Category: Arts & Life

  • Saro The Musical: A spectacle on stage

    Saro The Musical: A spectacle on stage

    Like Fela on Broadway, Saro: The Musical made a successful debut in 2013. This weekend the musical concert will return to the Shell Hall, Muson Centre, Lagos with spectacle and colours. Ben Tomoloju reviews the six -day performances holding this Easter.

    It pesters. SARO pesters. From the conceptual stage right through the entire production process, it pesters like a bundle of joy wriggling its way into life, and with it a rapturous celebration of music, drama, culture and history.

    This is the feeling evoked on one’s mind by Saro The Musical, created and produced by Bolanle Austen-Peters and scripted by Seun Kentebe and Thomas Odia.

    It has been showcased twice between 2013 and 2014. It made its debut at the grand ballroom of Oriental Hotel, Victoria Island the year before. The second outing, titled: Saro The Musical 2, took place during the last yuletide with a clear evidence of the progressive imagination of a creative visioner.

    The object of this piece is essentially the sustainability of quality cultural expression of which Saro The Musical is a reference point, but not without a piquant exposition of content and style.

    ‘Saro’ explores the odyssey of Brazilian returnees after the abolition of slavery and slave-trade in the mid-19th Century. The returnees migrated from Sierra Leone to Lagos.

    Etymologically, ‘Saro’ is a Yoruba derivation from the ‘Sierra’, which also explains the historical fact that there is a thriving Yoruba community in Sierra Leone with some members bearing original Yoruba names up till this day.

    According to the lead character, a culture connoisseur and unofficial historian, Don Ceeto: ‘We are Saro descendants. In the beginning of the 1830s, our forefathers were freed slaves who migrated from Sierra Leone to Nigeria. Most of them were well-trained and experienced in medicine, law and the civil service whilst in Sierra Leone….When they arrived, they settled in Ebute-Metta, Yaba and Olowogbowo….The Saros were known for their travel in pursuit of freedom and commercial opportunity.’

    The expose went on with details of the elitism and cosmopolitanism that characterise this breed of Nigerians, summing up the thematic thrust of the creative exploration.

    What follows is a dramatic quest, a country-to-city migration of four musically-gifted village boys – Laitan, Azeez, Efe and Obaro – in search of the golden fleece in Lagos City.

    In the city, they are dazzled by the ritzy cityscape, the hustle and bustle and, of course, the menacing culture-shock that lands them right in the midst of pimps, pick-pockets, prostitutes, area-boys and all manners of social derelicts. In one swoop of a comically enacted raid, they end up in a police-cell. Right there in the cell, they raise their voices in an exciting, self-consolatory rendition of Bobby McFerrin’s ‘Don’t Worry, Be Happy.’ And this turns out to be providential.

    Don Ceeto, the dreamer, visioner and benevolent godfather is around to bail out one of his boys from the cell. The song filters to his hearing. Deeply impressed, he also bails out the village quartet, takes them into his creative custody and grooms them for his dream-musical project, SARO.

    Between the odyssey of the Saros and the village-to-city migration of the quartet, Don Ceeto identifies a historical parallel, underscored by the drive for self-actualisation through vintage cultural expression. The main vehicle, this time around, is music, while other forms of art – dramatic and spectacular – fall in place in the unfolding plot.

    Don Ceeto grooms the boys in his studio. He discovers that even his own secretary, Jane, is also a fantastic singer and co-opts her into the group. Don is crazy about talents. He has an eye for excellence. He brooks no nonsense, not even from his own pampered, overbearing daughter, Ronke. He exposes the boys to a broad spectrum of Lagos life – secular and spiritual – to bring them to fullest terms with his ideology. He hones their skill to be at par with the sophistication which his new vision of cosmopolitan African culture represents.

    Thereafter, the young singers are replete with confidence and, in contemporary parlance, one of them interjects the conversations with, ‘We don blow!’

    The show, from curtain-rise to curtain-call, was a titillating interplay of sight and sound, rich, whimsical dialogue and comic relief. No dull moment.

    It opened with a dance exposition, complemented by colourful costumes – red on black and an aerial pattern toned with a curvilinear play on fans – which was as symbolic as it brought to mind an aesthete’s religion of beauty.

    Through this the music flowed. It flowed  from the folk-songs of the Delta to Yoruba Bata merged with a pan-Nigerian dance and musical revue woven into the afro-fusion effect of Lagbaja’s ‘Africalypso’.

    Africa, in its idyllic setting, was projected on the big screen on the cyclorama showing a serene, romantic Kutuenji (the quartet’s village). The raw talent of the village singers was displayed against this background in a local festival. So was the scene involving the parting of two love-birds, Laitan and Rume, as they delivered the hair-raising song ‘Ma Gbagbe Mi’ (Don’t Forget Me), backed by the polyphonic orchestration of a compact chorus.

    One song sailed into another with unbridled fluidity from the boundless repertoire of Nigerian music; highlife, juju, apala, and a medley of contemporary pop.

    Scenes dissolved, one into another introducing new segments. Lagos welcomed the village boys with a bold projection of ‘Baba Meta’, the iconic statue of three white-cap chiefs that adorn the Lagos State Gateway at Alausa. At other points, it was either the high-rise buildings or a legion of yellow-buses that depicted on the big-screen the peculiarities of Lagos in sympathetic correlation with the action on stage. There were several other pictures projected and, in turns, they heightened the visual appeal of the presentation.

    Actions, in Saro, were so pacy, varied and variegated that members of the audience were sometimes propelled to the edges of their seats. Songs were enchanting, dances scintillating. The music was pulsating, just as the acrobatics were spectacular.

    From ordinary sketches to full-blown enactments, the dramatic elements made compelling statements about our cultural reality, its delicate mix and variety. Religion found a place in it, as Jane’s church choir, later joined by the quartet, treated the audience to soul-lifting performances of ‘Jesus Na You Be Oga’ and ‘Bridge Over Troubled Waters’.

    Then came the show-stopper before the show-stopper, a performance of John Legend’s ‘All For Me’, remixed by Kunle Ogunrombi. With dynamic showmanship and vocal dexterity, the singer opened with the original western pop and suddenly adapts it to a throbbing, syncopative and dance-effective Fuji idiom. The applause was deafening.

    But the ultimate show-stopper was the performance of Fela Anikulapo-Kuti’s ‘Water No Get Enemy’. The MC’s line whet the appetite. The introduction of the act tuned the musical palate to salivate on a special dish from a grand-master. And, at the mention of ‘Fela’, there was a mirthful explosion our hilarity, whistling, hooting, cat-calls and hauling of ‘Eleniyan!’, synchronised with the fire-effect on the massive screen. The horns led the way with their tuneful harmony, followed by throbbing beats from African drums and the dialogue of the strings. Then spritelike dance-maidens stepped in, wiggling their waists in electrifying waves. The rest was the climax of an evening entertainment that led you to a soothing dream.

    But behind these well-deserved was a lot of hard-work. There were well over a hundred members of cast and crew in the ensemble and the skills they displayed were buoyant. From the majors to the minors and extending to the technical personnel there was clear evidence of the essential synergy.

    The quartet, Azeez (Paul Alumona/Frank Konwah), Laitan (Patrick Duabua), Efe (Paulo Sisiano) and Obaro (Gideon Okeke) evinced such ebullience and versatility that places them in the ranks of total performers, follow-ups to Nigerian classic examples like Jimi Solanke, Tunji Oyelana and Tunji Sotimirin. The same applies to petit and vibrant Adejoke Laoye who brilliantly performed the role of Jane in dual capacity of actor and singer.

    All said, except for a snappy instance of distractive mannerism by Efe and Ronke, an unguarded drift of the follow-spot and intrusive puff of the smoke-effect, the entire package was phenomenal. Team-spirit was taut and indicative of the qualitative pliability of individual talent.

    A very important point to note in SARO is the input of a new generation of directors; Kenneth Uphopho (Drama), Yusuf Gbenga (Dance), Ayo Ajayi (Music), their very able Stage-manager, Ibukun Fasuhan and Costumier, Juliana Dede. These young thespians not only showed their resourcefulness and accomplishment on the big stage, they also leave one with the confidence that a brighter future awaits Nigerian theatre given the right kind of encouragement and support.

    At the peak of it all, the commanding presence of Dolapo Ogunwale (Producer) and Bimbo Manuel was nothing less than edifying. The duo brought on stage robust experiences in oral communication, through sound and compelling elocution as well as spontaneity in speech and action where the occasion demanded it. Manuel’s stage charisma was a delight. It matched effectively the scripted role of the man in control, Don Ceeto, the captain in an artistic voyage who effortlessly stitched one scene to another with the proficiency of a master.

    On that uplifting note, Saro The Musical 2 lived up to its billing. The audience could only shout ‘Encore’.

    That ‘encore’ should come. A classy piece like Saro should enjoy optimal presentation. Its viability is already vindicated in virtually every department of theatre production, so much that government, the business community and other interest groups can tap into it for all the relevant promotional objectives.

    *Tomoloju is the former Deputy Editor,The Guardian, Lagos.

     

  • NTDC gets more information desk

    After commissioning of its  Information Desk at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja, the Nigerian Tourism Development Corporation last week unveiled two more desks at the local wing of the Murtala Mohammed Airport (MMA2) and General Aviation Terminal (GAT) in Ikeja, Lagos. The events were witnessed by Group Managing Director, Viko Nigeria Limited Mr  Lucky Chidi Kanu, CEO, Bi-Courtney Nigeria LImted, Mr Christophe Penninck and Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) Head of Operation, Mr  Dennis Okogwu.

    The facilities, a joint venture between NTDC and Viko Group of Companies will provide real time update to travelers on their flights, hotel booking, car hire services and tourism sites across the country.

    NTDC Director-General Mrs Sally Mbanefo said the partnership is to create awareness for the nation’s tourism sites, reduce man-hour loss of travellers; improve life expectancy of Nigerians and encourage human traffic to sites across the country. She stated that with the opening of other desks in Port Harcourt and Kano international airports, the facilities would increase the tourism contributions to the nation’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

    She said passengers can browse for free and in in same portalaccess and view the tourism sites, tourism activities, as well as make enquiries and book excursions.

    “The portal of the corporations is open to the public and tourists. But with this partnership with Viko it has further been exposed to the travelers at our major airports in the country. Today, the Lagos domestic wing has joined the Abuja which was unveiled recently. Kano and Port Harcourt airports are the next airports that we will mount our information desks. The two approvals we got from the Aviation Minister are what we have implemented,” she said.

    Mbanefo used the occasion to seek partnership from Nigerians to be able to launch  the Tourism TV game show approved by the NTDC board last year.

    Kanu said the facilities are meant to ensure pleasant travel experience by providing real time update to travelers thereby reducing their stress on issues of flight delay, rescheduling, boarding time, departure and arrival time.  He stated that the 23 inches touch screen computer monitor on the desk allows individual travelers to get update on his flight at no cost except the personalised option that sends update to telephone lines.

    “We have packaged a comprehensive real time information platform for air travelers and we believe that with access to this platform, travelers can find alternatives when their trips are not going as planned. We also have a comprehensive list of hotels across the country with a direct contact line for easy reservation.

    “The facility has several networks for its operations in order to offer 24/7 services. At MMA 2 alone, we are targeting at between 5000 and 8000 passengers each day,” Mr. Kanu added.

     

  • Hotel, tourism conference to host 30 countries

    Preparations are gearing up towards the Nigerian Hotel and Tourism Investment Conference.

    The event, which is meant to bring key players in the hospitality and tourism sector together as an avenue to promote Nigerian tourism potentials, is the brainchild of Jonel hospitality, an integrated and comprehensive hospitality consulting company.

    The conference, according to Jonel Hospitality Managing partner, Brian Efa, is meant to be a focal point as the government strives towards the diversification of its economy.

    He made the statement at a briefing in Lagos, adding that more than 200 industry professionals from 30 countries are expected to attend.  “The event is meant to be a networking hub and would serve as expos of investment opportunities in the hospitality sector with a mind of creating employment for the youth.

    “And there will also be a significant increase in participants from the Middle East and North Africa. This clearly demonstrates the regional appeal of the event and reflects the heightened activity in hotel investment through the country,” Efa said.

     

  • Gospel artiste Obiwon  gets double recognition

    Gospel artiste Obiwon gets double recognition

    Urban Gospel artiste and music minister Obiora Obiwon received two awards at themaiden edition of Applause Magazine Achievers Awards.

    Obiwon received Album of the Year and Collaboration of the Year awards, which, the organisers said, were in recognition of the artistes’s album ‘Gold Water’ and his Hiphop influenced single‘Hail My King’ which featured Frank Edwards, Eben and Kenny K’ore.

    “I am touched and surprised again to be honoured twice,” Obiwon said.

    From his early childhood on the streets of Enugu, Obiwon has displayed his affinity for music. After his initial stints with a hiphop group Thorobreds, in 2005 Obiwon debuted as a solo RnB/Soul artiste. In 2008, Obiwon revealed he had undergone a deep spiritual experience and subsequently switched musical focus to the Christian/gospel genre. He has since continued to impact the Nigerian scene with his songs.

    “I am now looking excitedly at the rest of this anniversary year. This is my 10th anniversary and projects… Glory to God alone… “

    The event, which held in Sheraton Hotels, Ikeja, was organised Applause Magazinewith Salvation Crusaders Media, creators of the ‘Minstrels TV Show’ on Dove Television and the National Drama Unit of the by the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG).

    The award categories cut across several Christian/gospel accomplishments, including Artiste of the Year (Musical), Actor of the Year (Movies), Movie of the Year, Song of the Year, New Artiste of the Year, Best Male and Best Female Vocalist, among others.

     

  • Museum as an agent  of change, innovation

    Museum as an agent of change, innovation

    Museum has been defined differently by scholars. It is a place where heritage materials are kept for display, learning and relaxation and have been seen as a non-profitable institution where people view and enjoy the display of cultural heritage. In 1979, ICOM defines museum as a non-profitable permanent institution in the service of the society and its developments, opened to the public, which acquires, conserves, researches, communicates and exhibits for the purpose of study, education and enjoyment, material evidence of man and his environment.

    In 2004, as a rejoinder at the Curators’ seminar in Calabar, Cross Rivers State, museum curators countered the non-profitable ICOM definition of museum since museums are now generating funds for their upkeep.

    Changerefers to outcomes, results, accomplishments or preconditions. It can also be defined as a passing from one phase to another thus making a variety. Innovation on the other hand means, a new way of doing something: incremental, radical and revolutionary, changes in thinking, products, processes or organizations. Innovations are ideas applied successfully: in organizational context; it is linked to performance and growth through improvement in efficiency, productivity, quality, competitive, positioning, market shares. All organizations try to be innovative in their operations: hospitals, universities, governments etc. As individuals, innovation occurs when someone uses an idea or invention to change the world outlook;how people organize and conduct themselves. Innovation is distinct from improvement in that it permeates society and causes reorganization. It is also distinct from problem solving but may cause problems, in this view, it has positive or negative results but it is generally understood as a successful introduction of a new thing or method.

    Innovation is therefore an embodiment of combinations, or synthesis of original knowledge, relevant, valued as new products, processes or services which begins with creative ideas. Innovation can fail if it is seen as an organisational process whose success stems from a mechanistic approach because it has an emphasis on control, enforcement and structure, but it is the only partial truth in achieving development and can be used to counter an organization’s orthodoxy. However, space for fair hearing of innovative ideas is required to balance the potential of auto-immune-exclusion that quells an infant innovative culture.

    A newly born child in Africa, Asia, America or Europe is born without knowledge or culture. Education is designed to guide such a child in learning a particular culture, model his/her behavior towards his eventual role in the society. In pre-literate societies with no formal learning system the entire environment the activities served as school while the adults served as teachers.

    As societies grow more complex the quality and quantum of knowledge to be passed on from one generation to another hence, the more selective means and efficient means of cultural transmission. The outcome of this is formal education: the school and the specialists called teachers. Overtime, societies grew more complex and schools became institutionalised, experiences gained therefore became far less directly related to daily life: less a matter of showing and learning in the context of the work a day world, abstraction from practices, distilling, telling and learning things out of contexts.

    The concentration of learning in formal atmosphere allows the child to learn his/her culture through observation and imitation. The society attaches more importance to education, in that it also began to formulate the overall objectives, content, organization and strategies for education giving birth to education as a distinguished discipline that is constantly being refined and redefined in various countries to meet national goals and aspirations.

    The museum has as part of its roles to the society the duty of transmitting cultural roles from generation to the other; therefore museum education is the transmission of cultural information of a given society from one generation to another using the platform of museum exhibitions. From museum inceptions, one of the fundamental objectives of the museum is to educate by using its collections and exhibits. Therefore, it follows that museum education is an in-depth transfer of pertinent “cult” information using museum exhibits, this process should not be evaluated in terms of what is imparted, but also on how it received and further transferred. Therefore, the aim of the museum education to foster contact between people (children or adults) and its exhibits, not to teach the facts alone but to sow a seed of interest and a spark of inspiration.

    Purposes of museum education are many, among which are: promotion of public awareness, developing the creative capabilities of the visitors, interpreting museum collections to all categories of people; promoting the museum institution as a centre of public learning. Museum’s educational role therefore is to liaise with formal education authorities when school curriculum and scheme are prepared. Museum education liaises with formal education authorities to enhancing the planning of school curriculum. It can also provide space for teaching groups of people within museum premises. In this wise, it help the informal learning system. It is the function of museum education to improve the provision of facilities for visitors particularly for schools, families and even disabled people.

    The museum is an educational resource centre that aids in the field of human learning. A Chinese proverbs says “a look is worth a thousand words”, illustrates the values of viewing, teaching and learning. Having resource materials at hand results in a more effective learning process of facts, information and skills in a short period of time than verbalisation. When properly used, resource materials can facilitate the following supplying of a concrete basis for conceptual thinking they making learning more permanent through reality of experience and self-activity thereby developing continuity. Resources like motion pictures, museum objects etc contribute to the growth of meaning and concepts. First hand experiences not easily obtained elsewhere are gotten from the museum resources and display. Museums all over the world are replete with many resource materials ranging from educational, archeological, ethnological, architectural, and natural history materials. The museum is a vital element in establishing a national cultural identity and the transmission of cultural heritage. The museum is a repository for many kinds of research, and in most cases it has a well equipped libraries, life specimen manuscripts, research results often very useful as educational materials.

    •Adedokun is of the National Museum, Osogbo.

  • Who are you?

    Too many people hold on to the past and allow the negative experiences of the past define their present and future. This should not be. Where you are coming from should not in any way determine where you going.

    In his book, The Call; The Passion; The Destiny, Abiodun Mabadeje helps you understand that the success you desire to attain is predicated on how you move from your present state into the future you desire, irrespective of the circumstances of your past. If you desire to move forward, you cannot keep looking back into your ‘unfortunate past’.

    Life is full of challenges. The road is never smooth for anyone and running away from challenges will not solve them. Many dwell only on what they have gone through in life, unable to look beyond their past or present circumstances. To succeed, you have to confront and overcome your circumstances. You must not allow fear and pessimism hold you back.

    One very fundamental point the book explains in the detail, which many people are ignorant of, is the law of attraction. To succeed, you have to align yourself with the reality of the Law of Attraction. This Law states that “I attract into my life whatever I give my attention, energy and focus to, whether positive or negative.”

    This raises questions which you must answer: “What do you give your attention to? What do you focus on? What do you expend our energy on?” When you fill your mind with negative thoughts, the Law of Attraction states that you will simply get more of the same. It is time for you to think deeply so as to determine whether the challenges you currently face are self-afflicted as a result of attraction or by reason of your thoughts.

    In Chapter Two, the author raises another critical question: “Who are you?” This is a question of identity. It is one you must answer, because if you do not know who you are, you will not know what you are about or why you are here.

    If you cannot answer this question, you will have the problem of misplaced identity. Many people are trying to be who they are not – they talk, walk and even dress like someone else. Knowing who you are helps you function as you should; living your own life and not someone else’s.

    You must note that to truly identify who you are you must go back to your source, the One who created you – God Almighty – because you were created not by accident but to fulfill destiny. He has the blueprint of your life.

    As the author clearly states, you MUST have a vision: a comprehensive sense of who you are and where you are going.  Anyone without a vision does not have a future. Your vision might seem gigantic and your challenges insurmountable. However, keep the Law of Attraction in mind, envisage the future you want, forget the past and project into the future.

    Everyone is called to do something or be something.  What are you called to do or be? It is time to step out and be bold, bearing in mind the Law of Cause and Effect; that actions determine reactions and input determines output.

    Get out of the “Good Old Days” mentality. To live in the future you dream of, consider the words of Isaac Newton, “Everything (or object, or life) remains in a state of constant rest until an external force is applied”, and do what you need to do right away.

     

     

  • Temple hosts Kainebi, Isichei

    Temple hosts Kainebi, Isichei

    AN art exhibition by Rom Isichei and Kainebi Osahenye, opened penultimate Monday at Temple Muse, Victoria Island, Lagos.

    The exhibition of 35 paintings and mixed media works shows an intense exploration of texture, colour, scale, style, and technique by two internationally recognised experimental artists.

    It is curated by Sandra Mbanefo Obiago and supported by Temple Muse and Ruinart and runs till end of April.

    Isichei’s 15 artworks are mostly figurative in composition, focusing on society’s self-obsession and excess consumerism while searching for ideal beauty. His large works are sometimes heavily textured, sculptural mixed media paintings in which he uses glue, sawdust, acrylic paste, and kitchen towels to build up tactile surfaces. At other times, we see a master painter at work, using intricate lines and strokes which are more classical in nature. His subjects look contemplative, while inhabiting a world of red energy which is expertly juxtaposed by quiet reflective gazes.

    Isichei’s broad stylistic diversity is also seen in four unique archival prints from his deification series in which he presents faces created out of found objects such as corks, wire, plastic plates, clips and even a cleaning mop, over which he paints and drizzles with an intense abandonment. “The deification series are mixed media, enhanced archival prints that reference themes of consumerism, excess, and object transmutation which negotiate between local and global culture,” Isichei explains.

    These works are juxtaposed with Kainebi’s intense exploration of the human conditions through intricately layered, small and large collages of hundreds of eyes, which have been cut out of paper and stuck across canvases p

    Osahenye uses repetition and clustering of eyes to reflect on themes of spirituality, materiality, instability and redemption. Moving away from his usual large scale installations of found objects including water bottles, burnt, crushed and flattened beverage cans, the artist for the first time is showing a series of much smaller works.

    “Our world is suffocated with things. Lagos, the city where I live and work, typifies crowdedness. So, I use an assortment of objects to tackle issues of consumerism, spirituality and the environment,” Osahenye explained.

    Osahenye also presents works from his Isolation series in which he paints human figures curled into themselves suspended and almost floating across planes of colour – a totally different vibe from his pulsating, multi-layered busy, repetitive collages.  Viewers see the outer-layer of isolation in some pieces while, at a closer look, a world of eyes comes into view, reflecting a suffocating, over-populated, soul-searching society looking for redemption.

    Both artists are graduates of the Yaba College of Technology, Lagos and recently completed their Masters in Fine Arts in the United Kingdom.

    Osahenye graduated from Goldsmith’s College while Isichei graduated from the Chelsea College of Art & Design. They have held group and solo exhibitions in Nigeria as well as in the United Kingdom, Germany, the Netherlands and the United States.

  • Towards rebuilding a derelict society

    To what extent can honesty and personal integrity inform a positive change in governance across all ramifications? The book-‘Honesty/personal integrity still the best policy…How Fashola became Governor’ tells it all.

    The book is simply an expose on how virtues such as integrity and honesty can promote and exalt individuals and societies. The author Grace Fehintolaoluwa Osifekun, espouses how a nation like Nigeria facing economic and social challenges can triumph over her present travails.

    According to Osifekun, the book is a reproduction of address delivered by the distinguished lawyer/academic and running mate to General Muhammadu Buhari under the All Progressives Congress (APC) platform Prof Yemi Osinbajo (SAN).

    The talk, Osifekun recalled to The Nation, was delivered by Pastor Osinbajo during an annual conference organised by a popular church in Ilupeju, Lagos with the theme Divine Abundance in 2010. ‘From the very day the message was delivered, Osifekun flashed back “I felt it was not a message for the local church but for all Nigerians. By chance, two years later, I met Pastor Osinbajo at a function and I asked for his permission to transcribe the message for public consumption. Pastor Osinbajo gave me the approval. The title of the message was: The challenges of our time. The book which iswell garnished with lots of Biblica quotes, argues that each time a society experiences a setback, its citizenry especially Christians should have themselves to blame rather than point fingers of accusations at government. “The word of God says you and I must provide direction. Mather 5:14 says: “You’re the light of the world. A city that is set of a hill cannot be hid….

    “In other words, it is your responsibility and my responsibility as far as the Bible is concerned. It belongs to you and I to define that direction for our generation, to define the direction of our community. In other words, who is responsible for what we are experiencing today…It is you and I who are called by the name of Jesus Christ,” Osinbajo argues in the book.

    The book provides several examples of societies like the UK, USA and Japan, once riddled with corruption but were reformed and serve as models to other countries today through the instrumentality of the Protestants who exhibited certain principles contained in the Gospel of Christ. The book outline the principles to include: honesty/personal integrity, handwork and innovation, modesty and frugality, as well as time management and precision. Osinbajo argues that at that time, the aforementioned societies sank their diverse cultures, adopting Christ’s.

    “People will say today, that the English man’s word is his bond. That is simply taken purely out of scriptures.  It was because the Puritans insisted that your yes must be yes and let your no be no, in accordance with the teachings of Jesus Christ,” the book posits.

    Just as the Puritans provoked industrial revolution in Europe, Osinbajo tasks Christians in other parts of the world to do same and make a difference in their immediate environment.

    “The factories in Europe, 75 per cent of them were started and owned by born-again Christians…As they began to change their nation, everyone began to pay attention. Later some born-again Christians, some Puritans went to America, those who were described as pilgrim fathers…three men led these men…all of them with the same puritanical ideals, that was later to transform America.” As Christians, Osinbajo said one should make a difference by being very committed and hardworking. “People must know that a Christian works here. If people do not know, there is something wrong. If we’re complaining ‘My boss is an unbeliever! Don’t mind him! In fact, witches fly all over our office…! Trust me, you are not the Christians that you ought to be. We’re supposed to be examples of Christianity in every way.”

    Using the Nigerian example, Osinbajo laments that most Nigerians Christians inclusive, have lost the virtue of honesty and integrity even in little things.

    “…But all of us called by the name of Jesus Christ, we are the people who must set the standard. Without us, the world and our nation are already in chaos.  We are the ones who must set the standard of honesty and integrity, that high standard.”

    Honesty and integrity, Osinbajo explained, catapulted outgoing Governor of Lagos State Babatunde Raji Fashola for the top job.

    Osinbajo recalled how according to the former Lagos State Governor Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, he entrusted his property to him (Fashola) and fled into exile at the height of persecution of NADECO members by General Sanni Abacha’s government.

    Tinubu, in the book, was aid to have returned to the country four years later only to find his property in Fashola’s care still intact, including money of some property Fashola sold off on his client’s behalf.

    “Not one kobo was missing” Osinbajo said while quoting Tinubu. “I am an auditor so if he (Fashola) borrowed the money and replaced it, I would see that he had borrowed and replaced. ..I even asked him ‘you should have…when you were looking for money for a fairly used car…” “This is a book every family should have” Osifekun said’ “I am very sure and confident that no one will regret going through this book. It is that preaches virtues that can make a home and society thrive regardless of ethnic or religious affiliations,” she concluded.

  • Osofisan’s Midnight Hotel goes on stage

    Osofisan’s Midnight Hotel goes on stage

    The Chief Executive Officer Thespian Family Theatre and Production, Mrs. Ayodele Jaiyesimi captures the essence of two plays Femi Osofisan’s Midnight Hotel and The Wizard of Law to be presented by the company in Lagos April 4 to 6.

    zulu Sofola’s The Wizard of Law was presented last Saturday and Sunday in Ikoyi, Lagos.

    Jaiyesimi said: “Asthespians, we desire to produce theatrical works that focus on making Nigeria a great nation. Beyond money and fame, we want to see how we can reshape the people’s thinking and actions for the good of all.”

    Jaiyesimi, who spoke with Arts Editors in Lagos, said as a follow up to last year’s presentation in Lagos, Ola Rotimi’s The Gods Are Not to Blame will go on performance tour of United Kingdom between April 26 and 30 at the Lost Theatre, London. Midnight Hotel is directed by Israel Eboh while Sola Roberts directs The Wizard of Law. 

    She said the audience of TFT is not limited to Nigeria alone, adding that ‘we are impacting Nigeria and the Diaspora. As we speak unto Nigerians at home, we do same for Diaspora as well as to our friends in the world.’

    On the cost of taking The Gods Are Not to Blame to London, she said production budget is modest and affordable because ‘we have good sponsors this year. And this has enabled us to do well.’

    The London show which is a collaboration between Thespian Family Theatre and Production and Heavywind managed by a UK-based Nigerian artiste, Lookman Sanusi is to  present the authentic African culture (heritage) to the Diaspora and the globe especially at a time when Nigeria is going through trying moments. Europe-based Nigerian actors are expected to be part of the casts.

    Eboh said the focus of Midnight Hotel, which is a comedy, is to interrogate how Nigerians have been raped by the political and military class, issues of religion and ethnicity, how citizens have not called the leaders to account for their stewardship and how disappointed Nigerians have been. “To make Nigeria better, we all have a role to play. We must take responsibility,” he added

    Osinaike, who acts Jimoh in Midnight Hotel, said his role symbolically represents the minds of the masses in a country where is so much of impunity. “At this time in Nigeria, we must take something serious and that I will do to my role as Jimoh,” he noted.

    Lead actor in The Wizard of Law Abiodun Kazeem (Ramoni Alao) said the play reflects the vicious cycle of corruption in the country, saying: “the joy for me is to make people laugh at ourselves’ misdeeds.”

     

  • Story of the river people

    Written in first person narrative, the short story was set in a village called Obir in Port Harcourt, South-South of Nigeria. (The writer’s maternal village).

    The writer focuses on the time of his life from the early 90’s to the year 2000; during this period the British had built gigantic oil refineries in the Niger Delta but the people were impoverished and their youths were not employed in the companies, yet the community suffered oil spill.

    He described his mother’s village as more civilised than his father’s. According to the writer, just like his father’s village he imagined his mother’s village to be characterised by “rustic setting where children played hide and seek with relish; where they frolicked in the sand and listened to moonlight tales of Tortoise, the antagonist of lore. I dreamt of a place where elderly men made merry with companions as palm wine flowed from calabashes to enthusiastic throats in front of huts roofed with bamboo and raffia. And I envisioned maidens with lithe limbs returning from the farm or marked with trays of ukwa and ogiri balanced on their heads.”

    But when he got there to spend his holidays as his father had travelled to England to study, he discovered his mother’s village had big structures of oil refinery and a maze of oil pipelines.

    In irony, the writer showed that even with the difference, appearance of the villages, the people of his father’s village were happier as they didn’t suffer oil spill or lived in abject poverty.

    Ogochukwukamma (The writer) soon settled in his mother’s village and had a friend called Sangha who showed and took him everywhere.

    The writer showed he was an intelligent child when he mentioned that he was only nine and read Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart from his mama’s library, and Ngugi Wa Thiongo’s Weep Not Child and many other African books even though they were just to overcome the sultry tiring days.

    He expressed this when he stated that his mama was surprised that he could read the books at that age.

    In the beginning of the story he said ‘Tuesday died on Thursday’ but didn’t explain who Tuesday was until he and Sangha were coming from the River Pama, they arrived at a field crossed by an oil pipeline, Sangha asked him to wait then went to defecate. A man materialised from nowhere and Ogochukwukamma froze.

    He described the man as looking grim, “his eyes were jaundiced, the colour of sunset. Fear gripped me and my heart beat faster. The man was huge and dark in complexion. When he said, ‘how are you?’ his voice appeared to come through a loud speaker. A lump in my throat stifled the reply forming in my mouth. ‘What are you doing here, he said with greater, if intended menace.”

    He continued: “Trembling I let go of the fish. ‘Are u waiting for somebody?’ No, yes, I said as I stopped to pick the sand-ridden fish. When he walked past me with a cutlass in his hand onto the path we had just left, I watched him from the corner of my eyes to make sure he didn’t swing at my neck with the double-edged machete that looked more like a sword.”

    Sangha revealed the man’s identity to be Tuesday, popularly called old soldier because he was a former soldier.

    Sangha further explained that Tuesday owned the fish pond near where he defecated, how many people are afraid of him and how he is fearless of even the British. “He told us that one day he would chase all those oil companies away if they were not willing to employ our youths in their companies, Sangha told Ogochukwukamma.”

    When he got home he was told by his mama that his holiday has been extended due to an indefinite strike by teachers.

    Ogochukwukamma didn’t bother about the strike or any other thing but instead in his child’s mind, he imagined how strong old soldier is and how he can single-handedly chase all the company owners away if they refuse to employ their youths. He imagined that old soldier would go to them and say: “Come I am sick and tired of all your troubles in our land. Now, pack your things and go!”

    He also imagined that old soldier would gather all the companies and their machinery into one gigantic wheel-barrow, the size of an ocean liner, and, with muscles bulging and veins bursting, push them off the land.