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Memorial library fit for Dr Ouko

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The late Robert Ouko. Photo/FILE

The late Robert Ouko. Photo/FILE 

By MUGUMO MUNENEPosted Saturday, September 26 2009 at 20:02

Mrs Christobel Ouko is a woman unbowed. She doesn’t look pitiful. She breaks into hearty laughter when sharing jokes with her children, now all grown-up, especially when they discuss how tech-savvy she is and how she catches up with them on email from her fourth-floor apartment in Kilimani.

It has been two decades since she weathered a national storm of betrayal, murder and deceit of which her family was the epicentre. She lost a husband in such a grisly manner that an entire nation was thrown into mourning, and the world was shocked. But she didn’t give up. She had a full life ahead of her and seven children to put through school.

Her eyes twinkle with delight and a warm smile spreads across her face when she talks about Dr Robert John Ouko. Yet a fighting spirit appears to take hold of her when she talks about one of Kenya’s most compelling murder mysteries. “I’d like justice done. I want justice, but not just for us, but for the many families who have lost their loved ones in such brutal ways and who are not as prominent as my husband was.”

Husband’s wish

She sighs with relief that she’s been able to put her children through university as her husband would have wished. She has weathered a storm only few could. The bolt from the blue struck on an undetermined date nearly 20 years ago when assassins murdered her husband, who was then President Daniel arap Moi’s Foreign minister.

Mrs Ouko is studious in her defiance of those who might have broken her spirit in committing such a heinous crime. She has said that she has forgiven them but would still like to know who they were and why they killed her husband. The mystery has persisted — along with those surrounding the murders of Tom Mboya, Pio Gama Pinto and J.M. Kariuki — one of the darkest blots in Kenya’s history.

Mrs Ouko has pondered for years how best to remember her slain husband. Should it be a mausoleum? No, she decided, it would be a library and community centre in honour of the love for books that Dr Ouko kept to his dying day. “When he left the house that night, he had an open book on his desk,” Mrs Ouko said. “It was a world chronicle or an almanac. He read anything and everything.”

Love of books

His love of books was something he developed in childhood. He did well enough in primary school to be invited to join St Mary’s School Yala. But there was a hitch. He was not of the Catholic faith, and it mattered a lot at that time, especially for students who were joining institutions established by missionaries.

“His parents, who were of the Africa Inland Mission Church, didn’t know much else, and they told him to turn to teaching,” Mrs Ouko recalls. He did teach, but he would not give up his passion for reading.

Dr Ouko did not attend secondary school. He taught himself the curriculum and earned his Cambridge School Certificate (O Levels), opening the door to pursue his university education and professional training and career, the family said in a statement posted on the Internet.

His children appear to have inherited his love of books. The first born, Kenneth, is a pilot, a chemical engineer and a computer consultant in Nairobi. Susan is an IT consultant in Atlanta, USA, Lilian is a research scientist at Kemri, Carol is a risk manager in the property industry and Charles is a mechanical engineer with a State corporation.

The family is now leading a funds drive that begins on Wednesday at Hotel InterContinental to build the Dr Ouko Communal Memorial Library on a piece of land the family has donated to keep the love of reading and seeking knowledge alive.

Mrs Ouko says the project will cost Sh45 million. The Kenya National Library Services will provide some of the staff while Koru community project committee members will hire the rest. Dr Ouko’s youngest son Andrew was just 12 when his father disappeared, but he still remembers vividly the question his father would often ask: “What are you reading now?”

Now, the applied sciences graduate from the University of North Carolina in the United States has turned out to be a chip off the old block. He has gone on to educate himself in designing websites and has made a career of it.

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Add a comment (3 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by KORYEMA
    Posted September 27, 2009 07:39 AM

    we can only remember how Moi worked with Biwott kwa mambo mingi hata saa hii angependa wawe pamomja,OUKO rest in peace

  2. Submitted by mzee_moja
    Posted September 27, 2009 12:18 AM

    I loved Dr.Ouko upto to this day.I was devastated to hear about his dissapearance and to read a special edition paper that "Ouko is dead". Whoever committed this crime, wherever you are, it affected not only the family but the whole nation. Unfortunately the murderers still walk freely amongst us. But still God will punish you.The liblary is a brilliant idea to honour Bob Ouko!

  3. Submitted by ozy
    Posted September 26, 2009 10:03 PM

    Moi was a disgrace to Kenya. A bloody murderer, selfish, greedy and a terrible leader.

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