Kubu Kubu
General Kubu Kubu | |
---|---|
Born | Njagi Wa Ikutha 1920 |
Died | September 1956 |
Cause of death | Lynching |
Resting place | Muragari |
Citizenship | Kenyan |
Occupation | Freedom Fighter |
Organization | Kenya Land and Freedom Army |
Known for | General during the Mau Mau Uprising |
Successor | General Kavote |
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Kubu Kubu (or Kubukubu), born as Njagi wa Ikutha, (1920-1956) was an Embu Mau Mau leader and general.[1] His nom de guerre, Kubu Kubu, means "heavy thud" in Kîembu, referencing to the thud his feet made due to his heavy build.
He was the de facto Mau Mau military leader in the Embu county, and an important leader nationally, alongside Dedan Kimathi, Musa Mwariama, and Waruhiu Itote.[2]
Kubu Kubu was revered among the Embu for defending their territory from British rule, leading the community for more than ten years, and repulsing colonial settlers from the southern Kenyan highlands.
Early life
[edit]Njagi wa Ikutha was born sometime in the late 1920s in a heavily forested area in Mukuuri, close to the current site of the Kubu Kubu Memorial Boarding Primary School, Embu County. Like many families from the colonial-era Mukuuri Native Reserve, Njagi's family later settled in the Kianjokoma area after independence.
Mau mau movement
[edit]During his time as Embu's independence war leader in the 1950s, Kubu Kubu lived in Kirimiri forest Hill in mukuuri sub location Runyenjes sub county, all his life as the ultimate war leader. He spent many days and nights leading victorious rampages on colonial outposts. Through Kubu Kubu's leadership, the caves perched on top of the hill became the fighters planning point from where they could see the entire of Embu county. In case of an attack by the colonialists, they could light a fire and smoke which would be seen bellowing on top of the hill to act as a warning that the enemy was within a way that you could see the enemy was within.[3] Kubu Kubu was revered by people across Embu and feared by the colonialists. He successfully led the community for more than ten years in defending their land and families from colonial aggression. In fact while colonial settlers carved out african lands across the Kenyan highlands for themselves, they were repulsed by the Embu. He also successfully raided colonial outposts in Embu and collected guns that were distributed to the fighters.[4]
Capture and execution
[edit]Around 1955, a breakaway group of Kikuyu and Meru Mau Mau fighters betrayed their Embu counterparts and stole their guns. The Embu fighters were forced to use the few remaining guns and other crude weapons. In his book "Mau Mau", General Itote writes how Kubu Kubu ordered that traitors must be dealt with ruthlessly. He told Kimathi that not even women and children would be spared if they were found to be colonial collaborators.[5]At this point a trap was hatched to capture the General. A colonial informer lured the Embu fighters with a promise to assist them get weapons. Kubu Kubu as the leader, led a team to pick the weapons at a place called Itundu near Runyenjes Town, where the colonialists shot him in the leg arrested him.[6] He was frogmarched through Mukuuri and Kathande villages where all women were ordered to collect firewood which was to be used to burn him. Colonialists then lynched him near Muragari primary school in Mukuuri sub location Runyenjes sub county. He was not interred conventionally as colonialists made a huge pyre and set his body on fire which was against Embu traditional customs. They forced the women and children to watch and clap as the body got up in flames. His remains were later collected by the colonialists and carried away, hidden in the dark archives that store much of Africa's colonial past.[7]
Legacy
[edit]In 1987, former Embu North Constituency (later split into Runyenjes and Manyatta) legislator Stanley Nyagah built a modern boarding primary school in Kubu Kubu's memory, where his body was burned in 1955.
A street and a shopping center in Embu Town, as well as a road in Nyeri Town and a main street in Runyenjes Town have also been named after him.
References
[edit]- ^ "Our two-hour search for Embu's hidden Mau Mau caves". The Star, Kenya. Archived from the original on 2018-12-09. Retrieved 2018-12-08.
- ^ "AfricanTribute".
- ^ Shannon Courtenay: From smoking, drinking& partying to world-title dreams - BBC Sport
- ^ market, Kenyan Diaspora (2024-07-22). "FAITH KIPYEGON". Kenyan Diaspora Market. Retrieved 2024-08-07.
- ^ Athlete profile on london2012.com Archived 30 July 2012 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 4 August 2012.
- ^ "Hall of Famers: Bill "The Baby-Faced Assassin" Corbus". College Football Hall of Fame. Retrieved 2007-06-19.
- ^ "Kenya's 'smiling assassin' Chebet wins Olympic 5,000m gold". France 24. 5 August 2024. Retrieved 10 October 2024.