Lumumba says church ‘waking from self-induced slumber’ after criticism of Ruto gov’t
Law professor and activist Patrick Lumumba
has termed the Kenyan Catholic and Anglican churches’ recent criticism of the
government and public refusal of politicians’ donations “heartening.”
Last week, the Kenya Conference of Catholic
Bishops (KCCB) publicly castigated Ruto’s “greedy” and “selfish” government for
what they called a deeply entrenched culture of lies, corruption, unfulfilled
promises, and misplaced priorities.
The Anglican Church of Kenya (ACK) on Monday
supported the Roman Catholic Church, saying they “spoke the minds of Kenyans
and faithfully expressed the truth as things are on the ground.”
ACK Archbishop Jackson Ole Sapit rebuked
Ruto’s administration’s dismissal of the Catholic bishops' statement, calling
it “dishonest.”
Later on Monday, the Catholic Archdiocese
of Nairobi announced it had rejected
donations from politicians.
Archbishop Philip
Anyolo said the Ksh.600,000 President William Ruto gave the Soweto Catholic
Church Choir and Parish Missionary Council on Sunday would be refunded, alongside
Nairobi Governor Johnson Sakaja’s Ksh.200,000 handout.
Ruto also donated Ksh.2
million towards the construction of the Father's house.
“The concatenation of
events as outlined is heartening,” Prof Lumumba said in a Tuesday letter to the KCCB Chairman Maurice Makumba
and ACK's Archbishop Sapit.
“They reveal a Church
that is waking from its hitherto self-induced slumber and is now giving meaning
to these words in the scriptures.”
Lumumba quoted Matthew 5:13
and Romans 12:2 Bible verses, which challenge Christians to be ‘the salt of
the Earth’.
“Your graces, permit
me to thank you for coming out to remind our politicians that occupying
positions of leadership is a privilege and that money must not be used to
dominate and blind the citizenry from seeing harmful indiscretions,” he wrote.
Further, the former Kenya Anti-Corruption Commission director challenged Kenyans
to support the clergy in “seeking to moral re-arm our country for the sake of
this generation and generation yet to be born.”
Among the issues the clergy have with
Ruto’s administration are what they call turning a blind eye to Kenyans’ concerns, such as
over-taxation and high unemployment rates, problems with the new university
funding model, the dysfunctional transition from the National Health Insurance
Fund (NHIF) to the Social Health Authority (SHA).
They also criticise the government for unexplained
abductions, killings and forced disappearances since the height of the
June-July nationwide anti-government protests.
But while Ruto – and top officials in his government – at first downplayed the clergy’s concerns as uninformed, the
President would later about-face, saying on Saturday he had heard the clergy’s
concerns and would make corrections on the issues they highlighted.
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