---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: John Ashworth <[email protected]>
Date: Sat, 13 May 2017 at 12:58 PM
Subject: [sudans-john-ashworth] Rev John Gatu RIP
To: Group <[email protected]>


South Sudanese will remember the role played by Rev John Gatu in the
run-up to the 1972 Addis Ababa Agreement, in the 1997 Kajiko meeting
between SPLM/A and the New Sudan Council of Churches, and in other
ecumenical peace efforts. RIP.

BEGIN

1. The Reverend John Gatu passes on at Nairobi hospital

FRIDAY MAY 12 2017
Daily Nation

The Rev John Gatu, the ex-moderator of the Presbyterian Church of East
Africa who spilled the beans on Mau Mau oaths during the Jomo Kenyatta
era, is dead aged 92.

Close family and church sources on Friday confirmed to the Nation that
the veteran cleric passed on at The Karen Hospital on Thursday.

HEART ATTACK

He was admitted to the Nairobi hospital after suffering a heart attack
on May 2 at his home.

Dr Gatu will be remembered for his candour in speaking against the
excesses of previous governments, especially that of President Daniel
Moi.

In late last year, he revealed Mau Mau oath ceremonies in the Mount
Kenya region in an explosive autobiography — Fan into Flame —
implicating Kenya's founding President Kenyatta.

His niece, Chebet Karago, eulogised him as “wonderful, kind man who
put his faith into action.”

SIMPLE LIFE

“Uncle was the loving father of many including people from other
churches who called him Dad. When my cousin fled the country my aunt
and uncle took care of his family and when his driver died, he
fostered his children,” she said.

“He lived a simple life in his two bedroom house in Karen. A person
who knew his true home was elsewhere with his God.”

Dr Gatu was born on March 3, 1925 to Muthoni and Gachango Gatu.

His wife, Rahabu Gatu, died in 2016.

He was the first African general-secretary of the Presbyterian Church
of East Africa and the past moderator of the 9th and 10th General
Assembly.

ECUMENIST

A celebrated ecumenist, he was the founder of the Jitegemee spirit in
the PCEA church.

In the 1970s, he introduced the Moratorium Debate that called for a
moratorium on foreign aid to African churches to promote growth and
self-reliance and this led to him being called by some in the West a
“missionary hater”.

In Fan into Flame, he discuses the origin of the Christian churches in
Kenya and the turmoil Kenya went through during the Mau Mau uprising
of the 1950s.

He is also the author of Joyfully Christian: Truly African, among other
books

WIFE

He wrote many hymns, including "Ni kii wenakio utaheirwo?" He also
translated into the Kikuyu language hymns such as "Do Not Pass Me By".

The cleric studied in, among other institutions around the world,
Princeton Theology College in New Jersey.

In all his travels he was always accompanied by his wife, according to
his niece.

“He was the first student to take a wife to what is now St Pauls
University,” she told the Nation.

http://www.nation.co.ke/news/The-Reverend-John-Gatu-dead/1056-3924022-q3dreq/

END1

2. Presbyterian Church father John Gatu takes a final bow

12/05/17 7:00 pm
Capital FM

By Wambui Waweru, NAIROBI, Kenya, May 12 – He wore many hats, a World
War II veteran, a nationalist, a prolific poet and writer, a
theologian, a pan-Africanist and a family man. The list is endless.

But in the preface of his biography – Fan into Flame – The Very
Reverend, Dr. John Gatu alludes to the fact that he’d rather be
remember as a crusader for Christ.

The 93-year-old renowned reverend breathed his last on Thursday, 11
May 2017 at Karen Hospital where he was receiving treatment for a
heart attack since Tuesday, 2 May 2017 when he was admitted for
emergency treatment.

“An icon of the Church, Dr. Gatu lived with dignity, preached with
passion and worshipped with serenity,” said PCEA Moderator, Rev.
Julius Mwamba in a communiqué from the church’s General Assembly.

His only daughter Naomi Njuguna was devastated by the sad news, saying
he will be missed by many because “He had a very big heart … always
concerned about the welfare of everybody.”

“Over the last decade my father has suffered from a progressive
weakening of his knees, hampering his movement,” she recalled, “but
this did not stop him from visiting the sick and attending important
church functions, armed with an original poem for every occasion. He
had just celebrated his 93rd Birthday in March.”

President Uhuru Kenyatta, who received the news in London where he is
attending a conference on Somalia, described him as a “committed
religious leader who led a life of simplicity and service aided by his
strong character and independent mind.”

“In this hour of sorrow, I convey my deepest sympathy and heartfelt
condolences to the Presbyterian Church of East Africa, and the family,
relatives and friends of the late Reverend John Gatu,” President
Kenyatta said in a condolence message sent to newsrooms.

Former President Mwai Kibaki has also sent a message of condolence to
the family and friends, of Dr. Gatu.

“For as long as I have known the late Rev. Gatu, which runs into
fifty-years, this man of God was always stoic, ever true to his
calling to serve fellow mankind without discriminating,” said the
former President in a statement to newsrooms.

“What, however, made Rev. Gatu all the more special was his
intellectual disposition that gave his preaching of the Word a rare
touch of thoughtfulness and finesse,” said Kibaki. “The late Rev.
Gatu’s iconic character, presence and authority made him a leader of
national repute, not just a man of cloth to a limited congregation.”

As the curtains comes down on the eventful life of a celebrated Kenyan
and clergyman, his biography launched less than 6 months ago comes to
the fore.

The story of Gatu’s early life as narrated in his biography offers a
poignant glimpse of life at the onset of colonial rule. He was born
1925 in Kiambu, the first born of Muthoni and Gachango Gatu who were
originally from Nyeri and Murang’a respectively but had settled at the
Gospel Missionary Society station in Kambui.

Young Gatu studied at the mission and completed primary school in
1940, he went on the serve at His Majesty’s pleasure during the 2nd
World War in Ethiopia and Somaliland. The book tells of his escapades
in the army – a notable one is about losing his rifle in drunken
stupor, a grievous misdemeanor and almost being dishonourably
discharged. Previous conduct and genuine remorse saved the day.

He narrates how he gave his life to Christ in 1950 and began his life
as ‘soldier in the army of Christ’. His other books are Joyfully
Christian and Truly African, and a collection of Gikuyu poetry, ‘He
Gatu Nguhe Kanua’ which loosely translates to, ‘Lend me your Ear, I’ll
tell you All’.

Dr. Gatu was the first African Secretary General of Presbyterian
Church of East Africa (1963 – 1979) and was among the founders of the
World Council of Churches. He remained at the helm of PCEA as
Moderator until 1985. He was a pioneer of ecumenical movement in
African that led to the birth of All Africa Conference of Churches
(AACC).

Propelled by his inclination towards ecumenism, Dr Gatu used his
position of leadership in the church to request the government to
allocate land for the construction of All Africa Conference of
Churches (AACC). The government under Retired President Daniel Arap
Moi granted the request to allocate the premises along Waiyaki Way in
Westlands, Nairobi where the offices are housed to date.

“Though saddened by the death of this great man, we thank God for the
time and service of our Church Father. The entire PCEA send our
heartfelt condolences to the family and friends of our departed hero,
mentor and father,” said Rev Mwamba.

Family sources say a Memorial service will be held at PCEA Muteero on
Sunday, May 14, 2017. Funeral details will be communicated later

https://www.capitalfm.co.ke/news/2017/05/presbyterian-church-father-john-gatu-takes-final-bow/

END2
______________________
John Ashworth

[email protected]

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Skype: jashworth1

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This is a personal e-mail address and the contents do not necessarily
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