(May 2010) Dreams in a Time of War: A Childhood Memoir
Ngugi wa Thiong’o
Pantheon Books, NY, 2010
Bob Gribbin
This memoir by Kenya’s most
famous author is exactly what it purports to be: a recounting of childhood in
Limuru, just outside of Nairobi. Indeed the times—World War II followed by the
Mau Mau emergency—were a time of war in Ngugi’s Kikuyu home. The uncertainty of
far off, and not so far off, events impacted upon rural society. Matching that
were the changes wrought by modernization—the railroad, education, colonialism,
religious controversy, wage employment and burgeoning political awareness.
These were the times Ngugi
recalls, and who better to do it than him. Kenya’s changes and history as seen
through the eyes of a child and adolescent are redolent with innocence and,
like all childhoods, a reminiscence for things past. Ngugi tells about this
family, his mother Wanjiku, the third wife of his father, Thiong’o wa Nducu, his
other mothers, the three other wives, his immediate brothers and sisters, plus
scads of step-siblings, then grandparents, cousins and other relations. All in
this constellation had influence on him. He portrays a rich family life, albeit
with an erratic patriarchal father.
Folks around Limuru were
mostly farmers, although wage laborers worked at the Bata shoe factory and many
picked tea on neighboring European plantations. Ngugi’s half brother went off
to war. Italian POWs built the escarpment road. The government seized more
African land to settle British soldiers. Later, another brother fled to the
forest to join Mau Mau. Atrocities, especially colonial over-reactions, mass
executions and interrogations terrorized the inhabitants. The inner Kikuyu
rift, which divided pro-missionary, pro-government individuals from Kikuyu
nationalists, became a life and death equation during the emergency and wreaked
havoc on stable society. Throughout, young Ngugi was finding his way,
particularly by dedicating himself to school. Determined to be the very best,
he modestly tells of his successes. Readers see him grow from a child with a
child’s perspective to become more aware of the greater world around him.
I did not know what to
expect from this book, but what I found was an excellent history of the times
as seen from a very narrow perspective. There is a small bit of a plot line as
troubles come and go, but that is an extra bonus to the chronicle. I learned
much about traditional Kikuyu life and how rural people lived. Of course, being
Ngugi’s work, it is well written and contains thoughtful reflections, pithy
observations and good quotations. Speaking of the dichotomy between fact and
fiction, despair and hope, Ngugi notes, “Perhaps it is myth as much as fact
that keeps dreams alive even in times of war.”
Obviously, childhood shapes
everyone. Ngugi’s did him. He grew up to be independent, thoughtful and
observant, incidentally with material for several good books.
Readers with some knowledge
of Kenya will readily relate to events and the society described, but others
too will find this an intriguing entry into another time and place. I highly
recommend reading this book.