Eunice Mathu
Kenyan journalist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kenyan journalist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Eunice Njambi Mathu (born 7 April 1952) is the founder and editor-in-chief of Parents Africa, Kenya's most popular and longest running print magazine.
Eunice Njambi Mathu | |
---|---|
Born | Kikuyu Constituency, Kiambu County, Kenya | 7 April 1952
Nationality | Kenyan |
Occupation(s) | Founder, Editor-in-Chief |
Known for | Parents Africa magazine |
Children | 3 |
Njambi was born on 7 April 1952 in Kikuyu Constituency, Kiambu County as the seventh child in a family of nine. Her father passed away when she was still a young child and Njambi was raised by one parent for most of her childhood.[1][2][3]
On completing her university studies in 1975, Njambi joined Nation Newspapers as a features writer. She would later move to East Africa Industries (now Unilever Kenya) where she worked for 5 years and established the communications department. Njambi was also tasked with producing a corporate magazine. This is where she first thought of starting her own magazine. She registered her company in 1981 and Consumer Digest magazine was born in 1984. More inspiration would come in 1985 during the United Nations Third World Conference on Women held in Nairobi where she was the assistant editor for the conference's official publication.[1][4]
Njambi established Parents in 1986 and issued the launch edition in July of the same year. There were 25,000 copies and it was a sell-out. In order to ensure she balanced her work and family, she folded Consumer Digest and focused on Parents magazine. She initially produced the magazine every 2 months. It centered on family, relationships and would become the first Kenyan mainstream magazine to discuss sexual topics quite elaborately. The magazine has been on Kenyan newsstands since. The cover features regular Kenyan couples and their children with about 20 couples requesting to be put on the cover each month. According to research firm Steadman (now known as Ipsos Kenya), Parents had circulation figures of up to 40,000 and readership of 6.5 million in 2005.[1][4][5]
Source:[6]
Njambi was inspired to start a quality high school for bright girls from poor backgrounds following a conversation with Geoffrey Griffin, the founder of Starehe Boys’ Centre. Griffin had already been entertaining the thought over the years and was reserving some donor money just in case. Njambi approached a number of successful women including respected educationist Eddah Gachukia. She also got veteran industrialist Manu Chandaria involved. Once the then Education Minister George Saitoti committed to provide teachers for the school, many people and institutions joined in after that including foreign embassies and the Starehe Boys' alumni. Starehe Girls' Centre was born and is 100% free with the government providing the teachers and the donors paying the support staff. Several girls from the school have secured admission in some of the world's best universities including Yale. Njambi is a member of the school's board of trustees.[1][7]
Njambi is involved with the KCDF, an organisation that helps communities raise their living standards.[1]
Njambi is married and has 3 adult children - the first born is a banker, the second an architect and the last born recently graduated with an MBA from Duke University. The family has retained the same nanny for more than 30 years.[1]
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