Author Topic: Lari Massarce - Very vivid account on what happened  (Read 2592 times)

Offline KenyanPlato

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Lari Massarce - Very vivid account on what happened
« on: May 23, 2020, 07:53:18 PM »
f Lari was a nest of Mau Mau influence, then it was also a place where loyalists were prepared to make a stand. By the end of November 1952 there were 3000 Home Guard in Central Province, a kind of 'Dad's Army' gathered around those loyal Christian Chiefs, like Makimei, who feared that they and their clients might be a target of Mau Mau attacks. Self preservation and personal security were a necessary response of these respectable Christian Kikuyu to the 'lawlessness' of Mau Mau's 'hooligans'. When the British decided to give their blessing to the Home Guard and to encourage recruitment, from December 1952, numbers rapidly increased. The 'Dad's Army' now became a formal militia, given authority to act in assistance of the police and army. The Home Guard would be the force that would confront Mau Mau head to head in the struggle for the hearts and the minds of the Kikuyu people. Lari would be the critical site in that struggle.
    By the end of January 1953 there were reckoned to be 7600 Home Guard recruits, comprising 2333 in Nyeri, 1387 in Murang'a, 1083 in Meru, 1000 in Embu, and 1863 in Kiambu. At Lari, the hundred or so men who had by then joined the Home Guard were mostly drawn from the landed elite gathered around Makimei and Luka Wakahangara, the wealthiest man in the location and the person whose influence had been behind the resettlement of those who had moved from Tigoni. Makimei and Luka had numbered the murdered chiefs Waruhiu and Nderi among their closest friends and allies. As the Mau Mau murder count mounted,they knew that their own lives were under threat. For men such as these, combating Mau Mau was quite literally a matter of life and death. The dogs of war finally caught up with them some five months into the emergency.
    Each night at dusk, Lari's Home Guard unit gathered to begin their rounds, patrolling the main paths and principal properties in the location. Just after 8 p.m. on the evening of 26 March 1953 the Lari patrol was summoned to investigate the discovery of a body in the location of Headman Wainaina, three miles to the east on the Lari boundary. When they arrived on the scene, they found the mutilated remains of a local loyalist, nailed to a tree alongside a busy footpath. The body had evidently been left there deliberately, with the intention that it should be found. It had taken the patrol almost an hour to get to the spot. As they now looked back to the west, just after 9 p.m., they began to notice fires breaking out in the direction of their own homes in Lari. They hurried along in the darkness, first reluctantly fearing the worst, and eventually running as they realized the terrible truth. They had been purposely lured to Wainaina's location, leaving Lari undefended. The Mau Mau attack they so dreaded had come at last.
    In five or six separate gangs, each numbering a hundred or more persons, the Mau Mau descended upon their targets. Their heads swathed to disguise their identities, armed with pangas, swords, spears, knives and axes, and with some carrying burning torches, they swarmed over the unprotected homesteads. They carried with them ropes which they tied around the huts to prevent the occupants from opening the doors before they set the thatch alight. As the occupants struggled to clumber through the windows to escape, they were cut down. Most of those caught in the attack were women and children,  but they were shown no mercy by the attackers, who seemed intent on killing every person in the homesteads. Shots rang out as some victims found their own weapons and made an effort to defend themselves and their families. But it was a hopeless cause. The Home Guard patrol reached Lari just as the attack was coming to an end. They gave chase to some of the attackers but they were too late to save the victims. By 10 p.m. some 120 bodies lay dead or grievously injured in the smouldering ruins of fifteen homesteads. The killers had disappeared into the night. In their wake, there was chaos, terror, shock, anger and indescribable grief.
    The first press reports (two days later) spread fear and horror throughout the Kikuyu communities of central Kenya. Where the events in Nyeri on Christmas Eve of 1952 had singled out leading male elders, the attack upon women and children at Lari was on a far larger scale and appeared less discriminate. No other attack during the emergency would have the tremendous impact on public opinion that came in the aftermath of Lari. The attack may have seemed an indiscriminate slaughter of collaborators but was far from random in its violence. All of the victims were the families of local chiefs, ex-chiefs, headmen, councillors, and prominent Home Guard. The male heads of these households were the leading members of Lari's loyalist community, and all were known as outspoken opponents of Mau Mau. Lesser members of the Home Guard, and those who were perceived as clients of wealthier men, were left alone.
    The principle victim in the attack at Lari was the community's senior statesman, Luka Wakahangara. At more than sixty years of age, Luka had continued to manage the affairs of his mbari after retiring from government office. An elder in the Catholic church, his extended family pursued a wide variety of business interests and dominated landholding on some of the most prominent farms in Lari. As chief, and as the elder principally responsible for arranging the resettlement of the Tigoni people at Lari, Luka had profited from his association with the government. His murder  was Mau Mau's punishment. More than 200 attackers had descended upon his homestead, killing several of his wives, many of his grandchildren and other relatives. Luka, his younger brother and one of his sons had fought bravely to defend the family. Armed with his shotgun, Luka had managed to break out of his hut to reach the cover of a lorry, parked in the compound. From there the old man had opened fire on his assailants, but had been quickly overpowered.. Luka's youngest wife was the only adult survivor in the Wakahangara homestead..
    Several families of other prominent members of the Home Guard were also targeted. One of Lari's oldest elders, Kie Kirembe, was among the dead. Like Luka, he died trying to defend his family. Four of Kie's sons were members of the Lari Home Guard. The family of Machune Kiranga, another headman and Home Guard patrol commander, were also slaughtered. The same fate befell the families of Arthur Waweru, Nganga Njehia and Mbugua Munya. Prominent members of the African District Council were also among the victims. Councillor Isaka Kagoru was killed with his family, as were Ndonga Kariuki and Kimani Wambui. From the fifteen homesteads attacked, spread over an area of some 30 square miles, the final death toll was seventy-four. Another fifty victims were wounded.
    There was nothing random about these attacks. The victims had been selected with care, their homesteads identified and singled out. The raid had been well planned and its perpetrators were well equipped. Neighbours were left unmolested as the gangs went about their business. The motive in the choice of victims seemed all too obvious: the male head of each household attacked was a government servant. All were Christian, and all were Catholic families who had come to Lari from Tigoni in 1939. In one way or another, they had all been clients of either Luka or Makimei, or both..
    Loyalists at Lari at first sought vengeance, not comfort. They turned their anger and grief into violent reprisal. The Home Guard patrol returning from Wainaina's location saw members of the gangs making their escape and gave chase. Through the night there was sporadic shooting and skirmishes as the loyalists engaged what they thought to be groups of the attackers. Anyone abroad in Lari that night was taken as fair game. Other Home Guard units were soon also in pursuit of the attackers. They were joined before midnight by Home Guard from neighbouring locations, by police from Uplands and Limuru, and by members of the KPR. In their fear and anguish, the survivors were convinced that other Lari residents must have been among the attackers: how could hundreds have disappeared into the night if they had not taken shelter in the homes of Mau Mau supporters within Lari itself?
    What followed between 10 p.m. and dawn the next morning is not easy to describe precisely, for there was never any official enquiry into the aftermath of the Lari attacks. All the same, there is no doubt that a second massacre took place at Lari that night. It was perpetrated by the Home Guard, later joined by other elements of the security services, who took revenge on any persons in the location they could lay their hands on whom they suspected of Mau Mau sympathies. By the time the Lancashire Fusiliers arrived in Lari the next morning, to assist in the 'mopping-up operations', the Home Guard, police and KPR had exacted their bitter revenge. Some 200 bodies then awaited identification at the local mortuary--more than twice the number known to have been killed in the homesteads initially attacked. Many other bodies were left in the bush, and some would not be collected until four days later. The only contemporary European account of this second massacre, provided by the Irish lawyer Peter Evans, estimated the combined total dead from both massacres at more than 400. . .
    Moreover, at around the same time as the attack on Lari another Mau Mau gang had seriously embarrassed the security forces at Naivasha, where they mounted a brave and well-planned assault upon the local police post. The Naivasha raid was organized by the thirty-three-year-old Mbaria Kaniu, a Mau Mau leader who operated mainly in the Kinangop. The purpose  of the raid was to aquire weapons and ammunition from the armoury at the police barracks. It was staggeringly successful. . .
Histories Of The Hanged
David Anderson, 2005.

Offline KenyanPlato

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Re: Lari Massarce - Very vivid account on what happened
« Reply #1 on: May 23, 2020, 08:26:23 PM »
eptember 6, 1953: I received the following report from Brigadier Benson Njogu: Our force operating in Njūkīini forest, Kīrīnyaga, ambushed and killed two homeguard traitors yesterday morning; the rest of the traitors took off. Two rifles were captured by our force.
September 25, 1953: Our force attacked and overran the Kagumo enemy post in the Kerugoya area last night. Several homeguard traitors were gunned down, the rest of them escaped into the darkness. Ten shotguns and five rifles were seized and the post was torched. This attack of the enemy post was reported by the East African Standard: "Armed with Bren guns and rifles, a Mau Mau terrorist force of about 150 strong launched an attack on the Kagumo guard camp at 1:30 a.m., some four miles from Kerugoya. The camp was overrun and several numbers of the guards were killed and the camp was set on fire. District officer Nightingale who was in command managed to flee and the 5th KAR soldiers who came to the rescue were forced to make a speedy retreat, leaving behind several of their dead men." The newspaper continues, "During this month of September nine schools, which the British were using as military bases in Embu, were burned down, three of them in the Runyenje area. Three captured guards were thrown in fire alive; another two were executed by the Mau Mau terrorists."
Note: After the Kagumo enemy camp was overran by the KLFA force, the colonial forces, armed to the teeth, returned to the village the next day. The British commander told his men: "I want you to use your guns---kill as many as you can; the more you kill, burn, loot and destroy is better. It will make me happy. These are not human beings, they are animals; kill them without mercy. Kill them as you would kill a rat or a snake. If you get tired of killing them, use your penises. That is my order. Now do your job!" (Maina Kinyatti, 2010:167)
October 8, 1953: I received a report that our force attacked and overran the Thūmaita enemy post in Gīcūgū, killing large numbers of the enemy. This attack was reported by the EAS; and it reads: "Armed with machine-guns and other precision weapons, a gang of terrorists attacked the Thūmaita homeguard post yesterday night. After little resistance the defenders surrendered and handed over their weapons to the terrorists. The post was set on fire and most of the guards were executed."
October 15, 1953: Yesterday afternoon our force operating in the Baricho area, Embu, attacked a Roman Catholic Mission, which the enemy was using as a military base. Four African nuns and a white priest were eliminated for their anti-Mau Mau activities. We have made it very clear that any African or foreigner who betrays the people's cause to the enemy will pay with his or her life.
October 20, 1953: A heavy gunfight involving our force and the enemy force took place on the Thagana Hills yesterday morning. After a two hour battle our force retreated, leaving behind several dead. On the British side, three KAR soldiers were killed.
November 2, 1953: Our force battled the enemy force---a mixed patrol of police and hūmungati yesterday in Kīamacūgū Location. After an hour of gunfight, the enemy retreated. There were no casualties on either side.
November 7, 1953: In the early morning during a heavy rain, according to the report I received this evening, our force made a surprise attack upon the Kathengūri enemy post. After thirty minutes of fierce engagement our fighters broke the enemy defense and seized the post. Most of the enemy defenders were eliminated, including the notorious traitor Chief Fausto. Our force captured a good number of weapons and ammunition. The captured enemies were executed and the post was left smoking. No casualties on the people's side.
Two days later: After our force attacked and overran the Kathengūri enemy post, the British forces armed with heavy weapons attacked the Kathengūri village, cowardly killing hundreds of people, of whom the women and children were the majority. Homes were burned and crops in the field were savagely destroyed. This act of brutality was an expression of fear and insecurity. The British know very well that their time in our country is over.
Dedan Kimathi Speaks: We Will Fight To The Last Gun
Maina Kinyatti, 2016.
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Offline RV Pundit

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Re: Lari Massarce - Very vivid account on what happened
« Reply #2 on: May 23, 2020, 08:35:21 PM »
Btw is there any linkage btw Lari/Mau Mau with evictions of Kikuyu by from Molo/Olenguorene by Italians/British. My great grandfather story mirrors many Kikuyus stories in settler farms in white highlands. Basically, in early 1900s the Mzungu had invited Africans to live in their settler farms and work as farmhands or like my great grandfather use their oxen to till Mzungu farm in exchange for land mostly at the fringes - for pasture and etc.

In late 1930 and early 1940s - there was WW2 turmoil - and post that - lots of changes. First Mzungu imported a lot of tractors (aka technology) rendering thousands of joblessness and as it was landless. The British then brought Italians prisoners of war to work the farm - basically drive tractors, build roads and name it - as punishment for world war II.

Many African were kicked out of British farms - most decided to stay just at borders of Mzungu farms - while others went back where they came from - others decided to go as far as Tanzanai.

After some years the Italians prisoners of war - were rewarded with land - and they swiftly evicted everyone. Kikuyus trekked back to Kiambu in 1950s - and they started asking why they were landless  - and thus began Mau Mau - initially as Kikuyus of Lari attacking fellow Kikuyus homeguard for stealing their land.

I think eviction by Italian POW happened around 1952s.

Offline KenyanPlato

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Re: Lari Massarce - Very vivid account on what happened
« Reply #3 on: May 23, 2020, 08:39:59 PM »
Btw is there any linkage btw Lari/Mau Mau with evictions of Kikuyu by from Molo/Olenguorene by Italians/British. My great grandfather story mirrors many Kikuyus stories in settler farms in white highlands. Basically, in early 1900s the Mzungu had invited Africans to live in their settler farms and work as farmhands or like my great grandfather use their oxen to till Mzungu farm in exchange for land.

In late 1930 and early 1940s - there was WW2 turmoil - and post that - lots of changes. First Mzungu imported a lot of tractors (aka technology) rendering thousands of joblessness and as it was landless. The British brought Italian prisoners of war to work the farm - basically drive tractors, build roads and name it - as punishment for world war II.

Many African were kicked out of British farms - most decided to stay just at borders of Mzungu farms - while others went back where they came from - others decided to go as far as Tanzanai.

After some years the Italians prisoners of war - were rewarded with land - and they swiftly evicted everyone. Kikuyus trekked back to Kiambu in 1950s - and they started asking why they were landless  - and thus began Mau Mau - initially as Kikuyus of Lari attacking fellow Kikuyus homeguard for stealing their land.

I think eviction by Italian POW happened around 1952s.

In 1952 the emergency was declared. A national curfew imposed. Movements restricted. The British didn't trust Kikuyu farmhands. they feared that they would attack them and colloborate with mau mau. So a decision was made to evict Kikuyus from RV. Each farmhand was asked to identify their home area. Tractor with tailers were used to ferry them to central. My mum tells me that most of the families were dumped on the boundaries of RV and central.

Yes this was the first massive displacement of Kikuyus from central. The tragedy of it is that some these Kiuyus had be born and raised in RV with no connection to their homelands


Offline KenyanPlato

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Re: Lari Massarce - Very vivid account on what happened
« Reply #4 on: May 23, 2020, 08:40:15 PM »
Gititi Kabutu became a location hero of the Mau Mau movement towards the end of 1952. He had received recognition as an oath administrator in the Mathira Division of Nyeri district. After the proclamation of the State of Emergency he entered Mt. Kenya forest and joined General China's Hika Hika Battalion.
    Like many of his counterparts in the forest he chose to operate under a bogus name. Right from the day he entered the forest he was to be known as General Kariba. In the Hika Hika Battalion he was chosen by the overall commander of Mt. Kenya Mau Mau, General China, to lead a company of fighters numbering about five hundred. As time went on his company became more and more independent from the control of the Hika Hika Battalion although it owed its allegiance to China. It could take certain decisions even without consulting China. Kariba's duty was to organise attacks on security forces in Mathira Division, North Tetu Division and the adjoining areas of the Nyeri reserve.
    On May 9, 1953, Kariba left the Mt. Kenya forest with about eighty armed men for raiding missions on loyalist guard posts deep in Mathira Division. That night, his men, most of them armed with .303 rifles swept down into Ihagwe loyalist guard post in Iriani location, not far from Karatina. This was aimed at wiping out the loyalist Kikuyu Guard Camp set up there by Chief Eliud. Their main target was the Chief, who had become a Mau Mau critic and publicly denounced the movement. As a result his head had been asked for by the freedom fighters. Prior to Kariba's attack the Chief had survived nine Mau Mau attacks on his life.
    The fighters burned down the guard post and fired into the Chief's house and motorcar. Kikuyu prisoners held in the camp compound were also set free and made off into the forest with Kariba's Battalion. In the fighting six Kikuyu guards were killed. Another two received serious panga wounds.
    Although Kariba had managed to destroy the camp, the loyal Chief escaped with his escort. He fought his way out of the besieged camp and through the darkness Chief Eliud raced four miles to Karatina to raise an alarm. He had survived the tenth Mau Mau assassination attempt.
    Most of those who formed Kariba's battalion were men drawn from Aguthi location of North Tetu Division. In all the Battalion consisted of five companies each headed by a company commander. Kariba became the most courageous leader in Nyeri and would take all chances even at the risk of his own life to achieve what he had set out to accomplish. Perhaps the only leader who superceeded him was General Kago of Fort Hall. General Kago had become famous because of his daylight terrorism on the security forces in Fort Hall. He had left the Aberdare forest for the reserve where he carried out his attacks. Kariba decided to follow Kago's example. Towards the end of 1953 he too left the Mt. Kenya forest with nearly 400 followers and started operating in the reserve..
    Like his counterpart in Fort Hall, Kariba began roaming the Nyeri reserve from one end to the other. His men were well armed and some were dressed in military uniforms which they had received from their supporters in Nairobi, at the beginning of the Emergency. The Kikuyu loyalists who were poorly armed with spears could not dare challenge his fighters unless they were sure of immediate support from better armed security forces. The "spear-bearers" who happened to contact them looked another way and pretended not to see them. This gave Kariba's men the right of way. In order to retain superiority he maintained his men as one fighting unit instead of breaking up into small companies which would offer little resistance if attacked by their enemy. When challenged they fought as one unit and often times this saved them from complete defeat because of their superiority in number.
    Most of the movement in the reserve was done at night. During the day time the Battalion lay in hiding in small jungles, banana plantations and small bushes. At night they went on recruiting missions on the "komereras" operating in the Nyeri reserve. As a result his Battalion continued to grow bigger and bigger. The number of followers that he commanded gave him such assurance that he found it necessary to form a Nyeri Reserve Army. He called it the Kenya Levellation Army (Kíharagania). This became the best equipped Mau Mau force operating in Nyeri. . .
With General China in the hands of the authorities, Kariba was selected to be the new leader of the Hika Hika Battalion. On Friday February 5, 1954, he was in the Mathira reserve near Karatina with his Kenya Levellation Army. He was contacted by the security forces at 3 o'clock on Saturday afternoon when government patrols brushed with the freedom fighters who were going south. The freedom fighters were cut off at Karura, some four or five miles from Karatina. The fighting which ensued became widespread. Some of the Mau Mau under General Kariba went up the Tumutumu Hill to seek refuge in the wooden slopes. The fighting continued throughout the weekend. Casualties among the Mau Mau were heavy. At least 13 home made rifles and a large quantity of assorted ammunition were captured by the Government troops. Brigadier Batu Batu, a leader in the Hika Hika Battalion was killed. About 17 other freedom fighters of the Kenya Levellation Army were also killed. Casualties among the Government forces were one European killed, two Europeans wounded. A number of police loyalist guards were also injured.
    The battle was so bloody that it had to be commemorated by a song composed by those who survived. The song called Kariba's song was sang in praise of the Mau Mau successes during the battle at Tumutumu:
1.  "Listen and hear this story
     Of the Tumutumu Hill
     So that you may realize that God is with us
     And will never abandon us
2.  It was on a Tuesday
     We were in the village down the valley
     The enemy decided to climb
     In order to see Kikuyu country
3.  On our arrival in the valley
     Our flag was hoisted
     When the Government forces saw it
     They took cover
4.  Kariba said with his own word
     "All the whistles be blown"
     And when the signal was given
     The bullets started pouring like water
5.  Kariba said again
     We would better move from
     The people's homes
     And fight in the banana valley
6.  When advancing very near
      Ndungu's fig tree
     The enemy was cautioned with
     The sound of machine gun fire
7.  When we arrived
     At Ndungu's fig tree
     Rongu fired his machine gun
     And scared away the Government forces.
8. When we reached the valley
     We found parents in tears
     Coming down the hill
     To witness the death of their sons.
    Contact with the freedom fighters was lost on Monday. But on Tuesday afternoon they were again contacted. Another two days battle followed which ended on Thursday evening. During the night some of the Mau Mau travelled across the Mathira reserve towards Mt. Kenya. The larger group under Kariba infiltrated into the Mukurweini Division of Nyeri district. For a time it was feared that he was trying to cross into Fort Hall to join with General Kago. As a result a wide manhunt was launched in Mukurweini Division especially the river valleys forming the boundary line between the Division and Mathira. During this operation members of the KAR routed out many of the "komereras" operating in the area. In the campaign "General Hitler" whose existence was hitherto unknown, was wounded and captured by a patrol of the 3rd. KAR in an engagement at Mukurweini. He was a prominent Mau Mau leader in the Division who operated under the bogus name of "General Hitler". No contact with Kariba was made during this operation. . .
Six Mau Mau Generals
Paul Maina, 1977.

Offline RV Pundit

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Re: Lari Massarce - Very vivid account on what happened
« Reply #5 on: May 23, 2020, 08:44:00 PM »
It wasn't trust. My old bar man told me they lived with many kikuyus in Molo - at fringes of Mzungu farms. Molo was grass thatched slums for Africans.

What happened is basically tractors came in 1930s - Mzungu didn't need manual labour anymore - so lots of people were kicked out of the farm.

The btw 1945-1950 the British brought Italian POW and a few Germans - to work the farms. 5yrs later those Italians would be freed and given land at the edges of British land - and they evicted a lot of Africans.

The majority of those evicted in 1952 by Italians were dumped in Lari/Limuru...and they brought a lot of social issues and re-opened old wounds in Kiambu.

After that - things went south - Mau Mau began and it basically became more a civil war btw Kikuyus than a war with British.

Btw is there any linkage btw Lari/Mau Mau with evictions of Kikuyu by from Molo/Olenguorene by Italians/British. My great grandfather story mirrors many Kikuyus stories in settler farms in white highlands. Basically, in early 1900s the Mzungu had invited Africans to live in their settler farms and work as farmhands or like my great grandfather use their oxen to till Mzungu farm in exchange for land.

In late 1930 and early 1940s - there was WW2 turmoil - and post that - lots of changes. First Mzungu imported a lot of tractors (aka technology) rendering thousands of joblessness and as it was landless. The British brought Italian prisoners of war to work the farm - basically drive tractors, build roads and name it - as punishment for world war II.

Many African were kicked out of British farms - most decided to stay just at borders of Mzungu farms - while others went back where they came from - others decided to go as far as Tanzanai.

After some years the Italians prisoners of war - were rewarded with land - and they swiftly evicted everyone. Kikuyus trekked back to Kiambu in 1950s - and they started asking why they were landless  - and thus began Mau Mau - initially as Kikuyus of Lari attacking fellow Kikuyus homeguard for stealing their land.

I think eviction by Italian POW happened around 1952s.

In 1952 the emergency was declared. A national curfew imposed. Movements restricted. The British didn't trust Kikuyu farmhands. they feared that they would attack them and colloborate with mau mau. So a decision was made to evict Kikuyus from RV. Each farmhand was asked to identify their home area. Tractor with tailers were used to ferry them to central. My mum tells me that most of the families were dumped on the boundaries of RV and central.

Yes this was the first massive displacement of Kikuyus from central. The tragedy of it is that some these Kiuyus had be born and raised in RV with no connection to their homelands



Offline KenyanPlato

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Re: Lari Massarce - Very vivid account on what happened
« Reply #6 on: May 23, 2020, 08:51:04 PM »
Could be that factor. However, the 1952 evictions were purely due to fear of Mau Mau.

Offline RV Pundit

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Re: Lari Massarce - Very vivid account on what happened
« Reply #7 on: May 23, 2020, 08:54:26 PM »
But Mau Mau didn't really begin as an attack against the Brits - but more a civil war within Kikuyus. It began when returning Kikuyus found themselves landless and they attacked fellow Kikuyus of Limuru-Lari-Tigoni for stealing their land or giving up their land.

The attack against the British happened a lot later.

The Lari massacre if you study was caused by IDPs. They had returned to nothing - and - they plotted their revenge against the home guards whom they blame for their land loss.

Could be that factor. However, the 1952 evictions were purely due to fear of Mau Mau.

Offline KenyanPlato

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Re: Lari Massarce - Very vivid account on what happened
« Reply #8 on: May 23, 2020, 09:03:05 PM »
But Mau Mau didn't really begin as an attack against the Brits - but more a civil war within Kikuyus. It began when returning Kikuyus found themselves landless and they attacked fellow Kikuyus of Limuru-Lari-Tigoni.
Could be that factor. However, the 1952 evictions were purely due to fear of Mau Mau.

Not correct. The attacks against brits started in Nairobi and other elite communities where houseboys would butcher their bosses at night. The first goal of Mau Mau was to create terror within the settler class. make them paranoid. Have them not trust anyone.. it was after the settlers being killed that the british governement started military operations.


 the civil war was after declared of emergency. Total loyalty was required within kikuyu community in order to stop penetration of British spying efforts. those that resisted were killed, those on the sidelines were intimidated to join. Lari Massarce was Mau Mau drawing a line on the sand and telling loyalists nothing was off the table. At this point Mau Mau had decided to go to war to keep Mzungu on defense while political arm tried to lobby. Those Chiefs that were hardliners got killed. It started with Waruhiu and luka was the the crescendo

The accounts of White people was that Mau Mau was just a rag tag militia like Mungiki. Far from it. Mau Mau was well established army with ranks within it and fighting companies each under a General. Their network was efficient as fuck.

The civil was usually assigned to low ranking mau mau conscripts that would move into the village, kill loyalists and create a lot of terror. In lower  Githunguri one night alone they raided a village and butchered about 20 loyalists and retreated. the worst is that Mzungu couldn't not find out who was Mau Mau. THey didn't even trust Homeguards because some of them were working for Mau Mau

The chiefs too were working for Mau Mau. Magugu and Koinange were working with the British political class that hated settlers. You have to understand that even with the White community there were great divisions. Most missionaries and other civil servants didn't really like the settlers class







Offline RV Pundit

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Re: Lari Massarce - Very vivid account on what happened
« Reply #9 on: May 23, 2020, 09:09:53 PM »
Okay differs with my history. I think Lari massacre happened before state of emergency was declared. It was after Lari massacre that gov (British) declared the war against Mau Mau. Mau Mau then was like Mungiki. They didn't have loft dreams.


But Mau Mau didn't really begin as an attack against the Brits - but more a civil war within Kikuyus. It began when returning Kikuyus found themselves landless and they attacked fellow Kikuyus of Limuru-Lari-Tigoni.
Could be that factor. However, the 1952 evictions were purely due to fear of Mau Mau.

Not correct. The attacks against brits started in Nairobi and other elite communities where houseboys would butcher their bosses at night. The first goal of Mau Mau was to create terror within the settler class. make them paranoid. Have them not trust anyone.. it was after the settlers being killed that the british governement started military operations.


 the civil war was after declared of emergency. Total loyalty was required within kikuyu community in order to stop penetration of British spying efforts. those that resisted were killed, those on the sidelines were intimidated to join. Lari Massarce was Mau Mau drawing a line on the sand and telling loyalists nothing was off the table. At this point Mau Mau had decided to go to war to keep Mzungu on defense while political arm tried to lobby. Those Chiefs that were hardliners got killed. It started with Waruhiu and luka was the the crescendo

The accounts of White people was that Mau Mau was just a rag tag militia like Mungiki. Far from it. Mau Mau was well established army with ranks within it and fighting companies each under a General. Their network was efficient as fuck.

The civil was usually assigned to low ranking mau mau conscripts that would move into the village, kill loyalists and create a lot of terror. In lower  Githunguri one night alone they raided a village and butchered about 20 loyalists and retreated. the worst is that Mzungu couldn't not find out who was Mau Mau. THey didn't even trust Homeguards because some of them were working for Mau Mau

The chiefs too were working for Mau Mau. Magugu and Koinange were working with the British political class that hated settlers. You have to understand that even with the White community there were great divisions. Most missionaries and other civil servants didn't really like the settlers class








Offline RV Pundit

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Re: Lari Massarce - Very vivid account on what happened
« Reply #10 on: May 23, 2020, 09:11:48 PM »
You're right. Mau Mau declaration of emergency is 1952 in October and Lari is 1953 March.

Offline KenyanPlato

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Re: Lari Massarce - Very vivid account on what happened
« Reply #11 on: May 23, 2020, 09:13:55 PM »
Lari Massacre happened in 1953. Emergency was declared in 1952.

Mau Mau at this time was full fledge military army with supply lines all over the country. They were getting most of their supplies from Nairobi and funding from those in the reserves. They could raise shs 1000 easily. that was a lot of money in 1950s. I will post a map of Mau Mau war council shortly

Mau Mau war Council Map

Offline KenyanPlato

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Re: Lari Massarce - Very vivid account on what happened
« Reply #12 on: May 23, 2020, 09:25:13 PM »


Mau Mau soldiers reintegrating to the society after leaving fighting Camps on the eve of independence

Offline KenyanPlato

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Re: Lari Massarce - Very vivid account on what happened
« Reply #13 on: May 23, 2020, 09:26:42 PM »
Mau Mau Fighters

Offline KenyanPlato

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Re: Lari Massarce - Very vivid account on what happened
« Reply #14 on: May 23, 2020, 09:51:20 PM »
General Waruhi Itote - account on how he started his fight company

A few days after this meeting with Kenyatta, the moment for which I had been waiting for arrived. I received instructions from the Nyeri (Nairobi) Committee to report to Karatina, an important market town on the slopes of Mount Kenya. At Karatina, I was to meet forty young men, untrained and unarmed, but inspired with patriotism and ready to fight. These men were to join me in Mount Kenya Forest and to become the nucleus of an Army of Liberation. I was also told that Nairobi would send us money, guns, ammunition and medical supplies, while the District Committee would provide us with food, and would control the supply lines. It turned out that we had to find our own arms and ammunition.
    Early on the morning of 18 August, 1952 I set out for Karatina in a taxi with two friends. I felt a sense of excitement as we sped along the wide road, and despite the new problems which faced me I was exhilarated. None of us talked much; each was occupied with his own thoughts. My mind wandered back to my army days in Burma, and then jumped to the lessons I had to teach our young recruits in the future, and the difficulties I would encounter through ignorance of the Mount Kenya forests. . .
    In the evening, members of the local committee called us and administered the second oath, the forest or mbatuni oath, to us. After four of us had taken this oath we were introduced to the forty young men who were to form the core of our army. Their leader, Gaitho (later known as Major Mabiganyama) brought them in and formally placed them under my command. I was requested to teach them all that I knew about fighting, and particularly to show them the "jungle" methods used by the Japanese in Burma. Gaitho said that the local committee would help us with money, clothes and communications, but that it was up to us to find weapons.
    In the darkness I saw the young men clustered round me, and it was probably then that I felt for the first time the enormity of the task we had undertaken. The lives of these men, and of many others to come, were essentially in my hands; the training and the leadership which I would give them would determine the future of all of us. I chose nine of the men to act as section leaders, men whom I would train and who would then pass on their knowledge to the remaining thirty-one, and to subsequent recruits.
    "You will be the leaders of the Mount Kenya Army," I told them, "and you must teach others what we are fighting for. There are no wages in this Army, and nothing can help us but our own skill, and the unity of people in the villages behind us. There cannot be unity unless we give the oath to these people, for that is the only way to be sure of them, and the only way we can know who is on our side and who we can trust with our lives."
    We agreed to meet in the morning, and broke up for the night; for me, sleep took second place to the many thoughts which were with me in the darkness.
    With my nine section leaders I left early the next morning to open our first headquarters. One man was left in charge of the thirty-one others, who were ordered to prepare themselves physically for the coming struggle.
    "Imprisonment or death might be in store for all of us," I told them before we left, "but it is out duty to save our country, and no one can be spared who tries to prevent us from carrying out this task. Even if it is your brother or sister, it is better for him or her to die than for us to remain slaves."
    Our first camp was located in a favourable spot, on top of a hill near the farm of an old man called Kariuki. The hill was topped by a flat plateau, and afforded a magnificent view of the surrounding countryside; its sides were free of bushes and trees and thus no one could approach us unseen. There were no roads leading to the hill, and although a few people came to this isolated spot on foot, we could never be taken by surprise. We could move freely among the cane and banana trees on the hill top..
    The first job was to administer the forest oath. Each one was given a bracelet, made from the skin of a pure black goat --- no other could be used. After this it was a matter of giving them basic training: moulding them into one group, loyal to each other and to our cause; teaching them the background of our trouble, and the goals for which we fought; and teaching them the practical skills of war.
    "The first step in any war," I told them, "is to know your enemy and to know his weapons. I shall teach you the tactics of the British so that we can know in advance what to expect from them, and how we can defeat them."
    As we advanced further in the training, I learnt that none of my men had been in the army, and thus they knew nothing of the secondary organizations which supported the actual fighting men. We had to have our own Intelligence Department, I said, to match that of the British. We also had to make certain that our supply lines remained open. Although the enemy would have many wonderful weapons, airplanes and automatic guns, and a great deal of money to bribe people to betray us, we had a stronger weapon. Because we were fighting for our country, we would always have the advantage in propaganda to persuade the people to support us.
    Yet all of us were conscious of the urgent need for weapons; there could be no substitute for fire power. I reassured the men that there was little to fear; we would have few difficulties in obtaining weapons. As an initial tactic, since we were not strong enough to organize a full scale raid on a police station or even a private house, we decided to ambush someone on the road and take his weapons.
    "I know a man with a rifle," one of them said. "He's a watchman at a European's house near here. Let me go with one other man and the two of us will return with the rifle."
    The man's enthusiasm and eagerness for action impressed me, and I let him go, with a companion, after warning them both to be cautious and keep their heads.
    The next morning, Mitambo (Batubatu) and his friend returned, tired but elated, with the precious rifle. They told us all a good story: Mitambo had approached the guard in the evening, and drawing out a packet of cigarettes, had asked for a match. He explained that he was in the neighbourhood searching for his wife, who had run away from home. Falling into the spirit of the tale, Mitambo had grown excited, and the guard himself became indignant at the idea of Mitambo's imaginary domestic quarrels. The 'mythical' wife, Mitambo had said, went off and left a two month old baby without milk, and he feared it would die unless she returned. Sympathetically the guard lit a match for him, and as he did so Mitambo struck him with a short but heavy club which he had concealed behind his back. The guard was not killed, but he fell to the ground, unconscious. Mitambo seized the rifle, took eleven bullets from his pocket and hurried back to his companion.
    The outcome of this first effort pleased me considerably; if all our young men showed the same coolness and initiative, our future looked good. And, of course, we had our first weapon!
    "In one day," I said, holding up the rifle, "we've got one gun. By being careful and thinking hard, we shall collect more. There's no need to buy them --- we'll simply take them from the British and their stooges and use them against their former owners."
    We continued with training throughout that day, and on the next morning I sent for the thirty-one others, who were still in the vicinity of Karatina township. Under cover of darkness we all moved together to Kihari, in the Hombe forest of Mount Kenya, about two miles from Karatina. We stopped at a place called Karima ka Mburi a quiet spot with one or two small farms and a hut which we ourselves occupied. I called the hut Thingira wa Iregi, "the cottage of our ancestors."
Itote, 'Mau Mau' General, 1967.

Offline Kim Jong-Un's Pajama Pants

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Re: Lari Massarce - Very vivid account on what happened
« Reply #15 on: May 24, 2020, 12:50:33 AM »
A contemporary, if slanted, report of the Lari Massacre.

"I freed a thousand slaves.  I could have freed a thousand more if only they knew they were slaves."

Harriet Tubman

Offline KenyanPlato

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Re: Lari Massarce - Very vivid account on what happened
« Reply #16 on: May 24, 2020, 01:35:23 AM »
A contemporary, if slanted, report of the Lari Massacre.


That the white man trying to make a case against mau mau. My uncle is among the detainees that were on trial. He was hanged in githunguri. My mum was in college in lower githunguri she told me that mondays before the hangings mau mau would spend the night "cursing their enemies" this still haunts her today.

Offline Kim Jong-Un's Pajama Pants

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Re: Lari Massarce - Very vivid account on what happened
« Reply #17 on: May 24, 2020, 02:57:43 AM »
Agreed.  He is not mincing words with his bias.  These guys were very patronizing.  But I still think you can get some useful insights into what's going on.

Here is another one from that period.  Unfortunately, the only guys who could film were also just straight up racists.

"I freed a thousand slaves.  I could have freed a thousand more if only they knew they were slaves."

Harriet Tubman