00:17Do you guys smell books?
00:20I don't know your books smell but it's really nice.
00:24Okay, not all of them.
00:29I was actually trying to find books by African authors.
00:32I did not today.
00:34That's disturbing.
00:37When it was opened in 1931,
00:39this library was purposefully for white use
00:43and then eventually with independence coming,
00:46that's only when it was actually open to use by Africans.
00:52So for more than 50 years now,
00:55there was never an attempt to decolonize that quite purposefully.
01:00And so I suppose in our own crazy way,
01:02we're challenging that.
01:14How did you do this?
01:17How did you do this?
01:18Computers, Wi-Fi, Ticket Show.
01:21Where did you go?
01:22How did you do this?
01:25I've been outside too long.
01:32Who's gonna take me?
01:34So the county have asked for the list of people who are coming.
01:37Like, oh, so you invited the senator but not the governor.
01:39And then they're doing that thing of protocol.
01:43We don't want to politicize the thing.
01:45What we're interested in is restoring the library.
01:58Publicly, everybody thinks we're good.
02:00It must have never been worse.
02:04Because if we invest that amount of money into our building,
02:07knowing what we know about the fracturedness of our state,
02:11it's gonna be our assets on the line
02:13and might be becoming more and more real.
02:22One of the most glaring fault lines in the construction of the Kenyan nation
02:27is not the absence of memory,
02:30but rather the deliberate institutionalization of a medium.
02:45Many of these scriptures said,
02:48Not always.
02:49unlike a sheep and aman.
02:54Why one can't hold these pictures of my baths,
02:54We're in this section of this section with people
02:54and we start working with people after seeing the duties of the 19th.
02:54And they say,
02:54this is the logic that they've gotten done.
02:55They're done.
02:55The thing like this is how mad teaches people
02:55The sure of what they can tell them from
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