Uhuru's full Madaraka Day speech.

Today, I am delighted to return to these hallowed grounds of Uhuru Gardens to commemorate our 59thMadaraka Day.

I am overjoyed because, after 59 years of self-rule, this is the first time we are celebrating Madaraka Day on these hallowed grounds.

Madaraka Day is significant in our history because it is on this day in June 1963 that the Founding Fathers of our nation replaced the outgoing colonial government and formed the first indigenous Government of Kenya.

nd with this act, we achieved self-rule or Madaraka, with Mzee Jomo Kenyatta as our first Prime Minister.

However, self-rule was NOT the same thing as independence. With Madaraka, we had merely surmounted the first hurdle in our liberation struggle.

It was six months after the first Madaraka Day, that we secured our full independence on the 12thof December, 1963.

On that day, the nation was summoned to these sacred grounds of Uhuru Gardens. An elated people listened with tears in their eyes as our national anthem played for the first time. And then we cheered in boundless joy as our flag was hoisted and the flag of the colonizers lowered.

This act of raising our national flag was not an exercise in symbolism or a sheer sentimental exploit. It was a sign that we had achieved sovereignty as a Nation. But fundamentally, it was a call to civic duty and responsibility to our people.

Once hoisted, our Founding Fathers reminded us that the flag was not just a cloth painted in designs of four colours. Instead, it was a painting of the national wounds and scars we bear from our liberation struggle, coated with the illumination of our shared aspirations our future.

It was and remains a picture of the blood we shed to regain what we had lost. It is a reflection of the dignity of our black heritage and the pride we restored.

nd because the ultimate act of every liberator is to lay down their weapon, the shield and spear on our national flag is a symbol of victory. But it is also a notice of readiness should our "heritage of splendour" be threatened.

ccording to our Founding Fathers, therefore, our flag is not a sentimental piece of fabric decorated in ink. We must always remember that each time it flies, it is NOT blown by the wind. It is blown by the last breath of our liberators as they made their final bow to liberate Kenya.

Fellow Kenyans,

Ladies and Gentlemen,

Why did our independence heroes choose Uhuru Gardens as the place to midwife our young Nation? What was the significance of these grounds in the history of our liberation struggle? And what did they want remembered by generations to come?

On these grounds sat one of the largest concentration camps in colonial Africa, holding up to 10,000 freedom fighters at any one given time.

Many of our compatriots were tortured and maimed for life in that camp. And many more unknown heroes died in this field.

The horrors of this camp are what inspired our Founding Fathers when they taught us that " the tree of freedom must be watered by the blood of our patriots". And that is why on Jamhuri Day in 1964, we planted a mugumo tree standing to my right, as a solemn and symbolic reminder of this eternal truth.

lthough the colonizers killed the messengers in this camp, they could not kill the message. The liberation 'fever' spread across the Nation and the colonizers had no option but to surrender.

Fellow Kenyans,

Why do I call Uhuru Gardens a hallowed ground? I do so because our Founding Fathers wanted us to celebrate this ground as a camp of martyrs and the birthplace of a Nation. A place of remembrance, healing and renewal.

Each time we gather at this birthplace of our great nation, we must remember that being free is the easy part; but staying free is the difficult part. Although we are now fully free, we cannot continue to claim freedom casually. Instead, we must begin to practice it and jealously guard it against all threats, both foreign and domestic. The practice of freedom comes with a price.

If our heroes paid the price to liberate our nation, we must similarly pay the price of nurturing our freedom. But fundamentally, we must remember that the price today is NOT the price tomorrow. The price of liberating the Nation is not the price of growing the Nation. To keep and nurture our freedom, we have to pay a higher price. And part of this price is to be trustworthy stewards of what our Founding Fathers passed down to us.

My joy today is that My Administration has restored the sanctity and historical significance of Uhuru Gardens. Following many years of neglect, this historic site had become a den of thieves. It is on record that the 68 acres on which these sacred grounds sit had fallen into the hands of some unscrupulous individuals. My Administration had to reclaim the 'grabbed' site in 2019 and restore its dignity and purity.

Yesterday, I had the distinct honour of inaugurating these grounds as a monument and a museum of remembrance; and a place of unedited history. And we have done this because a progressive nation does not hide its history. It confronts it and endeavours to correct it, to change the future.

Fellow Kenyans,

Ladies and Gentlemen,

Each time we celebrate our liberation struggle, tradition demands that we ponder a series of questions. Fundamentally, we must ask this: how have we built on what was handed down to us? What account can we give of ourselves as the successors of the course of our liberators? And can we honestly say that we have been faithful stewards worthy of their sacrifice?

On the 9thof April, 2013; I assumed office as our Nation's fourth President. Nine Years and two months later to the day, in the discharge of the mandate you bestowed upon me, My Administration has built on the gains secured by the previous three administrations and strengthened our social fabric, making Kenya safer and healthier; fairer and just Nation where justice is truly our shield and defender; reinforced our educational and technical excellence; integrated devolution as a way of life; successfully led the Nation through the worst global health crisis in a century; whilst also expanding economic opportunities for all Kenyans.

s Kenyans, we often dwell on the what and the how without asking ourselves "WHY". And so, I answer, why has My Administration invested so heavily in infrastructure? Why has My Administration extensively equipped and retooled our Defence and Security Agencies; and expanded the benefits enjoyed by staff therein? Why has the Government driven digitization in the delivery of public services; while also fostering grassroots location and access to the same?

Why has my tenure in office seen so much emphasis on transformative programmes and reforms in healthcare, education, agriculture, energy, titling of land, housing, social protection, affirmative action, commerce and industry, and the ease of doing business? Why the Big Four Agenda?

We have done all this because they are interrelated aspects of our national life that are tied together by a singular golden thread; areas of challenges that can become the engines that drive Kenya into a more just and prosperous future.

Fellow Kenyans,

National Security and Defence have been a priority area since 2013 because we cannot deliver on the National Anthem's promise of plenty within our borders if those borders were porous and insecure. I, therefore, made your security a top priority because I know that without a secure environment no life can flourish, and no enterprise can thrive.

With the mandate that you gave me, we silenced the wave of terror attacks that had a stranglehold on our Nation. We achieved this by retooling our security organs and making them more capable to address the dynamic contemporary security challenges that Kenya faces.

To our security officers, because of your commitment to defend our Nation and to squarely face new dangers, every citizen can participate in the socio-economic development of our Nation.

You keep us free, preserve our way of life, and allow us all to enjoy the present as well as the better tomorrow that is upon us.

Fellow Kenyans,

In realizing equitable development through devolution, it was my distinct honour to be the President who received, fostered, and gave impetus to the devolved system of governance.

Today, the results of My Administration's proactive and enthusiastic support, are markedly visible: from Makueni to Mandera, Busia to Bungoma, Mombasa to Meru, Lamu to Laikipia, and from Turkana to Tharaka-Nithi.

With the mandate you gave me, we institutionalized devolution and forever changed the face of Kenya; buoyed by the Ksh. 2.44 Trillion was transferred by the National Government to the Counties from 2013 to date.

On the regional front, with the mandate you vested in me, Kenya led the push to admit the Democratic Republic of Congo into the East African Community. With this singular move, the EAC common market grew by 90 million people; yielding a now expanded market of 300 million and consequently enhanced opportunities for Kenyan enterprises. To exemplify this, Equity Bank is already breaking ground in the DRC and it is already the second-largest Bank there. This is what I have done with the mandate you gave me.

On the global stage, we remain a leader in the cooperative multilateral order as evidenced by our membership in the United Nations Security Council, which has provided us with a voice on international peace and security matters threatening humanity.

This position has cemented our international stature and enhanced opportunities for Kenyans in the diaspora and within the international civil service.

In return, diaspora remittances have increased tenfold in the last decade; and they now stand at an all-time high of over Ksh. 400 Billion in 2021; surpassing traditional exports and making human capital our greatest export.

With the mandate you gave me, you challenged us to enhance the global competitiveness of our human resources. We did this because every epoch in our nation's history...

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