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Home > 2008 > AprilChristianity Today, April, 2008  |   |  
Political Eyes Wide Open
Helping Kenya begins by rejecting simplistic analyses and solutions.



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Since Kenya's botched presidential election in late December, more than 1,500 Kenyans have been killed and hundreds of thousands of people have fled their homes. As we go to press, rival politicians have agreed to a power-sharing deal after much foot-dragging.

Kenya, unfortunately, presents a case study in the limited imaginations of political and religious leaders, and presents a lesson in how we might better think and act in a fallen world.

Despite the speedy intervention of the international community, productive negotiations did not occur until former U.N. chief Kofi Annan walked out of the stalled talks. At the time, many Kenyan lives were still at risk. U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon issued a public reminder to Kenya's top leaders "of their legal and moral responsibility to protect the lives of innocent people, regardless of their racial, religious, or ethnic origin." Many heads of state and church leaders echoed this statement, telling Kenyans to, well, just stop it!

In volatile situations, of course, words alone do nothing to end ethnic violence. Those practicing ethnic cleansing assume there is no such thing as "innocent people" when it comes to rival ethnic groups.

In Kenya, 41 ethnic groups hunger for fair share of the nation's power and wealth. When the largest tribe, the Kikuyu, have one of their own at the nation's head (president Mwai Kibaki), and many Kenyans believe he favors the welfare of his tribe over others', it doesn't take a political scientist to anticipate the resentment of Luos, Kalenjins, and other groups. Then, when these groups suspect that vote-rigging probably cost Luo presidential candidate Raila Odinga victory, outside voices' calls to act moderately must sound like calls to accept injustice.

In such situations, Christian leaders worldwide call on Kenyan Christians to sponsor mediation talks: "Only the peace of Jesus Christ can transcend such ethnic and political divisions" is said in a variety of ways. This is true in the largest sense, thank God. But when we dig deeper, we often find Christians only exacerbating the political problems.

In the months leading up to the election, many Kenyan pastors, priests, and bishops joined in furious ethnic baiting. As the Ugandan newspaper New Vision put it, "It is now clear that religious leaders have taken sides; they are even more tribal than politicians—whenever any member of the clergy opens his mouth, you can guess what will spew out of his mouth by virtue of … tribal affiliation."

Kenyan scholar Eunice Karanja has noted how ethnic hostilities within Africa's churches have contributed to social unrest for decades. The church will need to get its own house in order before it can bring the peace of Christ to Kenya.

Dizzying complexity

So how should Christians, especially those in North America, begin to think and act regarding crises like Kenya's? By looking with our eyes wide open. First, that means to recognize the dizzying complexity that is Kenya—the nuances of traditional culture, its colonial past, its ethnic-oriented religion, and its presidential power politics.

Many media reports, secular or religious, have failed to note Kenya's weak constitution, its ongoing official corruption, its globalizing economy, or the volatile mix of ethnicity and religion—among other factors. What we get in most news summaries is something like the beginning of one New York Times story: "Kenya used to be considered one of the most promising countries in Africa. Now it is in the throes of ethnically segregating itself." Or the statement of one Catholic official who sensed a "lack of goodwill by both parties." Really.





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Displaying 1 - 3 of 7 comments.See all comments
tesfatadelle   Posted: April 08, 2008 4:51 PM
I was in Kenya in January (and I am not a Kenyan). While true some Churches contributed to the tribal in fighting, there were churches that preached John 10:16 and adhered to Galatians 3:26 and 28. We need to recognize them and praise the Lord for their stance. But who are we in North America that we should lecture the Kenyans when our own churches are the most segregated than any where on earth on Sunday morning? Should we not take the trunk from us first and not worry about the speck. It's true about 1,500 Kenyans died, but who could count how many are dying in NA because of indifference or harden their hearts because of rascism.

Anonymous Posted: April 07, 2008 9:12 PM
Barack Obama’s first cousin Raila Odinga is a Luo Muslim. He is the son of Barack Obama’s father’s sister. Obama met with Odinga during a 2006 African trip, appearing in a photo supporting him during rallies for Odinga.** Raila Odinga has a signed Memorandum of Understanding with a Muslim group to turn Kenya into an Islamic nation if he won Kenya’s presidential election. http://eakenya.org/newsevents/article.htm?id=8 After the Kenyan presidential election in December, it was Muslim Odinga’s Luo supporters generating the murderous mob violence rampaging Kenya, torching a church in Eldoret with Christians inside. Many of the 1,500 total killed were macheted to death. Is this a legitimate response even if injustice had occurred?** Four years ago Kenya’s Christian ministers had to bring a lawsuit when they discovered Muslims had inserted shari’a law for Islamic courts into Kenya’s draft secular constitution. Kenya’s Christians should continue their stand for righteousness.

Jim D.   Posted: April 07, 2008 10:35 PM
It would seem that alot of info. was left out of this article. I think C.T. should respond to the validity of the bloggers who have supplied this info. If this info. is correct, the hierarchy of the Christian Churches should be involved in either campaigning for one side or at the least against the side that threatens their freedom of worship.

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