Mukuuri

Mûkûûrî is a sub-location and township in Runyenjes Division, in Embu County, Kenya, with a population of about 15,000 people. It lies on the green, rolling hills of the Mount Kenya slopes. It is home to four public primary schools, including Kubu Kubu Memorial Boarding School and Muragari School, which is among the oldest schools in Embu and Kîrînyaga districts.

Nthenge Njeru falls in Mûkûûrî

Mukuuri is also home to the historic Kîrîmîri Forest Hill. The 800-acre forest was popular during Kenya's freedom war the Mau Mau. The Embu freedom fighter Kubu Kubu made the forest his main hideout. He was killed by the colonialists early 1950s. The colonial rulers burnt his body to ashes on the present location of Kubu Kubu Memorial School. General China[1], in his book The Mau Mau General, says women and children were forced to clap and sing as the body turned into ashes. This angered the residents and more Mau Mau fighters like Kaviu îtina were recruited.

The time zone in Mukuuri is Africa/Nairobi Sunrise at 06:39 and Sunset at 18:46. Latitude. -0.4000°, Longitude. 37.5500° For Kirimiri - Latitude. -0.4167°, Longitude. 37.5500°

Notable former residents

The area has produced a number of leaders at national and international levels. They include current Embu Governor Martin Nyaga Wambora, KASNEB founder and former MP Stanley Nyaga Kithung'a[2] and Lee Njiru, the long-serving head of the Presidential Press Service and Private Secretary of Kenya's Second President Daniel Arap Moi . Others are academics like Kenyan geneticist Dr Njiruh Nthakanio and veteran Embu Knut secretary general Mohammed Gakinya. There is also the late freedom fighter General Kubu Kubu and religious leaders like former Embu Anglican Bishop Moses Njue (1992-2006),[3] Embu Bishop of National Independent Church of Kenya (Nica) Bishop Amos Njiru (1993*-2003*), and business leaders including Richard Nyaga wa Stanley,[4] who served as MD of national carrier Kenya Airways (1981-1985) and later steered privatisation of the airline again as its Managing Director in 1999–2003. . Mzee Kariuki Kobuthi, the man who treated President Jomo Kenyatta by cutting off his uvula in 1960s when Kenyatta was very ill, also lives in Mukuuri.[5]

gollark: You also might obliterate his eyes, which would be uncool.
gollark: > buying expensive grass
gollark: If your neighbourhood doesn't like you, orbital-laser-strike everyone else in it.
gollark: BRB, enriching uranium.
gollark: Well, the places which would benefit more from nuclear power are factories and datacentres and such, which need large amounts of power all the time.

References

  1. SHADLE, B. (2015). The International Journal of African Historical Studies, 48(1), 152-154. Retrieved May 18, 2020, from www.jstor.org/stable/44715408
  2. http://www.icpsk.com/pdfs/ISSUE_3.pdf%5B%5D
  3. http://www.globalsouthanglican.org/index.php/comments/election_of_the_second_bishop_of_embu_diocese_kenya
  4. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2014-12-21. Retrieved 2013-10-11.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. http://www.the-star.co.ke/news/2015/07/13/traditional-surgeon-who-treated-kenyatta-marks-60-years-of-service_c1166430


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