first Prime Minister (1963 to 1964) and President (1964 to 1978) of self-governing Kenya
Jomo Kenyatta was the first Prime Minister and then President of Kenya after the country gained independence, serving in these top leadership roles from 1963 until his death in 1978. He matters because he shaped Kenya's early years as an independent nation during a critical period of African decolonization.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
<a href="https://www.last.fm/music/JOMO+KENYATTA">Read more on Last.fm</a>
5 total works indexed
· 2003 · cited 1,559x
· 2003 · cited 253x
· 2022 · cited 241x
· 2003 · cited 170x
Jomo Kenyatta (c. 1897 – 22 August 1978) was a Kenyan anti-colonial activist and politician who governed Kenya as its Prime Minister from 1963 to 1964 and then as its first President from 1964 to his death in 1978. He played a significant role in the transformation of Kenya from a colony of the British Empire into an independent republic. Ideologically an African nationalist and a conservative, he led the Kenya African National Union (KANU) party from 1961 until his death.
Kenyatta was born to Kikuyu farmers in Kiambu, British East Africa. He was educated at a mission school and later on worked in various jobs before becoming politically engaged through the Kikuyu Central Association. In 1929, he travelled to London to lobby for Kikuyu land affairs. During the 1930s, he studied at Moscow's Communist University of the Toilers of the East, University College London, and the London School of Economics. In 1938, he published an anthropological study of Kikuyu life before working as a farm labourer in Sussex during the Second World War. Influenced by his friend George Padmore, he embraced anti-colonialist and Pan-African ideas, co-organising the 1945 Pan-African Congress in Manchester. He returned to Kenya in 1946 and became a school principal. In 1947, he was elected President of the Kenya African Union, through which he lobbied for independence from British colonial rule, attracting widespread indigenous support but animosity from white settlers. In 1952, he was among the Kapenguria Six arrested and charged with masterminding the anti-colonial Mau Mau Uprising. Although protesting his innocence—a view shared by later historians—he was convicted. He remained imprisoned at Lokitaung until 1959 and was then exiled to Lodwar until 1961.
· 2005 · cited 160x
via Crossref · CC0
via Wikiquote · CC BY-SA
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).