Malindi is a Swahili city. Like the other cities (Lamu, Mombasa, Zanzibar) of the Swahili Coast, there is a rich history of interaction with the Indian Ocean. You can see the Arabic, Islamic, and Indian influences in the architecture and the food. But Malindi seems to be a bit more European than the others.
The main museum is called the House of Columns, and it's a great example of Swahili architecture.
When you first walk enter the museum, there is an exhibit the coelacanth that was found in the harbor in the early twentieth century. I had never heard of the coelacanth until yesterday, but I now know a lot more. Instead of simply narrating the story of finding a coelacanth, the exhibit is set up with signs that pretend to be a talking fish asking you to guess what he/she/it is. The exhibit was a bit weird because it felt like an exhibit designed for a five year old, but it lacked the other sorts of things exhibits for kids have.
On the upper level, there were rooms full of an exhibit on Vasco da Gama. But instead of having any artifacts or items, there were simply about twenty posters narrating the story of Vasco da Gama being the first European to sail directly to India. The odd thing about the posters is that they were written from an Eurocentric perspective. Da Gama "discovered" the route to Europe - despite non-Europeans sailing across the Indian Ocean for over a thousand years in 1498. Da Gama also got around the "Muslim stranglehold" to reach India, which seemed an especially odd description in a museum in a Muslim town. Not a single poster looked at da Gama's voyage from a non-Eurocentric perspective, other than to mention briefly the help that Ahmad ibn Majid, an Arab navigator, provided him in sailing across the Indian Ocean to reach India.
There is also a Vasco da Gama pilar that he set up at the southern edge of the harbor in the early sixteenth century, so Portuguese sailors could find Malindi again. Other than a few busloads of school children who quickly visited and left, I was the only person at the pillar. It was the same experience at the beautiful little Portuguese chapel, which was also built in the early sixteenth century.
But despite the prehistoric fish and Vasco da Gama, the main attraction in Malindi seems to be the beach. The town has been overrun by Italians. Most of them seem to shuttle between the beach, the tasty Italian restaurants, the mozzarella cheese shop, and the gelateria. The history of Malindi may seem to be ancient to most of its visitors, but you can still get a good espresso.

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