Leadership

Leaders Must Build the History Kenya Will Be Proud to Read

KaluaGreen Leaders Must Build the History Kenya Will Be Proud to Read

Many Kenyans think his­to­ry is what dead stones remem­ber. Greece recent­ly taught me that his­to­ry is what liv­ing lead­ers write every day. In 2025, Greece record­ed near­ly 38 mil­lion inbound vis­i­tors, many walk­ing through pre­served mem­o­ries. Dur­ing the same peri­od, Kenya wel­comed about 2.5 mil­lion tourists. Stand­ing at the Acrop­o­lis, near the Are­opa­gus where the Apos­tle Paul spoke, I asked myself what Kenya is writing.

Paul con­vert­ed very few peo­ple in Athens. Many mocked him, some lis­tened, and a few believed, includ­ing Diony­sius and Damaris. He then moved to Corinth, where he met Aquila and Priscil­la, Jews forced from Rome by Emper­or Claudius, and worked as a tent­mak­er while preach­ing and win­ning mul­ti­tudes. He car­ried the truth with­out enti­tle­ment, accept­ed rejec­tion with­out bit­ter­ness, and built com­mu­ni­ty through labor, patience, and conviction.

Lead­ers should hear that. A pub­lic office with­out hon­est ser­vice becomes a mon­u­ment to pride, but hum­ble ser­vice becomes a road oth­ers can wa

lk. Greece pre­serves stone, mem­o­ry and mean­ing so pow­er can be judged after it has passed. Kenya must know that today’s deci­sions will become tomorrow’s tour, text­book, song, wound or warning.

Greece also remind­ed me that dis­tance car­ries mem­o­ry. The marathon began with a mes­sen­ger run­ning 40 km from Marathon, where I vis­it­ed, to Athens. Lon­don 1908 stretched the race to 42.195 kilo­me­ters, which lat­er became stan­dard. When Sebas­t­ian Sawe ran 1:59:30 in Lon­don, Kenya saw that his­to­ry favors those who pre­pare when nobody is clapping.

At the pic­turesque Corinth Canal, opened in 1893 by cut­ting 6.3 kilo­me­ters through rock, I saw what seri­ous nations do. They do not only announce. They plan, dig, finance, cor­rect, and main­tain. Even the Acrop­o­lis sur­vived because ancient builders respect­ed stone, geom­e­try, wind, and earth. Tech­nol­o­gy exist­ed then because seri­ous­ness did.

Kenya is now writ­ing under rain, fear, and hope. Along the Mwin­gi-Garis­sa bor­der, com­mu­ni­ties clashed as inse­cu­ri­ty par­a­lyzed the high­way. Heavy rains turned roads, homes, and farms into rivers. Our con­tra­dic­tion is tear­ful and painful. We cry when drought comes and when floods come, because rain is not yet har­vest­ed, stored, and guid­ed as wealth.

These are not pass­ing inci­dents but warn­ings. Bound­aries ignored today become graves tomor­row. Social chal­lenges must be addressed before rumors become crowds. A leader who delays jus­tice is not neu­tral. He is choos­ing the his­to­ry chil­dren will inherit.

Kenya remains in severe water stress, below the 1,000 cubic meters per per­son bench­mark, as our water agen­cies seek an addi­tion­al 148.6 mil­lion cubic meters of stor­age. Athens receives far less rain than many parts of Kenya, yet it brings water from 217 kilo­me­ters away through reser­voirs, tun­nels, and aque­ducts. Every dam, pan, roof tank, restored wet­land, pro­tect­ed catch­ment, and unclogged drain can feed house­holds, not con­fer­ences. A moth­er dis­placed by floods does not need speech­es after the rain. She needs plan­ning before the rain.

Yet hope still speaks. In Kap­ta­gat, Hillary Kipla­gat Kibi­wott plant­ed 23,326 trees in twen­ty-four hours, almost one seedling every four sec­onds. But seedlings need guardians, water, land secu­ri­ty, and bud­gets, because plant­i­ng with­out sur­vival is an emp­ty cer­e­mo­ny. Over 2.6 mil­lion Kenyans reg­is­tered to vote. One seedling anchors soil. One bal­lot anchors dig­ni­ty. Lead­er­ship must pro­tect both.

As I have always insist­ed, lead­er­ship does not cre­ate val­ue. It pro­tects, enables, or destroys it. Cit­i­zens must reject hate, plant trees, clear drains, vote wise­ly, and keep the peace. Youth and wom­en’s groups must map graz­ing routes, water points, flood zones, and degrad­ed hills. Coun­ties must set­tle bound­aries, enforce land use, and fund dams, drainage, and ear­ly warn­ing. Nation­al lead­ers must finance stor­age, police fair­ly, pro­tect the vote, and pun­ish cor­rup­tion with­out regard to tribe, par­ty, or friendship.

When Paul left Athens for Corinth, he did not car­ry bit­ter­ness. He car­ried pur­pose and labored. Lead­ers must do the same: turn rejec­tion into reform, fear into jus­tice, rain into water, bal­lots into dig­ni­ty, and promis­es into mon­u­ments worth vis­it­ing. His­to­ry will not ask who shout­ed loud­est. It will ask who did right when peo­ple were wait­ing. Think green. Act green.

KaluaGreen
About Dr. Kalua Green

He is the Chief Stew­ard of Green Africa Group, a con­glom­er­ate that was envi­sioned in 1991 to con­nect, pro­duce and impact var­i­ous aspi­ra­tions of human­i­ty through Sus­tain­able Mobil­i­ty & Safe­ty Solu­tions, Eco­pre­neur­ship & Agribusi­ness, Ship­ping & Logis­tics, Envi­ron­men­tal Pro­tec­tion Ini­tia­tives, as well as Hos­pi­tal­i­ty & fur­nish­ings sectors

Kenya will not change until justice stops negotiating with power and starts governing it
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