Ameru- Where Did We Come From?
Our
Roots
Mugeni
bwnithe. (Greetings to you all). This is an exciting time for me, and a
beautiful journey whose destination is to publicize my county, capture real occurrences,
create conversations, share knowledge and of course give my readers a chance to
drop their burdens for sometimes and live in my story. This blog is meant to
bring you the past, present and future of county number 12- Meru County. I bet,
especially for the youngies, there is so much you don’t know. Meru did not just
come overnight from somewhere, and then we found ourselves calling
it home! Knowing Njuri Ncheke, ntaano (circumcision) your grandparents and their village is
barely enough.
So,
how did Meru County came to be? As compared to other Kenyan tribes, Meru’s
history and mythology is both unclear and fascinating. According to history,
our forefathers were at some point slaves of the “red people” at a place called
Mbwaa. While there the red people under instructions from their leader
launched a massacre against all the male children immediately after birth. Only
one boy escaped this fate after his mother hid him in a basket by the
riverside. He was named Mwithe (the hidden one) and later Koomenjoe who later
became a respected prophet.
The problems at Mbwaa were so tough they would offer sacrifices in form of people,
animals and plants to appease their gods who would ease the situation. The only way to be let
free is they had to triumph against all the tough conditions as stipulated by the red people. Such
were making a shoe with hair on both sides, get an ox that produced diatomite
for dung, and get an unknown fruit from an extremely deep pit without anyone
descending inside or piercing it. All the three tests were rejected upon
delivery. The fourth and fifth were the toughest. The fourth called
for killing of all the elders so their blood flew like a heavy stream while the
fifth was an impossible task as they were required to forge a spear touching
the earth and up to the sky, and should not have broken at any point. The spear known as itumo ria
mwito,was heaven sent as it gave them an idea to escape and Koomenjoe would late use to part the "red sea".
The
escape was such a magical and more like a famous story Old Testament in the
Bible. Remember Moses and the children of Israel while escaping from Egypt?
Yes, that one. Then Koomenjoe was Moses and the Isrealites.
He parted the water with the wonder spear creating a dry land immediately. The
crossing to the “promised land” went on the entire night, each of the groups
(nchienu) at a time. Once the last group crossed, Koomenjoe hit the dry land,
and water came back as an immense mass sweeping and drowning the Red People’s army.
Same script different cast right! It is for this reason that some
Meru elders believe Misiri they call it is their origin. Oh! it reminds of my old neighbour
in the village who used to warn his sons, "bwacokia Misiri, na'a twaumire" Don't take me back to Egypt, where we came from.
The
origin myth does not end here. The author of Restatement of Bantu Origin and Meru history Alfred M’Imanyara account has a
different story to tell. He explains the Meru originated from the primordial
Nilotic Meroe empire, that was bounded by the White and Blue Nile, and a number of
swamps on the south. To prove his account, the scholar points out on the linguistic
resemblance between ‘Meru’ and ‘Meroe’.
Then the Bantus account that explain
that the GEMA community (Gikuyu, Embu, Meru and Akambas) the earliest Bantus
arrived in Kenya from southwest, from there they spread east and north across
Kenya. Their crossing to north took them to Ethiopia
and Somalia, where they met the Oroma military between 1300 and 1500. However,
the Oroma pushed them back to Kenya, and lastly they settled near Mount Kenya.
Their route back took them to the Coast where we have the Indian Ocean which
might have been their “Red Sea”. They again moved west and inland to what is
now the larger Meru.I
am certain you as the reader have your side of the story.
The origin of Meru
County is characterized by confusion, imagination, fiction and truth. I am not
sticking my neck out too much but maybe the Ameru is a result of different
people, some who were real Meru, and others who they found along the way and
during enslavement. Some came from the east, others from the north, and some
may already have been there prior to the arrival of other groups. The "Red
People’s" account sounds so similar to the Old Testament; which makes me
think the dominant group of the Ameru were at some time in close contact with
the Jewish such as the Falashim of Ethiopia, where the myth was adapted to fit
the actual Meru history of enslavement and exodus. As the old saying goes,
“curiosity killed the cat”, but satisfaction brought it back”, I am eager to
find more about Ameru and guess what, I hope we will all be happy cats.
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The position of Meru on the Kenyan map, and supposed origins |
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A settled ancient Meru Community on a market day |
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