TBT Floods all over edition

Meria

Elder Lister
Staff member
When the first Kenyan Jews settled in Nairobi in 1903, it didn’t take long before they became a proper community, but they remained a small community of just a few dozen people for several decades.

All that changed when the Nazis took power in Germany and an exodus of German Jews found themselves seeking refuge in places they never would have expected.

Granted, the influx of Jews to Kenya was small, but that didn’t stop them from having to go through the British Colonial Office that was in charge of immigration to Kenya. In order to gain immigration status in Kenya, one had to be registered as a farm manager- something that was hard to come by for the Jewish immigrants and which limited their ability to settle. The local Jewish community worked hard to encourage Jewish immigration, but found much resistance from white European settlers and from the Indian community in East Africa that had backing from the British Colonial Office. Obviously, the opinion of the indigenous black population was not considered.

While the Jews of Nairobi were working hard on the local immigration initiative, British Jewry in England started their own widespread settlement campaign for thousands of Jews to relocate from Europe to the Kenyan Farmlands. They would settle in the White Highlands, which had already been designated for colonial farms.
In August 1938 the British initiative was registered as a private company limited by shares under the title Plough Settlements Association LTD that had an initial capital of 25,000 pounds. One of the partners for the British company was the JCA – Jewish Colonization Association – or as it is commonly known by its Hebrew initials: יק”א.
The initiative was presented as a colonial and financial enterprise and the hidden idea of rescuing Jews from the European continent was kept under wraps. The immigration activists met with established farmers in Kenya, the British Colonial Office officials, and other officiants in order to study and ready the ground, and gain traction and support for the immigration initiative.
The Jewish immigrants were not able to purchase farms upon their arrival, nor could they find ways to work on the farmlands where they could train as farm hands in order to eventually become farm managers. Many of the requests, and their rejections, were kept in the initiative’s archives.
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Meria

Elder Lister
Staff member
Chancellor and the Vice Chancellor.Back then the President was chancellor of all universities.When Mwai Kibaki assumed power in 2002 he radically devolved such Imperial titles.Kibaki was for demystifying of executive authority but the heavyweights around him opposed his delusional attempts to localise power. One may find the restoration of independence of the office of chancellor as a poor example but i think the perfect sample of this new system was Prof.Ali Mazrui.His wealth of knowledge and easy access even though he was tucked away in America brought much hope to many universities in Kenya,a new paradigm of leadership.
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Meria

Elder Lister
Staff member
April,1971.Bob Scott,senior lecturer in charge of the Computer Centre at the University of Nairobi,with Mrs. Agnes Miano a supervisor of the card punching operators.
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Meria

Elder Lister
Staff member
1969.This beautiful monochrome of Mathare Valley,Nairobi was taken by Baldev Singh Thethy.The population had reached 51,000 by September 1969.
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Meria

Elder Lister
Staff member
Two London School of Economics students.Jomo Kenyatta is on the left, looking dapper with a cane, in Russell Square during his time in London.Who is the other student ?
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