The Kenyan winner of the
prestigious Caine Prize for African Writing has told the BBC she will donate
half of her £10,000 ($13,000) winnings to help rehabilitate street children.
"With the rest of the
money I'll buy a car or maybe a motorcycle to get through traffic jams in
Nairobi," Makena Onjerika said.
Her winning story follows a
Kenyan street child named Meri.
The judges praised its lack of
sentimentality and haunting humour.
Onjerika said she was
surprised to win and had in fact betted against herself being awarded the
prize, given annually to an African writer of a short story published in
English.
Her story Fanta Blackcurrant
was chosen from a shortlist of five.
Onjerika, a graduate of the
MFA Creative Writing programme at New York University, said she chose to write
about street children as "Kenyans - me included - do not see street kids
as children.
"There are children, and
then there are 'chokora'," she added, explaining the derogatory Swahili term
used by Kenyans which translates as "street urchins".
The children depicted in Fanta
Blackcurrant manage to make a living in Kenya's capital, Nairobi, using their
natural intelligence and charisma.
Meri's one dream is to have
"a big Fanta Blackcurrant for her to drink every day and it never
finish".
She later becomes a sex worker
and gets pregnant.
After developing a talent for
stealing from successful businesswomen, she is violently beaten by local
criminals which she survives, later crossing a river - the story ending with
the words "and then we do not know where she went".
Unlike the other children in
the story who crave "community and acceptance," Onjerika told the BBC
that Fanta Blackcurrant's central character "just wants sweetness"
for her life.
BBC
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