visit “Humble Hearts,” time to go be a mzungu on a matatu again.

Feb
01
Posted by brianrants at 9:23 pm

Downtown Nairobi

Go to http://brianrants.com/enewsletter to sign up for my updates. I will try to send out updates 1-2 times a week in February.

Shannon and I are leaving this Wednesday to travel to Nairobi Kenya. The purpose of the trip is two-fold

  • Like all of The 1010 Project’s Service Learning Experiences, we will listen, learn, and serve. We look forward to spending time with the amazing social entrepreneurs who are changing lives in the slums of Nairobi
  • Shannon will return to the US Mid-February, and two business colleagues of mine will join me: Chuck Blakeman and Charlotte Wells. Responding to the invitation of our country director, Fred Afwai, we will be exploring the creation of grassroots business coaching/education for our entrepreneurs. The 1010 Project provides capital, with these micro businesses growing, we have the opportunity to help them thrive so they can help even more people

Keep me, Shannon, and the amazing, innovative, hard-working people in the slum communities of Nairobi in your thoughts and prayers.

Warm regards,

Brian