It
was about fifteen minutes to eleven o’clock. The classroom was full and the air
was filled with the smell of sweat and of different jelly we had applied on
ourselves. A smell of Kimbo in one corner, that of Arimi's in another and a
random Rune and Rays from a few girls. The noise was going out of control, and
the class prefect gave her usual threat, ‘Nyamazeni
ama nitaanza kuandika noise makers.’ Meanwhile, Mr Mugambi John (Jitu) the English
teacher entered and the loud noises turned into a pin drop silence.
‘Good
morning class’ He saluted.
‘Good
morning sir’ we answered while standing.
After
requesting us to take our seats, he turned to the blackboard and what he saw
did not excite him.
‘Who
drew this caricature?’ (It was my first time ever to hear that word) He asked.
His
question went unanswered.
‘I
am asking for the second time, who drew this caricature?’
No
one opened their mouth.
‘Kneel
down all of you’ He commanded.
Before
anyone could kneel down, I raised up my hand. I did what Ezra Chiloba has
refused to do amid all the demonstrations rocking our major towns across the
country.
‘Kaburu!
Kaburu! Kaburu! So it’s you? Get out. Go home and come with a box of chalk!’ He
shouted.
I
shed tears as I walked home. I knew mum would swallow me alive. How on earth
could we afford a whole box of chalk? I knew it would not cost anything less
than a few thousand shillings. A thousand in the early years of 21st
Century was quite some big money. Nevertheless, I went home and broke the bad
news to mum. I told mum how I had collected a small piece of chalk below the
blackboard and the teacher caught me doing a sum using the same on the
blackboard and sent me home to buy a whole box.
Mum
was in high spirits that day. She asked less questions and told me how it’s bad
to lose lessons as a candidate. She said a few unkind words about the teacher, handed
me a two hundred note and ordered me to go to the bookshop and inquire how much
a box of chalk cost.
‘If
it costs more than two hundred shillings, tell whoever is in the shop I will
cover the balance later.’ She instructed. The bookshop belonged to a family
friend.
Believe
it or not I bought a box of Someni school chalk at fifty shillings only. I
laughed all the way to Makena’s Ngumu shop
the rest of the week. I cheated mum that the box was retailing at two hundred
and fifty and the bookshop owner agreed to sell it to me at two hundred
shillings after a heated negotiation.
You
would see how I bounced back to school that afternoon, my ego literally went
out of the roof. Having gone home earlier than everybody else that morning, I
was the first to arrive in school after lunch. And for that no student saw me
with the box of chalk, I dashed into Mr Mugambi’s office, handed over the box
and went to class.
The
look that my classmates gave when they found me in class was that Oh my God! Look. They couldn’t fathom
how I would be sent to buy a box of chalk some minutes to eleven and there I
was some minutes past one o’clock having bought a whole box of chalk.
‘’How
much was it?” One classmate inquired.
“Two
thousand” I cheated him without blinking (Mimi
ni nani!) They thought it was a whole big carton when in real sense it was
a small box the size of a serviette pack. And just like that my name got
admitted to the list of pupils who came from very rich families (Saa ngapi!).
This
is one of the many incidences I so vividly remember about Mr Mugambi. He was a
teacher and half. It is because of him I can construct an English sentence that
makes sense. He is the kind of a teacher I would wish my kids to be taught by. He so loved what he did, he was born to do
it. I remember how we would go to school very early in the morning and he would
teach us for a whole one hour before normal lessons would commence. In the
evenings after normal lessons he would again be in class all this time without
an extra pay.
Far
from class, Mr Mugambi was a disciplinarian, he was a no nonsense teacher. He
caned us and pinched our ears for various indiscipline cases among them using
your mother tongue, having not tucked your shirt/blouse, noise making among
others. It is while in class 8 that lateness became a capital offence. Mr
Mugambi would send you back home to collect a Jembe that you would use to dig a
1ft wide and 1ft deep hole and plant a banana tree. Oh! And those banana plants
plus the flowers outside our classrooms made the school look so green and
beautiful.
Before
I forget, I must add that Mr Mugambi taught all my siblings, all the six of us
from the first to the last born. Several other teachers in the school did among
them Mr Muthaa, Mr Mwika (Kabitutu), Mr Mugambi (Thirungu) and Mr Rukunga.
Far
from being the discipline master Mr Mugambi doubled as the deputy head teacher,
he deputised one of the best head teacher of our lifetime, Mr Muthaa. A true
son of the soil. Mr Muthaa was to Muthara Primary School what Bob Collymore is
to Safaricom.
Muthaa
is a true visionary, he carries with him an ability to formulate and shape the
future. Always with the willpower and patience to see things through. He
inculcated into us the doctrines of honesty, hard work and obedience. He never
tires to remind us of these virtues to date.
I
remember his CRE lessons in class 8 and the good stories that he shared with
us. The fun we made in class minutes to his lessons. We would take turns to
write the words ‘What we have learnt’
and ‘what I am supposed to do’ on the
blackboard before his arrival. These are the words he would always write after
reading us a story from his book.
His
wise counsel was out of this world. He always ended his address with his usual
Kimeru phrase, ‘Buwikua luui chiana!’ This was maybe to ensure whatever he said
sunk into our heads. I can’t forget how he called our names syllable by
syllable while stressing the first one. The parents’ names would leave one
floored.
NTO-A-ta-ya
A-ta-ya
MA-ri-mba
NTO-i-the-wa
Andrew
MU-thi-mu
I
celebrate these two teachers plus many others for their immense contribution to
who we are today. May God grant them a long healthy life.
Disclaimer: Mr
Mugambi if you happen to read this forgive my typos and the many ungrammatical
sentences. They don’t at all represent what you taught me back in the day. The
mistakes are my own and I entirely take responsibility.
wow
ReplyDeleteThanks Andrew Murungi for always passing by
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