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Maendeleo Vijijini
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Nairobi
THE sight
of Kenya's all-female motorbike gang, the Inked Sisterhood, often shocks people
in the socially conservative East African nation.
The group
recently completed a 270km (170-mile) ride from the capital, Nairobi, south to
Loitokitok town. Their black leather boots, guards, jackets and helmets are the
only protection from the notoriously dangerous red-dirt roads.
Some
residents of the town, which is on the border with Tanzania, did a double take,
but these women are used to faces of surprise.
Patience
Mehta (above), a farmer and administrator, started the Inked Sisterhood two
years ago as a way to connect and empower women who ride motorbikes. It grew
out of the Inked Bikers training school in Nairobi, where many of the women
learnt to ride, and currently has 46 members.
The gang
is one of five all-female biker groups to have sprung up over the last few
years, including the Throttle Queens, Piki Dada and Heels of Steel.
Nicknamed
"Empress Peanut" because of her small stature and admired leadership,
Ms Mehta was inspired to take up riding after watching the 2010 US TV series
Nikita, whose star rode a motorcycle in full black leather.
She rides
a Hero Karizma ZMR 223cc - which she has named Babezy - and says the name of
the gang is more of a metaphor: "The ink is what we use to tell our riding
story - it's not because we all have tattoos."
Motorbikes,
called "piki pikis" in the Swahili language, are a common mode of
transport in Nairobi. Motorcycle taxis, known as "boda bodas", also
throng the city but some people find their drivers' reputation for unsafe
driving, catcalling and harassing passing women as they wait for customers
off-putting.
While it
is rare to spot a woman owning or riding a motorbike - more of them are seeing
the benefits of donning their leathers to plough through the city's congested
streets.
"For
the longest time we have had clear roles for men and women and motorbikes, as
they are perceived as rough and dangerous, and therefore more masculine,"
says Bettina Bogonko.
A medical
professional who owns a Lifan 250cc cruiser - named Dragon - she says: "My
turning point that fully got me on the road confidently was when my father gave
me his blessing to ride and said he was proud of me."
Hope
Makwali, a project manager who rides a 1991 Honda XLR 250, agrees that despite
Nairobi's cosmopolitan nature "biking is considered a man's domain for the
most part".
"The
danger, grit, and courage it seems necessary to ride is not appealing for most
women," she adds.
Before she
started motorbiking, social worker Amanya Kuchio was spending between five and
six hours in traffic each day.
After
thinking about it for three years she was finally ready to take the leap - on
to a Hero Karizma ZMR 223cc - to save on time and spend more time with her
family. "It is very therapeutic, cost effective, and I love zooming past
vehicles stuck in traffic and feeling totally liberated. In addition, the
support and unity in the biking community is just amazing."
The Inked
Sisterhood meet up every few months to take group rides. Their next one will be
a 56km trip to a small town called Kimende, north of the capital. They are also
in communication frequently to share tips and encourage one another.
They get
together with the other female groups for big occasions, like International
Female Ride Day at the beginning of May, but the gang has no affiliation with
any of Nairobi's several male motorbike groups.
Agi
D'Costa, an accountant who rides a G-Wizz Puzey 150cc scooter, recounts how she
overheard two men in a rural petrol station asking: "Do you think this
woman can have children?"
She rang
her daughter to prove them wrong, but they held to their belief that women
riding motorbikes become infertile.
Human
resources consultant Njeri Mbogo finds a heightened awareness and spirituality
when on her Suzuki Gixxer 155cc: "I notice things that I don't usually
notice when travelling by car.
"I
can feel the air, temperature change, smell, the views seem clearer and my senses
are generally heightened. It's a wonderful feeling."
Sylvia
Thiong'o, a microbiologist who rides an TVS Apache RTR 180, likes to escape the
city and dreams one day of riding north on the newly tarred A2 highway from the
central town of Isiolo to Moyale, which is on the border with Ethiopia.
Lawyer
Doreen Murang'a says she is not big on material things: "But my bike [a
ZMR Hero Karizma] is something I love. I've named her and I talk to her when
she's having a bad day and refuses to start."
It is also
a way of escape: "When riding you have to focus entirely on what you are
doing, not an impending work deadline or life's usual stresses. It's you, your
bike, the road and the wind in your hair and if you're like me, a good
playlist."
Her advice
for women who want to ride: "Life could end at any point, so fear should
never stop you. If you want to learn, learn, there is a community here waiting
to learn with you, grow with you, ride with you."
Nyambura
"BlazeLife" Njuguna, resting above on her Kawasaki Z1000, agrees. A
farmer who learnt to ride in the savannah grasslands, she says you also have to
ride for yourself - not for show or for prestige.
The Inked
Sisterhood urge other women to join them so they too can gain a sense of
freedom.
"You
don't realise how the Nairobi you experience is shaped by transportation -
whether cost of cabs, traffic, or time of day. Having a more flexible mode of
transportation opens up a new dimension of the city," one of the gang
says.
Credit Source: BBC
Credit Source: BBC
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