Hundreds of worshippers from across religious, cultural and national divides on Friday briefly brought traffic to a standstill along the busy Mwea–Embu Highway in a powerful public display of faith, unity and spiritual devotion.
The pilgrims, travelling in a colourful convoy marked with blue ribbons, halted at Kianjiru near Samson Corner, a revered site at the foot of Mount Kenya, to offer prayers facing the snow-capped peak believed by many communities to be spiritually potent.
The dramatic pause — unfolding along one of Central Kenya’s busiest transport corridors — was part of an annual interfaith prayer pilgrimage that has been observed for years, quietly growing into a remarkable symbol of peaceful coexistence.
According to event organiser Samuel Kamitha, the pilgrimage follows a long-standing tradition involving seven designated prayer stopovers before reaching Mount Kenya.

“This pilgrimage is held annually. Mount Kenya holds deep spiritual significance for many people, cutting across religions and cultures,” Kamitha said.
Participants included Christians, Muslims, Hindus, Rastafarians and other faith adherents, some travelling from different parts of Kenya and even beyond its borders. Despite doctrinal differences, they were united by a shared belief in Mount Kenya as a sacred space — a place of prayer, reflection and divine encounter.
At Samson Corner, prayers were offered not only for personal needs but also for national unity, peace and leadership. Organisers used the moment to urge Kenyans to embrace harmony amid economic strain, political tension and social uncertainty.
Kamitha noted that the pilgrimage has increasingly become a platform for inter-community bonding, reinforcing cultural values that promote tolerance and mutual respect.
“This gathering brings together people who might never worship together elsewhere. It reminds us that faith can unite rather than divide,” he said.
For a brief moment, engines idled and horns fell silent as motorists watched worshippers pray by the roadside — an unusual but peaceful interruption that underscored the depth of Kenya’s spiritual landscape.
Samson Corner, long known locally as a sacred pause point, continues to attract pilgrims year after year, quietly cementing its place as one of the country’s most unique spiritual landmarks.
As traffic resumed and the convoy rolled on toward Mount Kenya, one message lingered in the air: in a nation of many beliefs, shared faith in peace still has the power to stop a highway.








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