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WHAT’S UP!
It started as one of those memes that social media loves so much, but it quickly spiralled into something more. Hopefully, it will end well for the young girl who was filmed riding a bicycle in the rain on the streets of Kabale.
Children in Uganda, especially girls, suffer all kinds of difficulties in their daily lives, as pointed out by many people. I am not sure how this story will pan out, but I really hope Angel Blessing (what’s her Kiga name?) ends up like Henry Kiyimba, who was mocked for arriving at Makerere University with an iron suitcase, but is now working as an engineer.
What fascinated me about this story is the different ways that Ugandans reacted to it. If there is a PhD student looking for a dissertation topic, here is one for you.
As far as I can tell, the video clip was first posted on TikTok, probably as a curiosity, the way that platform rolls. Then, a one Kwikiriza reposted on X (formerly Twitter), with his main concern being that the girl should not be riding a bicycle. His solution? Fundraise for a bodaboda to take her to school. He proposed that funding should be for at least a year and extended if necessary (The irony is, it turned out Blessing’s father is a bodaboda rider).
Another, very typical Ugandan, said the girl should have waited, until the rain stopped, and then continued to school. That is so typically Ugandan, for everything stops when it rains and in many circles, it is an accepted reason for showing up late (reminds me of the pre-Uber days, when I was caught up by the rain. I called a cab guy to pick me up, and he said: “But it’s raining!”
Another insisted that the girl is a ‘planned kid’, that is why she is riding a bike when others are walking barefoot for tens of kilometres, come rain or shine. Someone else suggested that politicians should give up their helicopters to Blessing (in Kenya, a politician would have probably shown up in a helicopter to deliver new tyres for Blessing’s bicycle)…
Then enters Simon Kasumba. His intellect has never impressed me, for he usually says things before he thinks them through (some wag said he then should be in government, for that’s what folks there do). He said that there is nothing wrong with a girl riding a bicycle, that in fact they should get Blessing a sports bike to make it easier on the hills, and offered to buy a bicycle for any girl who would rather ride herself to school than be taken by a bodaboda.
Amidst all the bombast, Kasumba did have a point: There should be nothing wrong with a girl riding a bicycle. In fact, Kwikiriza was accused of being a male chauvinist, trying to determine what is right or wrong for the female gender.