Joseph Murumbi
The Honourable Joseph Murumbi E.G.H. | |
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2nd Vice President of Kenya | |
In office 3 May 1966 – 31 November 1966 | |
President | Jomo Kenyatta |
Preceded by | Jaramogi Oginga Odinga |
Succeeded by | Daniel arap Moi |
Personal details | |
Born |
Joseph Zuzarte Murumbi 1911 |
Died | 22 June 1990 78–79) | (aged
Nationality | Kenyan |
Political party | Kenya African Union |
Occupation | Politician |
Joseph Zuzarte Murumbi (1911 – 22 June 1990) was a Kenyan politician who was the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Kenya from 1964 to 1966, and its second Vice-President between May and December 1966.
Early life
He was a child of a Goan Kenyan Asian trader father and a Maasai mother, and spent the first 16 years of his life in India.
Kenyan politics
After returning to Kenya, he became a member of the Kenya African Union political party, amidst a political ferment in East Africa caused by the end and withdrawal from the African continent of the British Empire. The declaration of the state of emergency on October 20, 1952, saw the detention of the top two levels of leadership within the Kenya African Union, and Murumbi found himself thrust into the center of the party's leadership as acting secretary-general. He played a key role in securing legal counsel for the core group of detainees arrested in the emergency crackdown, and, together with Pio Gama Pinto, raised objection to the continuance of British Imperial dominion in Kenya through Indian newspapers such as the Chronicle.
After Kenya became independent of British imperial rule in 1963, Murumbi participated in the writing of its first governmental constitution, and held the office of its Minister of Foreign Affairs from 1964 to 1966, touring the globe to set up numerous ambassadorial offices in foreign capitals for the newly created nation. He subsequently served as the Republic's Vice-President in a government led by Jomo Kenyatta in 1966 for nine months. Around this time Murumbi became uneasy with Kenyatta's authoritarianism in dealing with political opponents, and the increasing corruption that he perceived developing in the Kenyan Government, and Kenyatta would go on to personally engage in using government power to engage in land grabbing in the late 1960s and 1970s. Murumbi had become further alienated from the new Kenyan governing authority when Pio Gama Pinto, a close personal friend and key political philosophical mentor of Murumbi's, was murdered in April 1965 after he had become a public critic of it. As Pheroze Nowrojee stated:
The assassination of Pinto illustrated to Murumbi the shocking extent to which the new government had departed from its promises. His feeling, evidently, was that these were not the principles for which so many had suffered, and his departure (from the new political order in power) was only a matter of time.
After resigning from the office of the Vice-President in November 1966 through what was claimed to be ill health, Murumbi withdrew from politics.
Later life
He became the Acting-Chairman of the Kenyan National Archives, and later co-founded 'African Heritage' with Alan Donovan, which went on to become the largest Pan-African art gallery on the continent.[1]
Death
In 1982 he seriously injured himself in a fall at his home, and was reliant upon a wheel-chair in his final years. He died on 22 June 1990 in his 79th year. Murumbi's body was buried in Nairobi City Park. The unmarked grave was subject to neglect, vandalism and theft through the late 1990s and early 2000s, and had at one time been threatened with being lost trace of via a building development scheme for the site, until it was protected by the creation around it of a memorial garden named after him.[2]
Personal life
Murumbi married Shelia, a Librarian whom he met whilst he was a political exile from Kenya in England in the late 1950s. They lived in Kenya subsequently on an estate in the Muthaiga district. She died in 2002.[3]
Legacy
He was an avid art collector, and during his life acquired over 50,000 books and sheaves of official correspondence. The Kenya National Archives established a library containing some of the 8000 rare books (published before 1900) entrusted to them upon the death of Murumbi. The Kenya National Archives also created the 'Murumbi Gallery' within the same building, displaying the different African artifacts that were collected by him through his lifelife.[4]
External links
- The East African Standard Gentle Dissident
- Muriithi Mutiga Nationalist grave vandalized at the Wayback Machine (archived March 23, 2006) The East African Standard, archived 2006-03-23.
References
- ↑
- Joseph Murumbi, Kenyan politician', obituary, 'New York Times', 24 June 1990. https://www.nytimes.com/1990/06/24/obituaries/joseph-murumbi-kenyan-politician-79.html
- ↑ 'Friends of City Park' website (2007). http://friendsofcitypark.org/things-to-do/joseph-murumbi-peace-memorial-garden/
- ↑ 'Joseph Murumbi died of a broken heart', 'The East Afrucan;, 27 December 2004. https://www.theeastafrican.co.ke/magazine/434746-245380-c5vplb/index.html
- ↑ Wafula, Evans (4 October 2007). "Murumbi gallery: the extinct African artifacts". Africa News. Retrieved 17 August 2012.
Political offices | ||
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Preceded by Jaramogi Oginga Odinga |
Vice-President of Kenya May 1966–August 31, 1966 |
Succeeded by Daniel arap Moi |