Kenya’s second Vice-President May 1965-August 31 1966. He was a child of a Goan trader and a Maasai woman, and he spent the first 16 years of his life in India. The declaration of the state of emergency on October 20, 1952, saw the detention of the top two levels of leadership within the Kenya African Union, and Murumbi found himself thrust into the centre of the party’s leadership, as acting secretary-general. Goa (गोवा) is Indias smallest state in terms of area and the fourth smallest in terms of population after Sikkim, Mizoram and Arunachal Pradesh. ... A Maasai tribesman The Maasai or Masai are an indigenous African tribe of semi-nomadic people located primarily in Kenya and northern Tanzania. ... A state of emergency is a governmental declaration that may suspend certain normal functions of government or may work to alert citizens to alter their normal behaviors or to order government agencies to implement their emergency preparedness plans. ... In middle school and high school, detention very specifically refers to a period after the end of the school day (or sometimes, before the school day) when students who have misbehaved must remain in a designated classroom for a certain time period as punishment for their misbehavior. ... Kenya African Union was a political organization that was meant to voice Kenyan voice to Britain, the colonial government of the time. ...
He played a key role in securing legal counsel for the core group of detainees arrested in the Emergency crackdown, and, together with Pio Da Gama Pinto, strove to make the world aware of the brutal nature of British imperial rule, through Indian newspapers such as the Chronicle. After resigning from politics in 1966, Murumbi co-founded African Heritage with Alan Donovan, and it became the largest Pan-African art gallery on the continent. An emergency is a situation that poses an immediate threat to human life or serious damage to property. ... Pan-African people are all people with African physical features. ...
He was an avid art collector and he left behind over 50,000 books and sheafs of official correspondence. The National Archives department has set up a library containing some of the 8,000 "rare books" (those published before 1900) entrusted to them upon the death of Murumbi.
The East African Standard (http://www.eastandard.net/archives/sunday/hm_news/news.php?articleid=19321) Gentle Dissident
The East African Standard (http://www.eastandard.net/archives/sunday/hm_news/news.php?articleid=19341) Nationalist grave vandalised