Jomo Kenyatta was born in Kamau, Kenya, on 20 October 1891
and grew up in Ichaweri, southwest of Mount Kenya. Kenyatta ran away from home
to become a pupil at the Church of Scotland Mission, where he studied English,
Mathematics, the Bible and carpentry. In 1914, he was baptised Johnstone Kamau
and left the mission for Nairobi.
In Nairobi he adopted the name "Kenyatta" and
worked in the Public Works Department. In 1922, he joined the first
anti-settler protest movement, the East Africa Association (EAA). However, this
organisation was banned in 1925, and he joined the Kikuyu Central Association
(KCA), of which he later became general secretary. The aim of the KCA was to
address the colonial challenges faced by the Kikuyu.
In 1929, Kenyatta went to London, and only returned to Kenya
15 years later. He became the principal of the Kenya Teachers College on his
return and in 1947 was elected the president of Kenya African Union (KAU). He
was later linked to the Mau-Mau Society, a radical anti-colonial movement that
staged the Mau-Mau Rebellion, a peasant revolt against white colonial rule. He
was arrested in 1952 for allegedly leading the group.
Following a five month trial, he was imprisoned until 1959
and detained until 1961. Kenyatta became Prime Minister in 1963 and the
President of Kenya in 1964. The opposition party, KADU, was dissolved, and
Kenya became a one party state. As he had been the sole presidential candidate
in each election during his term of office, Kenyatta was re-elected three
times. His leadership was marked by corruption and nepotism, and he is said to
have been the largest landowner in Kenya.
In 1966, Kenyatta had a heart attack and was plagued by ill
health until his death on 22 August 1978. He was buried on parliament grounds
and was succeeded by his vice president, Daniel arap-Moi.
The Mau-Mau Rebellion, with which Jomo Kenyatta was
frequently associated with, served to inspire protest action in many parts of
the African continent, including South Africa. This is because at the time of
the rebellion, the Malan administration had began to implement its repressive
laws.
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