Monday, June 2, 2014

Why Kenya Is Still Developing




I recently attended a film conference where several panel discussions about Kenyan showbiz took place. As is customary, towards the end of the discussion the floor was opened to questions from the audience. One man wanted to know why it was so difficult to get a local production accepted by a T.V station. The response from one of the panel member who was  a TV show producer was both encouraging and disheartening. She emphasized with the man’s situation claiming that her own productions had been rejected severally in the past. Her statement was encouraging because she was willing to meet the man who raised the question afterwards. It was however disheartening because the started from the bottom story she gave was a familiar one that I had heard from many personalities in showbiz. The only thing that bugged me was the question I later asked myself “When will this bottom to top approach stop?” 

Most people who make it in Kenya through their own sweat have to grab success the hard way. We are made to believe that there is no other way. But truly there must be. Those that face it rough simply don’t want to see you get it easy when they themselves hustled to succeed. They come up with reasons like, ‘It will help you build character’ and ‘It will teach you important lessons’. For instance, a company director who worked himself up the corporate ladder in a Kenyan firm will rarely find time to reply to emails from job seekers. Is it because, he doesn’t have the time? No. It would only take five minutes to read and reply simple email asking if there is any opportunity for fresh graduates in the firm. It is simply because, he thinks he does not owe anyone anything since no one gave him the same assistance when he struggled to make it. 

The problem with this kind of thinking is that it helps to keep the problem alive. Therefore the next generation of company leaders will do the same thing to the next generation of job seekers and so on.
In Kenya, many people cry for change yet they are unwilling to change anything themselves. People will cry foul over corruption but will hesitate to blow whistles when they spot an incidence of corruption happening right in front of their faces. Many people will complain about badly driven matatus and reckless drivers when they themselves cannot obey a simple traffic light. Most people will complain about how bogus our leaders are yet they have never bothered to find out what their local MPs background is let alone trying to get in contact with them in order to present their problems.

I have come to learn that Kenyans are often very quick to complain but slow to act. No one will be brave enough to create change but everyone is patient enough to wait for it to appear from thin air. And because of this complacent attitude, development is always a continuing process for us and never a final destination. We are just a developing nation.