We Must
Be Willing To Go Against The Grain To Allow Integrity To Advance
This year, 2016, has been one of many political,
economic, and social intrigues. Politicians have escalated corruption and
impunity, increasingly dwindling the rule of law.
Economically, the weak governance of the banking
sector was exposed by the collapse of some banks, as was the complicity of some
banks in corruption, namely the National Youth Service scandal.
Socially, religious institutions have ignored
integrity. Our mega churches have failed to deliver mega integrity. At the same
time, ethnic sentiments still contaminate national unity.
In the Ware Lecture of 2015, American public
intellectual Cornel West implored Americans to carry out a critical
self-inventory to establish who they have become as a people through exploring
how to anchor honesty, decency, and integrity in contemporary America.
As we cross over to another election year, I invite
Kenyans to ponder several questions that Dr. West attempts to answer in his
speech, questions asked by another towering intellectual, W.E.B. Du Bois.
First, how shall integrity overcome oppression?
Millions of diligent Kenyans are oppressed by a system of employment designed
to reward the corrupt while denying the conscientious opportunities.
We should not despair in bringing to life chapter six
of our Constitution, which deals with leadership and integrity, as it is the
only way out of this morass.
We must be willing to go against the grain to allow
integrity to advance by espousing moral conviction in place of political
calculation.
FORGE RELATIONS
Oppression thrives on silence and isolation. We must
shout at all forms of oppression and forge relations that transcend tribe,
class, and political affiliation.
Second, what does honesty do in the face of deception?
Ours has become a country where the accused and guilty have mastered the art of
using the courts to thwart justice for their victims. Honesty has been replaced
by trickery.
We ought to remind one another that honesty is a
torch, not a burden. That it is possible to be successful by being honest in
these times of economic, social, and political unsettlement.
Honesty is our most treasured weapon in overcoming
deception. We have to show intolerance to morally unsound leaders by voting
them out in August 2017.
At the same time, we ought to register our displeasure
with the compromised character of the Church as the institution that ought to
promote virtue and demand that religious leaders walk the talk of transparency,
accountability, and integrity.
Third, what does decency do in the face of insult? In
a democratic state, it is decent to exercise instrumental rights such as those
of expression, association, and assembly in constitutionally permitted ways. It
is how nations are nurtured to greatness.
The ruling political establishment has insulted the
civil society as being the “evil society” and normalized a misconstrual of its
complicity in regime change. Kenyans ought to challenge the state on such
controversial positions by demanding transparency, accountability, and
integrity on these claims.
GUARD DECENCY
This is what it takes to guard decency in times when
that which is wrong with the political is fast polluting what is decent in the
social and economic.
Lastly, how does virtue meet brute force? Our society
is plagued by the intransigent forces of inequality, ethnicity, historical
injustices, corruption, intolerance to dissent and a condescending
insensitivity to the working class.
These forces act against virtues such as solidarity,
tolerance, peace, and integrity; ideals that, if embraced, have the potential of
healing our nation.
As the carriers of these virtues, we ought to guard
and defend our country from further ethical lapse in leadership by adopting an
uncompromising attitude against all forms of trickery.
It is important to appreciate that it is in the interests
of the political elite that we abort the integrity clarion call and become
uncritical of its plunder and impunity.
Leaders who do not have integrity are not trustworthy
and consistent with our aspirations for a more unified, all-inclusive, and developed
Kenya.
More importantly, they do not have the moral currency
and bravery required to deliver our country from the dark place it currently
finds itself in as we get into next year’s grueling electoral contest. The
result of achieving the answers to the appeals explored here will be a profound
social awareness of our level of integrity.
This article was originally published in the Daily Nation (Thursday December 22, 2016 - http://www.nation.co.ke/oped/Opinion/we-must-be-willing-to-go-against-grain-allow-integrity-advance/440808-3494620-3uf9ls/index.html)
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