BLOSSOMS OF THE SAVANNAH KCSE ESSAY QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Here are some KCSE essays based on Blossoms of the Savannah. This article features essay questions and answers from Blossoms of the Savannah.
Before you have a look at them, jog you memory of the events in the novel with these Blossoms of the Savannah study questions.
BLOSSOMS OF THE SAVANNAH ESSAY QUESTION
BLOSSOMS OF THE SAVANNAH ESSAY QUESTION
Some cultural
practices are oppressive to women. Some women resist and liberate themselves
against such practices. Using Minik ene Nkoitoi in HR Ole Kulet's Blossoms
of the Savannah, write an essay to qualify this assertion.
Some intransigent
residents of Nasila use cultural practices such as FGM and forced marriage to
brutalize women. Minik ene Nkoitoi puts up a valiant fight against such unjust
edicts of culture and manages to emancipate girls and women who were shackled
by the cruel practices. She rescues over 500 girls among them Taiyo and Resian.
Minik ene
Nkoitoi is a fierce crusader against FGM, a cultural practice used to oppress
women and her efforts help to save many girls from the brutal cultural practice.
Uncircumcised girls are referred to contemptuously as ‘intoiye nemengalana’. Mama
Milanoi remembers women who were apt to ask intrusive questions about FGM while
they still lived in Nakuru (p8). This community cherishes girl-child
circumcision (p18). A vagabond armed with the knobkerry accosts Taiyo and Resian.
He refers to them as ‘intoiye nemengalana’ from Nakuru. He grabs Taiyo's arm
and declares that there is no position for women of their ilk in their society.
This pointless harsh treatment is fueled by FGM (p21). Minik ene Nkoitoi puts
up a spirited fight against such draconian practices. She bravely confronts Ole Supeyo and persuades
him not to circumcise his daughters. When she insists on having her way, Ole
Supeyo angrily and forcefully ejects her threatening to clobber her. All his daughters are circumcised. According
to him, FGM was not only an honoured rite of passage but also an important practice
ostensibly used to tame the wild gender. He opines that in order to keep two
women in one homestead, one has to make them docile through FGM (p33). According
to Resian, today’s men are no different from the despotic ‘Ilarinkon’ tyrants
who pushed women to birth FGM. They are not only despotic but also oppressive
tyrants who use FGM as a tool to oppress and put women down (p103). This claim
is authenticated when two vagabonds assault and attempt to rape them simply
because they are uncircumcised (p140-142). The chauvinistic vagabonds do not
respect women just like most of the tyrannical men in Nasila. The thought
strengthens Resian's resolve of teaming up with ‘Emakererei’ (p143). Ole
Musanka urges Taiyo and Resian to ignore crusaders of an alien culture. He
calls Minik ene Nkoitoi a wasp and curses her, “Taba! May she go down with the
setting sun.” (p53). Like in the story of the hapless legendary Ole Nkipida,
Mama Milanoi is in a dilemma: to force the girls to undergo the rituals, and
lose their faith, love and confidence or refuse to yield to the tradition and
become a pariah in the clan and society (p60). It is only Minik ene Nkoitoi who
criticises and campaigns vigorously
against FGM which she says abuses the rights of the girl child. She is regarded as the devil incarnate and she earns herself
the moniker ‘entagoroi’ (p61-62). Resian and Taiyo admire her gallant fight
against the oppressive edicts of Nasila culture. She manages to rescue 500
girls from the jaws of FGM (p152). She sets up a rescue center to accommodate
the young girls that have been rescued. She also manages to rescue Taiyo When she
sends her rescue team to free her from her captors in Esoit. After Resian
escapes from forced marriage and FGM in Inkiito, Minik gives her accommodation,
a job and offers her a scholarship to join Egerton University. She further
convinces ‘entasat’ Nabaru to shun FGM and preach against it (p262-263). Minik
ene Nkoitoi is a true epitome of a gallant woman that fights to liberate girls
and women from the tentacles of female genital mutilation.
Secondly, Minik
ene Nkoitoi fights against discrimination in education and strives and succeeds
to give girls an opportunity to get an education. There is discrimination in
education in Nasila. For instance, Ole Supeyo has sent all his sons to school
and two of them have reached university level. On the other hand, all his
daughters are circumcised and married off to prominent elders (p21). Resian is
determined to join Egerton University to read everything that is there to be
read (p54). She knows that through
education she can escape the jaws of outdated and archaic traditions like FGM
and forced marriage. She wants Taiyo to persuade their father to allow them to
return to Nakuru and pursue higher education at Egerton University (p33). She
is angry at her sister for she does not seem enthusiastic enough in that regard
(p58). Resian is against the idea of a clan brother teaching them the ‘abcd’ of
a good Nasilian woman for the purpose of pleasing their future husbands. She
believes formal education can be universally beneficial to all, unlike cultural
norms that apply only to a small group of adherents (p73). Parents in Nasila are
worried that formal education may have adverse effects on the Maa culture (p150).
Ole Kaelo refuses to send Resian to university. He insists that she has had
enough formal education. He calls her stupid and myopic for choosing education
instead of marriage. He tells her that she is lucky concerning the prospect of
being married by Oloisudori, a wealthy businessman (P207-208). Minik ene Nkoitoi went to primary
school with Resian's aunt Yeiyo Kiti. She further joined Makerere University to
study veterinary science. She has rescued 500 girls who had refused to undergo
FGM. There are many more she plans to rescue and take back to school. She
promises to see to it that Resian and Taiyo enroll at Egerton University as
they had wanted (p264). Resian is overcome with joyful emotions as she exclaims:
“Your voice dear Emakererei is truly the voice of God.” Minik ene Nkoitoi’s
ranch operates a scholarship that benefits young talented girls who excelled in
exams but lacked school fees to continue with their studies. She also plans to
employ Resian and give her a house. She secures admission for the two girls and
they’re supposed to report on 5th September (P280). Minik ene
Nkoitoi manages to fight against discrimination in education and give Maa girls
an opportunity to further their education.
Minik ene
Nkoitoi also fights against the harsh and authoritarian culture of forced
marriage. In Nasila, it is a norm for young girls to be married off forcefully
to older men. Ole Supeyo has circumcised
all his daughters and married them off to prominent elders (P21). Women like
Mama Milanoi are married off by their parents. Her parents were determined to
find a well -to-do son-in-law. She is eventually betrothed after prolonged
negotiations. She gets married to Ole Kaelo at the age of eighteen without any
resistance since tradition does not allow a woman to offer any (p28-29). In Nasila,
some women visit Ole Kaelo's home to ascertain whether his daughters are
marriageable. They are on a mission to find wives for their sons (p36). Ole
Kaelo instructs Joseph to teach Taiyo and Resian about some revered cultural
values in preparation for marriage (p70). Resian does not warm up to the idea
of such teachings and she considers them chauvinistic. She spends her time
buried in books (p73). While acknowledging Yeiyo Bottor's compliment about
Resian and Taiyo's industry, Mama Milanoi remarks that both she and Ole Kaelo
are diligent workers and so are their daughters. She does not therefore expect
them to be accused of laziness or their husbands to complain that they can’t
prepare delicious meals. Resian is against the idea of being taught solely to
please male counterparts some of whom are a bunch of lazy busy bodies (p76-77).
Oloisudori pans to marry off Resian without her consent. Whatever happened
Resian was to be married to Oloisudori. If all fails, Oloisudori's men are to
pounce on her and abduct her (p191). Her mother helplessly feels sorry for her
for she is to be ensnared in a web like a spider does a fly (p192). Ole Kaelo
is bedazzled by opulence. Resian is shocked to learn that her own father has the
audacity to sell her off to Oloisudori. She wonders if there is a curse for
being born a woman (p205). Olarinkoi abducts and takes her to his home in
Inkiito. This is after he deceives her that he wants to take her to Ntare Naaju
ranch to meet Minik ene Nkoitoi. Together with his mother, he planned to have
her circumcised and married to him forcibly. They make all these plans in her
absence (p229) in Inkiito. Resian is rescued from Olarinkoi's enslavement and
taken to Ntare Naaju by Nabaru. Minik ene Nkoitoi has rescued 500 girls. She
rescues Resian and Taiyo. When Oloisudori tries to confront her and take Resian
away from her using force claiming he had paid dowry enough for both girls. About
400 loyal workers descend upon his convoy and reduce the vehicles to smoldering
shells and acrid smell of burning tires. Oloisudori and his men are forced to
scamper for safety after receiving a thorough clobbering (p253-250). Minik ene
Nkoitoi manages to liberate Nasila girls from forced marriage.
Lastly, Minik
ene Nkoitoi manages to fight against chauvinism in Nasila and to extricate the
girls from the unjust male prejudice against women. Chauvinism is rife in the
largely patriarchal Nasilian society. Women are expected to be submissive to
their male counterparts. However much as Mama Milanoi did not like some of Ole
Kaelo’s decisions, she could never resist because she holds a subordinate
position. He treats her like a half-witted
child. Mama Milanoi also has a childlike dependence on him pay (p29). She
suffers in silence and this spells anguish for her daughters Taiyo and Resian. They
are disdained and taunted for being
uncircumcised. Some men even bully and harass women whom they call intoiye
nemengalana (p19, 46). In the Nasilian society, women have no say. Mama Milanoi
is torn between the love for her daughters and her dutiful role over faithful
and obedient wife. Her only hope in the fight against chauvinistic practices
such as FGM and forced marriage is Minik ene Nkoitoi. In Nasila, she is
referred to as entagoroi for criticizing and campaigning against the harmful
norms. She was fighting to find relevance in an unyielding patriarchal society
with little success (p61-62). Resian is
dismayed by the idea of being taught cultural lessons by a clan brother,
something that would not have happened had they been sans (p73). In Nasila,
male children are preferred as opposed to females. Ole Kaelo had prayed for a
healthy baby boy to carry the name to the next generation. He is utterly
disappointed when his second child turns out to be a girl. He detests her. Even
the clan elders regard him as a mono eyed giant with legs of straw. Men in Nasila
have the latitude of ordering women around simply because they are male (p77). Men
in Nasila are tyrannical and they do not respect women. They think they have a
right to every woman’s body (p143).
Girls who are unassertive and respectful are considered a paragon of
virtue and a true model of Maa decorum (p178). Resian feels it’s disadvantage
as being a woman in the society (p73). When her father tries to marry her off
forcibly, she feels there is a curse for being born a woman that takes away
once right to their own body and mind (p205). Although the culture is
oppressive against women, some women have risen above the suffocating cultural
norms and succeeded in their quest. Minik ene Nkoitoi manages to pursue
education and become a vet. She manages a large ranch and has Rescued over 500
girls. She is revealed and respected and even men like hold her in awe she has
employed over 400 workers at her ranch. She is courageous she firmly opposes
what she considers wrong. Many women
would not dare go against the grain but Minik ene Nkoitoi cares less if she
rubs the men of culture the wrong way. Minik triumphs in her fight for
emancipation against the authoritarian culture of male chauvinism.
Strong women
retaliate against unjust cultural practices and emerge victorious.
BLOSSOMS OF THE SAVANNAH ESSAY QUESTION
When people make decisions that are devoid of good judgement the results are usually adverse. People like Ole Kaelo and Oloisudori suffer as a result of their rash decision.
Ole Kaelo makes an irresponsible decision when he engages in business with Oloisudori. When Ole Kaelo is retrenched from Agribix Limited, he chooses to relocate to Nasila, his native home, with his family. Here, he opens a shop dealing in Agricultural products. His business is funded by Oloisudori. Oloisudori also helps him to secure some business contracts. He helps Ole Kaelo to secure a 4 years' contract to supply all government institutions in Nasila with agricultural inputs like fertilizer, seeds, herbicides, fungicides et cetera. His mentor Ole Supeyo warns him against his involvement with Oloisudori. He says that Oloisudori is corrupt. He equates him to a hyena and a randy he-goat and cautions Ole Kaelo to keep him away from his daughters. Ole Kaelo does not heed. This decision haunts him when Oloisudori asks for his daughter Resians' hand in marriage. Resian has to be circumcised first. Her dream is to enrol at Egerton University. When she learns of her father's plan, she confronts him at his shop and he slaps her, further straining their relationship. She runs to Nasila river where she contemplates suicide. Olarinkoi finds her and promises to take her to Ntare naaju to meet Minik ene Nkoitoi, who could help her pursue her education. Ole Kaelo's rash decision makes him to lose his daughter. She leaves Nasila with Olarinkoi.
Mama Milanoi makes an unwise decision when she keeps a low profile when her daughters are subjected to punitive cultural practices. When they relocate to Nasila after Ole Kaelo is retrenched, Taiyo and Resian suffer the stigma of being labelled "intoiye nemengalana". Ole Kaelo plans to circumcise Resian and marry her off to Oloisudori. Mama Milanoi knows that her dream is to join Egerton university and pursue a degree in Veterinary medicine. She however fails to defend Resian against the pressure from society to have her circumcised and married off against her will. She succumbs to the pressure of the Nasilian culture. She knows that FGM is a tortorous and painful experience but she still fails to speak to Ole Kaelo against it. She is privy to the details of having Resian abducted and forcefully circumsised but she still remains silent. The painful outcome of her subservience is that Resian esacpes from home with the help of Olarinkoi and she eventually manages to meet Minik ene Nkoitoi and to enrol at Egerton University. Mama Milanoi loses her daughter's trust.
Ole Kaelo suffers when he chooses to deny Resian and Taiyo a chance to pursue their education at Egerton university. Parsimei Ole Kaelo instead asks Joseph Parmuat, a teacher, to teach them cultural aspects of Nasila in preparation for circumcision and marriage. Resians coaxes her sister Taiyo to speak to their father about the prospect of joining Egerton University on so many occasions, because she burns with passion for education. When she tries to ask her father, he gets so angry at her. He warms up to the idea of marrying her to Oloisudori. Ole Kaelo receives gifts and money from him. He fails to protect her daughter from advances by the corrupt extortionist. Resian finally escapes from Nasila with the help of Olarinkoi and later manages to meet Minik ene Nkoitoi who helps her to finally leave for Nakuru to join Egerton university. Oloisudori loses her as a result.
Oloisudori errs in his decision to follow Resian and Taiyo all the way to Ntare naaju ranch. When his first choice for a wife, Resian, runs away with Olarinkoi, the Kaelo's offer Taiyo as a replacement. Minik's men manage to rescue her from Esoit village but not before she is circumcised. When he loses both of them, Oloisudori pursues them upto Minik ene Nkoitoi's ranch. He knows that Minik is referred to as 'entangoroi' or wasp but still chooses to confront her. He demands for either Resian or Taiyo saying he has paid dowry enough for both. Minik says that she will not release them even to their own father. She asks Oloisudori to leave. He asks his men to grab Resian and then a pandemonium ensues. Minik's 400 workers descend upon them and clobber them thoroughly before torching his expensive vehicles and reducing them to smouldering shells. Oloisudori loses his vehicles and still fails to get a wife even after spending a lot of money, time and effort.
Olarinkoi makes two foolish decisions. First, he abducts Resian and then he tries to rape her. When Resian runs away from home and is contemplating her next course of action by the Nasila River, Olarinkoi arrives and tells her that Oloisudori's men are looking for her all over. He offers to take her to Ntare naaju to meet Minik her icon. She complies owing to the fact that she trusts him since he has been a regular visitor at their home and he saves Taiyo and her when the vagabonds, Ntara Muyo and Lante, try to rape them. Olarinkoi does not keep his word. He instead takes her to Inkiito. He locks her up in a dingy hut. That night he comes back stone drunk insisting that Resian is his wife. He mocks her about her education and he forcefully grabs her tearing her clothes and pushing her to the bed. She defends herself by pushing his thumb into her mouth and sinking her teeth into it until he bleeds. She almost severes the thumb. Olarinkoi suffers physically and also emotionally when he is admonished by his mother until he goes into hiding due to shame. Nabaru, the nurse, who was contracted by the mono-eyed woman to take care of Resian after circumcision helps to rescue her when she brings a lorry driver, who takes them to Ntare naaju. Apart from the physical and emotional pain, Olarinkoi fails to get Resian as a wife as a result of his irresponsible decision.
Mama Milanoi makes an irresponsible decision when she tricks Taiyo into circumcision. When Resian runs away with Olarinkoi to avoid marriage to Oloisudori, Taiyo is offered as a replacement. Mama Milanoi allows her to accompany the three women from Esoit. They lie to Taiyo that Resian is on a hunger strike and has gone for three days without eating. They want her to accompany them to Esoit for Resian's sake. She complies and accompanies them happily since her mother assures her that their father had vowed never to try to marry them by force to any man. At Esoit she is thrown into turmoil as no one attends to her or talks about Resian. She is instead left in a dingy hut. The next morning she is dragged out of the hut by a group of excited women, 20 litres of cold water is emptied on her head before she is forcibly circumcised by 'enkamuratani'. The ordeal is so painful that she passes out. She is later rescued by Minik's men with the help of Joseph Parmuat, who tricks the guards guarding her, with alcohol. The guards attempt to chase after Minik's men,pelting them with stones, but they fail. Parmuat is speared to death. Mama Milanoi loses Taiyo when she is taken to Minik's ranch.
Through characters like Oloisudori and Olarinkoi, we learn that foolish decisions usually lead to bad consequences. We ought to think before we leap.
BLOSSOMS OF THE SAVANNAH ESSAY QUESTION
Women suffer in male-dominated societies. Write an essay to validate the truth in this assertion basing your illustrations on Blossoms of the Savannah.
In most societies,
men hold primary power and influence. Blossoms of the Savannah highlights the
problems women suffer in a male-dominated society. Resian, Taiyo, Mama Milanoi
and Minik ene Nkoitoi suffer a myriad of problems in Nasila.
Resian
suffers for simply being born a girl. Ole Kaelo is infuriated when his second
born child turns out to be a girl. He had prayed for a boy and wanted at least
three boys. The society values boys more
than girls. A boy would carry the Kaelo's name to the next generation Ole Kaelo
offers Resian as a sacrificial lamb when Oloisudori comes looking for a wife. As
much as she knows her father hates her, she is shocked that he has the temerity
to sell her to a man she hates with a passion. Resian is always sad and aloof
owing to her father's mistreatment. Resian feels betrayed by her father and at
one point considers committing suicide. She is forced to run away from home
with the help of Olarinkoi. Surely, women in male-dominated societies suffer a
great deal.
Men in
Nasila use FGM to oppress women. Women are considered a wild gender that has to
be tamed through FGM. Girls who undergo FGM suffer physical and psychological
pain. Uncircumcised girls are mocked, derided and contemptuously referred to as
intoiye nemengalana. Circumcised girls are considered decent and
accorded respect. The subject of FGM makes Taiyo and Resian feel squeamish,
hopeless and downcast. Resian feels that FGM is useless today and is only used
by men to oppress women. Taiyo is duped and taken to Esoit village, 5
kilometers away from Nasila, where she is forcibly circumcised. She is dragged
out of a hut, splashed with 20 litres of cold water, wrestled to the ground and
circumcised. The excruciating procedure is carried out using a bladelike tool known
as olmurunya. She faints and only regains consciousness two days later. She
even imagines she had died! Even after being rescued, she suffers bouts of
sickness, restlessness, weakness and pain. This all happened in order for her to be
married off to Oloisudori since men in Nasila do not marry intoiye
nemengalana.
In
male-dominated societies, women suffer forced early marriages. When Resian
learns that she has to marry Oloisudori, she is thrown into a sea of agony.
Forced marriage is rampant in Nasila. Oloisudori and Olarinkoi try to marry
Resian forcefully. Resian's dream is to join Egerton University. Her father, however,
plans to marry her off to Oloisudori against her will. He makes all these plans
behind Resian's back. He receives cash and gifts from Oloisudori knowing too
well that Resian only values university education. Oloisudori even considers
rendering Resian unconscious should she decline his proposal. At Inkiito,
Resian realizes that many girls are married to old men. One girl is eighteen
and her husband is about seventy five. Such girls live in squalor conditions. To
avoid marrying Oloisudori, Resian runs away from home. She endures an agonising
3-week stay at Inkiito battling hostile hosts, mosquitoes, hunger and physical
injury. Surely, she suffers a lot when her father tries to marry her off
without her consent.
In Nasila, Resian
and Taiyo suffer sexual exploitation since they are not circumcised. They are
mocked and chided by strangers. Two vagabonds attempt to molest them. Like most
men in Nasila, Ntara and Lante do not respect women. When they first meet,
Oloisudori harasses Resian despite her being too young for him. She describes
him as an ill-mannered devil. At Inkiito, Olarinkoi unsuccessfully tries to
rape Resian. He comes home drunk as a skunk and demands for food from her. He
then tries to molest her. She fights back fiercely and bites his thumb. Olarinkoi
then assaults her viciously rendering her unconscious. For a couple of weeks
that follow, Resian endures pain from the attack. Resian and Taiyo undergo
physical and emotional anguish in the hands of men who abuse their privacy.
Women in
Nasila suffer because they are voiceless. Mama Milanoi is voiceless when her
husband plans to marry off Resian to Oloisudori. She cannot even dissuade him
from circumcising their daughters. In Nasila, it is men who make decisions. Mama
Milanoi suffers sleepless nights pondering in pain owing to the excruciating
experience awaiting her daughters yet she remains voiceless. Mama Milanoi is in
a dilemma because she is torn between being a dutiful Maa wife and being a
protective mother to Taiyo and Resian. As a subservient Maa wife, she has
little choice but to submit to her husband and Nasila cultural dictates. She is
baffled that an old man like Oloisudori could marry Resian, something that was
unheard off during her childhood days. She visits and talks to other women like
Yeiyo bottor in an attempt to avert the marriage. The thoughts of early
marriage and circumcision take her through mental torture yet the
male-dominated society gags her and renders her voiceless. She suffers in
silence.
Minik ene
Nkoitoi is treated contemptuously by men in Nasila. Men like Simiren and Ole
Musanka hate her passionately. She is referred to as entagoroi, a derogatory
name for a sharp-tongued woman. When she tries to stop Simiren from
circumcising her daughters and marrying them off to old men, he chases her away
and almost assaults her physically. Ole Musanka curses her that “she may go
down with the setting sun”. Even women in Nasila call her a witch. Minik ene
Nkoitoi suffers mistreatment and alienation in Nasila simply because she fights
archaic practices like early marriages and FGM, which are perpetuated and
fueled by men, with a view of oppressing women.
In summary, it is clear that women suffer in male dominated societies.
BLOSSOMS OF THE SAVANNAH ESSAY QUESTION
Betrayal causes pain and strain in the family.
Using illustrations from Henry Ole Kulet's Blossoms of the Savannah,
write an essay to validate this statement.
Good families are built on trust and love. When we fail or desert
our family members, we cause them untold grief. In Blossoms of the Savannah,
Taiyo and Resian suffer when their parents betray them.
Ole Kaelo betrays his daughter Resian when he irrationally
mistreats her for no apparent reason, causing her untold grief. He fails his
daughter because he detests her right from birth. He feels cheated by nature
since he had prayed for at least three boys but as fate would have it ends up
with two girls. Ole Kaelo loves his first daughter Taiyo but hates her younger
sister Resian. He was utterly disappointed when she turned out to be a girl
when he prayed for a healthy baby boy to carry the Kaelo’s name to the next
generation. He is angered by her body size and intends to dispose of her as
soon as possible. Resian feels betrayed since her father intimidates her and
her mother fails to protect her from the provocations. Her only reprieve is
Taiyo, who gives her a shoulder to cry on. The girls enjoy their father's
absence more than his company. Resian wonders why her father despises her so
much but does not hate Taiyo. She ponders whether it was her fault. Her father
wants her to marry a shady crook named Oloisudori by force. She argues that if her father respected her, he
would have listened when she said she disliked Oloisudori. Resian knows that
her father hates her but is shocked that he could go as far as selling her.
This betrayal causes Resian misery since she was a child and she grows up to be
sullen, bewildered and resentful. She even thinks there is a curse for being
born a woman. Her nature is darkened with melancholy. The frequent tongue
lashing and harshly impatient nature from her father towards her contribute to
her tempestuous disposition. She is haunted by nagging complaints and never
ending unhappiness. Sometimes she sits alone in the biting cold brooding over
her father's inexplicable hateful nature. Her sadness is compounded by the fact
that he intends to forcefully marry her off to a monster she hates, in order for
his business venture to thrive. The pain pushes her to edge until she
contemplates drowning herself in Nasila River in pursuit of peace. Surely, when
a father hates his own daughter this, much the result, needless to say, is
untold suffering. (Pgs. 9-10, 34,
172-173, 205, 210)
Mama Milanoi betrays both Resian and Taiyo when she chooses
to remain indifferent and aloof to her own daughters causing them pain. At
first, she has a strange premonition since her daughters are uncircumcised yet
the culture demands otherwise. She is thrown into a conundrum of either forcing
the girls to undergo FGM and losing their faith, love and confidence, or
refusing to yield to tradition at the risk of being labelled a pariah. Instead
of fighting to protect her daughters when their father plans to circumcise them,
she subserviently bows to pressure and foolishly asserts that culture is
everything and it rules their lives. Now that FGM had reared its ugly head, she
knows that it was going to wreak havoc in the innocent girls’ young lives. She
also knows that her daughters do not expect their own parents to subject them to
the excruciating pain and turmoil of FGM. It would be mental torture for them.
However, she remains aloof and selfish simply to protect her position as a
dutiful Maa wife. She concurs with Yeiyo Bottor that Resian has olkuenyi which
can be cured through FGM. She knows that FGM would terribly hurt the girls but
she fails to protect them. She kept lying to the girls and reassuring them that
nothing sinister was in the offing as they prepared to circumcise them. She
laughs with her husband and Oloisudori as they discuss Resian's fate but a
feeling of betrayal lingers in her heart. Mama Milanoi fails Resian and Taiyo
since she abandons them at the time of need. Taiyo and Resian are angry at
their mother and term her as an example of a wife they never wanted to be. She
had been held captive by her husband and could not express her own opinion unlike
Nabaru and Minik ene Nkoitoi. Resian is forced to run away from home through a
harrowing journey but Taiyo pays the ultimate price when she undergoes the excruciating
pain of FGM. Surely, when a mother fails to protect her daughters, they suffer.
(Pgs. 17, 34, 60-62, 63, 78, 147, 192, 276)
Mama Milanoi tricks her daughter Taiyo into circumcision
causing her pain and regret. She calls Taiyo to greet three women visitors from
a village called Esoit. They say Resian had sought refuge there after running
away from home. They need Taiyo to accompany them since Resian was on a hunger
strike and had not eaten anything for three days. They claim they pitied Resian
and claim she had mentioned Taiyo who could persuade her to eat and save her
life. Since Taiyo is caring and knows Resian depends on her for protection, she
buys the story. She is happy since her mother assures her that their father had
vowed never to marry them by force to any man. This is the height of deceit and
betrayal from a mother. At Esoit, there is no sign of Resian. Taiyo is
abandoned in a dingy hut and at dawn she is dragged out, drenched with 20
litres of cold water, wrestled to the ground and forcibly circumcised. Her
screams of terror and pain fall on deaf ears. She faints and only gains consciousness
two days later, feeling sore, bitter and angry. She even imagines she had died.
She is later rescued by Minik ene Nkoitoi but still suffers bouts of pain,
intensely painful headaches and weakness.
It is difficult to come to terms with the forcible circumcision. Taiyo and Resian
blame their father for wanting to please Oloisudori at the detriment of his own
daughters. Their mother does not escape their ire. They think she is the
embodiment of a bad wife and mother. When a parent betrays their child, they
cause the child grief. (Pgs. 272, 274, 275, 276-277)
Ole Kaelo betrays Resian when he agrees to marry her off against her will to a wanton criminal - Oloisudori, causing her untold misery. Oloisudori is a rich man who helps Ole Kaelo by financing his business in Nasila and assists him in acquiring government contracts to supply agricultural inputs. He then demands to marry Resian. Ole Kaelo had been retrenched from his job at Agribix limited in Nakuru and had decided to relocate to his native Nasila to venture into business. Ole Kaelo's mentor Soin Ole Supeyo warns him that Oloisudori was a corrupt criminal, a hyena and a randy he-goat. He cautions him to keep the amorous man away from daughters. He does not heed the warning. Ole Kaelo knows that it is his duty to protect and educate his daughters and it pains him to hand them over to a man they don’t love. He foresees them crying forlornly and questioning the sincerity of his love and the reason for his betrayal. However, he still chooses to betray and sacrifice Resian. He accepts cash and other gifts from Oloisudori. He vows that Resian has to be married by Oloisudori and is party to an evil scheme to abduct her in the event that she resisted. While Mama Milanoi feels they were betraying Resian, Ole Kaelo feels happy and satisfied especially after visiting her potential husband’s palatial homes. As they drive past Egerton University, he feels Resian was foolish for choosing education over marriage to a wealthy man. Resian was speechless when it dawned on her that her father had sold her to Oloisudori. She feels it was a curse being born a woman in Nasila. She knew he disliked her but never thought her own father could sell her. She cries in anger and outrage and accuses him of betrayal and hatred. She says it was better to die than marry her father's monstrous friend. He even slaps her with the view of intimidating her into bowing to pressure of his demands. Resian leaves his office and heads to Nasila River where she contemplates suicide. She instead chooses to flee from home with the help of Olarinkoi and embarks on a harrowing, daunting journey to Ntare Naaju not knowing what awaited her. Resian surely suffers in the wake of her father's betrayal. (Pgs. 26, 108, 111-112, 178, 185, 191-193, 204, 205, 208, 209, 210)
Ole Kaelo betrays his daughter Taiyo when he fails to
support her musical aspirations. Taiyo loses trust in her father when he denies
her permission to attend an extravaganza organised by an FM radio station. Taiyo loves music. She has excelled in music
festivals and been awarded many times. Broadcasting stations noticed her talent
and encouraged her to pursue a career in music. Even her parents applauded her
on many occasions so she did not expect them to have any objection if she
pursued the desire of her heart as a future occupation. An FM station offered
her a chance to attend a music extravaganza in Mombasa and attend a short
course later. Her father refuses to grant her permission, claiming rather
absurdly that performing for money was akin to harlotry. It is evident that
Taiyo loves music. It was in her blood. She thoroughly enjoys the children’s
performance in Nasila. When her father denies her permission, it leaves a wound
in her heart. She stubbornly tries to convince him but loses the fight. This
betrayal leaves her seething in rage. (1-2, 44-45)
Lastly, Ole Kaelo betrays his daughter Resian when he
refuses to send her to university. Resian is determined to join Egerton University.
When they are about to relocate to Nasila from Nakuru, she tells Taiyo that she
does not want to work at their father's shop. She wanted to join Egerton University
to study veterinary medicine and be called Dr. Resian Kaelo. She requests her
sister Taiyo to persuade him to allow them to return to Nakuru and enroll at
the university in order to avoid being subjected to outdated traditions. She is
not interested in Parmuat's cultural lessons. She only wants formal education which
is universally beneficial to all. Her only hope was placed on Taiyo speaking to
their father as their mother proved to be either impuissant or unwilling. She,
however, chooses to remain optimistic envisioning herself in Egerton University
donning academic regalia. She rejects Oloisudori’s gifts and hands them back
since her only ambition is to pursue university education. Her father refuses
to allow her to join university. He intends to marry her off to Oloisudori, a
man Resian deems a monster. She refers to him contemptuously as ol-ushuushi
– a reckless person and olbitirr - a warthog. Resian assertively
declares that even if she was over eighty years old she would still join
university. It is painful for her to struggle, run away from home, suffer in
Inkiito in the hands of a callous brute – Olarinkoi, before she finally joins
university, courtesy of total strangers Nabaru and Minik. She finds solace in the distant lands of Ntare
Naaju when her own parents betray and hurt her. (Pgs. 4, 18, 33, 58, 73, 89,
196, 207, 210)
In brief, when family members fail or desert us, we suffer
immense pain or hardship.
BLOSSOMS OF THE SAVANNAH ESSAY QUESTION
Write a composition to show how education brings positive change in society using illustrations from Henry Ole Kulet's Blossoms of the Savannah.
BLOSSOMS OF THE SAVANNAH ESSAY QUESTION
An individual who is persevering and optimistic usually emerges triumphant. Referring closely to H.R. Ole Kulet's Blossoms of the Savannah, write an essay in support of this statement.
BLOSSOMS OF THE SAVANNAH ESSAY QUESTION
Misunderstanding crops up whenever a family fails to share opinions and values. Basing your illustrations on Ole Kaelo's family, show the validity of this statement.
NEXT : Themes in Blossoms of the Savannah
MORE ESSAY QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
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Let's learn how to write imaginative compositions that earn 19-20
Want to answer a question from blossoms of the Savannah
ReplyDeleteThanks for the feedback.
Deleteplease help with this question ;what doesbthe title blossoms of the savannah refer to?basing your argument on H.Ole Kulet's Blossoms of the Savanna.thanks in advance.
DeleteTalk about how Taiyo and Resian (Flowers/Vulnerable Girls)blossom in Nasila/Savannah-A difficult environment for flowers/women. Give the challenges and the victory.
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Deletehow are the women their own enemies
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Deleteresian is determined to fight the nasila culture so as to go to the university
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DeleteWhere there is a will there is a way
Ole kaelo digs his own grave
cultural erosion is the rot course of most evil things in nasila..discuss
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DeleteYeah but the question says support not negate as in the essay above.blood is thicker than water Drawing illustrations from the novel support the above statement
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DeletePlz help with this question:Female assertiveness is one of the main thematic concerns.Using Resian as a point of reference,justify this statement
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DeleteSimply show how Resian succeeds (avoids FGM, early marriage) and goes to University due to her resoluteness.
ole kulet uses women to express assertiveness against undesirable traits in the society
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Taiyo accepting to be taken to see Resian who had gone missing by the mother and some three women
Ole kaelo accepting the cash bride price of Edward Oloisudori Lonkiyaa
Discuss characters who make poor decisions after being hoodwinked or when they chase their desires for example Ole Kaelo's business deals with Oloisudori's.
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Deletetalk of the comparison they both had eg they are both sexually greedy, both are opportunistic and even male chauvinist etc
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Delete"Everyone gets what he or she deserve" illustrate from the blossoms of the savannah
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kindly help me on this;change is as good as rest to what extent do you agree to thhus assertion as far as blossoms is concerned
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Delete'it pays to stand up for ur rights'
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Please let me know when English paper 1 is ready.
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DeleteSuccess is not served on a silver platter.validate this statement using Blossoms of the Savannah by HR Ole Kulet
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