3 ways to uproot a culture of corruption Wanjira Mathai

Have you ever been robbed?

Or had something you value
forcibly taken from you

against your will?

It’s violating.

Feelings of fury, of assault

and of helplessness.

That’s what corruption feels like.

Corruption is theft.

It is corrosive,

it is criminal,

it is toxic

and it is predatory.

Now, I’m from Kenya,

and in Kenya, corruption
takes different forms.

I want to share the story
of Karura Forest with you.

This is my hometown of Nairobi.

I love Nairobi. It’s beautiful.

But it is a city of paradoxes.

It is at once beautiful

and challenging.

But at the heart of this beautiful city

that I call home

is Karura Forest,

an oasis of green, expansive beauty that
would be the envy of any city anywhere.

We almost lost
Karura Forest to corruption.

Word has reached
my mother, Wangari Maathai,

that Karura Forest is under attack.

There was a construction site coming up
right in the middle of the forest.

Government officials
had stolen the forest.

They had divided, sold and gifted
hundreds of parcels of Karura

to their friends and cronies.

Now in 1977,

my mother founded the Green Belt Movement

to plant trees across Kenya,

restore green spaces

and protect green spaces,
much like Karura Forest.

She got together her friends and allies,

and together, they created what became

one of the most successful
tree-planting campaigns in the world.

It was therefore no surprise

that when word got to her
that Karura was under attack,

they immediately sprang into action.

They battled police and hired goons

to stop the theft of this forest.

But fortunately, there was
an uprising of support

from the clergy, politicians,
students and the general public,

all of whom came out to say no
to corruption and greed.

And pretty soon, that support
was too strong and intense

for the authorities to subdue.

And Karura Forest was saved.

In the 2000s, I joined my mother
in the Green Belt Movement

and witnessed the growth
of the movement’s advocacy activities,

its expansion beyond Kenya

and an extremely important
growing consensus

around the 2004 Nobel Peace Prize
that she received –

that the environment, democracy
and peace were inextricably linked.

I also learned that what my mother
had faced that many years ago

trying to protect Karura Forest

was not an isolated incident.

The corruption and greed
that manifested itself then

is alive and well today,

from greedy politicians
and public servants

willing to loot public coffers

at their expense.

Corruption is everywhere.

Now, corruption is devastating
to any economy, democracy

and the environment.

It robs citizens of vital social services

and renders human life worthless.

When young men are willing

to join gangs

and brutalize their communities

for a small fee,

and women are raped on the way to work,

and, when they report this,

the perpetrators bribe
their way out of jail,

and when young girls
have to sell their bodies

to buy sanitary towels,

you know the society is broken.

In recent years, Kenya has been ranked

amongst the top 10 most corrupt
countries in the world.

Even more frustrating for me
is that Kenya loses

a third of her national budget
to corruption each year.

That is six billion dollars.

It is totally unacceptable.

In a country where anti-corruption efforts
have been frustrated and ignored

and interfered with,

we absolutely need new strategies
for dealing with this vice.

We cannot complain forever.

We either decide
that we’re going to live with it

or we are going to change it.

There’s some good news.

Human beings are not born corrupt.

At some point, these behaviors
are fostered by a culture

that promotes individual gain
over collective progress.

So if we’re going to uproot corruption,

we have got to start
before it ever takes root.

We have got to intervene early.

I don’t know about your country,

but where I come from,

youth will lead us into the future.

In Kenya today, 80 percent
of the population is under the age of 35.

But by their own admission,
they have conflicting values.

Fifty-eight percent of young people
in Kenya recently told us

they will do anything to make money.

An additional 45 percent said

corruption is a legitimate tool
for doing business.

Seventy-three percent

said they would not be willing
to stand up for what they believe in

for fear of retribution.

What I learned from my mother

a few years ago

was this concept of “the power of one” –

that each of us can be
potent agents of change

and that together, we are a force,

that if we put our hands together,
we can change the situation

and no problem is too big.

My mother understood this so profoundly

that it was at the center of her work.

Shifting cultures takes patience,
persistence and commitment,

and it is extremely slow and deep work.

But if we are going to shift a culture,
we have got to get that work started.

And in the time since her passing, we
have established a foundation in her name

to do exactly that

but to work with young people and children

to begin to build character
and personal leadership,

to inspire purpose and integrity.

But fighting corruption is not as easy
as saying corruption is bad.

Now, here are three strategies
that we are employing

that we believe can be replicated
in any school community.

First, we must understand the why:

Why does corruption happen
in the first place?

Do we call it for what it is – theft –

or do we gloss over it with other words?

When young children are able to model
what it looks and feels like

to deal with corruption,

they are likely, when faced
with a dilemma in their future,

to model what they’ve been taught.

Second, we need to teach
character explicitly.

Now, this may seem obvious,

but a child who exhibits a growth mindset

and a sense of self-control

is self-confident.

And a self-confident child is likely
to stand up for what they believe.

Third, we need to build
personal leadership in our children early

to give them an opportunity
to know what it looks like

to call corruption out when they see it,

what it feels like to stand up
and be counted when they’re needed

and, for me, to make the more
and most important connection

between human suffering on one hand

and corruption, greed
and selfishness on the other.

We have got to believe in our capacity

to bring about the future we want to see,

each of us in our small way.

Young people must believe

that a new reality is possible.

Corruption, climate change,

ecosystem collapse, biodiversity loss –

all these issues need leadership.

And in the words of Baba Dioum of Senegal,

“In the final analysis,

we will conserve

only what we love,

we will love

only what we understand

and we will understand

only what we are taught.”

Thank you.

(Applause)