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When I heard those bars
-
slam hard,
-
I knew it was for real.
-
I feel confused.
-
I feel betrayed.
-
I feel overwhelmed.
-
I feel silenced.
-
What just happened?
-
How could they send me here?
-
I don't belong here.
-
How could they make such a huge mistake
-
without any repercussions
whatsoever to their actions?
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I see large groups of women
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in tattered uniforms
-
surrounded by huge walls and gates,
-
enclosed by iron barbed wires,
-
and I get hit by an awful stench,
-
and I ask myself,
-
how did I move
-
from working in the respected
financial banking sector,
-
having worked so hard in school,
-
to now being locked up
-
in the largest correctional facility
-
for women in Kenya?
-
My first night
-
at Langata Women Maximum Security Prison
-
was the toughest.
-
In January of 2009,
-
I was informed that I had handled
a fraudulent transaction unknowingly
-
at the bank where I worked.
-
I was shocked, scared and terrified.
-
I would lose a career
that I loved passionately.
-
But that was not the worst.
-
It got even worse
than I could have ever imagined.
-
I got arrested,
-
maliciously charged
-
and prosecuted.
-
The absurdity of it all
was the arresting officer
-
asking me to pay him 10,000 US dollars
-
and the case would disappear.
-
I refused.
-
Two and a half years on,
-
in and out of courts,
-
fighting to prove my innocence.
-
It was all over the media,
-
in the newspapers, TV, radio.
-
They came to me again.
-
This time around, said to me,
-
"If you give us 50,000 US dollars,
-
the judgement will be in your favor,"
-
irrespective of the fact
that there was no evidence whatsoever
-
that I had any wrongdoing
-
on the charges that I was up against.
-
I remember the events
-
of my conviction
-
six years ago
-
as if it were yesterday.
-
The cold, hard face of the judge
-
as she pronounced my sentence
-
on a cold Thursday morning
-
for a crime that I hadn't committed.
-
I remember holding
-
my three-month-old beautiful daughter
-
whom I had just named Oma,
-
which in my dialect
means "truth and justice,"
-
as that was what I had longed so much for
-
all this time.
-
I dressed her in her
favorite purple dress,
-
and here she was, about to accompany me
-
to serve this one-year sentence
-
behind bars.
-
The guards did not seem
sensitive to the trauma
-
that this experience was causing me.
-
My dignity and humanity disappeared
-
with the admission process.
-
It involved me being
searched for contrabands,
-
changed from my ordinary clothes
-
to the prison uniform,
-
forced to squat on the ground,
-
a posture that I soon came to learn
-
would form the routine
-
of the thousands of searches,
-
number counts,
-
that lay ahead of me.
-
The women told me,
-
"You'll adjust to this place.
-
You'll fit right in."
-
I was no longer referred to
as Teresa Njoroge.
-
The number 415/11 was my new identity,
-
and I soon learned that was
the case with the other women
-
who we were sharing this space with.
-
And adjust I did to life on the inside:
-
the prison food,
-
the prison language,
-
the prison life.
-
Prison is certainly no fairytale world.
-
What I didn't see come my way
-
was the women and children
-
whom we served time and shared space with,
-
women who had been imprisoned
-
for crimes of the system,
-
the corruption that requires a fall guy,
-
a scapegoat,
-
so that the person who is responsible
-
could go free,
-
a broken system that routinely
vilifies the vulnerable,
-
the poorest amongst us,
-
people who cannot afford to pay bail
-
or bribes.
-
And so we moved on.
-
As I listened to story after story
-
of these close to 700 women
-
during that one year in prison,
-
I soon realized that crime
-
was not what had brought
these women to prison,
-
most of them,
-
far from it.
-
It had started with the education system,
-
whose supply and quality
is not equal for all;
-
lack of economic opportunities
-
that pushes these women
to petty survival crimes;
-
the health system,
-
social justice system,
-
the criminal justice system.
-
If any of these women,
-
who were mostly from poor backgrounds,
-
fall through the cracks
-
in the already broken system,
-
the bottom of that chasm is a prison,
-
period.
-
By the time I completed
my one-year sentence
-
at Langata Women Maximum Prison,
-
I had a burning conviction
-
to be part of the transformation
-
to resolve the injustices
-
that I had witnessed
-
of women and girls
-
who were caught up in a revolving door
-
of a life in and out of prison
-
due to poverty.
-
After my release,
-
I set up Clean Start.
-
Clean Start is a social enterprise
-
that seeks to give these women and girls
-
a second chance.
-
What we do is we build bridges for them.
-
We go into the prisons, train them,
-
give them skills, tools and support
-
to enable them to be able
to change their mindsets,
-
their behaviors and their attitudes.
-
We also build bridges into the prisons
-
from the corporate sector --
-
individuals, organizations
-
that will partner with Clean Start
-
to enable us to provide employment,
-
places to call home,
-
jobs, vocational training,
-
for these women, girls,
-
boys and men,
-
upon transition back into society.
-
I never thought
-
that one day
-
I would be giving stories
-
of the injustices that are so common
-
within the criminal justice system,
-
but here I am.
-
Every time I go back to prison,
-
I feel a little at home,
-
but it is the daunting work
-
to achieve the vision
-
that keeps me awake at night,
-
connecting the miles to Louisiana,
-
which is deemed as the incarceration
capital of the world,
-
carrying with me stories
-
of hundreds of women
-
whom I have met within the prisons,
-
some of whom are now
embracing their second chances,
-
and others who are still
on that bridge of life's journey.
-
I embody a line
-
from the great Maya Angelou.
-
"I come as one,
-
but I stand as 10,000."
-
(Applause)
-
For my story is singular,
-
but imagine with me
-
the millions of people
-
in prisons today,
-
yearning for freedom.
-
Three years post my conviction
-
and two years post my release,
-
I got cleared by the courts of appeal
-
of any wrongdoing.
-
(Applause)
-
Around the same time,
-
I got blessed with my son,
-
whom I named Uhuru,
-
which in my dialect means "freedom."
-
(Applause)
-
Because I had finally gotten the freedom
-
that I so longed for.
-
I come as one,
-
but I stand as 10,000,
-
encouraged by the hard-edged hope
-
that thousands of us have come together
-
to reform and transform
the criminal justice system,
-
encouraged that we are doing our jobs
-
as we are meant to do them.
-
And let us keep doing them
-
with no apology.
-
Thank you.
-
(Applause)