KAIKAI’S KICKER: Our athletes, our anthem and our flag

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On my kicker tonight; we Kenyans, once again and as always owe our athletes, immense gratitude. Without surprise, the World Athletics Championship in Tokyo Japan is gifting us with those rare moments as a nation and a people – those rare moments when greatness, pride and patriotic sentiment converge and present Kenyans with what is without doubt, our collective best feeling.
To
our glorious athletes in Tokyo, we are proud of you and immeasurably grateful
for the honour you bring our nation. Kenya tonight sits a proud second place on
the medals table courtesy of the individual brilliance of our world beating
athletes. And we know, this is not the first time and most certainly not the
last time.
Coincidentally, it was in Tokyo,
Japan, way back in 1964 that Kenya started winning athletics medals when Wilson
Kiprugut won a bronze medal in the 1964 Tokyo Olympics. More medals followed in
the 1968 Olympics in Mexico when legends Kipchoge Keino, Naftali Temu and Amos
Biwott gave Kenya its first gold medals. From then on, joy has been assured for
Kenyans at literally any global competition as athletics became a uniquely
Kenyan forte, in the same way football is a Brazilian area of expertise.
Now,
in a country whose national affairs are often clouded under a dense negative
atmosphere, athletics, and indeed football just the other day, provides a
much-needed gust of fresh air. There is something about that sound of our
national anthem during those medal presentation ceremonies. The melody in Tokyo
for whatever reason, sounds different from the same rendition in Nairobi.
Then there’s our flag. Something
happens to those colours when they land in the glorious hands of Faith
Kipyegon! The red, green, black and white acquire this sudden, overpowering
sparkle that automatically activates our tear-glands. There is this sharp
contrast between that flag on Faith Cherotich’s shoulders and the one flapping
from the bonnets of politicians’ cars in Nairobi. I agree, both flags may
trigger that well of tears, but for equally contrasting reasons.
This
contrast, fellow Kenyans, must be put under some sharp scrutiny. Why, we must
ask. Why is our national anthem sounding better in Tokyo than it does in
Nairobi? Why is our flag such a magical sight in the hands of our athletes and
an eyesore in some other hands? These contrasts tell us something is amiss; and
something must be fixed to make our anthem sound the same anytime anywhere, and
our flag beautiful and glorious anytime, anywhere.
As symbols of our national
identity in sports or international events, diplomacy or war – our flag and our
anthem survives on nothing else but, honor. And that explains the contrast
between our flag and anthem in Tokyo and our flag and anthem in Nairobi. For
the honor they bring our flag, anthem and country, our athletes and other
sportsmen deserve our utmost admiration.
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