Nelson Nanga Esikuri

Nelson Nanga Esikuri

Nelson Nanga Esikuri (1922 ndash May 26 2008) was a respected doctor, village elder and farmer in North Bunyore location in Western Province of Kenya.

Professional and Personal Life

Nelson Nanga Esikuri was born in 1922 at Eb'bayi Esirabe village, Eb'bayi sublocation, North Bunyore location. After his primary education at the local school, he joined Maseno Junior School in 1940 and, in 1941, was admitted to Maseno School. In 1943 he joined the East Africa Army Medical Corps, where he trained as a nurse. When he was discharged from the army in 1946, he got a job as a nurse at Kisumu District Hospital. He resigned from this job in 1958 to go home "and help my wife run the home and see my children grow." Though he never set up a formal clinic where he could put his nursing knowledge to use, he has since his resignation been involved in "the health of the people in my village."

Operating from his house in the village, Nelson's clients had always been teachers, farmers, local administrators, and urban dwellers who pay visits to the village during holidays. Since 1958 his popularity has "spread far and wide in the village because of my proximity, accessibility, and knowledge of the village and the health needs of the people. My patients come to me or I go to them when asked to." Though he approved of the efficacy of herbal medicine, he rarely referred his patients to herbal experts. Nelson's activities as a daktari (doctor) were not treated a profession as he was also a farmer and much respected village elder who was consulted on all sorts of issues that range from settling of disputed in the village and dowry negotiations in a villager's daughter's or son's marriage.

Mzee Nelson Nanga Esikuri passed away in May 2008 in Nairobi and laid to rest at his home village.

Notes

* ^ Based on [http://www.amazon.com/Dis-ease-Colonial-State-Medicine-AbaNyole/dp/0313320039/ref=si3_rdr_bb_product Osaak A. Olumwullah, "Dis-ease in the Colonial State: Medicine, Society, and Social Change Among the AbaNyole of Western Kenya"]
* ^ [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luhya#Notable_Luhya_personalities Notable Luhya personalities]


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  • Luhya — The Luhya (also Luyia, Luhia, Abaluhya) are the second largest ethnic group in Kenya, numbering about 5.3 million people, or 14% of Kenya s total population of 38 million, according to kenyaweb.com.The Luhya cultivate the fertile highlands of… …   Wikipedia

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