good catch but he was a womanizer so it could be his latest student fling. No?
“...good catch but he was a womanizer so it could be his latest student fling. No?”
We know NOTHING about the Kenyan, he was dead when ‘Dreams’ was written.
Let me say it again:
I think I get the picture now; the son of a kenyan goat-herder left the school at Maseno in 1953, married in 1954, and as he said at the interview in Hawaii in 1962, he hadnt been back to Kenya for seven years, he must have left Kenya in 1955.
Right?
Not quite. His eldest child Malik was six years of age when he left Kenya, remember? How does that work?
Ill try again.
The son of a kenyan goat-herder had a six year old son when he left Kenya in 1959, so he must have married when he was 17, and was working in Nairobi for an arab as a clerk...we all remember that, dont we? And he was a friend of Mboya - wonder how they met? - but never mind, Kezia was pregnant when he left Kenya to go to Hawaii...and had a two year-old.
Hold it!
Didnt the family in Kenya state at an interview that their son of a kenyan goat-herder relative went to the US, worked for an oil company and married a white woman named Anna Toot?
Yes, they did.
So well have another go. The son of a kenya goat-herder - if we take him at his word, left Kenya seven years before he left Hawaii, and that makes it 1955, right? Ah! Beginning to see the light now...thats why Kezia was confused, she must have married the son of the kenyan goat-herder in 1953, because at another interview she said her eldest was TWO years old when he left...
Getting closer?
In 2008 Kezia said her oldest son Malik was 50. But if the son of a kenyan goat-herder left Kenya in 1955 like he said at the Hawaii interview, Malik would have to be at least 55 if he was two years old when...
Ive mucked up again, evidently.
Its all too hard. Let someone else work it all out. What I cant figure out is how could Mboya and the son of a kenya goat-herder be such good friends? If he left Kenya in 1955, he would have been around 19 years of age and Mboya who was five years older, was in England, studying at Oxford.
At least one thing seems clear. The son of a kenyan goat-herder was never part of the first airlift of students which landed at Idlewild three months before he showed up in Hawaii. And when he was first interveiwed in Hawaii in June 1959, he told the reporter he only had enough money for three semesters and needed to find work to support himself.
Just got lucky, I guess.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2278969/posts?page=763#763