Boston, Massachusetts
Zeituni
Onyango, President Obama’s Kenyan-born aunt who passed away on Tuesday
in a rehabilitation home in Boston, Massachusetts, may have had
relatives in high places, but she lived and died in poverty.
Research revealed that for most of her life in the United States Zeituni lived a
life of isolation, loneliness, want and scarcity at times going to
sleep without knowing where her next meal would come from.
Living
on welfare was common knowledge, but we can reveal that beyond that,
President Obama’s aunt lived in squalor in one of the poorest “project”
houses in South Boston and depended on good Samaritans to bring her food
or take her out for shopping and church. She never owned a vehicle.
“For
a Kenyan-born woman who once had a good job back home, a happy family
life and a promising future, life in the America was anything but good.
And this tended to really disturb her, and so she chose to isolate
herself for the most part,” says John Maina, a long-time friend who has
since moved back to Kenya.
Mr Maina, who used to visit
Zeituni regularly when he lived in Boston, says she was sick for a long
time and was in no position to find and hold onto to a regular job.
“That is one of the reasons why she was housed by the state in
public housing in South Boston, a poor neighbourhood, in a one-bedroom
apartment,” he said.
Her situation was made worse by the fact that for a long time, she didn’t have legal documents to live and work in the US.
“She
couldn’t work here because she didn’t have a social security number.
She couldn’t go out to look for a job because she didn’t have a driver’s
licence to drive around. She was, therefore, dependent on the state for
housing and public transportation for movement,” he said.
For
the immigrant community, especially the Kenyan community in the US, to
become a “public charge” or to live on welfare as it is commonly
referred to in the US carries a big stigma even for those with some form
of disability.
There are many older Kenyans who moved
to the US for some reason and who later chose to remain there without
proper legal documents. Most of them don’t have regular jobs. but they
are always taken care of by the community, mostly within a church
set-up. Resorting to welfare is very rare indeed.
“When
it gets to that point, most people choose to pack up and go home or do
some crazy stuff to go to prison. That is why the whole Zeituni Onyango
story, sad and heartbreaking as it is, has never made sense to me,” says
Simon Kariuki, a Kenyan resident of Boston.
Mr Kariuki says that even though he never met Zeituni, he had been following her story in the press with a keen interest.
But it is probably Bishop Joshua Wambua, senior pastor at
Rapture Harvest Mission in Wakefield, Massachusetts, a church that
Zeituni attended from time to time, who has a complete picture of the
kind of pain and suffering that Zeituni went through.
“Auntie
was a proud woman who, despite the fact that she was related to the
President of the United States, never exploited that association. She
chose to live a simple, isolated life that was full of pain and
suffering, at times because of her sickly state and immigration woes,”
Bishop Wambua stated.
Although
Zeituni was associated with President Obama, Bishop Wambua knows that
she never received any support from the President himself or the White
House.
“In fact, for the most part, that association
tended to harm her rather than help her, contrary to common belief. One
of the reasons she chose to isolate herself was because she thought by
doing so, she would be protecting the President. She chose to stay
indoors, at times without food, to keep off the press, that hounded
her.”
Zeituni Onyango was the step-sister of President
Obama’s father. Mr Obama wrote about her in his 1995 memoir, Dreams From
My Father. In the book, the President acknowledges that she served as
his guide in Kenya and his guide to some “painful” family history during
his visit to Kenya in 1988.
Zeituni used to travel to the US from Kenya on a visitor’s visa,
at times under the invitation of Obama, then a community organiser and,
later, senator in Chicago, Illinois. It is believed that part of the
reasons she chose to apply for refugee status when her visa expired was
because she had marital and health problems.
“When I
first met her, way before Obama became president, she was suffering from
some health complications and it seemed she had had been unwell for
some time. I don’t know whether she got the disease from Kenya, or from
where she was living at the time in the “projects,” says Maina.
But
it seems there was little or no contact between her and the president
as her immigration woes intensified. She, however, attended his
inauguration in 2009, but the two apparently did not see each other.
Zeituni
moved to South Boston on a visitor’s visa in 2000 and sought political
asylum in 2002. It was denied in 2004, and she was ordered to leave the
country, but she did not. When her story came out, many Kenyans back at
home were surprised that she cited “threats to her life” as grounds for
applying for refugee status.
What they didn’t know is the fact that, many Kenyans had cited alleged threats from Mungiki and had been granted asylum.
In Boston, Zeituni lived in relative anonymity until just before the 2008 presidential election, when the Associated Press reported her illegal status. The Times of London found her in what it described as “some run-down public housing”.
At the time, aides to President Obama said that he had not known
that she was in the US illegally and that “any and all appropriate
laws” covering her situation should be followed. The aides said that he
would not intervene in her case and that the two had had no contact.
Hosted by Kenyan community
When
media scrutiny intensified, she moved to Cleveland, and was briefly
hosted by the Kenyan community. It is in Cleveland that she met Ms
Margaret Wong, an immigration attorney who helped her obtain a green
card.
In Boston, Judge Leonard Shapiro granted Zeituni asylum in 2010 but she died before being granted citizenship.
“It
breaks my heart to know that auntie was found dead in the morning in
her bed ... just like that. She lived alone and died alone with all this
notion of having people in high places,” said Bishop Wambua.
It
is because of the way and manner in which she lived her life that when
she passed away early Tuesday morning at a rehabilitation hospital from
complications associated with cancer she has had for a long time, there
was a lot of confusion because there was nobody to receive the news of
and confirm her death.
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