Environment

When a young Kenyan hugged a tree for seventy-two hours, she challenged Africa to take the lead

On a cold night in Nyeri, long after most homes had fall­en asleep, a young woman stayed vig­il beside a tree. Her arms remained steady. Rain came and went. Night turned into day and then into anoth­er. Crowds gath­ered in awe. Some­where between exhaus­tion and faith, twen­ty-two-year-old Truphena Muthoni trans­formed a sim­ple ges­ture into a nation­wide awakening.

On Decem­ber 11, she com­plet­ed a sev­en­ty-two-hour tree-hug­ging chal­lenge at the Nyeri Governor’s office com­pound. As we wait for Guin­ness World Records con­fir­ma­tion, one fact is already clear. She has made a mark in the hearts of mil­lions who saw her ded­i­ca­tion as a reflec­tion of our nation’s conscience.

I per­son­al­ly felt con­nect­ed to that mir­ror. My love for trees start­ed when I was a tod­dler, nur­tured by my father, Bish­op David Kalua, who passed away exact­ly five years ago on the same day that Truphena fin­ished her chal­lenge. That bond with trees inspired the Plant Your Age Ini­tia­tive, a sim­ple idea for each per­son to plant and nur­ture trees equal to their age, treat­ing those trees as liv­ing respon­si­bil­i­ties rather than just cer­e­mo­ni­al props.

Over the years, Kenyans have pas­sion­ate­ly sup­port­ed this move­ment, help­ing to ensure the sur­vival of over 980 mil­lion trees, accord­ing to our restora­tion track­ers. The key focus is sur­vival. Com­mu­ni­ties have done the tough­est work of pro­tect­ing seedlings through droughts and neglect. That is why Truphena’s actions caught my atten­tion. She didn’t per­form for applause; she demand­ed seriousness.

Her jour­ney to that tree sym­bol­izes the strug­gle many young Africans face. Gov­ern­ments praise youth at con­fer­ences but frus­trate them when they try to take bold action. She described her effort as a peace­ful protest against envi­ron­men­tal dam­age and as a cry from a gen­er­a­tion increas­ing­ly over­whelmed by cli­mate anx­i­ety. Sci­ence sup­ports her con­cern. Africa los­es an esti­mat­ed four mil­lion hectares of for­est each year, accord­ing to the FAO. Kenya los­es about four thou­sand hectares annu­al­ly despite restora­tion efforts report­ed by the Kenya For­est Ser­vice. These are not mere sta­tis­tics; they are wounds. Already, young peo­ple across Africa are cit­ing Truphena’s deter­mi­na­tion as proof that one act can spark a movement.

In our noisy dig­i­tal world, where cor­rup­tion spreads faster than con­ser­va­tion, Truphena chose an image too pure to ignore. A young Kenyan, bare­hand­ed and unwa­ver­ing, hug­ging a tree for three days. It prompt­ed the coun­try to pause and ask essen­tial ques­tions. Why are rivers shrink­ing faster than rain­fall pat­terns can explain? Why are land­scapes thin­ning? Why are floods becom­ing more fre­quent, as the IPCC has warned? Why do we plant mil­lions of seedlings yet lose so many before their first birthday?

This is the truth Kenya must con­front. Plant­i­ng trees is not the same as pro­tect­ing forests. We can plant ten mil­lion seedlings and still fail if sur­vival rates do not improve, if ripar­i­an land con­tin­ues to be invad­ed, and if ille­gal log­ging qui­et­ly resumes. Forests can­not be restored with mere announce­ments. They are restored through discipline.

This week, I share anoth­er image: Liberia. Near­ly 69 per­cent of the land is cov­ered in forests, yet more than 80 per­cent of the pop­u­la­tion depends on char­coal and fire­wood. For­est cov­er with­out liveli­hood solu­tions is frag­ile. Pres­i­dent Joseph N. Bara­ka Boakai’s accep­tance of the role of Plant Your Age Ambas­sador sig­nals a shift Africa des­per­ate­ly needs, from sen­ti­ment to prac­ti­cal action that restores ecosys­tems while sup­port­ing lives.Kenya can choose this path now. Coun­ties must fund after­care, not just seedlings. Schools must ground cit­i­zen­ship in envi­ron­men­tal respon­si­bil­i­ty. Cor­po­ra­tions must replace pub­lic rela­tions with mea­sur­able restora­tion. And cit­i­zens must demand proof of who pro­tects and who destroys.

Truphena expressed some­thing deep with­out speak­ing. A tree tests your char­ac­ter. You can’t fake its survival.

In Nyeri, a young woman showed up for sev­en­ty-two hours and asked Kenya and Africa to show up for decades. Let her hug become our habit. 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

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