JAMILA’S MEMO: Chapati in one million ways
Audio By Vocalize
Tonight, my Memo is about chapatis and promises.
I know a thing or two about making
chapatis. You need flour, oil, salt, and baking powder. I also know that
kneading the dough properly and letting it rest before rolling it out makes for
softer chapatis.
For many of us, growing up, chapati
was a special occasion meal—aspirational, something to look forward to. Even
today, not much has changed. Chapatis are still not an everyday meal for most
families. In many ways, they remain a Victorian cake—a luxury rather than a
staple.
Here in Kenya, ugali is our staple
food—the true measure of whether a family is food secure. The price of maize
flour for ugali is also significantly cheaper than that of chapati flour.
When thinking about food availability,
our priority should be ensuring that families have ugali, sukuma, and githeri
first before we talk about one million chapatis. On a typical menu of urgency,
chapati is probably fourth on the list.
This hierarchy reminds me of promises,
priorities, and project delivery.
Let’s assume the "chapati
machine" is already out at sea. Over the past four days, we have witnessed
a flurry of project launches in Nairobi, with billions of shillings at stake.
- Commissioning of Kamukunji Technical Vocational
College
- Inspection of Bangkok Fresh Produce Market
- Launch of Nairobi Rivers Engineering Works
- Construction of an 800-bed dormitory at St. Teresa
School
- Groundbreaking for 12 classrooms at Mabatini
Primary School
- TVET college groundbreaking in Mathare
- Launch of last mile electricity connectivity in
Mathare
- Classroom construction at TJ Kajwang’ Mathare
North Secondary, Ruaraka Constituency
- Classroom construction at Gatina Primary School,
Dagoretti North Constituency
- Classroom construction at Westlands Primary School
- Inspection of Kangemi Bridge construction progress
Launching. Groundbreaking.
Commissioning.
In the past four days, promises worth
billions were made. On Monday alone, the pledges were…billion. By Tuesday,
promises were valued at…billion.. Wednesday, Dagoretti and Westlands residents
were promised projects worth Ksh.3 billion. And on Thursday, it was Lang'ata
and Kibra residents ambao waliahidiwa miradi ya mabilioni….
In this country, we are obsessed with
launching for optics. It’s a camera moment—smile, click, flash, and repeat.
These are important projects that
would greatly benefit residents—if they are completed. But the real question
is: will they actually be finished?
In this country, past events have
taught us that launching a project does not guarantee it will be completed and
materialize.
And so, back to chapatis—there is a
little omission I noted: what are we serving the one million chapatis with?


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