Monday, July 05, 2010
 
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Starkey Acres residents celebrate neighbor's citizenship

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[July 05, 2010]  Saturday morning the residents along Richland Avenue in the Starkey Acres subdivision of Lincoln had their annual Fourth of July early morning block party.

HardwareThe tradition of a block party to kick off the Fourth of July weekend is something that the neighborhood has enjoyed for several years.

However, this year the party offered a little something extra: a tribute and acknowledgement of one of the city's newest U.S. citizens, Dr. Njeri Mwede Bere.

"Jerrie Berrie," as her name is pronounced, is a happy, outgoing woman born and raised in Kenya. She now lives in Starkey Acres and is a professor at Lincoln Christian University.

Last year, just a few weeks before the Fourth, she earned her citizenship in the United States of America. As a new citizen, she proudly marched with her daughter, Kena, in the Old-Fashioned Children's Parade downtown, but otherwise hasn't really made much of a fuss over her new status.

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This year, however, her neighbors decided that she deserved a full-blown celebration and therefore dedicated their annual get-together to her.

Kenya is located on the eastern side of Africa, near the equator. The six-sided country borders against Tanzania, Uganda, Sudan, Ethiopia, Somalia and the Indian Ocean. Bere grew up in the country's capital city of Nairobi, which has a population of 3,064,800.

She first came to the U.S. in 1993 for her graduate studies at Indiana University. At that time, she intended to stay only for her education and then return to her homeland.

As part of her studies, she was appointed to teach for one year at Illinois Wesleyan University in Normal. When the year was completed, the university offered her a position, assisted with her green card and made it possible for her to stay in the United States for another five years.

Along the way, she brought her daughter, Kena, into the world. Born in the U.S., Kena was automatically a citizen even though her mother was not.

Bere said that making the decision to stay in America was based on her daughter and her career, and that she feels she owes Wesleyan University a great deal for encouraging her to stay.

Ron Keller, who with wife Cindy hosted the annual Starkey Acres block party this year, talked about Bere and the community's decision to honor her.

"She has a fantastic sense of humor and is a wonderful gal to have in our neighborhood. You don't see this kind of thing happen every day, you don't have a new citizen in your neighborhood, and we need to celebrate that," he said.

"This is what (the Fourth) is about anyway," he added. "Celebrating not just what has happened in the past, but also the fact that it still happens, which is a real compliment to our country and who we are."

As part of the celebration, Mayor Keith Snyder paid a visit to the party this year, offering his congratulations along with a memento of the occasion.

Snyder spoke to the neighborhood group, saying: "It is a great day! We're not only celebrating our country's independence, but we're also celebrating with Njeri her one-year anniversary (as a citizen).

"I thought maybe one of Lincoln's newest citizens needed a picture book about Lincoln's namesake. I've started inscribing it, but I need everybody here to do something. I need you sign it too so Njeri will have it as a memento."

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The mayor's inscription read: "presented to Njeri on July 3rd 2010. Congratulations to Lincoln's newest citizen. Best wishes on living out your life-sized American Dream."

Keller also made a presentation to Bere. Giving her a badge donated by one of the neighbors, and a wooden baton, he named her the grand marshal of this year's parade.

Bere and Keller drew a happy laugh from the audience as she piped up, "I've never done this in Kenya!" to which Keller responded, "And I'm afraid she'll take it a little too seriously telling everybody where to go!"

When the parade took off, Bere happily led the way, wearing her marshal's badge, carrying her baton and waving a small American flag all around the block.

Afterward she spoke briefly about what she feels toward her new country and her citizenship.

"This is like being a new mother," she said. "When you have a baby, you don't just say, 'Yeah, I have a baby!' You feel the responsibility; you want to do the right thing because whatever you do impacts other people.

"I feel very responsible; I want to do the right thing for my country," she commented.

"One of the things that I have really taken to is praying for the country and praying for the president," she added. "I feel there is no need to criticize what is going on, but as a Christian citizen, I have to pray."

Born and raised in Kenya, and with her mother and grandmother still there, that country will always be Bere's first home, but now she knows that as a citizen of the United States and a member of the Starkey Acres community, she has a new home, a new sense of belonging that she truly values.

In Kenya there are two major languages: English and Kiswahili, also known as Swahili. It is a language with happy-sounding words such as "Jambo" for "hello or greetings," "Asante sana" for "thank you very much" and "Hongera" for "congratulations."

In her honor it seems only fitting to end this story with a message bearing her two languages now blended together: Hongera, Njeri! Asante sana for choosing to be a part of our country and our community!

[By NILA SMITH]

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