Kwani? 05, Part 1, Now In Bookstores
Written by Kwani · February 13, 2009

Kwani ? 05 Reviews
Kwani? 05 Casts Light On Post-poll
“….While Kwani? 05 does not pretend to offer solutions to what happened to Kenya after the 2007 elections, it nevertheless presents us with a mirror with which to look at ourselves and hopefully learn where we so terribly went wrong…”
Read the rest of Joseph Ngunjiri’s review of Kwani? 05 published on The Sunday Nation here
Writers In Search Of A Nation – The East African
“….For me, the real value of these Kwanis (Kwani? 05 Part 1 & 2) will be better understood in later years.
They are a radical departure from earlier issues of the journal that relied heavily on the literature of the Kenyan middle-class — comfortable, personal and more than a little self-involved.
Written in the grip of the post-Moi era, the sense of individual self-discovery (the celebration of the “I”) loomed large on the agenda.
With the PEV, Kenyan literature has been forced to return to the concerns of an earlier generation of writers. Except that this return journey now involves writers in search of a nation.”
Read the rest of Parselelo Kantai’s review of Kwani? 5 published on The East African here
Book Searches For Answer To Kenya’s Redemption- Business Daily
“…the Kwani? 05 collection …was born at a momentous historical juncture and as such it is a historical signature itself. Kwani? 05, like its predecessors, seeks to destabilise that which we assume to be given; it jolts us out of the zones of comfort that we have started to reconstruct — reminding us about the cost of the ‘peace’ we now ‘enjoy’….”
Read the rest of Tom Odhiambo’s review of Kwani? 05 published on the Business Daily here.
Excerpts From Kwani? 05
Truth does not set you free. Instead, truth sets loose. It risks what we hold dear. And there are no assurances.
Daring truth entails risking all we might want to preserve. It means daring to break with family and friends. It means disturbing the fragile peace we inhabit by having difficult conversations. It means telling our mothers, fathers, sisters, brothers, lovers, and friends that their political choices are unpalatable.
Kenya Burning (Mgogoro baada ya uchaguzi 2007/8)- Now In Bookstores

Kenya Burning Reviews
When Kenya was red, and it wasn’t Valentine’s Day- Daily Nation
“…Kenya Burning is a very uncomfortable book to look at. But I have seen as bad, or worse from the Rwanda genocide of 1994 that killed nearly one million people, and the grim work of the Lord’s Resistance Army rebels in northern Uganda.
The book, however, should not be kept away from the children — not forever. It should be kept and given to them as a coming of age present, because it will give them an education about their country and its people that nothing can equal.
Kenya Burning, like other similar chronicles of savage rage are like giant onions with endless layers. You keep peeling off one, and another one confronts you….”
Read the rest of Charles Onyango- Obbo review of Kenya Burning published on the Daily Nation here
‘Kenya Burning’, a visual narrative of Kenya’s post elections violence, is a collaboration between The Godown Arts Center and Kwani Trust.It features photography by Yasuyoshi Chiba and Boniface Mwangi selected from the Kenya Burning Exhibition and text from Kwani? 05.Read interviews of the two Kenya Burning photographers here
Kwani? 05,Part 2, In Bookstores March 28th

Kwani 5 Part 2 ‘Revelation and Conversation : Part 2 of Kwani? 5, the second 400 pages of a twin edition, further examines Kenya in the context and violent aftermath of its 2007 elections. Here, writers, photographers, poets, cartoonists provide further collective narratives on what we were before, and what we became, during the epochal first 100 days of 2008. The issue also features a extended travel piece based in Uganda that comparatively explores the concept of ethnicity, and the history of a peoples in a space other than our own.
Excerpts From Kwani? 5
When I speak with truth it creates opportunity for everyone. -Excerpt from ‘Daring Truth’ by Jeremeiah Okongo.
I saw someone being killed in town at the matatu station called Kalenjin airport because the matatus there carry people heading into the North Rift. The IDPs who had been evicted from Eldoret were very bitter and were going around looking for Kalenjins to avenge their losses. They came to Kalenjin airport because they knew that’s where most of them board matatus to go home. Unfortunately, one man was caught by the group. They beat him up and stabbed him to death. I was not noticed because I look like a Kikuyu.- Kevin Koros, a 20-year-old actor from Lakeview, near Nakuru.
When my uncle saw some people approaching his home, he called the chief again who didn’t answer the call. When the Kalenjin youths reached my grandparents’ compound they said they were looking for my uncle to kill him. When they spotted him running away they tried to shoot him with arrows, but luckily none hit him. My uncle and grandparents moved to Nyahururu to start a new life. – Gladys Maina, currently living in Kikuyu, Central Province.
We spend most of our lives listening to every word of those politicians. That’s why we are suffering, especially the middle class and poor people. The rich from Westlands, Lavington, Runda are very safe. -Alvando Msamani, electronics salesman. Dandora.
I was born in Baringo. I’m a Kikuyu, but I learnt Kalenjin before my mother tongue. Most of my friends are Kalenjin. But today I don’t want to see any one of them. I really hate myself for saying that.
I cannot go back to Central Province. The language they speak there is totally different from the Kikuyu I speak here. When I speak my Kikuyu there, they start laughing at me. And when I go to Baringo, where I grew up, they look at me as a foreigner. If I don’t belong in the Rift Valley, where else can I fit? I am married to a Luhya! – Jesse Njoroge, Nakuru







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