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Why American woman wants to migrate to Kenya

Living
 American citizen Kea Tiffani Simmons. She wants to settle in Kenya (George Orido)

With her long but neatly kept dreadlocks and a white t-shirt emblazoned with a Kenyan flag, Kea Tiffani Simmons, looks every inch Kenyan.

She even has a Kenyan name, Wakesho Akinyi.

It is only when she speaks that you can hear her rich South Carolina accent.

“I live in one of the most progressive cities in the US, but Nairobi is three times as much home as the city of North Carolina,” she says.

Simmons is leading a group of 30 African-Americans on a five-day safari in search of their African roots.

The visitors drawn from UK and different parts of the US; North Carolina, Texas, New York, Virginia, Missouri, Florida, Alabama, Las Vegas-Nevada, Mississippi, Virginia and Los Angeles, jetted into the country on Wednesday morning.

But already, they say they have finally found their way back home and cannot wait to relocate.

“We are tired of being blacks in America. We are tired of living in fear of being shot because of the colour of our skin. We are tired of being called Americans,” says Simmons. Simons, 37, founder of World Views Organisation, has been coming to Kenya since 2012 and has already invested in property in Juja.

Born in South Carolina, the mother of one is so determined to make Kenya her new home that she has taken up her new name, Akinyi, with gusto.

“My second Kenyan name, Akinyi, means born in the morning. It reminds me how good it feels to wake up in the morning and feel no discrimination or profiling based on race,” she says.

Simmons, is already working on residency papers, and if successful, plans to apply for Kenyan citizenship.

But what exactly is the Kenyan magic that attracts them?

Simmons smiles and goes into a long litany of Kenya’s magic, from the people who she describes as warm and friendly to its rainbow of cultures that blend seamlessly with Western values.

“The Maasai are the last Samurai,” she states with finality.

In their itinerary before flying out on Sunday, Mombasa, where they expect to get new Kenyan names from a team of Mijikenda elders, will probably be the closest they come to their roots.

It is from here that ships laden with black slaves left for America’s cotton and sugarcane farms more than 300 years ago.

It is from here that the story of many African-Americans like Simmons and her group of pilgrims most probably began.

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