A hundred years of the Moman family in East Africa
09 December 2022
A hundred years of the Moman family in East Africa
In 1937 my father Kuldip Rai Moman, aged 18, set sail for Mombasa in Kenya and joined the colonial service in Kenya.
In 1946 he married my mother Kaushalya, from Lahore, Punjab. He was passionate about the wilderness and our family grew up on safari.
At the age of 12, I first went walking in Mgahinga, in the Virungas, with my father, staying at The Travellers Rest in Kisoro, the hotel made famous by Walter Baumgartel. It was around the time that Dian Fossey started her seminal research with the gorillas high up in the Virungas. I think by then I had these romantic notions that ultimately took me back to work for the safeguarding of wilderness.
In 1972, 50 years ago this year, sadly our family’s connection with East Africa was interrupted and we were expelled from Uganda and became refugees to the U.K.
In 1997, three years after the genocide in neighbouring Rwanda, I too pitched a tent in Mgahinga National Park in southern Uganda, where I had first walked in 1966 with my father. This was the beginning of Mount Gahinga Lodge and Volcanoes Safaris.