7/18/2005

Graduation

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Graduation ceremony

***** Location: Kenya
***** Season: Short rains
***** Category: Observances


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Explanation

While graduation ceremonies can take place in Kenya at various times of year, they are particularly associated with the month of October, during the short rains, when most universities hold theirs.

Kenyan graduation ceremonies are all-day affairs. Each graduand receives a small number of admission cards for family, sponsors and friends, and those who are invited count themselves among the lucky favourites. Both graduands and guests need to be ready and seated in the right place in good time before the ceremony starts.

Invariably, the right place is an open sports field or park in front of a roofed dais set out for the Chancellor and guests of honour, and equally invariably, the day is hot and sunny (or, on rare occasions, drowned in rainfall from early afternoon -- this would be regarded as an inconvenience and a blessing). Graduands and their guests bring their umbrellas (often large golf umbrellas), to shield themselves from the sun or rai) and create extra colour.

Like all Kenyan festivals, graduations are colourful occasions. Black gowns, hoods and mortar boards are hired and worn by the graduands, British style -- but the trimmings on the hoods are bright and cheerful, African style. Many of the women wear African dress under their gowns, and Maasais take great pride in donning their full facial ornaments.



[Photo by Eric Kadenge : http://daystarus.org/Grad05/20.jpg]

The Chancellor makes a lengthy speech, which may or may not be reported on the television news in the evening. The presentation itself can be an interminable affair, when students are often asked to present themselves in groups according to the final result achieved. In order to save time, some universities may ask students to stand up in their places when their names are called, and then sit again, without walking forward to receive their degrees.

There are currently six State universities in Kenya, plus a growing number of recognised private universities of high standard. All of these, as well as the other third-level colleges, hold graduation ceremonies.



[Photo by Eric Kadenge : http://daystarus.org/Grad05/19.jpg]

On the day prior to the graduation (the rehearsal day) and the day of the ceremony itself, the city is awash with graduates showing off their gear and having their photographs taken in the famous beauty spots, sometimes with admiring and envious street children looking on. Thanksgiving prayers in churches, and receptions for family and friends, are held after the ceremony; more photographs are taken, piles of food consumed, hugs and gifts given and received, speeches by all important guests delivered. These are opportunities for the fresh graduates to thank all those who made it possible -- even well-off Kenyan parents would be hard pushed to raise university fees for all the necessary years on their own. Other family members will have helped, as will well-wishers and sometimes even non governmental organisations (NGOs). All of them have cause for celebration on the great day.

And whether the sun shines or the showers descend, it is a day of blessing for all.

Isabelle Prondzynski

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Picture taken by Eric Kadenge at the 2005 graduation ceremony of Daystar University (a private university in Nairobi) :



[Photo : http://daystarus.org/Grad05/1.jpg]

Plenty more beautiful photographs of the same occasion -- the site takes a while to load, but is well worth the wait!
http://daystarus.org/Grad05/Grad2005.htm

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Why universities missed the mark
Story by SAMUEL SIRINGI
Daily Nation, 14 October 2005

For the first time, two state universities – Nairobi and Kenyatta – will hold their graduation ceremonies on the same day. Both ceremonies take place today.

At the University of Nairobi a new system, in which only an estimated 1,000 students from three colleges will graduate, will be part of a series of reforms taking place under the stewardship of chancellor Joe Wanjui and vice chancellor George Magoha.

The university plans another graduation ceremony for students from other colleges in December. This is expected to bring the number of such fetes to three annually.

Today's 33rd ceremony will be for students from the colleges of agriculture and veterinary sciences, architecture and engineering, and biological and physical sciences.

Kenyatta University's graduation ceremony is also unique in the sense that, though the main occasion takes place today, a special ceremony, in which chancellor Harris Mule awarded Tanzanian President Benjamin Mkapa with a honorary degree, was held on Wednesday.

Yet that is as far as the good news goes.

Only last Monday, local universities were reported to be lagging behind in research. The diminished quality of graduates they produce was also reviewed.

According to the World Universities Ranking report by Europe-based international organisation Internet Lab, Kenyan universities are ranked lower than their counterparts in the region. The organisation does research on science, technology and higher education.

The University of Nairobi was ranked 24th in Africa, following University of Dar es Salaam which was ranked 13th. Uganda's Makerere University was placed 18th. Globally, they were ranked 4,385, 2,576 and 3,505 respectively.

Ranked 49th in Africa and 5,986 worldwide second in Kenya was Moi University, while the United States International University was rated 61 in Africa and 6,373 globally. Kenyatta University was ranked 74 and 6,813, completing the list of Kenyan university's on the continental map of 100 best universities.

Egerton, Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Maseno did not make it to the list of Africa's top 100 universities.

The study was based on a number of parameters, including university's research outputs and general contribution to new knowledge.

State funding to public universities has been dwindling over time after the Government shifted its focus to basic education. Since public universities have never revised their fees, they have only struggled to meet their mission. The State only sends Sh70,000 per student to the universities directly, though students can individually apply for Sh55,000 in government loans.

The government funding criteria is irrational to some degree as some students in courses such as medicine and engineering require more funds to train than students studying humanities. Experts have proposed that the Government pegs funding on the cost of each individual course.

The diminishing budgets to public universities have meant that salaries for lecturers remain low, while funding for research is hardly available. The situation has forced lecturers to resort to moonlighting to make ends meet.

At Kenyatta University, for example, the situation is grim. The institution is currently reeling under a huge financial deficit following Treasury's allocation of Sh1.2 billion to the college, far less than Kenyatta University's annual wage bill of Sh1.8 billion. It means the Sh555 million deficit would have to be sought from elsewhere, mainly from the self-sponsored academic programmes.
Overall, all local public universities are seeking to plug a Sh800 million budget deficit to pay their staff salaries, especially after the Government revised salaries for lecturers. Keen to narrow the budget gaps, universities have been admitting many students to parallel degree programmes, which some argue compromises the quality of academic standards.

These are some of the factors that point to the fact that the World Universities Ranking, could be credible. In any case, the University of Nairobi, ranked 24 in Africa, is believed to be the leading one locally.
http://www.nationmedia.com/dailynation/nmgcontententry.asp?category_id=39&newsid=59267

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Two universities to enrol more
Story by RICHARD CHESOS and JIBRIL ADAN
Daily Nation, 15 October 2005

Two of the country's public universities will enrol more students once they adopt a new system in which admission would not be pegged on bed capacity.

University of Nairobi chancellor Joe Wanjui and his Kenyatta University counterpart Harris Mule said the move would see most of the 50,000 students locked out of public universities yearly being admitted as day scholars. Although about 60,000 students score at least a C+ in the Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education examination every year, Nairobi, Kenyatta, Jomo Kenyatta, Egerton, Moi and Maseno admit only 10,000. Parents and secondary school heads have been asking the public universities to delink admission from boarding space, saying the scheme had prevented qualified students from accessing higher education.

Speaking while presiding over the university's 33rd graduation ceremony, Dr Wanjui regretted that some of the 50,000 qualified students, locked out of the university yearly, did not even get middle-level training opportunities.

Some 920 graduands from the colleges of Architecture and Engineering, Agriculture and Veterinary Sciences and Biological and Physical Sciences were awarded degrees and diplomas during the ceremony whose theme was, Towards World CLass Excellence. The next would be held on December 9, this year.

Dr Mule, while presiding over KU's 20th graduation ceremony in which 2,352 graduands received degrees and diplomas, said: "It was a big challenge for the Government and universities to come up with innovative ways to accommodate the majority of students who qualify for higher education but do not get access."
http://www.nationmedia.com/dailynation/nmgcontententry.asp?category_id=1&newsid=59365

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Honorary degrees :

Honorary degrees are usually -- but not always -- presented on the same day that other degrees are conferred. The University of Nairobi now has a lengthy list of honorary degrees conferred over the years :

http://www.uonbi.ac.ke/varsity_focus/degree_awards.htm


[Photo : http://www.uonbi.ac.ke/varsity_focus/images/31.JPG]

Prof. Richard D. Keynes - Doctor of Science
In recognition of a distinguished physiologist who has made contribution to the understanding of electro-physiological processes and to international science. Honouring a true friend of the University.


Mkapa receives Kenyatta University honorary degree
Story by NATION Reporter, 13 October 2005

Tanzanian President Benjamin Mkapa was yesterday awarded an honorary degree by Kenyatta University. With the Doctor of Letters degree he becomes the first sitting president of a foreign country to be given such an honour by a Kenyan university.


[Photo : Fredrick Onyango
http://www.nationmedia.com/dailynation/images/news/mkapa13102005.jpg]

Tanzanian President Benjamin Mkapa's robe is adjusted by the Kenyatta University dean school of humanities, Prof Mary Getui, for the conferment of an honorary degree on the campus yesterday.
He was honoured for his contribution to the fight against poverty and the promotion of economic development. The university also considered his role in the revival of the East African Community.
http://www.nationmedia.com/dailynation/nmgcontententry.asp?category_id=1&newsid=59224

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Worldwide use

See the main Graduation (sotsugyoo, Japan) page in the Worldkigo Database

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Things found on the way



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HAIKU


black and blue
shining among the stars
my lovely child




[Photo by Eric Kadenge : http://daystarus.org/Grad05/18.jpg]



arm in arm
blow a kiss to the street girl --
graduate tomboys


Isabelle Prondzynski

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Graduation 2009

Shiki Monthly Kukai, June 2009


orphan girl --
she graduates without a gown
or a relative


~ Patrick Wafula


anxious moment
waiting to hear his name —
a graduate eager


~ Adan Issak


graduation day —
an old woman embraces
her son


~ Hussein Haji


the shortest girl
graduating with a diploma —
jubilant parents

~ Catherine Nyambura


chilly morning —
cheers from the crowd
to jubilant graduates

~ Kisilu Peacock


sunny day —
graduates sweating
under a tent


~ Busigwa Peacock


graduation day —
students rush for space
in their gowns


~ Aineah Peacock


graduation day —
a drunken man in the crowd
disrupts the ceremony


~ Khadiah Rajab


graduation day —
anxious students welcome
their vice chancellor


~ Andrew Otinga


calm day —
students gather in the hall
for graduation

~ Amuwa Devis


a lame girl
graduating with a degree—
bright day


~ Stephen Macharia


beaming faces —
my brother graduating in
a black gown


~ Kevin Wanjala


jubilant students
graduating in red gowns —
bright day


~ Antony Mwangi


crippled boy
graduates successfully —
jubilant parents


~ Emmanuel Mwita


graduation day —
the President in a black gown
presides


~ Elkana Migaka


students in black gowns
shouting and screaming for joy—
graduation


~ Mary Wambui


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Related words

***** Graduation (sotsugyoo, Japan)


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Green Caterpillar

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Green Caterpillar (aomushi)

***** Location: Kenya, Japan, others
***** Season: Non-Seasonal Topic in Kenya
***** Category: Animal


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Explanation


"green insect", as mentioned in the haiku below
in Kenya is not a caterpillar, but a flying and crawling insect (for example a sort of spider).
The common green lacewing (scientifically known as Chrysoperla rufilabris) is one of them.
More later.

There are of course many kinds of green caterpillars in Kenya, but we have them in all seasons.

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Green Lacewing
http://www.insectary.com/lw/lacewing.htm

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Worldwide use

Japan


http://onion.cocolog-nifty.com/homemade/cat849134/

Green Caterpillar, aomushi 青虫
leaf-eating caterpiller, namushi 菜虫
picking leaf-caterpillars 菜虫取る
kigo for all autumn

These bright green caterpillars prefer the leaves of vegetables, like big radish. Children pick them with chopsticks.
The caterpillar develops into the beautiful butterfly Monshirocho 紋白蝶 モンシロチョウ
(Small White in UK, Cabbage Butterfly in USA).


Click HERE to see more photos of the green caterpillar

Click HERE to see photos of the butterfly.


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Things found on the way





. The Very Hungry Caterpillar .
a children's picture book designed, illustrated and written by Eric Carle.


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HAIKU


a green insect
crawling in green grasses
sucking green sap

Oseme Jeremiah (Bamboochas) Kenya

青虫や
青葉を這って
青汁チュウ

aomushi ya
aoba o hatte
aojiru chu~

(Tr. Nakamura Sakuo)

chu~ is a also word used for a kiss blown to a child. Here it is used to imitate suu 吸う, sucking.

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a green caterpillar--
English Class suddenly
focused


eiko yachimoto, Japan July 2006

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green caterpillar --
how it peers through the leaves
in my vase!


Isabelle Prondzynski, July 2006

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Related words

***** World Kigo Database : Insects (mushi)

***** Hairy Caterpillar in Kenya

***** Caterpillar (kemushi) Japan


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7/08/2005

Ghana SAIJIKI

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GHANA SAIJIKI


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CLICK for more MAPS


The Republic of Ghana is a country in West Africa. It borders Côte d'Ivoire (Ivory Coast) to the west, Burkina Faso to the north, Togo to the east, and the Gulf of Guinea to the south. The word "Ghana" means "Warrior King", and was the source of the name "Guinea" (via French Guinoye) used to refer to the West African coast (as in Gulf of Guinea).

Ghana was inhabited in pre-colonial times by a number of ancient kingdoms, including the Ga Adangbes on the eastern coast, inland Empire of Ashanti and various Fante states along the coast and inland. Trade with European states flourished after contact with the Portuguese in the 15th century, and the British established a crown colony, Gold Coast, in 1874.

Upon being the first African nation to achieve independence from the United Kingdom in 1957, the name Ghana was chosen for the new nation to reflect the ancient Empire of Ghana that once extended throughout much of western Africa. In the Ashanti language it is spelled Gaana.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !

CLICK for more photos of GHANA

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The climate of Ghana is tropical, but temperatures vary with season and elevation. Except in the north two rainy seasons occur, from April to July and from September to November. In the north the rainy season begins in April and lasts until September.

Annual rainfall ranges from about 1,100 mm (about 43 in) in the north to about 2,100 mm (about 83 in) in the southeast.
The harmattan, a dry and dusty desert trade wind, blows from the northeast from December to March, lowering the humidity and creating hot days and cool nights in the north.
In the south the effects of the harmattan are felt in January.
In most areas the highest temperatures occur in March, the lowest in August.
The coolest time of year is between June and September when the main rainfall occurs.
source :  www.ghanaweb.com


Haiku Seasons for Ghana


dry season : December to March
rainy season : April to June
cool season : June to September
cold rainy season : September to November



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Kigo from Ghana

Floods, flooding


kigo for the rainy season

animals
centipedes and millipedes
cotton stainers
. . . CLICK here for Photos !

mosquitoes
snails
termites (winged types)
toads and frogs


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Non-seasonal TOPICS


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General Thoughts
Nana Fredua-Agyeman

Harmattan season

Diseases
Because the weather is dry and humid the incidence of Malaria is on the low side. Thus river bodies dry up and all breeding grounds are dried up.

Dressing
Since the weather becomes cold in the evening people wear pullovers, jackets and cardigans in the evenings and early mornings. However, during the day the dressing becomes lighter due to the hot weather.

Dam
The drying of water bodies affects the Volta Lake which has the Akosombo Dam or the Akosombo Hydroelectric Power. During this time there is most often load shedding where some parts of the country gets light and others do not depending on the day and time. This occurs mostly between August and March. The reason being that the Volta Lake flows from the North to the South and therefore depends on the Rainy Season in the North for the generation of power.


Rainy Season

Farming
The rainy season marks the beginning of the farming season. Land preparation occurs in March in wait of the rains for planting to begin.

Disasters

The most common sight of the rainy season is flood, especially in July and August. It occurs in most cities of the country and also in the Northern part of the country. In the North, it washes away buildings (most houses in the North are built with mud) and food crops. It is not uncommon to see farmers leaving their harvest on the field to rot.

Also, most roads are feeder roads and hence, traveling to the remote areas to carte food crops becomes next to impossible. Food crops become cheap as the farmers are faced with a sell or perish phenomenon.

Early morning showers are also a major problem in the country. This occurs in July. Umbrellas and raincoats become a common site.

Foods and Animals
During the rainy season it is easy to see frogs croaking and snails moving around. Every small bush would be filled with snails as well as every puddle with mating frogs. Also, mushrooms become a delicacy.


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Haiku Poets from Ghana


Fredua-Agyeman Nana

I am Fredua-Agyeman Nana from Ghana.
I have lived in Suhum a town about eighty kilometres from the capital, Accra, for all the twenty-five years I have been in this world with the exception of the time I spent pursuing higher learning. I attended Star of Suhum International School from kindergarten to the Junior Secondary School and continued to Adisadel College, in Cape Coast, to read science—a continuation that began the break in my long stay in Suhum. From there I moved to the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Kumasi, to study Agriculture.

I started reading any book my hand would get hold of—both literary and non-literary and writing anything that comes to my mind (after all, whoever loved that loved not at first sight—Marlowe). Some of my articles were published in a local entertainment newspaper Graphic Showbiz. To this point I have two unpublished collection of my poems: Tot of (My) thoughts and ImageNation. Some of my poems have been published in a London-based Ghanaian newspaper Ghana Today. My admirers include Pope, Keats, Dryden and Donne on the non-African scene whilst on the African soil I admire Kofi Anyidoho, Atukwei Okai, Ali Mazuri, Wole Soyinka, Immomotime and many others. I aspire to move from being an amateur poet to a professional poet.

Read more HERE:
source :  www.africaresource.com



moss and moon —
the same old
broken hut


source : Simply Haiku, 2006


. Haiku from Ghana : BLOG


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Adjei Agyei-Baah

garden reading
a ripe mango drops
with a splash of red ants


Actually this haiku was written about a couple of weeks ago in 2015 when reading at a backyard garden in my homeland Ghana, specifically Kumasi; when this event occurred.
Presently it is mango season in Ghana which usually starts from January to about May thereof. The season is characterized by emergence of red ants, aphids, butterflies who pierce the ripe mangoes for its sweet juice and sap.


ripe mango
on the garden floor
an aphid takes a bite



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KENYA and TROPICAL SAIJIKI



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7/01/2005

Goats and sheep

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Goats

***** Location: Kenya, other areas
***** Season: Non-seasonal Topic
.......... for kigo see below, sheep
***** Category: Animals


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Explanation

Goats are a non-seasonal topic for haiku.
Capra hircus, the domestic goat, has been domesticated for more than 9000 years.

Goats are very important animals in Kenya.


Goat meat
a kigo for the hot and dry season.


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© Photos by Patrick Wafula, 2006

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Dairy Goat and Capacity Building Project (Kenya)
Farmafrica.org

The project aims to ensure sustainable community-based dairy goat production and animal healthcare systems are established, strengthened and supported by community-based organisations and local extension services. We will work closely with farmers and government staff to develop appropriate systems in the dry Mwingi and Kitui Districts of Eastern Kenya. FARM-Africa's approach here is to build on its experiences in Meru and in Ethiopia, Tanzania and Uganda and to share our successes with farmers in a range of environments in sub-Saharan Africa.
To read more, click HERE.


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Worldwide use

Japan

"mountain sheep", yagi 山羊 goat

hitsuji 羊 sheep



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Things found on the way



HUMSHAKAL

A large brick arch leads off the bustling main road into a maze of narrow lanes with crumbling buildings. Here there are no glitzy shops, no smart display windows, no luxury goods to display. Poverty hangs in the air like a pervasive smell.

“Eh bhai!”

It’s only when the caller repeats it a third time that I realise he means me. “Come over here please,” he says when I turn around. “Usmanbhai is calling you.”
I follow him. A tall man with a hennaed beard stands at the roadside smiling. “Hello Usmanbhai,” I say. “You were calling me?”
“I’m not Usmanbhai. That’s him over there,” the man says, pointing to one of three men seated on a charpoy a little farther on. Usmanbhai gets up from his charpoy as I approach. He too is smiling broadly.
“Iqbalbhai!”
His smile wavers as I show no sign of recognition.

“Iqbalbhai? You are Iqbalbhai, aren’t you? Iqbalbhai from Palanpur?”
“I’m sorry, but I’m not Iqbalbhai.” I feel vaguely and irrationally apologetic for not being Iqbalbhai.
“Well.” Usmanbhai shakes his head in disbelief. “Well, what a thing! I could have sworn you were Iqbalbhai. I was just saying to my friends – what on earth is Iqbalbhai doing here? You look exactly like him from the front, from the side, even from behind!”
“No, I’m afraid I’m not Iqbalbhai. This seems to be one of those humshakal* cases.”
“Well, I’m sorry to have bothered you. Hope you aren’t annoyed.”

I continue on my way, wondering who Iqbalbhai might be.

dusty street
a goat shares a doorstep
with three children


Back home, I take a long look at myself in the mirror.
Palanpur? No, I’ve never been there.

*Doppelgänger

- Shared by Johannes Manjrekar
Joys of Japan, March 2012




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HAIKU


cows and goats
scatered all over the place
grazing up and down

Miriam Nyambura (Bamboochas), Winner of May 2006 Ginkoo

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tag of war --
two goats pulling a tread
of dry grass


Brian Etole
Peacock, Kenya October 2010


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hot noon-
a goat rests under
a cactus shadow



Jacinta

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smiling farmer--
a goat delivers identical
twins


Ephantus Kamara


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dusty wind --
a tethered goat sneezes
again and again


Brian Etole
January 2011


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dry evening--
a goat bends to drink
sewage water


Caxton Okoth


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Related words

***** Maasai Cattle (Masai Cattle)


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***** Sheep (hitsuji)
With no further addition, this is a topic.
non-seasonal topic



kigo for late spring

hitsuji no ke karu 羊の毛刈る (ひつじのけかる)
shearing sheep

..... hitsuji senmo0 羊剪毛(ひつじせんもう)
. . . CLICK here for Photos !


yagi no ke karu 山羊の毛刈る(やぎのけかる)shearing goats

senmooki 剪毛期(せんもうき)time for shearing (sheep, goat etc.)


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ENGLAND

Around 500 professional shearers, many of them Jackaroos – cowboys adept at ranch and farm skills – or their female equivalent Jillaroos, have been travelling to the UK for decades to help cut the fleeces of the 25million-strong national flock during the main shearing season, from May 1 to the end of July.

source : www.dailymail.co.uk


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ROMANIA

In Romania is a true national holiday, shearing sheep.
Sheep are gathering up the first day of May. In other areas of the country shearing begins in March.
Sheep must be shorn to be not hot in summer and to be easier milking.
Mountain climbing on alpine pastures, starts on June 1 with both the sheep and cattle.
Alex Serban


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June cold--
sheep huddling in the middle
of the slum road


Caleb Mutua, Kenya 2010


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dusty street--
a pregnant goat feeds
on mango peels


Patrick Wafula
January 2011


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6/18/2005

Frangipani, Plumeria

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Frangipani, Plumeria

***** Location: Kenya, India, Australia and other tropical countries

***** Season: Hot dry season, cool dry season
............. Summer in Australia and India

***** Category: Plant


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Explanation

Frangipani trees are planted in Nairobi here and there, in public parks and large gardens, usually just one or two, as they need space and attract plenty of attention. In Mombasa and at the Indian Ocean coast, around the famous beach resorts, they are planted together with bougainvillea and poinsettia and provide a special attraction for tourists.

This small tree has a striking appearance, with long bare elephantine branches, a small tuft of leaves at the end of each branch, the tip studded with scented flowers.

Kenya has several bulbs, shrubs and trees with a delicious perfume... but of all these, the frangipani tree and its blossom also have the most beautiful appearance.

The frangipani tree is much beloved by the Hindu community of Kenya, who present its flowers as offerings in their temples. One can see piles of the flowers in Mombasa temples in the morning, brought in by the faithful.

Some of the airlines display just one or two fresh frangipani flowers in their WCs en route from Kenya to Europe -- a natural perfume which quite fills the cell with its fragrance.

Isabelle Prondzynski

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© http://www.xcalak.info/visit/uk/plants-uk.shtml

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Frangipani, Temple Tree
Plumeria spp. Family : Apocinaceae

This is a familiar shrub, almost a small tree, having a characteristic appearance, with rather thick, smooth, green twigs which branch regularly and ooze large quantities of latex if damaged. It is often planted near temples and in cemeteries in India and South East Asia.

The white variety (P. alba) originates from the West Indies and is named after the Frenchman Plumier, who was a pioneer of West Indian botany. The pink-flowered Frangipani (P. rubra) comes from Central America and now has a wide range of allied colours.

It is suggested that the name Frangipani originates from the French frangipanier, meaning coagulated milk; but a more attractive hypothesis refers to a perfume developed from its flowers in the 12th century by an Italian nobleman named Frangipani.

John Karmali, The Beautiful Plants of Kenya, Nairobi 1993.

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Balinese girl in a Hindu Temple, Ubud, Bali,
Indonesia, August 2005
© http://www.flickr.com/photos/pape/128564255/in/set-72057594063093676/

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Plumeria rubra, Frangipani

A large, commonly seen succulent shrub that reaches 5 m in height. It is much favoured in the tropics, growing at altitudes from sea level to 2,000 m.

Bark : Grey, smooth, with prominent leaf scars.
Branches : Thick, forking, exuding a milky sap when wounded; sap very poisonous.
Leaves : Large; dark; leathery; lanceolate; in terminal bunches at the end of branches; tapering to base and apex; 20-22 cm across; prominent veins; regular, usually shed during the dry season, when flowers appear.

Flowers : White, yellowish, pink or reddish purple; 5 petals, overlapping at the centre and curled at the edges; 6 cm across; scented; in terminal bunches.
Fruit : Paired capsules up to 25 cm in length.

Uses : According to legend a 12th-century Italian called Frangipani combined certain volatile oils, including the oil of these flowers, to create an exquisite perfume, which made his name and fortune. Today the plant, to which many names and stories are attached, is widely cultivated throughout the tropics. In Asia, it is often grown near Buddhist temples, where it is known as the ‘pagoda tree’, and the flowers are sometimes called ‘temple flowers’. It is also frequently planted near graves, especially those of Muslims and Buddhists. The latex in the branches is poisonous, though apparently useful in the treatment of skin cuts and inflammation.

Najma Dharani, Field Guide to common Trees and Shrubs of East Africa, Cape Town 2002.

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© http://www.frangipani-aroma.com.au/Japanese/personalityjp.htm

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Worldwide use

India

In India, the name of frangipani is "champa" or "chafa", in Telugu "Deva ganneru" (divine nerium), in Manipuri "Khagi Layhaaw"

Fragrant frangipani
THE FRANGIPANI is a popular tropical plant, growing to smallish tree-like proportions. As it is propagated both by way of seed and cutting, the plant is found almost everywhere in India, the East and the Far East.

The beauty of the flower, along with its fine wafting perfume, has made the flower a popular offering in Buddhist temples all over the East.

Of the Apocynaeceae family, its botanical name is Plumeria, after the French botanist Charles Plumer, who first found the plants in the Caribbean in the 17th Century.

The plant goes by various unusual names — `Dead Man's Fingers' in Australia, `Jasmin de Cayenne' in Brazil and `Pagoda' or `Temple Flower' in India. Frangipani came from `frangipanier' or coagulated milk, so called by the French settlers in the Caribbean in the 17th Century.

The P. Rubra is the most common of Plumerias and has given rise to many cultivars. Most common is the white with yellow centres, while other Rubras come in shades of red, pink, yellow and a mix of these colours.

The plants also do well in pots, needing strong sun and enough water. The leaves drop and flowering lessens, till the plant gathers strength to start blooming profusely again. A single frangipani tree in bloom will scent the air for quite a distance in the evenings, making it a beautiful acquisition to any home. The bunches of flowers make the tree attractive.

© RUPA GOPAL
http://www.hindu.com/mp/2004/06/03/stories/2004060300260300.htm


- - - - - and this blossom

Champa, Joy Perfume Tree - Magnolia champaca

The most interesting part of the tree are its flowers which are not very showy with few narrow yellowish white petals, but have an extremely heady fragrance. This fragrance has made Champa flowers very popular and they have been part of the culture in India from time immemorial. They are used in religeous offering in various parts of India. On a warm humid night, the scents can easily be enjoyed several hundred feet away. Champa flowers are used to make the world's most expensive perfume 'Joy' in America.
source : www.flowersofindia.net

between wedding
and the blooming of champa . . .
her tears


- Shared by Sandip Chauhan -
Haiku Culture Magazine, 2013


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Things found on the way



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HAIKU


Uhuru Park --
sweet scented sunshine under
the frangipani


Isabelle Prondzynski, Kenya


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cloudy sky --
yellow frangipanni blooms
in green leaves


Patrick Wafula, Kenya


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© becky blair. yellowhouseart
http://www.yellowhouseart.com/photos/work_details.asp?urn=1642


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frangipani scent . . .
somewhere in my mind, the seed
of a haiku

Richard Kay, Australia


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plumeria blooms
butterflies sparrows etch
my vast solitude ~


Narayanan Raghunathan

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On my slow walk home
Saw a frangipani fall -
So I picked it up


Wing
http://blog.wingdingo.com/2007/01/03/frangipani/

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beach sunset
a frangipani trodden
into wet sand

Sharon Trevelyan Dean
http://users.mullum.com.au/jbird/dreaming/ozku-beach.html


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Some Haiku by Angelee Deodhar, India

frangipani blooms
softening iron balustrade
of the stone terrace

http://www.tempslibres.org/sites/ang/hku/ang04.html


windswept -
into the upside down umbrella
frangipani blossoms

http://www.geocities.co.jp/Bookend-Christie/5203/2004.html


end of summer
the first whisper of rain
on the frangipani

http://summerhaiku.blogspot.com/2006_07_01_summerhaiku_archive.html

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starless night
frangipani blossoms
litter the lawn


Sue Mill
Copyright 2003 Simply Haiku
http://www.poetrylives.com/SimplyHaiku/SHv1n6/Sue_Mill.html


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strewn, grounded
white frangipani flowers~
petals of autumn


- Shared by Mark Phillip Liston - Newcastle, Australia
Joys of Japan, 2012



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Related words

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6/15/2005

Form One Entrants

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Form One entrants and monolisation

***** Location: Kenya
***** Season: Hot dry season
***** Category: Humanity


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Explanation

The Kenyan school year starts in January. New students entering Form One of secondary school (usually aged 14 or over), register in January and start classes at the beginning of February.

This is a very big step for a Kenyan student. Form One entry, in modern Kenya, functions as the equivalent of circumcision, i.e. entry into adulthood. People may or may not practice circumcision or other rites of passage -- either way, initial research has found that the transition between primary school and secondary school has come to resemble these older practices. This is expressed by massive parties (so-called “bashes”) held by the youth, largely without adult supervision, as well as by the short-term victimisation (so-called “monolisation”) of the new Form One students by their predecessors. Sometimes, things can go wrong (see article below).

The end of primary school is achieved by a national examination, the Kenya Certificate of Primary Education (KCPE). Only about 50 percent of students passing this examination find places in secondary schools -- the other 50 percent dropping out either because they have not achieved the necessary points for the limited number of places, or because they cannot raise the necessary fees.

While primary education (eight years, from age 6 to age 14 or over) is now free of charge in Kenya, secondary education is subsidised but fee-paying. Many bright students, who cannot find a scholarship or a sponsor, drop out at this stage, even though they might have had the points to enter a recognised secondary school.

Bahati High School, in Kayole, Nairobi, being run by volunteers, is able to provide education at low cost, and can therefore offer places to the children of the community without being selective as regards points. This school started the Bamboochas Haiku Poetry Club at the start of 2006. Now, one year later, is the first time that the Bamboochas have welcomed new Form One entrants.

This coincides with the exciting moment when the school is building a corrugated iron laboratory as its contribution to recognition as an exam centre for the Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education (KCSE) from the end of 2007.

Secondary school involves many changes for the new entrants. The style of the uniform changes (dresses are replaced by skirts, shorts by trousers, checked cloth is out while plain colours are in, both girls and boys wear ties), many new subjects appear (history, geography, the sciences), English becomes the language of instruction for all, and this may be the first time that the students meet classmates from other parts of the country, speaking a different mother tongue.

All the haiku collected below were written by the Form One entrants themselves -- brand new haijin. They convey the atmosphere so well -- please enjoy reading their work!


Bahati High School

Text and photo : © Isabelle Prondzynski

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School where boys have to be 'men'
Daily Nation, 15 February 2007
By: PATRICK MUTHURI and MUCHEMI WACHIRA

The excitement that comes with joining Form One was evident on the faces of the young students as they were guided by their parents through the gates of Kiriani Boys Secondary School in Meru South District last week. They were excited to be joining secondary school and many of the parents had toiled hard to meet the many expenses that come with sending children to high school.

The usual words of advise for the students to take their studies seriously could be heard as the parents bid their children goodbye and left them behind.

But 25 of the parents could not believe their eyes when three days later, their children arrived home, carrying all their belongings and a letter from the principal, Mr Ngaruthi Kithinji, saying they could not be allowed in the school because they were not circumcised. They were lost for words.

Even if they were to take their sons to be circumcised, it would take no less than a month for them to heal enough to resume studies. Meanwhile, other students would be going on with learning.

But Mr Kithinji said the presence of the uncircumcised boys in the school could lead to unrest. "There was a lot of screaming and disturbances when your son was discovered to be the way he is. Just like you cannot keep your elder son who is uncircumcised in the same room with your younger son, this also applies in the dorms," Mr Kithinji said. He told the parents of the affected children to have them circumcised in two weeks and take them back to school when they get well.

The parents are now appealing to the Government to intervene.

Trouble started on their first night in school. The older boys ordered the newcomers to strip naked so that they could be inspected. Those who were not circumcised spent the whole night going through all manner of torture and insults. Says one of the boys: "The first night was very bad. We were never given a chance to rest or sleep even after the long journey. They started shouting and asking us silly questions like are you a man or a woman?"

The following day, they reported the matter to the principal, who instead of assisting them, sent them home.

The Meru South district commissioner, Mr William Kiprono, ordered the immediate reinstatement of the students, saying it was wrong to take such a discriminative action. "Circumcision is a cultural thing not accepted in some societies. It's wrong to chase students from a public school because it is not government policy," said Mr Kiprono, while apologising to the students and their parents. "The bullies were the ones to be sent off and not the other way round," he said.

But even as Education minister George Saitoti was condemning the action by the headteacher, the students demonstrated in his support yesterday afternoon.
... //www.nationmedia.com/

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Worldwide use


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Things found on the way



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HAIKU


By Patrick Wafula
Patron of the Bamboocha Haiku Club, Bahati High School

The New Bamboochas, who number about 40, have been taking their first lesson in haiku this week. First, it was Form One West, then Form One East. On Ash Wednesday (21 February 2007), I spent the lunch hour with Form One West, giving them their first haiku lesson. It was a great joy and experience. We wrote the first haiku together as a class; the rest were written individually.

Form One East took their lesson three days later. The new haijin have been writing about the new school year and their experiences in Bahati High School. They are such a bundle of joy! Some of their experiences are hilarious, others are pitious, but each of these experiences are true.

Fasting and Prayer day (Wednesday 21/02/07)

The Form One West had their first prayer and fasting experience and they wrote about it in their very first haiku the next day :

Mr. Wafula
taking photos of
the new lab

in the school kitchen --
Sharon happily biting
a huge chapati

from the kitchen,
delicious scent of chapati --
a rumbling stomach

a student
giving a testimony...
hymns are sung

Mr. Wafula
praying for sponsorships...
moment of silence

Mr. Wafula
taking photos --
students praying


~ Class


Patrick Wafula Sensei with his camera
Photo (c) Isabelle Prondzynski


in the kitchen --
people eat chapati
revenging for Wed


~ Timothy Wambugu

(On Thursday, students were eating chapati to compensate for what they missed to eat the previous day during the fasting and prayer)



first year in Bahati
prayers and fasting --
my grumbling stomach


~ Josephat Mwangi

students making noise --
their cries as Mr. Macharia
beats them

students dozing
during History lesson --
the teacher's shouts


~ Steven Nzomo


a teacher with a sad face
going back to the staffroom...
what stupid students


~ Shadrack Masai Mwengi

in the sitting room --
we happily take breakfast
with my family

~ Mercy Karanin

Mr. Ogembo writing
on the blackboard --
students laughing

last lesson to lunch...
bored students wait to go
for lunch

students laugh
as Mr. Ogembo says gaii...
geography lesson

~ Samuel Ndung'u

Mr. Macharia in class...
students sleeping on the desk
and they get strokes

~ Gerald Kariuki

students rejoice
around the new laboratory --
praise for Isabelle

~ Caren Cheptoo

students laugh
and cheer up --
last lesson to break

~ Vivian Adhiambo

in class
Beatrice cries like a baby --
corporal punishment

~ Jonah Kamande


at the school kitchen
people carry plates and spoons --
chapati in hand

at home --
my brother happily runs
to me for a kiss

at the shop --
a long queue of people
waiting to buy goods

everybody quietly settled,
writing and reading stories --
library lesson

~ Anne Wairimu


Constructing the new laboratory
Photo (c) Patrick Wafula



NEW SCHOOL YEAR HAIKU (Form One East)

new different
school rules…
Discipline Prefects

smell of my
new school ID…
smell of sewage

~ Christine Minae

first time
to wear trousers…
my new uniform

in the school kitchen,
big transparent chapatis…
smell of food

~ Peter Mwangi

new school lab --
teacher lights the Bunsen burner,
for students doing experiments

many students
of different tribes --
Bahati High School

many rules to keep --
if you break one,
punishment

~ Dorothy Nthenya


first day
in Bahati High School --
different daily menu

meeting
and making new friends…
first day in Bahati

~ Brian Mwangi


school kitchen --
much tasteless
rice

first day in Bahati --
smell of new
textbooks

first time
to wear a tie --
Bahati High

~ Rose Mwikali


many tribes of students --
my first day in
Bahati High School

first time to
own school ID --
Bahati High school

first time
to meet Discipline Prefects …
Bahati High School

in the lab,
Rose holding a gas jar …
first Chemistry Lesson

~ Eunice Mwema


first time in school kitchen --
many students enjoying
different menu

first day in Bahati --
many new classrooms
with different arrangements

first day in Bahati --
students in the lab,
smell of chemicals

~ Truphosah .I. Osendi

many different subjects…
first time in Bahati
High School

many new students
confused like lost
sheep in a forest

greedy Form Four
students in the kitchen --
first day in High School

~ Michael Bwoga

confused like a maggot
in a demolished toilet --
first day in High School

~ Sheillah Shikawa

many tribes of students --
communication problems
between Luo, Kikuyu, Kamba and Luhya

~ Rhodah Ndindah

smell of my
new uniforms --
first day in Form One

first day
in High School --
meeting different tribes

in Bahati School,
talking nicely to students --
Discipline Prefects

seventh week
in Bahati School --
new lab built

first time
to carry student ID --
Bahati School

~ Maxiwell Omondi

black water
flowing down along Soweto --
smell of sewage

many new faces,
different languages --
first time at Bahati

many new
scaring subjects --
biology, geography

~ Catherine Wanjiku


hardworking teachers,
teaching all the subjects --
students nodding

~ Jane Mumbua

students struggle
to keep school rules --
speaking English all the time


~ Nelius Muthoni

time keeper
ringing the bell --
lesson after lesson

~ Alice Wambui

ndengu and chapati,
ndengu and chapati for lunch --
rumble of my stomach

first time
to see black water --
sewage river

~ Patrick

time keeper
ringing the bell --
change of lessons

in our class,
calculations --
first Maths lesson

first time to see
scientific calculator --
first Math lesson

Discipline Prefects
in Bahati School --
many rules to keep

~ George Onyango

James holding
a ruled exercise book --
second Math lesson

~ Ashitwa Douglas

in Bahati School,
Discipline Prefects --
respect

new black
and blue uniforms --
rule of smartness

different daily menu --
day after day
in the kitchen

first day in
Bahati High School --
miss my primary friends

new school,
new faces --
curious feelings

~ Alice Nyambura


Fasting and praying -- the Bahati students
Photo (c) Patrick Wafula

cooks serving
too little food --
sulky faces

first day
in High School --
equipped lab

many students
with different talents --
karate team

~ Raphael

on the assembly
the school is attentive --
raising the flag

in the kitchen --
students queue at the door
waiting to be served

ringing of the bell
by the time keeper…
change of lessons

~ Risper

black skirt blue blouse
blue tie black shoes white socks --
my new uniforms

~ Joyce Atolwa

first time
to learn Biology --
smell of my new uniform

smell of new books --
rules to follow
and keep

~ Caroline Ndegwa

hardworking teachers
of Bahati High School—
no idle lesson

new classroom
arrangements --
first day in Bahati


~ Lagat Amos

in the school office --
Mr. Wafula give us five five
for noise-making

Kamba, Luo, Luhya
and Kikuyu all meet --
Bahati School

~ George Ngamau

first time
to see Luhyas --
Bahati School

in school kitchen --
the chef gives me soup
without chapati

first time
to see a microscope --
school lab

senior students
steal form one books --
monolisation

~ Steven Nzomo


first time to see
many discipline prefects --
Bahati school

~ Mary Wangari

many students
with different talents --
the volleyball team

so many rules
to remember and keep --
discipline

~ Cynthia Adhiambo

girls wearing skirts
and boys wearing trousers --
new uniforms


~ Nancy Kamene

school kitchen --
meat stew tasting
delicious in my mouth


~ Moses Makule

many students
with different talents --
the football team


~ Muhia

in the lab
our teacher mixing chemicals --
first chem. practical

school kitchen,
watery rice with no fat --
rumble of my stomach

~ Joseph Mumo


the good feel and smell
of my new student ID --
first year in Bahati


~ Anonymous

first time to cross
the sewage river by bridge --
way to Bahati High

rice and cabbage
rice and cabbage for lunch…
rumble of my stomach

~ Grace Ruguru

second day --
welcomed with strokes (from Mr. Wafula)
for noise-making

new subjects,
harsh teachers,
and kind students

in the kitchen—
tasteless rice without
fat and spoon

~ Serah Wanjiku

first time
to join a drama club --
Bahati High

first time
to have school ID --
Bahati school

first time to wear
a skirt, blouse and tie --
Bahati uniform

~ Serah Mbuthi

bad smell of sewage,
but Christian students --
first day in Bahati High

smell of new books,
discipline prefects
and hardworking teachers

many different rules to keep --
different toilets,
different daily menu

~ Rachael Wangechi

many surprising…
subjects keep me reading
all the time

first time to mix
with students of many tribes --
learning in Bahati

first time
to be photographed --
school ID

~ Winnie Wairimu

Kamau holding
a test tube --
new laboratory


~ Robert Foro

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Related words

***** Start of School Year, School Year starts (Kenya)

***** School exams KCSE / KCPE (Kenya)

***** Ash Wednesday


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6/12/2005

Flies in Kenya

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Flies, Fly

***** Location: Kenya
***** Season: Non-seasonal Topic
***** Category: Animal


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Explanation


Flies as a Kigo

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I am sure that we can get a lot of good, satirical and humorous haiku on flies!
May be there being a lot of garbage in Nairobi could make it more appropriate kigo
especially at this time when the government is thinking of getting rid of the largest garbage dump in Kenya: The Dandora Garbage dump!
It is estimated that it would cost the government about 13 billion shillings to manage the Nairobi wastes alone!....

Patrik Wafula, December 2006

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Worldwide use

Japanese Kigo for all Summer

Flies in Japan

Flyswatter in Japan


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Things found on the way



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HAIKU


ouch!
a mosquito bit me
its painful

fracas
as mosquitoes riot
against raid


- "Raid" is an insecticide in Kenya and the haiku is about "Raid" advertisement that we see on T.V

Caleb David Mutua

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a swarm of houseflies
on cobs and leftovers--
green maize


David Wandera

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flies everywhere -
as i try to kill one
i slap my face


Adelaide Luvandale

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in the kitchen
a drawer filled with oranges --
safe from the flies


They are tiny fruit flies, and would just love to find a crack in the orange skins!

Isabelle Prondzynski

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Related words

***** Mosquitoes in Kenya


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6/09/2005

First Rainfall

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First rainfall, first rain, and related kigo

***** Location: Kenya, other regions
***** Season: Start of Short Rains,

..................... Start of Long Rains
***** Category: Heavens


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Explanation

Just as Japanese haijin write about "first sunrise", "first calligraphy", and the many other "firsts" of the new year, Kenya haijin write about "first rainfall" -- those very first hours of the eagerly awaited rainy season. It is very clear to anyone living here when the real rains have started and when they are about to start, with a raindrop here, and a slight drizzle there, as may happen for a week or longer before the actual first rainfall.

The first rainfall usually comes in the evening after dark --it lashes down, thick and heavy, and probably lasts a few hours at least. Everyone takes notice -- standing and breathing in the rainy air, and thinking about all the work that will result, now that the rains have come.



The first heavy rain usually brings out the termites, which fly into the dusk and up to any electric light, and which get devoured by frogs, gekkos and other waiting animals. There are some people, particularly in Uganda, who value the flying termites as a source of protein, catch them and have a feast.

The first rains usually bring about power failures too, as weak cables succumb to the rains and need to be repaired. Drains need to be cleared, roads get flooded, public transport fares rise and traffic jams stretch way into the night. The first rains are usually a major item on the evening news, and reporters speak about all the difficulties they have caused. “When it does not rain, the poor suffer, and when it rains, the poor suffer too”, a wise man I know said some years back.

The first rainfall binds the dust but, because of the preceding drought, it does not immediately lead to the formation of mud, as the following day’s sunshine will quickly dry the soil again.

Once the soil has become a bit softer, the ibises return to the grassy areas and eagerly search with the beaks for worms and other delicacies.

Mosquitoes do not come out until the rains have lasted for a week or more -- so the first rainfall is still mosquito-free. Plants do not start to grow visibly until the rain has lasted a week or more. Nor do bullfrogs come out of their muddy hideouts until the rains are established -- when they start to croak, the first rainfall is over.



Text and photo : Isabelle Prondzynski, 2006



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Worldwide use


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Things found on the way



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HAIKU


Imminent rains (26 to 31 October 2006)
-----------------------------------

rain in the air --
seated on soda crates
three young men chat

donkeys and carts
at Hope Filling Station --
first raindrops

waiting for the rain --
the blue patch in the sky
grows larger



First rainfall (1 November 2006)
-----------------------------

first rainfall --
surrounded by sleep and
a steady downpour

first rainfall --
the camel foot flowers
look brighter too

first raindrops --
lined up like pearls on
my clothesline




first rain --
the soft tread of the soil
underfoot


Haiku and photo :
Isabelle Prondzynski (October/November 2006)

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first rains-
jacket hawkers move
from door to door


Patrick Wafula

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an old man smiles --
rain drops wipe and sweep away
a huge lump of dust

Gideon Gichamba (Peacock)

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no place to pass through --
the first floor corridor
forms a stagnant pond

Catherine Njeri Maina (Bamboocha)

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early morning
preparing our shambas --
sleeping times decrease


Sobaha Wairimu (Bamboocha)
(shamba is Swahili for garden or field)

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under the bed
I search for my gumboots --
rain has started


Beth Mwangi (Peacock)

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raindrops cling to grass
catch the sunbeams sending
lights that dazzle eyes

Raymond Otieno (Bamboocha)




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Related words


***** Ibis (Hadada)

***** Umbrella

***** Monsoon ..(India, South Asia)


***** .. .. .. .. Rain in various KIGO (Japan)


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5/11/2005

Emancipation Day

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Emancipation Day

***** Location: Trinidad and Tobago
***** Season: Rainy Season (summer equivalent)
***** Category: Observance


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Explanation




In 1833 Thomas Buxton presented The Emancipation Bill in Parliament.
The Act was passed and came into effect on 1 August 1834. On that day,thousands of slaves in the British West Indies became free men and women.

August 1st is a public holiday in Trinidad and Tobago; in 1985 the government of Trinidad and Tobago declared Emancipation Day a national holiday, to commemorate the abolition of slavery.

Days leading up to August 1st there are historical lectures, films, drama and afrocentric exhibitions of arts and crafts.

Gillena Cox

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Quote
Posted By: History

On August 1, 1985, Trinidad and Tobago became the first country in the world to declare a national holiday to commemorate the abolition of slavery.

Obviously, we celebrate the abolition of slavery in the British Empire in 1834. However, individual colonies in British North America (which later became the United States of America) abolished slavery, beginning with Rhode Island in 1774. The first national abolition was declared in the French Revolution of 1789, and maintained afterward only in the independent Republic of Haiti.

Slavery was abolished permanently in the French Empire in 1848, in the Spanish Empire in 1880, and in Brazil in 1888. (Brazil is central, since it received more than one-third of all Africans imported in the slave trade).

Also, while we do not often think beyond the European-Atlantic slave trade, the Middle Eastern trade in African slaves also was significant. Opposition to slavery in Africa and Asia was not as strong as it was in the Caribbean, Europe and the United States.

Saudi Arabia and Angola abolished slavery officially only in the 1960s. Although legal slavery by then had probably ceased to exist, some Berber peoples continued to own slaves until at least 1975, and in areas of Africa and Asia, authentic slavery still exists surreptitiously.

Emancipation's worldwide significance is undoubtedly vital. However, in Trinidad (as opposed to Trinidad and Tobago), we should recognise that our historical experience does not neatly fit the wider one. As Dr Eric Williams, first Prime Minister of Trinidad, noted, Trinidad in 1833, was not a plantation society; it was a society of small estates operated by a few slaves. The average slave owner had seven slaves in Trinidad, as compared to 24 in Tobago.

According to Dr Williams, Trinidad had a mere 17,439 slaves at Emancipation, as opposed to Jamaica, which had 254,310, slaves, or British Guiana, which had 69,579. In addition, in Trinidad there were three domestic slaves for every 10 field slaves, as compared with a ratio of under two to 10 in Jamaica and one to 10 in British Guiana. Moreover, the British annexation of Trinidad came at a time when English opposition to slavery was winning popular approval. As a result, Trinidad was administered as a Model Colony, in respect of legislation governing the treatment of slaves.

Read more HERE !
© TrinidadandTobagoNews.com

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Worldwide use



 Emancipation Day, Guyana
Season: Dry Season, August 1



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Things found on the way



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HAIKU


rainy Emancipation day
sunny smiles of
women in parade


Emancipation day Haiga

gillena cox, 2007


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Related words

***** Independence Day - worldwide



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