Category: Arts & Life

  • Writers’ residency at World Book Capital

    Port Harcourt is  in its third month as the United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) World Book Capital.

    With a mind of fulfilling its mandate as the World Book Capital (WBC) expressed in the winning bid, it has kicked-off several projects, such as the Reading Tree and Book Clubs, the Walking Book and National Essay competition for students in primary, secondary and tertiary institutions across Port Harcourt and the country, the Port Harcourt World Book Capital project administrators have said.

    According to them, they have started a monthly Book-of-the-Month discussions and drama performance, Books in the Air, and Library Support programmes. Besides these, they say the Port Harcourt Book Festival, the Port Harcourt Book Centre, new Public libraries and the Writers in Residence projects are soon to be unveiled.

    The Writers in Residence project will bring together 12 selected writers (published and unpublished) from all over Nigeria to reside in the city of Port Harcourt for three weeks. Throughout their stay, they are expected to exchange ideas and engage in intense training sessions that will be anchored by seasoned literary professionals. They are also expected to draw inspiration and ideas for new works based on the theme of the Port Harcourt World Book Capital 2014: Books Windows to our World of Possibilities, which would then be published in an anthology.

    The residency, the WBC administrators said, is expected to foster cooperation, unity and friendship among the writers thereby encouraging national integration and promote tourist activities in Rivers State. There would be Writers’ Workshops onScript writing and fiction with Mr Chris Ihidero and Chika Unigwe.

    Interested participants should apply, according to organisers. “ To participate, writers must be Nigerian citizens or permanent residents of Nigeria, be at least 21 years old and possess a portfolio of good quality written material.”

    Applications for the Writers in Residence programme is expected to include a statement of what the writer hopes to achieve during the residency, a detailed curriculum vitae and a 1200-1500 words excerpt from a published or unpublished work. Application forms can be downloaded from the website below:

    www.portharcourtworldbookcapital.org<http://www.portharcourtworldbookcapital.org.

    Entries should be submitted electronically to

  • Young at Art holiday workshop is 10

    Young at Art is 10. The holiday art workshop made its debut in 2004 as a yearly event for children and young adults between the ages of four and 19.

    Young At Art Children Creative Workshop  started on August 4, 2004 at Specifics Gallery in Ikeja, Lagos, with only three participants: two boys and a girl – the children of the founder Biodun Omolayo.

    According to the organiser, this year’s anniversary will hold in the  second week of next month because most of the people involved would have been back from summer vacation. “We do not want anyone connected with Young at Art to be left out,” it was said.

    Activities marking the anniversary include Special Creative Workshop for children from selected orphanages, homes and public schools in Lagos; presentation of photo book featuring its old and new members with all the activities from inception to date; presentation of special paper on the Role Of Children Creative Education In National Development; and anniversary dinner; awards for the initiative’s facilitators, class governors, parents, supporters, sponsors and the media.

    According to Omolayo, the art initiative has grown without losing focus of the original vision of developing the creative potential of the child for future benefits of the larger society along with engaging the best human and material resources to develop a happy creative well-motivated and culturally-sound child.

    The initiative has since added other events, such as May 27 Children Day and Free Art Workshops, especially for children from public schools, orphanages and the physically challenged. In addition, the initiative provides employment opportunities for undergraduates and graduates on permanent and part time.

    Its quarterly publications Young at Art Express is distributed free to schools, colleges, organisation and missions across Nigeria.

    The initiative, an institution operating through Biodun Omolayo Art Gallery is also consultant to the British Council Lagos  It has facilitated a one week art workshops Young at Art 100 for teachers of junior and senior secondary schools sponsored by the British Council, to celebrate Nigerian centenary. “We are looking forward to having workshops in Mathematics in other to assist those children who are weak in the subject, since some of the parents complain that a lot of the children who love art seem not  good enough in Mathematics,” Omolayo discloses the future pals of the workshop.

    Part of its plan is to have our own permanent facility where the children can camp during the workshop. This will be referred to as Young at Art Village.

  • Forces against writing

    Forces against writing

    All is set for this year’s edition of the NLNG Prize for Literature. Eleven Nigerian authors are gunning for the $100,000 prize money. The literati and book lovers met with the shortlisted authors in Lagos at the CORA Book Party. It was a dramatic feast of sorts, reports Evelyn Osagie.

    Writers have been urged to revisit the works of their old and established counterparts to get inspiration in addressing the country’s socio-cultural and political problems.

    Citing religious and ethnic upheavals, ace actress, Taiwo Ajai-Lycett advised writers to address themes that highlight contemporary issues, particularly peace and love, in their works.

    Writers, she said, should tackle the “issue of love” from political, religious, socio-cultural angles, saying it would curb violence.

    “There is nothing utopian about love. In fact, the fundamental thing wrong in our society is that we do not love one another. It is the intellectuals that galvanise our people, working on their collective consciousness. Writers should think about,” she said.

    Hers was one of the submissions at CORA’s book party held at the Federal Palace Hotel, Lagos in honour of the initial shortlisted authors of the Nigeria Literature Prize sponsored by the Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas (NLNG) Limited. It drew the literati, publishers, booksellers and booklovers from within and outside Lagos.

    The playwrights and their works that were on the spotlight at CORA’s book fiesta include: John Friday Abba – Alekwu Night Dance; Patrick Ogbe Adaofuyi – Canterkerous Passengers; Soji Cole – Maybe Tomorrow; Paul Edema – A Plague of Gadflies; Jude Idada – Oduduwa, King of the Edos; Onshore Ruth Momodu – No Fault of Mine; Attah Isaac Ogezi – Under a Darkling Sky; Julie Okoh – Our Wife Forever; Ade Solanke – Pandora’s Box; Arnold Udoka – Akon and Sam Ukala – Iredi War.

    After two months of intensive scrutiny, the list of 11 playwrights was drawn from a total of 124 entries by the panel of judges, including Professor of Theatre and Drama and Vice-Chancellor, Benue State University, Prof Charity Angya; a past laureate of the prize and Professor of Theatre Arts, Prof Ahmed Yerima and Professor of Performing Arts, Akanji Nasiru.

    They are contesting keenly for the $100, 000 prize. The yearly prize rotates among four literary genres – prose fiction, poetry, drama and children’s literature. This year’s focus is drama; and the sponsor’s say the final shortlist of three playwrights will be announced in September, and the winner of the $100,000 prize in October.

    Its previous winners include Prof Akachi Adimora-Ezeigbo (2007) for children’s literature; Chika Unigwe (2012) for prose fiction and Tade Ipadeola (2013) for poetry.

    For CORA, the authors whose works make the prize’s initial shortlist are winners in their own rights. And the yearly book party, which offered guests the opportunity to interact with the celebrators, was a way of honouring them.

    The event was incisive, educative and fun-filled, blending of book readings discussions, poetry and musical performances with assorted food and drinks.

    This year’s had an added spice – the audience were able to interact with nominees based abroad via online conferencing.

    According to CORA Secretary-General, Toyin Akinosho, the feast is part of the foundation’s intervention in spreading the word about The Nigerian Book. He said “It’s one of our several outreach programmes for the book (including Book Trek in Secondary Schools and Publishers Forum).”

    In fact, on the part of CORA’s Programme Chair, Jahman Anikulapo, it is out to enlarge Nigerian reading population. “We find ourselves in the vanguard of expanding the membership of the community of booklovers. This party is one of the several events we organise to make books look cool,” he said.

    Indeed the “Word” took centre stage and was served fresh and raw to the audience as the shortlisted playwrights and Nollywood celebrities celebrities read from their works and interacted with booklovers.

    There were several poetic and dramatic performances as well as music.

    And as charging the celebrators to honour their “covenants as writers”, poet and journalist Akeem Lasisi’s poetic renditions: “…You kept your words like the delicate egg…you have honoured your covenant with the musing drive…” reaffirmed the importance of the “Word” and the writer’s role as a conscience of society.

    Celebrated scholar Dr Esohe Molokwu re-echoed Ajai-Lycett and Akeem’s words, urging the celebrators, thus: “Use your work to change society; dramatists have the power to change society”.

    According to NLNG General Manager, External Affairs, Mr Kudo Eresia-Eke, the prize was established by his company as part of its corporate citizenship programme and commitment to the development of Nigerian society, adding that there has been progressive improvement in the quality of works entered and the competition is getting “sweeter and stiffer”.

    He said: “We have seen continuous improvement in the quality of works, whether you call it poetry, drama, prose or children literature. The quality of works that come in every sense, the creativity of the stories, the manner in which they are expressed – the expressionism that we see, we can really say that people are gearing up even more to do better works. And African Literature is the greater beneficiary.”

    On the part of shortlisted writers, it was a privilege to be on the initial shortlist, and the event, a welcomed initiative. However, for most of them, writing is beyond winning a prize but more of “affecting lives”. They decried their plights of creative writers, calling for better support and infrastructure to encourage budding ones.

    “Many things militate against the health of writing in the country. How healthy is our society? These rub off on writers. What kind of encouragement do we have as writers?” Prof Ukala said. While making a case for playwrights, he said: a teacher of drama, saying: “Why not drama? As a professor who teaches drama, if I don’t write plays upon what basis would I be teaching?”

    The hilarious twist of the evening came towards the end when the moderator, Mr Deji Toye threw questions to the authors. “Do you think you stand a chance of winning the prize?” he asked.

    “If I am given the prize, the critics would not be disappointed,” Ogezi said, drawing laughter from the audience; while on Abba’s part, “It is not a fair question”. “I have stood on the shoulders of many great shoulders; whether I have seen far enough, standing on those shoulders, is left to the judges to decide. Am I going to win, I don’t know,” he said.

  • Day of giving

    Day of giving

    Despite came the way of members of the Spinal Cord Injuries Association of Nigeria last Wednesday. The Rotary Club of Festac Town District 9110 Nigeria inaugurated a bore hole worth N1.7 million for the association.

    Before now, the home patronise water vendors but now, it open taps within its premises at no cost.

    The facility was installed with sustainable pump, stainless steel water treatment plant and components. Rotary also donated a wheel chair to the home.

    The same day, the club donated physiotherapy equipment to Beth-Torrey Handicap Children’s Home in Festac.

    The equipment will aid treatment of the handicapped children to restore consciousness.  The equipment are; ultra sound, cotton wool, hand gloves, thermometer and messaging cream among others.

    At about 5pm the same day, Rotary gave out sewing and baking machines and some funds to empower no less than 15 people.

    The club’s gesture for the day ended with a cheque of N55, 000 scholarships to an 18-year-old Usman Lawal, a student of Comprehensive Academy in Abeokuta, Ogun State.

    Usman, who had hole in the heart, was endorsed by the club four years ago on his return from a surgery in India.

    The donations were parts of activities lin, Dr Dele Balogun.

    The club President, who is also the Chief Executive Officer of Whitehall Multinational Limited, Mr Gabriel Onyema, said the day was another joyous period to give joy to the lives of the deprived and attend to their needs.

    “This is just the beginning of the projects to be carried out during my administration. I told my club members that there is no rest this year; we are going to carry out one project per month,” he said.

    Onyema reeled out programmes for the next few months: “In August, we will donate beddings and baby incubators in Maternal and Child Care Hospital in Festac Town, in September, the club would inaugurate a Peace triangle symbol in Amuwo-Odofin Local Government Area to let people know the importance of living together in peace.

    “In October, we will donate 300 desks to students in Amuwo-Odofin Local Government Area and in November we will carry out a project that will cost us nothing less than 1.2 million naira for the library in the council.”

    Dr Balogun hailed the club. He admitted that the government cannot cater for everybody, hence the need for organisations like Rotary to support the government.

    “It is our responsibility to assist our fellow human beings in the little way we can and it is important that we make these people as comfortable as possible. No soul is superior to the other,” he said.

    He raised concern on the state of the spinal cord injury victims saying, they need to be engaged to live a meaningful life.

    “People should stop the stigmatisation; they can be engaged in activities like skill acquisition that will make them feel part of the society. Their eyes, brain, hands and mouth are still sharp and can work,” he said.

    Balogun reiterated that there is ability in their disability saying, when you have something to showcase, people will come looking for you.

    He urged the beneficiaries who were given equipment and money to make the best of all they have gotten from the club, adding that they should use it to take care of themselves and their family.

    Spinal Cord Injuries Association of Nigeria chairman, Mr Obioha Ononogbu, said many of the victims are capable of doing what they were doing before they had the injury – all they need is retraining.

    “One of us has written a book, this shows that even with our disability, we can still offer something to the world,” he said.

    Ononogbu explained that the home solely depends on service rendered from service clubs and other well meaning individuals, urging government and corporate organisations to come to their aid.

    The Administrative officer at the Beth-Torrey Handicap Children’s Home, Mrs Tayo Udoh, said the physiotherapy equipment donated will be used to imrove the health of the children .

    “When we see people like this coming and humbling themselves regardless of who they are and show love to those who are less privileged, it is a great opportunity,” she said.

    “These children have talents and they have to discover it. So with all these items received, it will go a long way to nuture their talents,” she stated.

    One of the beneficiaries from the empowerment, Mrs Mary Olojobi, expressed her gratitude to Rotary, saying “My shop got burnt sometimes ago and since then, I have being borrowing sewing machine from colleagues to sew cloths for my customers. What Rotary has done for me today would make me independent and cater for my children.”

  • Finding Fela opens in US

    Finding Fela opens in US

    Finding Fela, a documentary on the late Afrobeat legend, Fela Anikulapo Kuti, opened penultimate Friday at a New York Theatre, United States. The 119-minute documentary was produced and directed by Alex Gibney.

    The small gesture was not the late Fela Kuti’s style. With his band the Africa 70, this Afrobeat pioneer rolled out monster-size grooves, chugging along with soulful beats, keyboards and horns. His lyrics, partly in pidgin, spoke out against military dictatorship; at home, he declared his Lagos house to be an independent territory. As for marriage, he embraced polygamy, in the cultlike double digits.

    With the perilously stuffed documentary Finding Fela, the Director, Alex Gibney, tries to reckon with this audacious child of the Nigerian elite who courted execution with his brickbats, and megalomania with his extravagance. And Mr Gibney gives his rise-and-fall treatment an extra critical filter through a “making of” look at the recent Broadway musical Fela! Accordingly, through interviews and lively clips about Fela’s musical and political evolution in the 1960s and ’70s, “Fela!” director, Bill T. Jones, portrays the man, who died in 1997. Mr Jones is both razor-sharp and candid about his mixed feelings, and he’s part of a robust core of commentators, including the biographer Michael Veal, the former New York Times correspondent John Darnton and the former Black Panther Sandra Izsadore, a formative influence on Fela.

    The behind-the-scenes component, juiced with razzle-dazzle excerpts from the

    “Fela!” production is sound, in theory. But, like many sequences, it’s not so tightly executed, and this strand tends to knock the documentary off balance.

    Mr Gibney’s approach has built-in limitations (and a milquetoast title: where’d Fela go, exactly?). But maybe it’s a tall order for any conventional documentary to get its arms around a man whose 30-minute-plus jams routinely broke free of their moorings.

  • Bank of Industry, Kaduna seal pact to boost SMEs

    The Bank of Industry (BOI) and the Kaduna State Government have signed an agreement to raise N1billion Entrepreneurial Development Fund (EDF) to boost the operation of small-scale businesses in the state.

    This is even as the development bank put the total loan portfolio to small and medium enterprises (SMEs) in Kaduna State till date at N23.6billion.

    Based on the term of the agreement, the Kaduna State Government raised the sum of N500million, while BOI matched it up with another N500million, totalling N1billion.

    The fund, which would be given out as soft loans, is aimed at empowering small businesses in the state to, among other things, enable them process the abundant agricultural products that abound in the state, thereby arresting the colossal post-harvest losses occasioned by lack of crop preservation capacity.

    Speaking during the signing of the MoU, the managing director, Bank of Industry, Mr. Rasheed Olaoluwa, stated that the pool of funds which would be given out as loans to SMEs operators would help to boost commercial activities in the state.

    Apart from helping to empower the people of Kaduna State, the MD also noted that the injection of the fund would have multiplier effect on the people of the state while complementing the poverty reduction programme of the present administration.

    Apart from the N1billion loan deal, Olaoluwa said the bank had given out N23.6billion soft loan in support of small businesses in the state.

    He expressed the commitment of the bank to continue to help small businesses not only in the state, but also across the 36 states in the country, including the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), adding that that was the surest way Nigeria could consolidate its status as the economy hub of Africa.

  • A resounding party for playwriting

    A resounding party for playwriting

    Last Sunday artistes gathered in Lagos under the aegis of Committee for Relevant Art (CORA) to celebrate, interact and rub minds with the 11 initial longlist for the Nigerian Prize for Literature for 2014. Edozie Udeze reports

    Almost everybody, including the authors and other artists agreed that the Nigerian literary scene is ever alive, bubbling with issues and awash with events that also enable writers to produce sound and convincing works. The outing was the 6th annual book party of the Committee For Relevant Art (CORA) The event was put together for the initial eleven long listed names for the Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas (NLNG) prize for literature for 2014. It was an occasion to interact with these writers who emerged out of the 124 authors that submitted their works for consideration.

    The authors and their works include, John Abba (Alekun Night Dance), Patrick Agbe Adaofuyi (Canterkerous Passengers), Soji Cole (Maybe Tomorrow), Paul Edema (A Plague of Gadflies), Jude Idada (Oduduwa, King of the Edos), Ruth Momodu (No Fault of Mine), Isaac Ogezi (Under a Darkling Sky), Julie Oko  (Our Wife Forever), Ade Solanke (Pandora’s Box), Arnold Udoka (Akon( and Sam Ukala (|Iredi War). All the plays also highlighted the numerous problems that have, in the recent times, plagued the nation called Nigeria.   While some of the authors concentrated on social and family ills, others went more political and historical, hitting on the core problems that have been the main draw-back for the society.

    Even though it was only four out of the eleven authors that were physically present, it did not, however, remove the shine from the show. Both Solanke and Momodu who live in the United Kingdom and Idada who plies his trade in Canada spoke online. They were able to bring out the issues that shaped their works and what, in the initial beginning, informed the ideas that made their plays.

    At 17years, Momodu whose work  is entitled No Fault of Mine and who obviously is the youngest candidate in the history of the prize told of how she dwelt on the issue of what she described as a “dysfunctional Nigerian family. It is a family where father and mother could not agree on the requisite values necessary to bring up their daughter. The girl grew up into a terrible character that was not of her own making.” Momodu, however, conceded that over there in England, Nigerian Diaspora are ever active, eager to be in touch with people at home. “Their habitual tendencies, more or less, encourage Nigerian and African writers to have materials for their works,” she posited. “But we need to do more interesting works that would tend to get the youths off the internet. This is one of our primary roles as writers”, she said.

    On her own part, Solanke decided that one of the steps to make plays permeate the society is when the audience flow along with the issues raised in the work. “All over England and Europe, Afrobeat music has become the rave. The youths of Africa in the Diaspora now identify with it; they play it and spread the message among the people. The role of a writer is to look into these trends and bring out the Nigerian literature inherent in them.” To her, experience and contemporary Nigerian cultural values, what the people themselves see in what they have; all help to shape the story ideas of a writer.

    But Idada’s own concept while reporting from Canada in that there are plenty of Nigerian stories waiting to be told. “We try to make the impossible possible through what we write. It is our responsibility to react to what people do, what the society is all about; whether here in Canada where we have plenty of Nigerian Diaspora or in Nigeria where the stories happen aplenty. Publishers also have a role to play in this contemporary arrangement. But we as writers have to first of all fulfill over own responsibilities by writing well and polishing our works. That indeed is what the NLNG is doing; helping us to polish our works so that what we push out into the society is not makeshift or half baked or even bellow standard”.

    In an interview, Abba confessed that his own work is unique in many respects because “I do not follow convention when I pick my pen to write. I am very unconventional in my style of writing. And when I depict life I also depict what it portends. This is my first published play and what I raised in the story of Alekwu Night Dance, it is a story of a young girl raped in questionable circumstance and this led the whole village to begin to query the level of morality within the vicinity.”

    He explored the story to paint sordid picture of a society in a terrible moral state. The girl was an only child, a gifted child in whom the parents had a lot of hope and prospects. The sorrows of both the parents and the entire village thus invoked a spirit of torture and perpetual agony on the head of the culprit. “This rapist will sleep no more; peace will ever elude him for he has indeed murdered sleep by puncturing the life of a promising girl-child.”

    As the issues and the themes raised by the playwrights continued to seep into the people, Ukala, a professor of Theatre and one of those on the longlist intoned: “The Eredi War, being the title of my own work happened in 1906 in Delta State. It is a true life story and the mess put in place by the colonial overlords to overwhelm the local people. In that mess some of the local people became collaborators and helped the white people to mess their people up.

    The motive behind this was to denigrate the people and their culture. There was no regard for the constituted authority. All the people, including the king of the town, were compelled and ordered to obey His majesty, King Edward VII of England. “In the process, the king of the town was arrested but the people did not forget to remind their tormentors that the little bird dancing on the road has drummers beating for it by the bush side. Therefore, my business, my professional calling as a teacher of Theatre is to be versatile, totally versed in the art of literature to be able to impact well on the society. People keep asking me, why drama? But my answer is that I have written prose fiction before and won an award in that genre. I have also written poetry and won an award but here I am now completely immersed in drama. I am a total literary person. If I do not write drama, if I do not get involved in this now, what else can I do?” he asked.

    In his own story, Isaac Ogezi told the story of Ken Saro-wiwa who led the Ogoni people at a point. He uses metaphors, allegory and paradigm of historical facts to dissect the theme. A part of it read out to the audience indeed evoked sad memories of the past and how Shell Petroleum continuously despoils the land and renders the environment uninhabitable. “Thus, Under The Darkling Sky has the story of a people steeped in the bowel and throes of subjugation, malady and social injustice. How do they then extricate themselves from it is a matter that the play has handled in a way to let the audience decide,” Ogezi said.

    A deep play that spared nothing to indict the powers that be on what they have been unable to do to remedy the situation, Ogezi thinks it imperative to apportion blame where necessary.   And where it became urgent, he rendered the ideas to help push ahead. The role of the people would soon be considered treasonable and soon enough the bubble burst and Ken was hounded…

    In A Plague of Gadflies by Edema, he told the story of the wall gecko that no longer sleeps. Then what is the irony here, what is the central theme of the story? It is metaphorical and shows to what extent wall geckos have been used as agents of follies and harbingers of ill-luck. “Yes, we are now being hunted by the very people who are supposed to be our close pals. The wall gecko is an allegory of sorts. It is man who develops others into slavery and how do we overcome this state of slavery both of mind and the body? Our children are dehumanised daily, our daughters are no longer safe, our families have been taken over by force by those who are supposed to be our protectors. Too many issues that do not benefit anybody have been perpetuated and we are in a quandary,” he professed.

    Spiced with both poetry and drama performances, the event which took place at the Federal Palace Hotel, Lagos, offered artists of diverse genres the opportunity to hubnob and strategise on the ways to prosper the sector. Toyin Akinoso, the chairman of CORA insisted that NLNG has done its level best to institute the award and therefore “we have to do our best to take it further. We have to make books available and known to the public: Book readings and reviews must continue to be made possible by CORA so that literature can become part of us.”

    Present at the occasion which took place last Sunday were Professor Biodun Jeyifo, Taiwo Ajai Lycett, Tunji Sotimirin, Mahmod Ali-Balogun, Nobert Young. Others were Lanre Arogundade, Jahman Anikulapo, Anne-Marie Ikuku, Akachi Adimora-Ezeigbo, Ndidi Dike, Olayinka Oyegbile and many others.

    In the end, Kudo Eresia of NLNG told the gathering of how the zeal to institute the prize began. Yet, he said, “We will continue to do it to entrench excellence in our literary firmament. We will continue to encourage and discover more stars in the literary circle so that we’ll discover more Achebes and Soyinkas in our midst.

    The ceremony came to an end with a buffet and plenty of music.

  • For their sake

    For their sake

    This is a fact and the gospel truth: we speak more English Language now than at any time in our national life. Yet we have more failures in English Language than ever before. Why is this so? This is a question we need to find an answer to. Everywhere you turn today you hear people speak English or as some other would say, Englishes, yet we have more people who cannot write or string together correct grammar? Why?

    Every day we sit down in our sitting rooms and watch television programmes broadcast in English language, in our cars and homes we listen to programmes on radio in the same language, yet we still cannot write correct English. Why?

    Most of us were brought up on a rich diet of our local languages; rich in anecdotes, proverbs, innuendos etc. that is why we are very rooted in our local languages and English as a second language.

    However, today we bring up our children more with the English language than in our mother tongues. With a bit of a tongue in cheek, perhaps I can say that English today has become our first language at home rather than our mother tongues! One would have thought this is a plus. But is it really from what steers us in the face?

    Let me explain. How many of us today speak our languages to our children at home? We have a renaissance in naming our children by giving them names that reflect our various ethnic origins. Names such as Olusegun, Daramola, Feyikemi, Obiageli, Hassan etc are becoming popular and common. However, if you greet such children in Yoruba or any of our local languages they are lost. Most of them would not know how to respond to a common greeting in their mother tongue. Why? The answer is not far-fetched; we speak more English language to our children more than our mother tongues!

    This being the case what one would have expected is that our children would write better English than their parents who during their time only spoke English language in the school environment. Don’t forget that speaking our mother tongues was referred to as ‘vernacular’ and severe punishment awaited any child that broke the strict rule.

    Today’s children have been saved such torture and agony because both at home and in school they speak English even if it is the ‘broken or pidgin’ variety. Your typical Iya oni worobo or Iya alata in your neighbourhood speaks English language to ‘Junior’ because she wants him/her to be conversant with the language and speak it flawlessly and be able to compete in our world of today.

    So, if we speak more English in all our relations today why do we continue to have failures in the language, why do you turn out graduates who can’t string together intelligible compositions and essays?

    The answer is contained in the book we are unveiling today. We have failed to pay attention to the elementary rules of grammar and if we ignore or have a bad start, there is no way what we build on it can stand erect.

    Fola Adekeye has in this book ENGLISH GRAMMAR FOR COLLEGES, done our students and every one of us who communicates in the language a world of favour. Don’t be deceived by the title, every one of us needs this book because since we have agreed to transact our daily businesses in English we must endeavour to use it well.

    These and some other minute details commend the book to me.

    My favourite chapter in this book is Chapter 14 (p177). The author calls this Becoming rich in words. This encapsulates what the whole book is all about. As they say, you cannot make omelet without breaking the eggs. In the same vein, you cannot be an adept user of English language without reading sand expanding your vocabulary. Many want to climb the palm tree from the top. This is impossible. You have to start from the bottom.

    In Chapter 16, Mind your speech, we are exposed to common errors which most people, including native speakers of the language often make. These errors are made because they often sound simple and commonly spoken thus given currency to them.

    Some of these are: A beggars has no choice  instead of Beggars can’t be choosers, More grease to your elbow instead of More power to your elbow, What is good for the goose is also good for the gander instead of What is sauce for the goose is source for the gander and Every nook and corner instead of Every nook and cranny and You cannot eat your cake and have it instead of You cannot have your cake and eat it.

    However, sticklers to the Queen’s English will  find some axe to grind with the author. This is over Americanisation of some spellings in the book. For instance, characterised is spelt with a ‘z’ instead of ‘s’ etc.

    As it is with all human endeavours, a few typographical errors are in the book and it is hoped that this would be corrected in future reprints. One of these is on page 214 where it is written “I am pleaded with my surroundings” instead of “I am pleased with my surroundings.”

    With the publication of this book, Adekeye has given a shot in the arm to the teaching of English Language in our secondary schools. He has done what many people used to think is a task for some spirits or phantoms. Many of us may not know the Molara Ogundipe-Leslies or Tunde Tregidos of this world who wrote English text books but we know Fola Adekeye, he is not a spirit or a phantom. This is a good and helpful book for all who want to master the English language.

  • The mockery of a nation

    The mockery of a nation

    How does a playwright dissect Nigeria as a theatre of confusion and disorder through drama?  Why is it often convenient or proper to use satire to explain the political issues that confront the nation?  Many older playwrights have done that in the past and it worked.  It worked because, like it is said in an Igbo proverb, that when you want to talk the truth to a King who has been stiff-necked for too long, a King who has never had time to hearken to the cries of his subjects, put a basket on your head and then talk to him through the little holes.

    It is only when your words begin to drop one by one and he can only see your eyeballs as they stick out from the basket holes that he’d know that finally, his people have come to the point where one of them can be bold enough to let him know how they feel.

    In the same way, Emmanuel Ifie has presented the Nigerian situation in a satirised form, using the metaphor of a farm settlement to show the world that Nigeria is a mockery, a country where the leadership is not committed to the project.  In the face of thousand and one problems facing the over one hundred and fifty million people, Boko Haram, Fulani herdsmen’s menace, oil pollution and exploitation, the neglect of the youths of the country and more, the ruling class seems to be in an animal kingdom, babbling away as if nothing matters.

    The title of the play makes it more poignant – Once Upon A Farm and it shows the level of unseriousness on the part of the people who preside over the affairs of the people.  In the prologue, the playwright sets the stage very clearly – the farm consists of thirty-six plots of gardens.  Several of them hold crops, ponds and pans.  Indeed, the gardens in the Northern side consist of dry, receding, over-grazed savannas while the Western part has cash crops.  Even so, the Eastern part harbours dates and other palms, while the South has timber and plywood.  Capping it up are two streams flowing into one to form a confluence, a confluence of confusion and false beliefs.

    Describing the meeting of these two streams as darkness that gives no hope somewhat, he goes on to give names of the strange characters that inhabit the farm settlement.  They include His Excellency called Ram Rod who is now known as the farm prefect, while his deputy is known as Ram Dom.  The manager of the farm, in-charge of Defence is called Ram Nutsy while his Finance counterpart is called Ewe-Ewe.  There are others too.  But the whole essence of all this is to give the state of a country where clowns and impostors inhabit the farm in form of leaders who do not know what to do to save the farmland.

    As the federal executive council sits to resolve the insecurity in the land and proffer ways to safeguard the future, there are discordant tunes.  No one could proffer real solutions to steady the drifting society.  Now, pitched against goats and sheep on one hand and wolves and jackals on the other, it shows crystal clear how the society is divided.  The rich continues to have their way while the poor continues to be at the receiving end.  Indeed the state totters.

    “The nation faces the peril of extinction within a short time,” the playwright says on page 7.  “As you all can see,” His Excellency continues in a form to rebuke the council, “sheep and goats are lean already.  The second threat; Ewes and gentle Rams are the drain on sheep brain…  Our intelligent sheep are making exodus to the greener pastures of other farms abroad to graze.  Secondly, wolves have recently developed a special preference to and appetite for Isi-Ewu.  I mean, Ewes and Rams’ delicacy.   Wolves’ present choice of daily snack is painfully leading to a faster depletion of sheep and sheep’s brain…  The militant Rams, I call them Jackals that are ramming everything in sight-in the North – Easterly gardens…  This siege just has to stop…”

    In a nutshell, that describes the central message of the play and its potency towards a nation-state.  Yet this book done in two parts is too slim for that purpose.  With the part one coming in just 16 pages, it shows a lot of unseriousness.  But again the message is clear – Nigeria has to guide its loins to be able to remain one.  Even though the issue were never resolved since the people couldn’t speak with one voice what is the future of Nigeria?  What can be done to douse the tensions in the land and give peace to the people?  It is all in this Animal tales of Naija Gardens, a book so deep in political mimicry and satire.

  • Deep in thought

    Deep in thought

    The book opens with a thought-provoking quote urging the reader to be wise. “Today is a new day, live it well. Live one day at a time. Your time is your life. It is your wealth. Today is the day you can wisely lay claim to. Your today surely will determine the quality and worth of your tomorrow- Leave the best of Yesterday at its best. But strive to attain a better best TODAY. So be wise!”.

    This is followed by the content page which is divided into 20 chapters. Some of the contents include the ‘Golden advice for a golden life, God has good plans for you, Strive to be the best you can , Character: a must, Divine love in the family, Blessings and joy in obedience, and Growing old is life’s fulfillment.

    In the first chapter, tagged ‘Golden advice for a Golden life,’ the reader is welcomed with a number of inspirational advices created to bring change and transformation to lives. The chapter contains a variety of collections and selections of short pieces of advice to guide the willing reader. This chapter also exposes the reader to information and knowledge.

    In the second chapter, the reader is given an insight into the goodies in stock and the need to apply wisdom at all times. “You cannot recall or relive the past. Nonetheless, that past or the present circumstances might be launch pads for higher heights.”

    In the fourth chapter, the reader is advised to ‘strive to be the best you can’. “Yesterday has been rolled into the annals of history. It has made its own history. Today is yet another day, then a new thing, a new thought, a new expectation,  a new performance, a new result. Never be satisfied with your yesterday’s record of performance no matter how good”. Next the reader is admonished in chapter five to have a good character no matter what is going on in the society. Other virtues identified to building an exceptional character include courage, humility, respect and resourcefulness.

    The need to preserve the institution of marriage is examined in chapter seven, encouraging all to be ready to make it work. “The family is the smallest unit of the society or the community. Yet the family is the heart of the whole world. It is the hub, the moving machinery. Divine love in the family is the love that binds the whole family, the entire community, and that love determines the type of community we live in.”

    The book’s distinctive folklorist style  reminds one of the golden days of Adesakin’s youth story telling  style when words of wisdom lay at the feet of those who had years of experience and rich knowledge that spurred them to share such with others. A knowledge that would make the listener or reader a better persons and keep them so.Like nuggets of truth, it targets the bane of human existence and takes the reader to an emotional depth of thought through its step by step discussion of current issues and how to live a purposeful life in spite of the many odds.

    In a his  easy to read and  conversational style , the writer communicates with reader giving insights on how to tap from his wealth of knowledge. Through the progressive theme of bettering one’s life every new day, through the giver of life itself by the dexterity of the writer who creates vivid images that the reader can relate with.

    This prevocational piece does not only encompass the immortality of art, it also  seeks to influence the thought process positively.

    The ladder of success and the potentials deposited in every human being is x-rayed in chapter thirteen. “There is a ladder embedded in you , by which you can diligently climb to success. It is an invisible ladder”.

    The writer who turns 80 this August is a family coach of the budding Olabode Dynasty in Supare Akoko South West; Ondo State, Nigeria is an unwavering prime mover of environmental sanitation and development of decent and orderly society. He is also a motivating bridge builder, community patriot, purposely public thinker, analyst, critic and essayist.

    He authored and distributed for free, the book titled, “AWO in Nigeria Political Storms (1966). His other books are “Matchless Grace through the Storms of life at 70(2004) and Inspirational guide for Successful Happy Life (2005).

    Olabode prays for and supports good governance. He was a prime co-initiator of the Mini water works to supplement water supply in Lagos State by the extraction of ground water through drilling of batteries of bore holes in chosen strategic locations. He was also a member of the committee on Rapid Development of Water supply in Lagos state during the administration of Alhaji Lateeef Jakande.