Salute to champions of light, citizens who resist culture of compromise

Opinion
By Rev Edward Buri | Mar 09, 2025
Youths during Gen Z protests along Moi Avenue in Nairobi, on July 23, 2024. [File, Standard]

Bold. Unafraid. Champions of right and light. They come armed with cold, hard, undeniable facts. They stare into the darkness that engulfs Kenya and declare, “Truth matters.”

Dr Nancy Gathungu, the Auditor General, walks into battle with numbers that do not lie. Margaret Nyakang’o, the Controller of Budget, speaks with the unwavering confidence of hard facts. When asked, “Who do you work for?” their response is simple yet profound—“Truth.”

It is not that they fail to recognize the hostility toward truth. These are intelligent and well-informed civil servants who fully understand that truth is often unwelcome. Knowing the risks, they still have chosen light. The thickness of Kenya’s suffocating darkness only amplifies the visibility of their stance. While many in public service expend their courage crafting deceptions to justify greed, these servants display a rare audacity in their allegiance to truth. They stand for its necessity and expose the falsehood of its rejection.

Integrity is not just unwanted in Kenya’s political landscape—it is systematically hunted down, marked, and ejected at the earliest. Any glimmer of uprightness is swiftly shot down. And yet, the nation’s crisis is fundamentally an integrity problem. Suffocating the very integrity needed to resolve this crisis reveals a system whose supposed agenda to progress the nation is nothing more than empty hype.

In strategic management, there is an established principle: to gain a competitive edge, one must possess something others lack. In Kenya, the landscape is drenched in deception. The real strategic advantage, then, is found in aligning with the light. Amid overwhelming darkness, those who choose integrity gain an unmatched distinction.

Faith Odhiambo, the President of the Law Society of Kenya, stands as the contemporary face of justice. Her presence among Kenya’s truth-bearers places her in powerful company. Then there is Cabinet Secretary Rebecca Miano, propelled by what many perceive as a divine wind, managing to carve out an ethical image that starkly contrasts the tainted reputation of the government she serves. Chief Justice David Maraga need not blow his own trumpet. His life’s organic alignment with integrity makes him the envy of Gen Zs. Then there is Okiya Omtatah who has paid and continues to pay heavy prices for integrity, proving that morality not only counts but is worth sacrificing for. This list extends beyond the well-known. It includes the silent warriors of integrity, ordinary citizens in street corners who refuse to conform to the culture of compromise. They are the friends of light in a country drowning in darkness.

Masters of the dark

Kenya’s political leaders have mastered the dark. They navigate effortlessly in lightless environments. They are not just part of the darkness; they are the thick, impenetrable fog that controls all other shades of black. Any flicker of light is an existential threat to them. They do not discredit it because it is false—they do so because it blinds them. To them light is a liability and truth-bearers are mocked and persecuted.

Biblically, the rejection of those who stand for what is right is no surprise—it is the natural consequence of being Savior-like. Kenya’s top politicians are merely playing their part in a world that despises righteousness. They do everything in their power to extinguish the light. But on this side of the Scriptures, the light-bearers stand firm, knowing that no matter how many blows they endure, they will reignite—resurrected by the unbreakable power of truth.

The real tragedy, however, is that it is often Christians who are playing the game of darkness. It is deeply disturbing that the very people propagating falsehoods, fighting against truth, and enabling the theft of public resources are church-going, chest-thumping cheerleaders who never pause to think.

Poisoning of the wells

The existing wells of integrity are under attack. The broadbase system works tirelessly to poison them. The goal is simple: corrupt everyone. That way, those in power can manipulate and control without opposition. But among the masses, there remain citizens who know only one thing—doing the right thing. They may be a small minority, but they are in ultra-high demand.

The broadbase government is broad on greed and baseless on ingenuity. Kenya’s problem is an integrity problem. But rather than solving it, the government multiplies it through pacts, unions and memorandums with political actors who will suppress truth in favor of power and money. Birds of a scheme plotting together! A government that resists scrutiny does not value accountability. A government that despises accountability is inherently suspect.

Suppressing Gen Z’s call for integrity is akin to placing a lid on an erupting volcano—it only builds up pressure. The eventual explosion will be catastrophic. Yet government actors remain lost in their deception, intoxicated by their own lies. As it seems now, the government has not only run out of ideas; the ones it does implement backfire spectacularly. Why? Because they are power-centered, not people-powered. This is a fatal flaw. They would do well to remember: lies run out. Every lie lies to the liar too. Truth pushes back.

Church’s shameful complicity

The role of the church is to be a light, not to cozy up to darkness. Yet, too many church leaders have traded their prophetic voice for a seat at the political banquet. Instead of rebuking corruption, they entertain it. Instead of standing with the oppressed, they align with the oppressors. The biblical mandate is clear: righteousness exalts a nation.

Christians in churches appear shallow when they cheer uncontrollably after receiving money from politicians. It is sheer ignorance for a congregation to erupt in celebration simply because a politician shouts, ‘Bwana asifiwe!’ (Praise the Lord!). Brethren, you are letting your Savior down! A gift of Sh20 million, coupled with a promise to raise it to Sh100 million, may seem grand on the surface.

But pastors must teach their followers to be more than surface-level Christians—they must be curious, questioning, and willing to cross-check. It is such training that adjusts wild cheers into a mass walkout. Why? Because integrity-laced believers realize that unclean money can turn into a ministry curse.  A church that befriends thieves should expect to share in their handcuffs. 

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