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“Between Soil and Song: Learning from the Keepers of Indigenous Wisdom”

AFRIAK Fellows from across Africa visited Motomwaka’s indigenous botanical garden in Kakamega County, engaging with 93‑year‑old knowledge holder Johns Wambetsa and community members to learn about plants, practices, and indigenous knowledge systems.

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“Between Soil and Song: Learning from the Keepers of Indigenous Wisdom”

There are gardens that nurture more than roots and shoots — gardens that cradle stories, lineage, and memories woven through the living tapestry of leaves. In a quiet corner of Kakamega County, beneath the shade of age‑worn trees, such a place exists — an indigenous botanical garden tended by a keeper of knowledge whose years are as many as the rings inside an ancient tree trunk. When the MMUST AFRIAK Fellows arrived here on March 10, 2026, it was not merely a visit to a collection of plants, but a step into a living classroom where wisdom is whispered by every leaf and stem.

At 93 years old, Johns Wambetsa, affectionately known as Motomwaka, is both gardener and storyteller, holding within his memory the intricate relationships between people and the plants that sustain them. The Fellows — a vibrant mosaic of scholars from countries including South Africa, Cameroon, Tanzania, Botswana, Malawi, Ghana, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, West Africa, and Somalia — were welcomed into his world with rhythms of traditional music and dance, echoing ancestral connections to land and life.

The visit unfolded like a gentle dialogue between generations and geographies: young researchers with notebooks and questions, and community members whose hands know the pulse of indigenous species. In Motomwaka’s botanical garden, seeds of knowledge — both literal and metaphorical — were shared beside plots of Solanum nigrum (locally Lisutsa) and stinging nettle, plants revered for their medicinal properties. Here, the Fellows saw sustainable practices like sink seedbeds that guide water gently into the soil, and Switzerland beds nurturing seedlings before their transplant into open plots.

It was a reminder that indigenous knowledge does not lie in dusty manuscripts but thrives in the soft rustle of leaves, the patient tending of soil, and the stories passed across generations. The garden’s seed bank — a cool, simple space where indigenous beans, maize, and other seeds rest in glass bottles — stood as a symbol of resourcefulness against shifting environmental patterns.

For the Fellows, the day was a tapestry of reflection and discovery. Beyond academic curiosity, it sparked conversations about challenges faced by indigenous knowledge holders — from limited recognition and financial support to water scarcity and market access. These insights, shared in the garden’s embrace, seeded ideas for future research that honors the deep cultural roots of local wisdom.

Dr. Lucy Mandillah, Project Coordinator and Deputy Director at the Institute of Indigenous, Cultural Studies and Climate Change, spoke of the visit as more than a field trip. It was an encounter that knits academic inquiry with lived realities, grounding research in community narratives that have long shaped landscapes and livelihoods.

As the sun cast long shadows across the garden paths, the Fellows, the garden’s caretakers, and community members shared stories that reverberated beyond the day’s itinerary. In this garden, indigenous botanical knowledge revealed itself not as a relic of the past, but as fertile ground for future inquiry, collaboration, and respect — an enduring reservoir of ecological insight and cultural heritage.

In the gentle unfolding of these interactions, the AFRIAK Fellowship’s journey in Kenya continues — anchored in dialogue, learning, and the living wisdom of communities like Motomwaka’s that nurture both plants and the stories they carry.

AI Image Disclaimer Visuals are created with AI tools and are not real photographs and are intended for representation only.

Sources • MMUST official news (Masinde Muliro University of Science and Technology)

#AFRIAK #IndigenousKnowledge
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