I was washing the dishes in the kitchen one day when
Hailey brought her plastic chair and sat behind me. She had her bible story
books in her hands. She had; The Miracles of Jesus, Joseph and His Brothers, and
The Birth of Jesus. I asked her what she was up to and she told me that she
wanted to read. She started reading quietly. “Why don’t you read aloud?” I asked
her. She read aloud and I listened as I did the dishes.
It was an interesting dish-washing experience. I got
to listen to my six year old daughter read and I was able to teach her how to
pronounce difficult words in the process. I am happy to have a daughter who reads
because reading is a good thing.
I remember my father buying us storybooks when we
were young. Each one of us owned a book that we held onto for a long time. They
included Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women,
Mark Twain’s The Adventures of Tom Sawyer,
Charles Dicken’s Hard Times & David Copperfield, and Anthony Hope’s The Prisoner of Zenda.
Growing up, I saw my father grab a book and get
immersed in it so dedicatedly. There was a shelf full of books (which exists to
this day) from where we would once in a while make our own selection and share
in the reading experience. That experience
was invaluable.
Since then, I have read books that left me shaking
my head in disapproval or nodding my head furiously in approval. With every
book, I have been able to learn. A lot. My emotions have been stirred by authors
who made me cry and laugh. I have been angered, while on other occasions, I have
been deeply impressed. Books have had me thinking about stuff. I have changed
my opinion about stuff. I have made discoveries, travelled to different worlds
with different people in different times. Reading has made me learn. It has
made me write better. Speak better. It has helped shape my dreams. It has
sharpened my mind.
I am glad to have had the chance to peep into the
reading culture and entering deeper and deeper, to a point of no return. I am aware
of the transformation that happens between the time one opens a book to begin
reading from the first page, to the time one closes the same book having read
it to the last page. I am privy of the fact that every book one reads does not
leave one the same way it found them. That we learn from each reading
experience. I want the same for my children.
Reading is cool. I know that. Do you know that? The
Storymoja Festival begins this Wednesday the 17th through to the 21st
of September. During the festival, there are events that will be too important
to miss. Case in point is the Reading is
cool! Kusoma ni Poa! event that will
be held on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday from 8.30 to 9.15am. This reading
anthem (click here to listen) will be sung by the Grace Children’s Centre
choir. They will perform and launch their CD during the festival. Listen in.
Dance to it. Teach it to your children- I intend to teach it to Hailey and Heidi
too. Share it and let it become a powerful tool for spreading the reading
culture in Nairobi and beyond.
If I will be anything, I will not be that mother who never taught her children the importance of
reading. A reading child is a knowledgeable child. A knowledgeable child is a
strong child. A strong child is a grounded child, a confident child. If my
reading has anything to do with who I have become, then I can confidently say
that a reading child is a fearless child. Unashamed to live their lives the
best way they deem fit. A reading child grows to become a sage.
During these times when the reading culture in
Nairobi has degenerated due to the attention given to video games and cartoons
as the quintessential pastime for children, you need to introduce your children
to the magical experience that comes with holding a book between their hands. Read
for them. Read with them. Encourage them to read for you. Read together. Read.
Since you guys are dear to me, I will give one of
you a complimentary ticket to the Storymoja Festival to be held at the Nairobi
National Museum. If you are interested in attending the weekend events on the 20th
or 21st Sept, all you need to do is to email me between now and
Thursday at renee.murrey@gmail.com
and share with me what your favourite book is to date and why.
The Storymoja Festival weekend events include a
session with Dr. Kinyanjui Nganga on Parenting and Marriage, a children’s book
launch of The Lizard and the Rock
with author Joanne Ball-Burgess, a discussion with award winning Kenyan journalist
Jeff Koinange as he talks about his memoir- Through
My African Eyes, a Wangari Maathai Memorial
Lecture delivered by Nobel Laureate Prof. Wole Soyinka from Nigeria (I
know!). There will be exhibitions, talks by Tony Mochama aka Smitta, Caine Prize
winners - Okwiri Oduor and Yvonne Adhiambo Owuor (I know!) There will be hot
conversations, Poetry, storytelling, Mchongoano,
film screening… Go on, hit my inbox and grab that ticket!
Oh, almost forgot - Sauti Sol will also be there. I
Know! (sigh!) They together with Berry Heart of Botswana and Dizraeli from UK will
steer the Jaza Matatu na vitabu concert
to raise money for www.startalibrary.org
in order to stock libraries in schools. Storymoja Festival attendees will
literally get to jaza matatu na vitabu. Reading is such serious business!
Do me a favor and let your children, your young
nieces, nephews, brothers, sisters…this young generation, let them know that
reading is cool. Reading is oh-so-cool!
Have a cool week!
Its cool to read Renee.. There is alot of power in books. I have learnt alot from books. Its also good to pass it to the kids.. When my son argues and he is quoting a book he has read, it is quite humbling. So let people read, let kids read.
ReplyDeleteYou put it so well: Let people read!
DeleteIs it too late to win that complimentary ticket?
ReplyDeleteHaha! Pole.
Delete