Coast, a people

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Coast-o

I was down at the coast over the weekend and this picture perhaps defines coast for me. It’s the endlessness of bliss, an infinite happiness. And happiness for me are boats like this that bob in the slight morning breeze. It’s the blue sky, and the gales that break that monotony with their chuckles. Coast is so orgasmic that someone from bara, totally taken by its beauty, decided to add an “O” at the end of “coast” just to try and transfer part of its ownership to the city sleekers.

 

Sometimes when you sit silently and listen to the sea, you will hear a distant groaning that is almost as spiritual as it is morbid, which goes to show that the sea has his owners. And the sea is inexplicably sexy.  The sea is like Toni Braxton when she steps out of the bathtub, wet and tugging at her white towel against her chest. And we all go down – with our hats in our hands – to pay homage, and worship this beauty. We go down with our cameras and intrude into this magnificence and with the clicks and whirs of our lenses we freeze coast-o so that when we come back to the rat race that Nairobi has become, we can once in a while, look at them from our screensavers and pretend that it makes us calm. That it insulates us from the madness of the city. That it’s therapeutic. I don’t know.

Germans in a boat

I hate ceremonies. They embarrass the hell out of me. I hate when you check into a hotel and find, at the entrance, a troop of Maasai’s (Kyuks more like it) bedecked in their reds, leaping in the air for your benefit. Or some Swahili dancers doing a chakacha or a Karibu Kenya, hakuna Matata gamut. Can’t stand it because apart from it being very embarrassing I find it hopelessly touristy.

The hotel I was hanging my coat in (Severin) organized a dhow ride that takes you around from Tudor creek through the bridge then to Old town where they show you around Fort Jesus and tell you about the Portuguese. The dhow was called Takdiri and when we rocked up we were met by a little crew who strummed a guitar and sung their poor hearts out. But carry a tune they definitely could. I find such scenes discomforting because you have to smile at these guys playing a guitar and you have to stop and listen raptly and act like you really love it, even if you don’t. Common decency dictates that you say something nice to them and perhaps drop a tip in their hat.

Anyways I was the only black guest on this boat. The rest were Germans. That’s not a good thing because Germans don’t smile. Germans have that constant frown that suggests that if they smiled their faces would crack and would never be the same again. The only German I know who smiles is called Mirjam and the only time she smiles is perhaps when I mispronounce her name.

 

So for an hour I suffered these guys, most of whom were aged. “They are rich,” the captain told me helpfully and I wondered what money has got to do with smiling. Shouldn’t rich people be smiling more because they have a good reason to smile; they have money?

Old Town

I go to Old Town because they have excellent food and I love the feeling of culture and age in it. I love the Tuk Tuks that zip loudly between the small corridors. The mysterious buibui clad women who peer from under their black ninja. And the guys who sit on doorsteps, shooting the breeze, I envy them because they seem not to have a plan for the day apart from sit outside those doors and watch time pass by. It’s blissful to let your hair down like that and not feel like the world is passing you by. They aren’t curious as to what happens beyond Mombasa.

I asked one guy who looked 27 what he did for a living and he said – in terrifyingly beautiful Swahili- that he doesn’t have a job but that sometimes he helps his father run their shop. His father sells spices. He said he doesn’t make much. He asked me where I was from and I almost lied to him that I come from Dakar, Senegal. But regretfully I didn’t because he seemed like an okay guy. I told him Nairobi. I asked him if he has been to Nairobi and he sort of snorted and said no. Which is just as well, I told him. “But aren’t you curious?” I prodded and he shook his head. I asked him if I could take his picture and he declined. “I will pay,” I insisted and he didn’t even think about it, he said no. And that guy spells the spirit of Old Town, little town locked from the outside world, a town that soldiers on a treadmill of time; going nowhere. A town that has successfully fought time.

Cassava man

He sells cassava chips at a street corner which in itself is somewhat unremarkable at first glance. A commonplace. But it’s not his trade that drew me to him. It’s his regard of it. How a man treats his trade gives away who he is as a person. This guy wears a work shirt to his work, not a tee shirt or anything loose like that. And although it’s so bloody hot I want to lose my t-shirt, he buttons up this shirt and tucks it in his official pants as if later he has a meeting at Rahimtulla Plaza. He speaks less, even ignores some of my questions. Although he might be a man of few words his mannerism speaks a lot as to what kind of a guy he is; a proud man. Proud of his trade, a man who respects his work and who in turn he respects himself. And he silently serves his cassava chips from this street corner while all around him laziness lurks, a laziness characterized by young men who sit in doorways, cackling and totally oblivious of time.

Blogs gone bananas

The first thing that struck me with this guy was his t-shirt (yes, gentlemen, I noticed the ass passing if you want to know). So I walked up and said, “For a banana can I guess what MM means?” He regarded me like a snake would regard a cat and said nothing. But I told him anyway.

“Media Madness,” I said, “That’s what it means right?”

He smiled, a confused smile.

I told him I knew who his boss was. He folded his arms across his chest which I interpreted to mean, “Oh is that right punk?”. So I told him anyway.

“It’s the guy who writes Media Madness blog. Yes?”

“What’s a blog?” he asked.

That explanation was going to last a whole day, so I told him it’s a newspaper.

“And what does he write about?”

“Mostly? He calls people names. He is your boss right?”

He proceeded to do something that people do when they are trying to ignore you; find something to do. So he started to arrange and rearrange his stock of bananas. I suspected that the guy for media madness supplemented his income by putting out banana carts like this in coast and hiring sales boys in t-shirts proclaiming that they love Media Madness. Talk of desperation and vanity; trying to sell bananas and push a blog at the same time. I told his employee that his boss was a mean guy, that he calls people bad names and that he is heartless brute. He looked at me sympathetically, like I was going bananas.

“Does he even pay you on time?” I said, trying to incite him. He simply went about his business.

“Tell your boss he is shameless!” that’s the message I left the boy with, then I split (pun intended).

Rasta planter

From a small radio placed on a stool under a tree trickles Metro FM. Reggae music. Jeff Mwangemi, I’m told and I remember thinking, Jeff? My goodness, that guy is still on radio?

All round are pots and pots of flowers and seedlings. That’s what Asmari does for a living. A rastaman turned gardener (times are tough gentlemen you got to re-invent yourself). Asmari is a former acrobat and he is Giryama. Thirty years of age. A father of one. His dreadlocks are five years old. But since he’s a rastaman art still haunts him so he does some paintings on the side when his plants aren’t moving. That piece of wood he is painting is for some acrobatic troupe that will be headed for Sweden tomorrow.

Asmari makes the cut here because he was hospitable to us, he offered us seats and we chatted about his life and his trade and most importantly he said he was happy…and he meant it. Not many people are happy and not many have the guts to admit that they are not happy. On our way out I asked him a very important question: “Do you by any chance have some weed?”

Maasais can’t swim

This picture is telling; a Maasai at the coast. Red against blue, both of which are fiery in their own right because indeed – if my Bunsen burner, chemistry lessons were any good – blue is the hottest fire.

His story –like many stories at the beach- is a story of woe. He came to the coast because his cows perished in the drought. But since he is a man with a family, a man who doesn’t back down to circumstances, he leaves them in Samburu and comes to the coast to search for better fortune. Only he doesn’t find it at the coast, or rather not yet. To get by he sells pitiful artwork at the beach. They don’t move, mainly because they don’t look good. I wouldn’t hang those things around my horse’s neck. But he is a man, so he doesn’t give up, he keeps trying. He wakes up each morning and walks the beaches selling his artwork. Selling ice to the Eskimos. Does he feel resigned? No, he doesn’t, he keeps moving because when you stop you sink. Life is quick sand.

I asked him if I could take his picture and he said fine. But he asks me not to publish his name which is weird really.

Anyway some smart Alec behind me, a beach boy, an aspiring director, goes ahead and asks him to jump in the air assuming that that would make for a good picture. I think he thought I was making a success card. So I asked the Maasai not to jump. A Maasai leaping in the air is a corny picture, like a Coke ad with someone chugging a coke with their eyes closed.

“Please don’t jump, please?” I pleaded with him. “Ero, please stop jumping, will you?”

“But it will look good!” the beach boy protested.

“No, it won’t. Now, please don’t jump.” I repeated.

“Why don’t you want him to jump?” Spielberg pouted, somewhat disturbed by my photography skills. Or lack of it thereof.

I would have told him jumping is corny, but I didn’t know what corny was in Swahili.

 

I think looking deep into another man’s eyes is not only inexcusable, it is very questionable. There are only two permissible reasons for looking deep into another man’s eyes; I you are an optician or if you are a photographer because that’s art. And so I couldn’t pass up the chance to take a picture of this Maasai’s eyes because they looked cuddly, like his whites were getting sour. He also looked like he could use some sleep. But to take a picture of someone’s eyes is to ambush them, to invade their space. To lay them bare and make them vulnerable. I didn’t see anything in his eyes, not a dream, not fear, not pride, not hunger, or anger, not a vice or any of that shit that you will read from the lips of hotshot photographers. I only saw a man who was thinking, “This pose had better be good for some money!”

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48 Comments
  1. Nice post. I just had my coast holiday for the year and it was so relaxing that i only did one post. Next time though, I will pay attention to the people, as i search for good food and swimming points

  2. hehe. Biko, you did not unleash Media Madness (pun intended) upon a poor unsuspecting guy!! 🙂

  3. Funneee as hell. Impressive stuff!! Thank you.. I haven’t laughed like this in a while

  4. Nice story especially that conversation with the banana MM and Steven Speilberg… Made my evening….Good stuff

  5. Teriffic!! And the MM barb…brilliant. I find it strange that you didn’t talk to any women….heck in all your travels, you never talk to women. Hmmmm…..why is that?

    Ps: I loooove Coasto!

  6. Biko as usual u have not disappointed me,great piece…….and i’d really like to know who that media madness guy is,i am just curious…..really curious..

  7. Just wondering what these strangers think of when you ambush them with all those stupid questions that make our reading interesting? Dont stop asking,just dont get arrested…Good one…

  8. The only women Biko spoke to were the Mwingi old women who had a langa goat….

    Coasto has this heat that makes you lazy instantly! Just like Bujumbura town, peeps are laid back and there never seems to be any hurry in doing anything

    And as for MM guy, he just makes media guys go bananas and i sort of like his maddness

  9. I really do hope you interviewed the people of the nightlife; Buibuis don’t talk in daylight… Sequel! Sequel!

  10. Definitely a different perspective of “coast-o” from i’m used to.Makes for great reading.

  11. That was some serious jab you threw at media madness and you did it in a very classy way it actually looks decent. Great piece.

  12. The little crew who strummed a guitar and sung their poor hearts out are to be appreciated Jackson, if only you will listen to the tune and not not be afraid to seem pretentious… Just like the songs in Mad Men (3), strange but there is something there…

  13. “I hate when you check into a hotel and find, at the entrance, a troop of Maasai’s (Kyuks more like it) bedecked in their reds, leaping in the air for your benefit. Or some Swahili dancers doing a chakacha or a Karibu Kenya, hakuna Matata gamut. Can’t stand it because apart from it being very embarrassing I find it hopelessly touristy.”

    My biz comm lecturer, batty, middle-aged lady named Dr Ann, had a term for this: staged authenticity. One finds it in every culture the West has deemed exotic. I can’t stand it either.

  14. Media Madness…hmm….i’m really restraining myself from saying more. Lest i say something I shouldn’t…

  15. Oh, and on the word *Coasto*…gosh…should u in ur right senses say “Coast”, you’ll look like the shadiest person ever. (Ok, maybe i’m still having the Yuppie article hangover.)You, know, some of these sheng, slang and other modified words in a way upgrade pple. Most of us are so often in search of the coolness approval from those around us. Which brings me to textification, sm short forms are just surprising! Today, a pal sent me a text and says “…w’l…” instead of “wil”. Look, i have a tendency of analysing minutie. but sometimes i can’t help it. You ommit letters in order to save urself the hustle of writing long stuf. But if ur saying “…w’l c u then”, instead of “wil c u then” how have u gained anything? And what’s the difference btwn saying “ur b.day” and “yo b.day”? Or doesn’t saying “c u” save u a bit more energy than saying “c ya”.
    Anyhu, maybe it’s jst me…

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  16. so did asmari have any weed? 🙂 and what’s your fascination with men when you go on these trips, don’t the women look approachable?? loved that bit on the guy selling cassava chips, i’d hire him…i’m getting tired of complimenting you on your little pieces, aarrgh!!!

  17. Coast is a great place! Serene and ancient in the best of ways. If only it didn’t have the most absurd of scenarios: serious drug dealers, child trafficking, rising lesbianism, ill-informed strippers and hookers…anything outrageous, you’ll find it in Coast.

    Style….hehehehehehe…..i’ve never looked at texting from that point of view. It’s good to take notice of minutie, that’s what makes the difference btwn u and the next person.It’s possible that yearning to be a barbie is just a human trait. See, we always compare ourselves with our buddies. You want to be the first to own a car, to land the good job with a corner office and a good view, the first to lose weight/gain a 6 pack. the first to own land, get a boyfy/girlfriend…And i think this was passed on to us from older generations. Our grandparents wanted to be the first to own 100 cows, our parents wanted to be the first to get to uni, and now, here we are…its everywhere, from kindergarten, to high skuls and unis, to churches and the neighborhood. Ever had a sneak peak at Desperate Housewives?

  18. Shiro, just do what i did. Stop! Sorry Biko, but you already know ur writing is dope, right? Unless not getting complements from your audience emasculates you. The thing is, i praised the articles a number of times then it got to a point i thought, with all the complements from readers, this will at some point get stale.The mere fact that we are responding shows we appreciate the article. And if we don’t, we will say.

    Chanuka, speaking of churches, the things you would observe on a typical Sunday in this land can be quite interesting.Take All Saints Cathedral for example, the church is solid, don’t forget RAO and family attend there once in a while. And Johnstone Mwakazi leads the choir. But the cliques there…ngai!! Youth teams are meant to unite peeps of that age group, but when it becomes a case of what do you have and what don’t you, can u weng’ or can’t u…ei…there’s a problem.Don Bosco, Upperhill! The church was the ish. And i said “was”. The choir was just something else! On Christmas Eve it would get so packed pple would be found sitting outside on the edges. That was what the Catholic church in Kenya needed, well, until some priest got posted there and everything went back to boring. Anyhu, lemme not drift, the pple who attend there are mainly the middle and upper class folks.I believe peeps go there bcoz it really is a good church, but most times i encounter pple who insist that the church is just about showing off. “Just go to the parking lot and check out” am told. Then the dressing. And the language, it’s very hard to find peeps speaking Swa there. And the after-mass big ups. “How’ve u been, whatchu doing with urself, did u get the promo at work, when are we going to Malindi”…something in those lines. There are pple who go to these churches bcoz they are really part of ’em or are genuinely interested. but a good percentage of ’em go there in order for so and so to c i can also attend such churches. *sigh*.

    Anyhu, maybe that’s why Holy Family Basilica and JCC in Ngara will always have a huge following. Because pple who go there go because its conveniently located and the point is just the service.Whether u drove a Benz or a Vitz, rode a bike, walked from Eastleigh, no one cares.

  19. I love coasto and miss it tuu sana making arrangements for the annual pilgrimage in Dec . I think you should do a sequel where u will mention the night life, the wierd et al ama??

  20. @sunshine/ bella/carolyne, what’s a Rastafarian without weed?

    @shiro/karuu/serah I hope you ladies aren’t suggesting that I’m shy, that i can’t talk to girls? or perhaps that I’m averse to them? Remember the pilot lady i interviewed? Joan, i think? But next time I’m going female.

    style and n.sync: I love the diatribe, very amusing and catalytic.

    @ Chillimangoclothing: It’s a Nikon D70, a sexy little thing. I’m looking at upgrading so if you interested i could flog it?

    To all: Your presence and contribution here has never been taken for granted. Thanks

  21. Its been a while since I’ve been to coast.

    Coasterians are friendly and have this ‘not in a hurry’ attitude that makes one envy them.

    Now, wait till Media Madness gathers enough info on you!

  22. Wow so it’s not just I who sees MM somewhere and instantly thinks of the blog…the relevant parties should go after that trademark if they knew the recognition it currently has

    Anywhoos biko as always, great piece, great spread with great photos especially the frowning germans one…

  23. Nikon D70…not bad but I’m a Canon person.. Flog it and get the Canon Mark II now that’ll get you over mizz Tony Braxton real quick

  24. Entertaining read…got me to smile…and miss the beach.definitely heading down the soonest I can. You’re right about the…endless bliss..infinite happiness.
    And you should totally lose the toni thing 🙂

  25. Media’s Uncle Rukus makes a debut on this blog and not in a good style but also in a civil manner. Whatever recognition it gets, even the 42 brothers for those who are familiar with them had their own recognition.

  26. am possibly the only person who read this blog and shed a tear!! i really feel for the masaai man…so much hard work and such sad eyes!! i feel like going to coast ‘o’ and giving him half my salary!! did you get his mobile?

  27. Excellent post. I see a dwindling hope in the moran’s eyes. I hope the vicissitudes of his life don’t snuff it out.

  28. very intresting

    and sure thing you would envy the guys who are just sitted bila a plan like there is no kesho.

    waiting for the next post.

    cheers biko….

  29. @wambui. Didn’t pick his mobile, sorry. How about you send me that money, I will make sure it gets to him…somehow.
    @miriam what is vicissitudes? sounds like a sea animal…:-)

  30. Don Bosco!!!! I luuuv the church. In_sync, i think that’s just the sort of congregation the church attracts.The fellows you meet are mistaken. You can’t blame pple who are well off for having what they have. It just so happens that those who attend there can afford lavish cars, good dressing and perhaps communicate more often in English.It’s not bragging.

  31. Lee, there’s a difference between using what you have because you can and flossing. I go to Don Bosco, the church is interesting.Unlike most Catho churches. And yes, its above the average Kenyan, but no, most of the time peeps go there in order to boast. To show that you have this, drive that and wear this, that and the other.The church’s initial idea was good, but like any other institution, peeps who go there try to outdo one another.

  32. What are you pple talking about?! Don Bosco is for peeps from all walks of life. Not everyone goes there in a ride. There are those who catch mats, buses and even those who walk.It’s just that pple hang around those they affiliate with. Am not sure if that’s a good or bad thing.When going there you have to be able to stomach the fact that there are pple who are doing better than you as well as those who are below you. Either way, you go there for the sole purpose of worshipping. We have to learn to stop comparing ourselves with others. Comparison will kill you.

  33. looove coast! mainly coz im from thea. (well, its actually my shagz. I was born in nai) And I looove how u painted a picture of Old town. That’s exactly how I see it. I just always thot other Kenyans look at the place and see the peeling paint off the walls and immediately write it off….Junguz see it in a different light…but then, they are tourists so it doesn’t really count. In any case, Mombasa Raha…

  34. “The sea is like Toni braxton”…..very good post and you seem to enjoy most of these trips, good for you ma guy.