Tribe in the past

Six30

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KCr.
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Once upon a time, this thing called "tribe" mattered a great deal. When all our livelihoods were dependent on souls, rivers and pastures, your tribe helped you secure those vital resources for:your" people. Your tribe kept you safe and kept you fed, so you were right to feel loyal.

Once we started to urbanise and develop income streams away from the forces of nature, the hold of tribe started to weaken. Now, skills and knowledge began to matter more than prowess with spears or shears. But still, tribe remained a powerful adhesive : urban-dwellers stuck together in tribal groupingseven in the big city. Businessfolk trusted their own tribes folk more, and tended to trade amongst them. Political leaders fed jobs and contracts to their own people.

And, of course, the fact that the city slicker's true home was still back in the rural abode, in the bosom of the tribe, meant that the hold of kinship and clanship stayed strong.

That was then. Today, Kenya has been catapulted into the 21st century. If you haven't noticed, this is a world in which pretty much everyone on the planet interacts with pretty everyone else, cheaply and pretty much continuously.

In this mind-blowing cacophony of relentless communication, how does one stand out, be distinctive, have influence, earn a better living than the rest of the crowd?

It is not, I suggest, by being a Kikuyu or a kalenjin or a Kenyan Asian, period. The world of 24-7 commerce does not know those categorizatious, and does not care about them. It only cares about who is adding value.

Despite this new reality, one of the most depressing aspects of a Kenyan General Election is the confirmation that we remain entrenched in our tribalism, fossilized in our ethnic ghettoes and stuck in the dreams of our distant mountains and lakes. And it doesn't take us forward, not one inch.

If you are a young Kenyan with an eye on making a future for yourself, please rethink this premise. Let me put to you that the hills of your ancestors and wedding rituals of your forebears are the least relevant ingredient in your future success. What will matter will be to stand out in your chosen field, in an increasingly competitive market place.

Your tribe will find it very difficult to give you skills and knowledge, or preffered status in contracts, or even employment. Slowly but surely, the hold of ethnicity on economy is fading, and new forms of identity are merging.

Groupings are still important. We can't just be a faceless part of the teeming billions. But the nature of the groupings matters, as writer Seth Godin has argued with eloquence. It is way important, for example, for you to be a member of the global tribe of software developers than to be associated with a river. In the former tribe, you will gain access to the shared knowledge and experiences that will forge your career success.

Don't misunderstand: culture and kinship never go away. It is very important for people to have shared language, history, songs, literature and cuisine. These are elemental forces that carry huge emotion. I relish my culture, and I hope you revel in yours. But it is very important for us not confuse heritage with competitive advantage. Your economic future will be swung on an altogether different set of identities, around skills, occupations, passions and past times.

In Kenya we have some way to go before this sinks in. The forces of closed - kraal thinking retain a withering hold on the Kenyan mind, even the highly educated one. But the enlightened young Kenyan would do well to understand. Your tribe provides your roots, but you must flower widely. Your place of birth is a beginning, not an ending. We can all live bigger lives by living broad ones.
 
Tribalism is still intact and will still be intact for the uncountable years ahead of us. Starting from the current hyped thing 'politics' let's use the two big horses on the race that is Ruto and Raila. From just checking the strong points or places where they garner alot of votes says it all. Raila being a Luo from Kisumu the people there are widely luos too and so they choose him because they share that one tribe same to the case of the hustler where the Rift valley where all the kalenjin and kipsigis reside are on support of him because of the tribe he shares with them. Now from your view is that not more than an explanation to say that it's still a tribalistic country till today, every tribe still holds on firmly to the ground. Some might have changed minds and chose another path other than tribe but it's a very small percentage. There are also advantages evident even in the article above where tribe helps one feel secure since the protection they give you is just unmeasurable they treat you as family plus and added advantage when you go for interview you automatically stand a great chance to win it because your tribe's man is the interviewee or the owner of the firm. And lastly the standing advantage to be the leader e.g for Uhuru Muigai Kenyatta who took the seat because most of the votes came from his tribe the mount region.
 
You carefully selected a biased approach to tribalism believing the modern world as a solution to backward river and lake practices, mwacha mila ni mtumwa
 
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