Is Ruto the head of Freemason in Kenya?
Is Ruto the head of Freemason in Kenya?
By John Kamau, editor, thingira.org
(Email:thingiragema@gmail.com)
Though Deputy
President William Ruto (pictured) religiously attends church service every Sunday, and
greets the worshippers using the Kiswahili catchphrase Bwana Asifie (Praise be to the Lord Jesus Christ), unknown to the
faithful is that he is a member of the secretive freemason movement.
The freemason
is a secretive society behind many calamities in the world, from planning
to control the world through force and propaganda to murders
of those who disagree with them.
Its membership includes
prominent politicians, business moguls and criminals.
In modern times, the members
are known for donating millions of shillings to charity works to hoodwink the public
of their good intentions but in reality they are criminals.
Kenya’s most famous freemason
was former President Daniel arap Moi (deceased).
During his 24-year iron fist
reign, Moi headed the secretive society but when he retired in 2002 elections
his personal aide, Joshua Kulei, took over.
During Moi’s reign, thousands
of Kenyans died in mysterious accidents that were meant to appease the gods for
Moi to rule in peace.
Train and road accidents were
common on the eve of general elections, where Moi would emerge victorious despite
stiff opposition.
Kulei, one of the top Kalenjin businessmen
funding Ruto, is credited with inducting the Deputy President to the secretive
society.
Indeed, Kenyans born in the
eighties know of the story about Moi's bodyguard who saw a snake in the former
president’s "rungu".
The
former president carried the rungu as a mark of authority.
The bodyguard who saw the snake
would later be fired and the story died with him.
At the time, Moi had been instructed by the
freemason to put a snake in Kenya's Sh100 note so as to be synonymous with the
"all seeing eye" in the dollar.
The Sh100 note was later withdrawn after the
church threatened to lead a revolt against Moi, who, like Ruto, posed as a
devout Christian.
After Moi’s retirement in 2002, Kulei took
over the freemason leadership and began preparing Ruto to be fully inducted in
the society.
As part of preparations for Ruto
to eventually lead the movement, the Deputy President was instructed to marry
off his eldest daughter to a Nigerian freemason family in order to be crowned
as the head of the African Freemason Charter.
That is why Ruto’s eldest
daughter, June, married a Nigerian, Dr Alexander Ezenagu.
Though Dr Ezenagu is an Assistant Professor in
the College of Law at Hamad Bin Khalifa University (HBKU), Qatar, his family heads
the freemason movement in Nigeria.
Ruto’s connections to freemason
were first exposed by political analyst Mutahi Ngunyi when he threw Twitter on
fire by claiming the Deputy President was a member of freemasons.
"William Ruto was created
by the FREEMASONS in the Moi government.
Fact. This is how a Chicken seller from Sugoi became the Deputy President
from nowhere. True or True?
Check history." He tweeted.
Ngunyi added that Ruto is filthy rich due to
his connections with freemason.
He added that the wheelbarrow,
which has recently been associated with Ruto’s Hustler Politics, and is the
symbol of United Democratic Alliance (UDA), is also a symbol of freemasonry.
“Did you know that the wheelbarrow
is one of the symbols of the freemasons?” Mutahi posed.
The freemasons’ secret society
has been shrouded in secrecy, myths, and conspiracies but its influence in
Kenya's history has never been in doubt.
So powerful is the society that
they at one time attempted to recruit founding President Mzee Kenyatta and then
Head of Public Service Duncan Ndegwa.
The details are contained in Phillip
Ndegwa's book ‘Walking in Kenyatta's
Struggles’ where the career civil servant shares anecdotes as
Kenyatta's aide.
He writes that at one
time, a judge of the Court of Appeal Kwash Udum tried to recruit the
first president into
freemasonry.
At the time, there were many
African elites who had been invited to join the cult and asked not to reveal
what was said or done in the freemason lodges.
To
many people, the Nairobi freemason’s hall along Nyerere Road is a byword for
evil.
The white building, which is partly hidden by
trees, is discussed in hushed tones as conspiracy theories fly over what
actually happens inside.
It
is seen as an underworld cult with strange practices, whose members are sworn
to secrecy.
The movement is shrouded in secrecy and was indeed
subject of an investigation by a presidential commission in the 1990s to probe
claims of devil worship.
However, the commission, which was headed by the
late Catholic archbishop Nichodemus Kirima, recommended more investigations.
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