Scars of a Nation: Survivor of Kiambaa Church Massacre and the Elusive Justice - Paperback
Scars of a Nation: Survivor of Kiambaa Church Massacre and the Elusive Justice - Paperback
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by Peter Mbuthia (Author)
Scars of a Nation is a powerful first-person account of survival, loss, and the long, painful search for justice following Kenya's 2007-2008 post-election violence. Told through the eyes of a father whose son survived the burning of Kiambaa Church, the book traces one family's journey from ordinary life into extraordinary trauma-and beyond.
When political violence erupted after a disputed national election, thousands of Kenyans were killed or displaced. At Kiambaa Farm, terrified families sought refuge inside a church, believing it to be sacred ground. It was not spared. The author's young son, Anthony, survived the inferno but was left with life-altering burns that required years of surgeries in Kenya and abroad. Many others did not survive.
From displacement camps and shattered livelihoods to hospital wards, refugee-like existence, and eventual exile, Scars of a Nation documents the hidden human cost of political power struggles. It captures the intimate toll of trauma: the nightmares, the fear, the silence imposed on victims, and the resilience demanded of survivors.
The book also chronicles the author's engagement with formal justice mechanisms-from failed local prosecutions to participation as a victim witness before the International Criminal Court in The Hague. With clarity and restraint, it examines how justice systems can be undermined by fear, political pressure, and witness interference, leaving victims once again abandoned. This is not a legal treatise, but a lived experience of what it means when justice becomes elusive.
Yet this is not a story of despair alone. It is also a story of courage, resilience, forgiveness, faith, and rebuilding. It shows how survivors choose life even when justice fails, how a scarred child grows into a hopeful young man, and how a wounded family refuses to be defined by hatred.
Scars of a Nation is both a personal memoir and a national reflection. It asks difficult questions about accountability, leadership, and moral responsibility-while reminding readers that behind every statistic is a human being whose scars still ache long after the headlines fade.
