EnockTheeFirst
Lister
The major ingredients of "githeri" are maize and beans. It has been so and will remain so
However at times, when things get tough, the mixture of maize and beans can be cooked without beans and will still be "mahenjera", and this is what has nourished generations for eons
I do not understand how someone who grew up in the village, eating this maize only githeri, has finally become so sophisticated that they can't eat this meal served at a social function, with everyone else and instead, they hide inside the cars to sip bottled water, as they peep out through the tinted windows
When did the community water fetched from the spring became poisonous and at what point did githeri became harmful? If it were, we couldn't be alive. The village would've died long ago
Someone travels from Mombasa to his home village, a thousand kilometers away, to attend a relative's funeral, and upon arrival he spends 98% of the three days at a bar in the neighborhood. Aren't there pubs in Mombasa or beer is more delicious if served closer to a dead relative?
Who is this man running away from?
In other news, there a typical hoof eater is thought to be a vagabond, with very little or no value to add to humanity
While attending a meeting, in case he leaves, the meeting will proceed like no one has left or nothing has happened and before he arrives, the meeting will commence, like no one is yet to arrive because he is a nobody
But when a rich man's car plunges into the river and gets submerged in the water, the good guys are always nowhere to be seen and if you see them, all they do is take photos with their expensive phones
The hoofmen will arrive at the scene even before the accident occurs (we are everywhere) and dive inside the waters pull the scared Beef-Eater from his car and get them to safety
In a funeral the most important event, the digging of the grave, is done by these men. No matter how "saved" or how you are of class, it is we, the village busaa drinkers who will dig your grave, when you kick the bucket
Even when the deceased is a clergy his grave has to be dug by guys high on narcotics because the "saved" ones are too elite for such jobs
Ama namana gani?
However at times, when things get tough, the mixture of maize and beans can be cooked without beans and will still be "mahenjera", and this is what has nourished generations for eons
I do not understand how someone who grew up in the village, eating this maize only githeri, has finally become so sophisticated that they can't eat this meal served at a social function, with everyone else and instead, they hide inside the cars to sip bottled water, as they peep out through the tinted windows
When did the community water fetched from the spring became poisonous and at what point did githeri became harmful? If it were, we couldn't be alive. The village would've died long ago
Someone travels from Mombasa to his home village, a thousand kilometers away, to attend a relative's funeral, and upon arrival he spends 98% of the three days at a bar in the neighborhood. Aren't there pubs in Mombasa or beer is more delicious if served closer to a dead relative?
Who is this man running away from?
In other news, there a typical hoof eater is thought to be a vagabond, with very little or no value to add to humanity
While attending a meeting, in case he leaves, the meeting will proceed like no one has left or nothing has happened and before he arrives, the meeting will commence, like no one is yet to arrive because he is a nobody
But when a rich man's car plunges into the river and gets submerged in the water, the good guys are always nowhere to be seen and if you see them, all they do is take photos with their expensive phones
The hoofmen will arrive at the scene even before the accident occurs (we are everywhere) and dive inside the waters pull the scared Beef-Eater from his car and get them to safety
In a funeral the most important event, the digging of the grave, is done by these men. No matter how "saved" or how you are of class, it is we, the village busaa drinkers who will dig your grave, when you kick the bucket
Even when the deceased is a clergy his grave has to be dug by guys high on narcotics because the "saved" ones are too elite for such jobs
Ama namana gani?