Wainaina, 79 sits for KCSE after deferring dream for 60 years

Central
By Ken Gachuhi | Nov 22, 2025
Samuel Wainaina, 79 sits for KCSE after deferring dream for 60 year.[Ken Gachuhi/Standard]

Samuel Wainaina, 79, is among hundreds of thousands of candidates who sat for this year’s KCSE examinations, his story standing as a testament to lifelong learning and that no dreams are too far to achieve.

Wainaina was born in Oljororok, Nyandarua, and his journey back to the classroom comes over sixty years later, after poverty denied him a chance to enrol for secondary education.

“I was among the top performers in the 1966 exam and was confident of joining high school. I was even interviewed to join Mang’u High School,” said Wainaina.

Determined to educate him, Wainaina’s father, who worked on a white settler’s farm, handed him his savings and borrowed more from friends to send him to school.

It was during the same period that the Kenyan government announced a plan to resettle Kenyans on their own farms from villages designed for squatters working for the whites.

The situation posed a difficult choice for his parents, who had to choose between educating him and paying for the land. They left the decision to Wainaina.

“Anyone who was to be settled had to pay Sh361. My father told me to choose between education and land. I chose land and returned to him the school fees he had given me,” he said.

With the dream for more education put on hold, Wainaina began working in the new settlements until 1968, when his uncle linked him to a company that made artificial fishing flies for sports fishing.

“I perfected the art and was elevated to quality control and later to a managerial position. The company later closed down, and I was rendered jobless,” he said.

His two friends, who had the chance of furthering their education, funded him to start a similar business, where his salary at the start went towards his share capital in the business.

“I worked with them for some time before we wound up the company. I started my own company where I worked alongside my wife. Later, I handed it over to my children and went back to the farms,” said Wainaina.

He settled in Laikipia, where he teamed up with local farmers to register the Kenya Livestock Producers Association, which introduced pedigree cattle to the local community.

After their progress was noted, the association members were brought on board the Kenya National Farmers Federation, which gave Wainaina exposure to interact with more educated persons.

“I then became a board member in the East African Farmers Federation. My limited formal education often posed challenges. It was then that I realized I had to upgrade my education,” he said.

In 2013, he joined a group of other senior citizens who rented space in Gilgil town and hired tutors for their secondary education. The group, however, disintegrated before they realized their dreams.

“Three years ago we revived it with the help of teachers from a local secondary school who even offered us the laboratories for practical lessons in science subjects,” he said.

His return to school received overwhelming support from his family. His grandchildren, among them Mary Njeri, a master’s degree student, took up the role of tutoring him whenever they are home.

“We are very supportive of him regarding his education. Helping him with tuition and exercises is the least we can do to honour the sacrifices he made for our family,” said Njeri.

Wainaina is confident to perform well in the KCSE exam and join a university to pursue a degree in community development. He believes this will enable him to contribute more meaningfully to society.

“I want to join a university and study community development so I can be even more relevant to my community,” he said.

Share this story
Sh1.9b shame: How poor planning, oversight gaps sank the Likoni floating bridge
The once sturdy metals of the Liwatoni Floating Pedestrian Bridge (LFPB), hailed in 2020 as an engineering marvel, are sagging under the weight of sheer neglect at Liwatoni and Ras Bofu, Mombasa.
More holes in payslip as new NSSF rates set to come into force
Salaried workers, already reeling from enhanced statutory deductions, are bracing for a further squeeze on their pay from February 1 as a scheduled increase in NSSF contributions takes effect.
KPC stake sale: Kenya's strategic play in East Africa's oil and gas rush
So far, the economic prospects in terms of growth seem to favour Uganda and Tanzania compared to Kenya majorly because of natural gas and oil exploration.
How Africa's green energy boom is stalled by ageing power grids
Despite huge renewable potential, Africa’s grid infrastructure is characterised by under investment, fragmentation, and technical difficulties, leaving millions without dependable electricity.
State dangles incentives to woo private investors in geothermal
The proposals are aimed at de-risking investment in a sector the government says can no longer rely solely on public financing to meet future power needs.
.
RECOMMENDED NEWS