The rise of a self-taught journalist driven by his passion
He did his first five years in the newsroom without any formal training
by BRIAN OTIENO
Audio By Vocalize
Wife Sellah and George
Sunguh in the Vatican / BRIAN OTIENO
George Sungu during the interview / BRIAN OTIENO
George Sunguh began practising journalism in Mombasa in late
1983 without any formal training.
He was driven purely by a passion he had developed in
primary school.
Born in Kisumu, his father worked for the East African
Railways and Harbours Corporation in Kasese, Uganda, near the border with the
Democratic Republic of Congo, and the family relocated there.
“We lived in Kasese most of my childhood. I started my
nursery school there inside the Railways estate bordering the Queen Elizabeth
National Park," Sunguh said.
“We could be in class and see a herd of elephants roaming around.
Sometimes, away from the teacher’s watch we would get out of class and start
chasing the elephants."
"To us it was fun. We didn’t know we were exposing
ourselves to danger until we got caned by our parents.”
The family later moved to Tororo in eastern Uganda, close to
Busia county, before returning to Kenya where he began schooling at Makindu Primary
in Muhuroni, Kisumu county. He proceeded to Ngere High School, also in Kisumu,
completing Form 4 in 1980.
“My first job was as an accounts clerk in Kisumu because I
was good in accounts and scored a distinction in school. I did Kasneb part 1
and part 2 exams and passed,” Sunguh said.
He was, however, uninspired by the clerical role at a paint
manufacturing company called Plasco, where the work required him to sit all
day.
“I am not a desk man. I wanted to be here and there. In
1982, I went to Nairobi looking for another job. Then August 1 happens when the
military tried to oust President Daniel Moi," Sunguh said.
“We ran away from Nairobi. I had a cousin who was working
for Railways in Kivati, Makueni county, between Sultan Hamud and Masimba.”
The cousin, who was the stationmaster at Kivati, encouraged
him to try his luck in Mombasa.
“He put me on a train
and I landed in Mombasa on May 1, 1983,” Sunguh said.
In Mombasa, he decided against pursuing clerical work.
“I had a passion in writing. I was the editor of the school
magazine. In fact, our editor who inspired me into this was a gentleman called
Oduor Ong’wen, the ODM executive director now,” Sunguh said.
“I was with him in high school. He was in Form 4 when I was
in Form 1. He used my first article in the school magazine and that really
inspired me.”
Armed with pen and paper, he attended small football pitches
around Mombasa where Division Four Kenya Football Federation matches were
played.
He wrote match reports and submitted them to Coast Week for
publication.
“One day, Abdulrahman Sherrif, a writer at the Coast Week
then, recommended me for a vacant position at the Daily Nation where sports
journalist Johnnie Pewa was being recalled to Nairobi,” Sunguh said.
At Coast Week, the “salary” was the joy of seeing his byline
in print.
In January 1984, he joined the Daily Nation as a sports
journalist. Over time, he developed interest in other sectors, including
politics and the church, writing particularly on issues concerning the Catholic
Church.
A Christian wire agency, All Africa Press Service, owned by
the All Africa Conference of Churches, approached him to contribute articles.
“I was a reporter but I had no training. During those years you did
not necessarily need to have a certificate in journalism to join the industry,”
Sunguh said.
“Many of us were recruited purely on interest of writing.”
Despite his progress, he longed for formal training. “But
the resources would not allow,” Sunguh said.
A friend, Winnie Ogana, then an editor at the All Africa
Press Service, informed him of possible sponsorship opportunities through the
Catholic Church.
“She asked me to go
to Waumini House in Westlands, Nairobi, where the headquarters of the church
was, and talk to a Joseph Ngala, who was the national executive secretary for
the Kenya Conference of Catholic Bishops – Commission for Social
Communications,” Sunguh said.
“She asked me to explain myself and see whether they could
offer me a scholarship.”
He travelled to Nairobi and met Ngala but did not
immediately raise the matter, choosing first to build rapport.
“But of course, he knew me from my bylines and even
congratulated me for my excellent writing. That was a plus for me,” Sunguh
said.
He would visit whenever he was in Nairobi. “One day in 1987
an opportunity presented itself. I asked if the Catholic Church sponsored
people for journalism training. He was surprised I had no formal training.”
Sunguh learnt that the Association of Member Episcopal
Conferences in Eastern Africa had a scholarship programme offering training in
Dublin, Ireland; Nyegezi, Mwanza, Tanzania; or Kitwe, Zambia.
He began processing his passport, and in 1989 secured a
place at the African Literature Centre in Kitwe.
“We were required to report in Zambia for an intensive
diploma course in journalism for one year. So I went. That was in 1989,” Sunguh
said.
Upon returning, the International Network of Young Journalists,
headquartered in Geneva, invited him to attend a Summer University course in
the US and Canada.
“Part of it, we would go to St Paul’s University in Ottawa,
Canada, then to Marquette University in Milwaukee, in the US. This training was
very interesting. It had intensive travels,” Sunguh said.
“We would be in Indianapolis in the morning then hop into
another plane to New York in the afternoon and the next day in Washington DC.”
They were 25 participants from 23 countries. The training
strengthened his ties with the church, and between 2006 and 2010, he served as
Parish chairperson at Kiembeni parish.
By then, he was editing African Shipping Review, a magazine
on maritime affairs, gaining deep knowledge of maritime issues.
At one point, then Mombasa archbishop Boniface Lele, who
oversaw the commission for refugees, migrants and seafarers at the Kenya
Conference of Catholic Bishops approached him.
He asked for his help in preparing a presentation for a
seafarers’ conference in Gdynia, northern Poland, focusing on piracy in the
Horn of Africa.
“I had written a lot about that and so I had all the
information at my fingertips,” Sunguh said.
The presentation was well received and Archbishop Lele
appointed him archdiocesan coordinator of the Apostolic Ship of the Sea, Stella
Maris, which supports the spiritual and social welfare of seafarers.
“My work was to go to the ships, find out if there are
Catholics on board, most of whom were Philippines, and ask if we could be
allowed to have mass on board,” he said.
“Because when these
people are at sea, they do not get opportunities to celebrate mass.”
On one occasion, a sailor died aboard a ship sailing from
the Black Sea to an English port.
“The young man was
cut into two by an elevator door that had malfunctioned. This really disturbed
the crew on board,” Sunguh said.
The ship owners requested a priest to purify the vessel.
“So, they called me from London and asked me to organise for
a priest to purify it when it sailed to the Port of Mombasa and I got Fr
Harrison Yaa to do it.”
He said the owners subsequently increased their contribution
to Stella Maris in London.
His maritime work led to his recruitment by the Port
Management Association for Eastern and Southern Africa, a UN agency based in
Mombasa.
He later pursued a Master’s degree in Media and
Communication at the University of Leicester in the UK, graduating in 2016.
Reflecting on the profession, he said journalism today
differs greatly from that of the 1980s.
“Technology has evolved and made things faster. Back then
you would nurse a story for about a week,” he said.
“Today, you cannot risk that, because news is not just for
the journalist. Any commoner can break a story.”
He said journalism was once highly prestigious and
journalists were few. “You could go to a press conference and if there are
three of you, it is a full house,” he said.
“Today, if you call a press conference, you would think it
is an ODM rally.”
This is premium content
Subscribe to Continue Reading
Help us continue bringing you unbiased news, in-depth investigations, and diverse perspectives. Your subscription keeps our mission alive and empowers us to provide high-quality, trustworthy journalism. Join us today to make a difference!