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Kissing whites was illegal, but Argwings Kodhek still married one

He was Kenya's first black lawyer when Africans found guilty of raping whites were hanged.
Whites were judged by white judges. Whites had jurors. African cases had assessors in the racially segregated judiciary. But Chiedo More Gem (CMG) Argwings-Kodhek showed his mettle in search for justice.

Miffed by one white chief justice who sneered at African lawyers, Argwings-Kodhek reportedly retorted: "Woe and wilt upon Britania, that she chooses to export the most stupid and vile of her sons to civilise Africa! Oh, mistaken Queen, come and evacuate these simpletons who understand nothing of you, neither your jurisprudence nor your language. Their perfect idiocy insults your royal foolishness!"
That was vintage 'Clem': Learned. Intelligent. Witty. Confrontational. The 'Mau Mau lawyer' offered criminal defense to suspects accused of killing loyalists and Mau Mau oath takers.

The late Nyeri MP Waruru Kanja was to be hanged for smuggling arms to the Mau Mau before Argwings Kodhek's tough defense saved him from the hangman's noose, as E.S. Adhiambo Otieno and John Lonsdale note in their 2003 treatise, Mau Mau and Nationhood: Arms, Authority and Narration.
Kodhek was later debarred in 1957.

The man born in Nyawara, Nyanza, was only 34 then. Retired President Moi was once his student, when the first man to form a political party in Nairobi taught in the Rift Valley, according to the Dictionary of African Biography.

'Clem' had majored in education at Makerere College in 1940, but later followed his heart and qualified, in 1951, as Barrister-at-Law from London's prestigious Lincoln's Inn, where Charles Njonjo, later Kenya's Attorney General, also schooled. The colonial State Law Office offered him a salary thrice lower than his odiero colleagues. He turned it down and joined Chanan Singh Advocates, before establishing a private practice at Church House, Nairobi.

It was illegal in colonial Kenya for blacks to kiss or hold a white woman's 'imperial' hand in public. This was why Jomo Kenyatta wisely left Edna Clark, his English wife, in cold old England. Not so Kodhek, who returned home with Mavis Tate, an Irish nurse in 1952. Funny thing was, Kodhek could not live in Westy, a whites' only area and Mavis Tate could not live in 'Ololo,' which was reserved for nyeuthis!

The two divorced in the tumultuous 1960s. Kodhek married Joan Omondo. The former MP for Gem and Assistant Minister for Internal Security and Defense died in a mysterious car accident on January 29, 1969 along Argwings Kodhek Road that bears his name in Kilimani, Nairobi.