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En garde! Fencing draws Nairobi youngsters away from guns.

Tsavora Fencing Mtaani club, whose name loosely translates to “great neighborhood fencing club,” is introducing teenagers living in an informal settlement in Nairobi to a sport that still conjures up visions of European aristocracy. 

Mburu Wanyoike started the club in 2021 to help stop young people from falling into gang violence, as he had done as a young man. Now, the club boasts 15 members who are on Kenya’s national squad, and Mr. Wanyoike himself has Olympic ambitions. 

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Fencing has a reputation as an elite – and sometimes elitist – sport. A group of young athletes in Nairobi, Kenya, is shattering that stereotype and forging Olympic dreams.

Fencing gives young people the discipline to escape crime and drugs, Mr. Wanyoike says. But the club’s challenges mirror broader obstacles faced by African athletes looking to compete on the world stage.

For one thing, it’s expensive. Mr. Wanyoike says it typically costs a youth fencer in Kenya about $2,500 a year to train and compete, an impossibly high sum in the neighborhood where his club is located, where most families live on less than $3 a day. He pays for many of his fencers’ expenses from his own pocket. 

“We need more competition halls, more referees, and many more fencers to attend international competitions for the sport to really grow,” says Stephen Okalo, the secretary-general of the Kenya Fencing Federation.

A police officer pointing a gun at Mburu Wanyoike’s head was his Saul-to-Paul, Damascus moment.

He was 17 years old and out for a late-night walk in Mathare, the informal settlement in the Kenyan capital where he lived. The officer was searching for members of a gang who had committed a robbery the day before, and mistakenly thought Mr. Wanyoike was one of them. 

He wasn’t, but he was also no stranger to that life. By that point, he had been a gun runner for another gang in the area for three years. He had been shot twice, and several friends had been killed.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Fencing has a reputation as an elite – and sometimes elitist – sport. A group of young athletes in Nairobi, Kenya, is shattering that stereotype and forging Olympic dreams.

But with the cop’s gun leveled at his forehead, he had a sudden realization. “I knew that I had to change my ways,” he remembers. 

He started distancing himself from his gang, and working out regularly to channel his energy in a different direction. Two years later, a fencing coach suggested he try the sport. Mr. Wanyoike was quickly hooked. In 2021, he opened a fencing club in the same neighborhood where he once smuggled guns, hoping to give other young people a positive outlet to channel their energies, too.

So far, it has been a success. Fifteen members of his club are on Kenya’s national fencing team. Mr. Wanyoike himself would have competed in the African Olympic qualifiers in Algeria recently, if torrential rains in Nariobi had not delayed his flight beyond his starting time.

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