The
only one in his family to go to school, Joseph Lekuton
left his native Kenya for the first time when he traveled to St. Lawrence.
Now a teacher at the Langley School in northern Virginia, he remains
actively involved in community development projects in rural
Kenya. Through his work with several non-profit organizations,
more than 100 nomadic children have received education scholarships
and constructed a water system delivering clean water to a dozen villages
in northern Kenya. He is the youngest recipient of Kenya's
Order of the Grand Warrior, given by the president for exemplary
service to the country. He returns to Kenya every summer, where he
lives as the Maasai tribesman that he was raised to become.
National Geographic is the publisher of a short, heartfelt memoir
by Lekuton. Facing the Lion: Growing Up Maasai on the African
Savanna is a book of cultural encounters as he recounts growing
up in a traditional nomadic way of life in Kenya (where “facing
the lion” is both a metaphor and a vivid memory). Torn between
two ways of life, he learns to accommodate both of them. Along the
way he celebrates his tribal initiation by circumcision, learns to
play soccer and speak English, gets help when drought causes his
family to have too few cattle to pay his school bills, and adapts
to being a college student halfway around the world, in a physical
and cultural climate unlike any he'd known before.
He was given St. Lawrence’s
Sol Feinstone humanitarian award in 2005. He has also
been profiled in People and Reader’s Digest for
his humanitarian efforts.