Category: Arts & Life

  • Child’s play

    Child’s play

    With the long vacation for schools fast approaching, the National Troupe is preparing to host the fourth edition of its annual Children Creative Station Workshop (CCSW). The workshop is conceived as a long vacation theatre workshop for children between the ages of five and seventeen and it is primarily aimed at exposing participants to general theatre practice and appreciation of the creative arts.

    The 2014 edition according to the coordinator of the project and director in charge of Drama of the National Troupe, Ms Josephine Igberaese, would begin as from the first week of August 2014 and will run for a period of one month. She also disclosed that at the end of the creative workshop exercise, the participants would be expected to put up a performance that will detail all they have learnt during the one-month training period. ‘What we are doing is in line with one of our objectives which is to encourage the development of children’s theatre. But beyond that we have used the project successfully over the last three years to groom future theatre practitioners who may want to take up a career in the theatre and allied genre like taking part in Nigeria’s Nollywood’’.

    Explaining further that one of the other objectives behind the exercise is to engage the children creatively during the long holidays,

  • Managing tourism

    Managing tourism

    Title: Tourism Destination Management; A Guide for Policy Makers and Destination Management
    Author: Ashamu Sewanu Fadipe
    Reviewer: Nneka Nwaneri
    Publishers: Prince of Prints, Lagos

     

    Tourism is now a major engine of growth and development contributing significantly to Gross Domestic Product of many nations.

    Arising from the Earth Summit in 1992 organised by World Commission on Environment and Development in Rio de Janeiro, sustainability has become a major ingredient for development.

    This book takes a cue from the publication of the World Tourism Organisation ( Indicators of Sustainable Development of Tourism Destination a Guidebook) to further help and inform Policy Makers and Destination Managers to obtain as much information as possible to guide their decision making process.

    To further articulate and interpret the subject matter, a set of component issues are provided including its performance indicators and verification to allow deeper knowledge. Sustainable development of tourism is applicable to all forms of tourism without exception.

    Tourism destination cannot exist without tourism product. Tourism products are the assets of the local community. They include complimentary attractions such as natural resources (beaches, waterfalls, mountains, ecosystems and landscapes) cultural and historical resources (festivals, historic sites, museums, local food) infrastructural facilities (roads, marinas, airport terminals) and support services ( tour operations, courier services, insurance, tourist information office etc).

    These attractions are planned in an integrated manner with the community aspiration and their active participation. The planning also involves creating partnership with other stakeholders such as travel agents, the tour operators, the hotel owners, the transporters  and owners of the heritage sites to mention but a few.

    These attractions are planned in an integrated manner with the community aspiration and their active participation.  The planning also involves creating partnership with other stakeholders such as the travel agents, the tour operators, the hotel owners, the transporters and owners of the heritage sites to mention but a few.

    There should be fundamental principles of creating tourism products, its development guidelines, planning process and marketing strategy.  Planners are encouraged to develop as many as what to see and what to do because tourism products are amalgamation of attractions, because the more of what to do and what to see; the more the visitors are attracted to the destination.

    The author made reference to the United Nations World Tourism Organisation and the United Nations Environmental Programme, which set out twelve aims towards achieving sustainable development through tourism.

    From the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), Human Development Report of 2003 reviewed in 2011 and 2013 respectively, it was reported that these aims are set to reduce poverty in the world.   Already over 1.2 billion people are in extreme poverty level.  More than two-third of them live in Asia, half of them are in South Asia while one fourth reside in Sub-Sahara Africa.  The larger majority of the poor live in medium and large size countries.  More than sixty percent of the event world’s poor reside in just five countries and other less developed nations live in hunger and malnutrition, lack access to good health, water, housing, education and basic skills.

    The book tourism development is recommended to some of these countries as a means of combating poverty thereby reducing their poverty level and improving their quality of life.

    The overall objective of the concluding part of the book is to identify specific policy areas for which policy implementation can be formulated to reduce poverty and improve the well-being of the people.  The policy area articulated include conservation of physical integrity, visitor’s fulfilment, economic viability of tourism enterprises, its local prosperity, employment opportunities and the impact on the wellbeing of the local population.

    Visitors appeals are the attractions of the destination which could be natural, cultural, historical and manmade.  Maintenance and conservation of the attractions with respect to local circumstance are subject to policy formation.  Government is encouraged to develop appropriate policies that will bring about deliberate actions towards sustainable development.

    Sustainable development of tourism requires sound planning as well as protection and management of key elements such as destination assets, involvement of the local community and other stakeholders.

    Where no plan exists in a locality, it becomes imperative to identify possible assets and collate data on all elements associated with tourism potentials and threats.   Where a plan exists, then evaluate current tourism plan, issues and objectives to improve upon the existing system and initiate plans in consonance with sustainable development of tourism.

    The chapter is designed to provide in-depth study on destination planning and development by throwing more lights on tourism and planning, destination elements and characteristics, types of planning approach, destination development and control including parties that make tourism work at a destination.  Policy Makers and Destination Managers are encouraged to understand the planning process in tourism and what makes tourism work sustainably in a destination.

    Who has the mandate to plan and manage tourism destination?, the author asks.

    He went further in the publication to describe tourism as multi-sectorial and multi-discipline where no single entity (stakeholder) can lay absolute acknowledge to its management.  It bore on the importance of destination managers to understand the policy behind sustainability.

    The highlight of the success of the any destination is based on the following:

    •Emphasis on poverty reduction and increase on the quality of life of the local residents;

    •Protection of unique ecosystem, heritage sites and places of memory.

    •Establishment of the role of private sector in the planning, financing, implementation and ownership of the tourism operations;

    •Ensuring that the poor play active  role in the supply of goods and services including management of destinations;

    •Development of effective marketing and promotion strategies;

    •Co-ordination of essential government services;

    •Creating awareness among the stakeholders and the local community;

    •Ensuring implementation of regulation and control throughout the destination area.

    Tourism Destination Management; A Guide for Policy Makers and Destination Management gives an insight into the roles of various stakeholders and the Destination Management Organisation in the overall management of the destinations.

    Tourism destination is a place where visitors spend atleast one night. It covers a geographical and administrative boundary where products and services are offered to the visitors.

    Visitors in turn absorb complimentary and experiences, and share same with other (friends, families, colleagues and group).  These complimentary and experiences are expectations.  They could either be interesting or unpleasant.  It is a place where several actors and stakeholders nest, network and offer their services.  They are not limited to the following; public authorities, destination management organizations, transport operators, accommodation providers, heritage conservators, travel agent, tour operators, tour guide, financial institutions, other ancillaries and service providers including the host community.

    Destinations vary depending on their assets and unique attractions.  While issues affecting one destination may be similar to the other but several destinations are distinct in their attractiveness.  This chapter is designed for tourism professionals and managers of destinations to understand and appreciate the complexity, flexibility, similarity and uniqueness of destinations.

    It is certainly possible that issues affecting cultural heritage sites in the areas of protection and conservations are likely to have similar issues of ecosystem and biodiversity with beaches and coastal zones.

  • All hail Kongi  at 80

    All hail Kongi at 80

    Nobel Laureate Prof Wole Akinwande Soyinka turned 80 last Sunday amid tributes from scholars, writers and politicians. Ace poet Prof Niyi Osundare, renowned playwright Prof Femi Osofisan and Rivers State Governor Rotimi Amaechi, among others, sent him birthday greetings.They share their thoughts on the man and his works in this piece, writes Evelyn Osagie.

    Nobel laureate Prof Wole Soyinka is 80. Soyinka has lived through pre-colonial times, survived a civil war and several military regimes. An activist of the highest order, he remains a crusader even in old age.

    Because of his scathing writings, he was accused of treason and jailed without any formal charge for over 20 months. Soyinka was forced into exile because of his stand against injustice. But despite the storms, Soyinka’s voice is not stilled and his pen remains as potent as ever.

    With many titles in all genres, Soyinka is known as “one of the finest poetical playwrights in English”.

    His literary voyage covers drama, poetry, prose fiction, biography, film and music. In 1986 when he won the Noble Prize in Literature – the first African to do so – his literary prowess was captured in these words: “He possesses a prolific store of words and expressions which he exploits to the full in witty dialogue, in satire and grotesquery, in quiet poetry and essays of sparkling vitality.”

    Welcome to the world of the acclaimed dramatist, poet, novelist, essayist, musician, culture icon, Wole Soyinka.

    In the words of his colleagues, friends and fans, “words are not enough” to describe what Soyinka has come to mean to them and the world of Literature.

    Amid several literary festivities commemorating the thespian’s birthday, is the avalanche of tributes in his honour. Some called him, “a man of stupendous courage and candour”, an “indomitable writer”, Asayagbangba and more. In this piece, renowned poet Prof Niyi Osundare, celebrated playwright Prof Femi Osofisan and Rivers State Governor Rotimi Amaechi, among others, relive their encounters with Soyinka.

     

    ‘Asayagbangba Soyinka is Pathfinder and Pioneering Spirit’ – Ace poet, Prof Niyi Osundare:

    My first encounter with Wole Soyinka’s works came though his poem Abiku; and that was in my secondary school days at Amoye Grammar School, Ikere Ekiti in the mid- 60s. It was about the same time my class was introduced to the woks of other African writers such as Chinua Achebe, and JP Clark.

    From then on, I saw Soyinka from a respectable distance. Well, until 1970 when he became Director, School of Drama, University of Ibadan, and Drama was my main Minor in the degree course. It was supremely inspiring having a great man like Soyinka around and seeing him on an almost daily basis. Young, good-looking, creative, iconoclastic with an unmistakable swagger, he smiled not too often in those days, and we put it all down to his well- deserved fame.  But kind-hearted he was, and his patented baritone and posh English accent were a bliss to the ears.

    Soyinka’s contribution to the field of Literature is epochal and phenomenal.  Drama, poetry, prose fiction, biography, film, music; name it: the man excels in all of them. An anthology of world drama without Death and the King’s Horseman would be incomplete; just as Ake would stand out supreme in the comity of world prose fiction. Add to these Soyinka’s innumerable essays and you get the picture of a truly world-historic writer.

    Soyinka, a man of stupendous courage and candor; the kind who speaks out when others have bowed under the sword of Silence. Asayagbangba (one whose chest stands out like a solid shield) whose courage serves as a spur to courage in others. A true ecumenical spirit whose being traverses the world.  Like Ogun, his personal orisa, Soyinka is Pathfinder and Pioneering Spirit, an indefatigable fighter for Justice. We would be glad to have him around for another 80 years.

     

    ‘Father, don’t tire, not even tomorrow’

    Head, School of Languages, Rhodes University, South Africa,  Prof Russell Kaschula:

    Soyinka’s contribution to the field of Literature is gigantic! His work has now influenced generations of writers and thinkers not only on the continent, but globally. He has taught us to be vigilant through creativity.

    I first came across his work at university as a young white South African who had grown up under apartheid. Scholars such as Soyinka were not permitted to be mentioned in the schooling system. It was then in the more liberated university environment that I began to understand creative writing and the work of Soyinka as a powerful socio-political commentary.

    As he marks his 80th, in isiXhosa we say: Ungadinwa nangomso, Tata (Don’t tire, not even tomorrow, Father)!

     

    ‘Indomitable Soyinka is my role model’

    Renowned Professor of International Law and Jurisprudence, Akin Oyebode:

    As one of Africa’s most illustrious sons, Soyinka has been my role model since my secondary school days. I was the school’s drama producer, and in my teens then, when I was opportune to produce two of his plays The lion and the Jewel and Trial of Brother Jero. In fact, so engrossed in his grammatic prowess had I become that I had actually sought to go and learn at the feet of the master in the University of Ibadan where he had held forth as the Director of Drama. I was admitted to combine Honours in English and Drama degree programme and had indeed secured accommodation at Melani   Hall until providence decreed otherwise. Well, that is a story for another day.

    As part of my encounter with Soyinka, while schooling in Toronto, he had come for a writers’ festival and he came to give a talk at the York University and one of the eminent professors of Language and Literature asked WS himself “Prof Wole Soyinka, yesterday you wore this hat, in another plane you wore another hat, can the real Wole Soyinka stand up and be identified”. And the indomitable Soyinka had a one-line response for him, and I never forgot it, “It takes a writer to unmask another”.

     

    Renowned playwright and former Association of Nigerian Authors (ANA) President, Prof Femi Osofisan:

    What words can be adequate to offer in tribute to such an outstanding personality? Soyinka will continue to be a beacon of light. Long may he stay yet among us.

    Outlining his contribution to the field of Literature deserves a long answer really, since he has been active in almost all the genres. That is clearly impossible here. But one significant contribution however is his creation of what I will describe as a ‘condition of plausibility’ for the existence of an authentic African drama in the English language. After him, all of us became empowered, and credible. Another area that is still to be well discussed is his resuscitation, and exploration, of myth.

    I met Soyinka for the first time through his poems, Telephone Conversation and Abiku. I can’t recall accurately now, but I think it was in the Mbari magazine, Black Orpheus, edited then by Ulli Beier, that I found them. But the real encounter with his works that mesmerised me was watching his production of Kongi’s Harvest at the Arts Theatre of the University of Ibadan. I was then still a student at the Government College, in the southern suburb of the town, and we were taken in the school bus one night to see the play. The blend of music and dance and ‘indigenised English’ language fascinated me, and has stayed with me since.

     

    ‘May his genius be recognised for generations to come’

    Professor of English, Hofstra University, United States, Joseph McLaren:

    I first read Soyinka over 25 years ago.  I was exposed to his performed drama when Death and the King’s Horseman was performed in New York.  It was well received and demonstrated Soyinka’s brilliance.  I also saw the film Kongi’s Harvest, which showed how Soyinka’s work was relevant to the transitions in leadership during and after the Independence era.

    Soyinka has contributed immeasurably to the world of literature. His gift of language and dramatic ingenuity is incomparable.

    As he turns 80 this month, I am hoping that Soyinka will continue to comment on the state of affairs in Africa, in general, and that he will offer additional dramatic works reflecting 21st century concerns.  May his genius be recognised globally for generations to come!

     

    ‘My only regret as Soyinka turns 80’-Rivers State Governor Rotimi Chibuike Amaechi:

    Let me speak like a soothsayer, we shall celebrate your 90th. Poet, playwright, essayist, scholar, Nobel laureate and political activist, Wole Soyinka has for over the period of five decades pursued his dreams and goals for a better Nigerian society with inventiveness, thankless energy and radical tenacity.

    Some of us, who were the liberal arts students at the university, first encountered Wole Soyinka through his works, but I must confess I wasn’t a fan of yours in the class! Reading Prof was like reading William Shakespeare with his ancient riddles, ancient words, we took more time unravelling the works than studying them. And although some of us experienced initial difficulties over his works, over the years, as we have come to know the man better, a lot has become clearer.

    Soyinka’s struggles transcend ethnicity, class, religion or race. His life of struggle and a writer-activist career goes back to 1964 when he participated in the Nigeria Labour Congress rally that threatened the Balewa Conference. He has since been involved in all forms of activism.

    In all his writings, his main objective has always been to admonish, to chastise and to hold up a mirror of society to itself and to warn of the dire consequence of ignoring the path to progress in the polity. Without question, his public concern remains that of a permanent intellectual precedence against misrule: corruption and man in humanity to man. He is one writer who has put his life at risk in furtherance of the best political conclusion.

    Prof Soyinka, I salute you sir and wish you well! I have only one regret and it derives from the fact that while we all know your colossal royal wines, I do not take alcohol – in whatever form. And, therefore, I cannot even drink to toast your good wines. But I give you my word sir, that when next you go hunting for wildlife, I will accompany you hunter.

     

    ‘The world will not forget in a hurry this exponent of existentialism’

    Former Bursar, University of Benin and first female Vice-President, ANA, Dr May Ifeoma Nwoye:

    Wole Soyinka is one of those writers for whom a determined philosophical position is the centre of their artistic being.  Soyinka’s theoretical writings as well as his novels and plays constitute one of the main inspirational sources of modern literature.

    I see Soyinka as an extremely practical man in the sense of putting into practices his thoughts and ideas. As exponent of existentialism, Soyinka was prepared to use any literary form or genre to communicate his ideas widely.

    This is particularly true in the works  he produced during the Nigerian Civil War – The Man Died.

    He realised that the Theatre was a good way of doing this, but he also felt that the novel might also prove to be useful.

    All of his work served to reinforce the basic principles of existential thought, to show humanity as it is, and he realised that the Theatre was the best place to demonstrate man in action, in dramatic circumstance, and in the midst of living.  Although the plays sometime seem pessimistic, he demonstrated that commitment is essential for human freedom and dignity.

    Soyinka writes extremely dense and complicated critique.

    Indeed my first contact with one of his works, The Lion and the Jewel was in my second year in High school.  I couldn’t conceptualise any part of it.  I understood and appreciated it 15 years after. I took delight in laughing at myself in retrospect.

    With his birthday in perspective, I rejoice with him and proudly declare as a Nigerian: This is ours!  One of the most substantial thinkers and writers of the 21st century and will remain known for his tireless contributions to existentialism and hence, whom the world of literature will not forget in a hurry.

     

    ‘Soyinka for our literature is a watershed’

    Director of Research, National Institute for Policy and Strategic Studies, Kuru. Prof Olu Obafemi:

    I read of the production of A Dance of the Forest in Daily Times old copies left by our uncle, a retired Sergeant Major who shortly after fought in Burma and Congo.

    Years later, I heard of The Masks and Orisun Theatre. Then of course we had to read those lovely pairs of poems Abiku by both Soyinka and Clark. The ordeal of piercing the concrete metal jarring the drink lobes in The Interpreters. All in the scripts. I was not a Soyinka disciple in the direct sense that Osofisan, BJ, Ogunbiyi and Omotoso were. A distant mentee somewhat. I had sent a message to him in Ife for a copy of Opera Wonyosi running on stage then. I came from Leeds where I was working on my doctoral thesis in 1978. It was Yemi that gave me the copy. He had travelled. I didn’t meet him until 1980 I think in Leeds. It was a delightful, even electrifying experience. Soyinka for our literature is a watershed- a delightful inspiration. A lifter from the deluge of imperialist paternalism and hegemonic concept. The Nobel is a critic lift for the literature of Africa and its humane civilisation exploded on the world literati. His political activism is a baffling mix of profound creativity lending valve to radical politics. We had criticised his mythopoesis and ahistoricism while he was out there confronting the reality of our socio-political decadence and dysfunctional political leadership.

    At 80, he appears battle-ready for the fight meant for the next generation in a rudderless, adrift Nigeria. It is really not true that he is 80 but he is. Happy welcome to deep winter in the midst of late spring to our own Kongi!

     

    ‘Soyinka remains a vital force in Nigeria’s polity’

    Associate Professor of African and African Diasporic Literatures, Villanova University, United States, Chiji Akoma:

    First, Happy Birthday, Prof! Prof Soyinka has done humanity an incredible service by sharing his prodigious talents with us. Significantly, he remains a vital force in Nigeria’s polity.

    I don’t remember my first encounter with Soyinka’s work, but it must have been either the poem, Telephone Conversation or The Trials of Brother Jero, both in secondary school. Indeed, we staged the latter as part of a Patrons Day event. For the poem, I thank God for a textbook that broke down every line and practically every word or phrase of that poem and made it accessible for me. Jero was sweetly despicable!

    I believe I met Prof Soyinka personally for the first time at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government in the early 1990’s. We had just formed the International African Students Association (IASA) and had invited him to speak. The “Abiola Election” upheaval and the Ken Saro Wiwa tragedy were still unfolding. Soyinka’s own escape was legendary and we greatly felt inspired by what the great man had to say.

    I would say that the citation for his Nobel award pretty much sums up contribution to the field of Literature for me.

     

    ‘May this courageous voice for human rights retain his sharp, clear mind in coming years’

    Founding President, WRITA,  Mrs Mobolaji Adenubi:

     

    I first met Prof Soyinka in 1993, after the manuscript of my story, Splendid, was given to him as advised by Chief Simeon Adebo. His comment, “That story, full of love and courage.” stunned me, coming from Africa’s first winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature! That would be my first published work, and he generously wrote a superb Foreword to it!

    Ake: The Years of Our Childhood was the first of Soyinka’s works I read, and I was enthralled by it. It is so readily accessible!

    The Nobel Prize for Literature, awarded to WS in 1986, is a testimony to his incalculable contribution as a playwright, poet, novelist and critic to African and world literature. He remains a prolific writer. But, he is not only an eminent scholar but also a courageous voice for human rights worldwide. He is an eloquent speaker who uses the English language better than many of its natives.

    I certainly wish our own WS many happy returns of his birthday as he celebrates the 80th this year! May he continue to retain his sharp and clear mind in the coming years, and may he spend these years in good health and happiness!

     

    Playwright and Chairman, ANA Lagos (Chapter), Mr Femi Onileagbon:

    As an acolyte of this incomparably talented writer, a large chunk of my engagements have been patterned after his without any conscious attempt to do so. He just grew on me.

    It was in 1989 that I first heard the name Wole Soyinka. I was a precocious boy who was already taking the lyrics out of Don Williams’ songs and putting in mine. In JSS 2 at Mainland High School, I was gradually setting in solid cast a reputation as one of the best Literature students. Writing and directing a play titled The Beggar and the Princess with the cast made up of my classmates earlier that year did not do my reputation any harm.

    My fame as a Literature guru, an avid reader and then an amateur thespian brought me to the attention of my seniors and I was invited along with our star actors, Shakiratu Shodipo and Usang Mbang, to join the dramatic society called SOCULT. I did not join up then because I was the goalkeeper of my class and we were in the thick of the interclass football competition. The day we were knocked out by the huge, brawny SS1C students, I sat dejectedly near the school gate and heard a chant and involuntarily listened…without realising it, I was at the door of the drama group meeting. As they sang, “you dance like him/you talk like him/ you walk like him you’re just as clumsy in your Lagos way/ you’ll do for him”, I was truly and irrevocably caught and stayed for that rehearsal and for many more.

    A week later while scouring the bookshops along Fadeyi, Ikorodu Road, for The Lion and the Jewel, I came across Trials of Brother Jero and Jero’s Metamorphosis. The names and the titles held my attention and I bought all. It was a weekend: I remember because I had finished them before the next rehearsal which was a Tuesday.

    The daily rehearsals grew the love for Soyinka’s works in me and though I did not get to act because I insisted that I wanted to direct, I was a Soyinka acolyte. Interestingly, I had to wait till 1995 to read another work by Soyinka and I couldn’t have been faced with a tougher challenge than understanding the novel, Interpreters. Rather than run away from Soyinka as a few of my colleagues did, I wanted more.

    I had the opportunity to be the theatre workshop student director for my department and others who borrowed the course. Unsurprisingly and to the chagrin of Chief Charles Somade who was the lecturer-in-charge of that course, I selected Death and the King’s Horseman. He felt we were not sound enough to stage a play like that but we knew we could. I knew that my colleagues and I were ready.

    Led by Abiodun Idowu, the assistant director, Wole Oduwusi, stage manager and me, artistic director, we put up a show that convinced Baba Somade and other lecturers in the department that we were the best set of thespians in the department up to that time.

    By that time I had read The Man Died, Dance of the Forest and many other works.as well as being deeply influenced by his theory of the four worlds. Further encounter with Soyinka at Prof Niyi Osundare’s class at the University of Ibadan only furthered my desire to explore themes similar to Soyinka’s though I was resolved that I would write in the language of Osundare and the grammatical eccentricity of E. E. Cummings. I wrote the poem Abiku in Ibadan. One of the poems in my latest poetry collection, This Forge, My home titled Return is based on Soyinka’s poem, Rust. I have completed a verse drama entitled Tides which is based on his version of Abiku and mine.

    I constantly have the itch to write prose but I feel I am not ready yet. One thing I know is that whenever I do get to write fiction, my thematic preoccupations and explorations will not be too far from those of Wole Soyinka who is for me, the greatest African writer and a legend alive.

  • An encounter with Kongi

    An encounter with Kongi

    Founder, Rainbow Book Club and Project Director, Port Harcourt UNESCO World Book Capital 2014, Mrs Koko Kalango recalls her encouter with Prof Wole Soyinka

    From my vantage point on the balcony of the theatre, I could see the speaker clearly.  The Hall in East London was full on that cold evening in January 1999. I had left my office on Brompton Road earlier than usual to get to the venue well before the doors opened at 7pm. The seat I had secured afforded me a good view of the event’s proceedings. A Nigerian band, Tamayan, played highlife, just before the writer took to the centre of the stage.  The light from the ceiling made his bushy white head of hair appear silver. His beard remained grey. Wole Soyinka was casually dressed in a grey, sleeveless jacket with a white band around its arm, over a black jumper and a pair of black trousers. He began to speak, but there seemed to be a problem with the microphone. He muttered something which I did not quite catch. I don’t think anyone else in the audience did either. We all burst into spontaneous applause anyway!

    I had travelled across town to attend The London Festival of Literature where three literary legends would be under one roof, on one night. I was not about to miss this lifetime opportunity to see, hear, and perhaps even meet, Wole Soyinka, Chinua Achebe and Derek Walcott.

    After Soyinka gave his Lecture, Alastair Niven, then Director of Literature at The British Council, had an interview with Achebe and, following an interlude, Walcott read some of his poems.

    At the end of the programme I joined the queue to get Soyinka’s autograph. In anticipation of this meeting I had purchased a copy of his 1972 memoir The Man Died: Prison Notes of Wole Soyinka. I shuffled patiently in the line, every step inched me closer to meeting the man. After about 20 minutes, I came face to face with Wole Soyinka. In the little time I had, I managed to get my book autographed and to take a picture with the author.

    Seven years later, I found myself seated in a four-wheel drive beside Prof. Soyinka, riding from the Port Harcourt International Airport to the British Council office. We were going to meet with over 100 eager young students who had studied  Ake: Soyinka’s childhood memoire, and were waiting to interact with the writer, as part of the Rainbow Book Club’s 2006 ‘Get Nigeria Reading again!’ campaign. Soyinka had turned 70 a couple of years before and his latest memoire You Must Set Forth at Dawn was being launched at this time.  As we made plans for the second Rainbow Book Club national reading campaign, Africa’s first Nobel Laureate for literature was our natural choice for guest writer.

    When I met WS at the Airport, he was obviously very tired; he had, only the day before, come in from Finland. In spite of his fatigue, the Professor came across as easy going, warm and kind. During the 70 minutes ride into the Garden City, I could not help noticing how the faces of people we passed lit up when they recognised the man with the trademark bushy grey afro.

    In the car, I intimated WS of the programme for the day and informed him that I would be interviewing him before the audience at the dinner that evening. “You?” he asked, surprised.  I looked him straight in the eye and replied “Yes, me”.

    Someone had warned me:  ‘you don’t just get up and interview Soyinka. You have to do a lot of study and preparation. He could get irritated if he senses that you have not done your homework.’  I was not initially billed to interview him and had approached a couple of literature scholars to conduct the interview; each of them turned down the invitation. I suspect that they dreaded the thought of confronting this literary lion, who had a reputation of taking his prey apart, effortlessly. As the organisation of this event rested largely on my shoulder, and I could not find anyone with the courage to face Wole Soyinka, I had no option but to take on the giant myself. I must confess that when the hour did come I really felt like a David before a Goliath.  But it was too late for me to back out… without thinking too deeply, I shut my eyes and took a leap of faith!

    That event would mark the beginning of the association between WS and me. Now an honourary member of the Rainbow Book Club, Prof. Soyinka has not held back on his goodwill, personal participation or counsel whenever we have reached out to him. At our instance he has read to children, taught aspiring writers, taken part in various interactive sessions and ofcourse he delivered the keynote address at the historic occasion of Port Harcourt’s assumption of the prestigious title of World Book Capital 2014!

    When we put in the bid to UNESCO for a city in Nigeria to be World Book Capital, Prof. was not very optimistic but he encouraged me all the same. When UNESCO contacted me to say Port Harcourt had been nominated World Book Capital 2014, beating cities like Oxford, Lyon, Sharjah and Moscow, I was ecstatic. Naturally, Prof. was one of the first people I informed. Prof. threw his weight behind our preparations and even came all the way to Port Harcourt to make his input and offer his assistance.

    Today, a decade and a half since my first meeting with Prof. and almost a decade since we first hosted him in Port Harcourt, Prof. has become, easily, one of my favourite people. I enjoy chatting with him as we often have during the long rides to or from the Port Harcourt International Airport or the University of Port Harcourt. Over the years, in the course of my work, i have related with many people but Prof. has stood out tall amongst others. I recall that when we invited him to the maiden edition of the Garden City Literary Festival (now the Port Harcourt Book Festival), in 2008, I inquired what honorarium I should give him. Prof. never responded to my emails. I went ahead to propose a sum that was a real sacrifice to Rainbow but nothing near what he would usually accept. I waited in anxious anticipation for his feedback, not sure if he would feel I was taking his goodwill for granted. Rather, Prof. reverted to say what I was offering him was ‘too much’ and that he did not want ‘to empty the coffers of the Rainbow Book Club’. That is vintage Prof., ever ready to go the extra mile for a cause he believes in!  Prof. belongs to the endangered specie that is the de-tribalised Nigerian. His tribe is any tribe in trouble. Like a chameleon he takes on the colour of the oppressed and when their problem is solved he assumes the pigmentation of the victimised.

    A man of courage, Soyinka remains  a voice for the voiceless. A typical example is the now world famous Bring Back the Girls campaign which grew out of a passionate plea he made at the opening ceremonies of the Port Harcourt World Book Capital programme on World Book Day (April 23rd) this year. I quote him “Today, we shall not even be so demanding as to resurrect the slogan BRING BACK THE BOOK – leave that to us. It will be quite sufficient to see a demonstrable dedication that answers the agonising cry of BRING BACK THE PUPILS!”

    As I write, my mind still goes back to that evening, in 2006, when I took the stage in an interview with Wole Soyinka, at the Hotel Presidential, Port Harcourt. I survived the encounter and the audience seemed to have enjoyed it as much as I did, even if, at the beginning, I had felt like David and, in my eyes, Soyinka was like Goliath. Unlike the biblical Goliath, however, Soyinka did not fall down. Infact, at 80, he still stands tall.

    In my few years of relating with WS, I have found this giant to be gentle, young-at-heart, giving, fearlessly loyal and fiercely intelligent. My prayer for Professor Wole Soyinka, on his 80th birthday, is a promise God has made in Psalm 91 verse 16, ‘with long life will I satisfy him and show him my salvation’.

     

    •This article is a revised edition of an article written by Mrs Kalango and published in WS A LIFE IN FULL (Bookcraft.)  Mrs. Kalango is the founder of the Rainbow Book Club and the Project Director of the Port Harcourt UNESCO World Book Capital 2014 programme.

  • ‘Greatest sickness today is not HIV but lack of love’

    ‘Greatest sickness today is not HIV but lack of love’

    The Executive Secretary of Nigerian Christian Pilgrim Commission (NCPC), John Kennedy Opara, is a rare Christian. Like the former president of the US, the late John F. Kennedy who was assassinated on November 22, 1963 in Dallas, Texas, Okpara’s tenacity, steadfastness and commitment to humanity endear him to most Nigerians, non-Christians alike. He spoke on among other national issues, the increasing spate of violence in the land, religious tolerance, relevance of religious pilgrimage to the citizenry and whether he will go into politics. The Assistant Editor (Arts), OZOLUA UHAKHEME reports.

    It is common knowledge that Nigeria is currently facing an unprecedented challenge in terrorism. This is also linked to religion and to some extent politics. As a major personality in Christendom what is your take?

    I want to say that no religion encourages destruction of lives. No religion allows people to take lives. People don’t understand the meaning of religion. It means that  every man or woman is free to worship and wherever he wants to worship. And it mustn’t be that I must get you to worship in my church or mosque. God created us as Nigerians, he created us Christians, Muslims and some don’t go to church. No matter how I try or everybody tries all Nigerians cannot be Christians, it is practically impossible. There is no way every Nigerian can become a Muslim even if we have 20 Muslim presidents back-to-back. Most of us take the issue of religion to the extreme. How are you sure of the lineage of the person who is being persecuted for his religious leanings? You may discover that you are linked up somewhere. So what do you stand to gain from all these killings and maimings?  It is unfortunate that someone will kill in the name of religion. It is not acceptable at all and I want to say I have a lot of respect for my Muslim friends, most of them that are reasonable and sound do not agree on this either and say everyone of us values our lives.

    Most of what is happening are politically motivated acts cloaked in religion. And I tell you politics will fail you and human beings will fail you.  The only thing that is permanent is God.

    As head of a Christian body and a key player in that domain, what is your commission doing to resolve these crises?

    You know I have taken part severally in some of the inter-religious dialogues and meetings and the CAN president has been calling series of meetings between Christians and Moslem leaders all for us to find a common ground to understand ourselves better. Myself and my friend, the Hajj Commission Chairman also relate a lot and I will give you a practical example.  Before we got our present headquarters, we were accommodated by the Hajj Commission for three years. We were given accommodation at no cost. In fact, it got to a point they had to pack from the building accommodating the two commissions because we couldn’t stay together as we were growing and the space constraint was there. A Moslem leader conceded his accommodation to me, he was the landlord and I was the tenant. And when I vacated after three years, I gave him the key and I said Bello, I am very grateful and I invited him for the commissioning of our new office and he obliged me. He did what most of my Christian brothers would never have done and I can never deny him anything he wants from me.

    I always believe that we are the change that others see. And you must be the change that the world must see. I always tell people that the greatest sickness today is not HIV but lack of love.

     

    The ongoing National Confab is proposing that government should reduce its sponsorship of pilgrims to the holy land, thus making pilgrimage a personal affair. Also, some delegates are advocating for the review of the commission. How do you react to this?

    I read about it and I said the greatest challenge they had was the issue of communication. What they should have done if the delegates wanted to do a thorough job is to invite the DG of the Hajj commission and I to tell them about these commissions. By the way, they don’t know that these commissions generate a lot of revenue which we pay to the Federal Government. We generate money here.

    Pilgrims pay what we call administrative charges, also the ground handlers and air carriers pay administrative charges too and that money goes to government and government can bank on our internally generated revenue (IGR). My own model is to leave an organisation that is self sustaining and pay its overhead without relying on government.

    The Federal Government does not sponsor people on holy pilgrimage. Government sponsors doctors and nurses, at times 50 doctors and 50 nurses. It is the same thing applicable to the Hajj. People  say what is not true. Agreed that during last year operation we had an increase in the number of self-sponsored pilgrims of 100 percent. We are not sitting pretty either, we are doing all we can to encourage self-sponsorship through adverts on radio and word of mouth and the turn-out is unbelievable because this is what they owe themselves.

    We are also using it to transform the citizens of this country. What is pilgrimage all about? In the NCPC, pilgrimage is used as a tool for moral and spiritual transformation. We believe that when Christians go on holy pilgrimage and are spiritually transformed, they will come back as citizens of our great country and move Nigeria forward and pursue peace where the enemies of peace may be sited. And I have testimonies of people that have been touched by God. Any responsible government will always look out for the welfare of its citizens.

    It is practically impossible for any government to fold its hands and say we are not interested. Massive movement of Nigerians entails a lot in the diplomatic circle and other areas. No country will deal with you as an individual. Like the Hajj that goes with more than 100,000 Nigerians, you expect Federal Government to sit down and watch them.

     

    What of the overhead costs of these commissions?

    The offices that government set up are for administrative convenience. When you have a commission administering the process of pilgrimage, it gives a standard. Why we are not able to achieve what we want to achieve is because we do not plan. I believe what government is doing is commendable, many people are gainfully employed. For example, part of our success story this year is our own Christian Pilgrim Guest House. Christians are lodged there and this generates IGR, it is not free. I think something is missing somewhere for people to advocate the scrapping of NCPC and the Hajj Commission. This is very unfortunate.

    We are also doing something new. We are partnering with the Ministry of Agriculture, exposing our pilgrims to the area of agriculture, so they can learn how to farm and do other things when they get there, it’s a rare privilege.

     

    You grew up as a strong Catholic who dreamt of becoming a priest. Are you still within the Catholic faith?

    I was born a Catholic but you know my position is very simple. I am born a Catholic but I am a Pentecostal by fellowship and I always tell people I am an Anglican by association because many of my friends are Anglicans and when they do their programmes I have to join them. Many of the fathers who have blessed me and inspired me to be who I am today are men of Pentecostal fellowship and I fellowship with them. When I visit them I hear the word of God and my faith increases.

     

    Are you interested in politics?

    I am one man that cannot do anything except the Lord speaks to me and tells me what to do. He has never told me to go into politics. For everything you do, the Lord must lead you.

     

    Nigeria is witnessing an increase in influx of people on religious tourism especially with some Pentecostal churches.  What is NCPC doing about this development?

    I was at the last Holy Ghost congress in June and I tell you what we have done since we came on board is to introduce what we call the local content. We now have Nigerians who are into ground handling services, providing services to inbound pilgrims and work with different churches. There are so many of them who can take care of people coming from different countries. We register them to empower them. The churches are aware and have responded positively with some registering their own ground handlers with us and the government generates IGR from this, they pay tax and other levies, you know. We make sure we license them and empower them.

     

    Who do you admire?

    I have come across great men but one man that has stood out without fear of contradiction (because he is my boss) is President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan. He is a man with wisdom. He is a man I admire so much. I also admire President Barrack Obama of the US and Pastor Enoch Adejare Adeboye.

  • ‘No cash value increase for now’

    ‘No cash value increase for now’

    The Chair of Etisalat Prize for Literature, Dr. Sarah Ladipo Manyika has said that it would be premature to start considering an increase in the cash value of the annual prize, saying that the Etisalat Prize for Literature is not about providing gift for the few but the community. She spoke in Lagos during the unveiling of the judging panel for the second edition of the prize.

    Other members of the panel include award winning British/Sudanese writer Jamal Mahjoub, prolific Francophone writer Alain Mabanckou and writer and filmmaker Tsitsi Dangarembga.

    Manyika described Etisalat Prize for Literature as a phenomenon in any scale noting that she would ensure that the panel gets better and stronger in the discharge of its duty. “The prize is very unique and is poised to be African most prestigious prize,” she added.

    On whether there is likelihood of raising the cash value of the prize, she said: “We are always looking at several ways of improving the prize. For now, the prize is significant but it is not all about cash value. It is much bigger than individual award, not about providing gift for the few, but the community.”

    She holds a Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley, and currently teaches literature at San Francisco State University. Her writing includes essays, academic papers, reviews and short stories. Sarah’s first novel, Independence, is published by Legend Press (London) and Cassava Republic Press (Abuja). Sarah was one of the inaugural Judges for Etisalat Prize for Literature 2013.

    Now in its second year, the Etisalat Prize for Literature is the first Pan-African prize for debut fiction writers of African citizenship. The prize was launched last year June and has become one of Africa’s most prestigious literary prizes for fiction.

    Chief Executive Officer, Etisalat Nigeria, Matthew Willsher said the judges for this year’s prize are some of the most respected individuals in the literary world and they will bring in diverse experiences and expertise to the judging panel. “What is most exciting is that we have a very diverse panel that will bring in their individual perspectives to the judging process. They are an accomplished panel with vast amount of experience in the creative writing world”.

    He noted that building the brand is a long term journey and that the literature prize shows that ‘we care and it differentiates us. The direct business building may not be there now. The prize according to Willsher is a long term commitment by Etisalat to develop African literature as well as enhance the flame in African literature.

    Dangarembga who expressed happiness that the prize would make younger generation feel they are not left out, is hopeful that a homegrown African prize will lift African literature. “It will go a long way to unlock new talents as well as encourage publishers,” she said.

    She is a contemporary African feminist. She published a short story in Sweden entitled The Letter and in 1987, she published a play in Harare entitled She No Longer Weeps. Her real success came at age twenty-five with the publication of her novel Nervous Conditions. This novel was the first to be published in English by a black Zimbabwean woman. In 1989, Nervous Conditions won her the African section of the Commonwealth Writers Prize. She had made many film productions, including a documentary for German television. She made the film entitled Everyone’s Child in 1996. It was shown worldwide at various festivals including the Dublin Film Festival. In 2006, she published The Book of Not: A Sequel to Nervous Conditions.

    Jamal Mahjoub is an award winning writer of mixed British/Sudanese heritage. Born in London, he was raised in Khartoum where the family remained until 1990. He is also an award-winning novelist, translator and essayist.  Jamal Mahjoub reflect on notions of ancient Egypt in modern life and art. He was awarded a scholarship to study in England and attended the University of Sheffield. He has lived in various countries including the UK, Denmark and currently, Spain. He writes in English and has published seven novels under his own name. In 2012, Mahjoub began writing a series of crime fiction novels under the pseudonym Parker Bilal.

    Alain Mabanckou is considered to be one of the most talented and prolific writers in the French language today and the first francophone sub-Saharan African writer to be published by Gallimard in its prestigious “collection” called La Blanche. He is mostly known for his novels, notably Verre Cassé (BROKEN GLASS) which was unanimously praised by the press, critics and readers alike. In 2006 he published Memoires de porc-épic (Memoirs of a Porcupine) which garnered him the Prix RENAUDOT, one of the highest distinctions in literature written in French. His novels are published in more than fifteen languages.

    Zimbabwean NoViolet Bulawayo emerged winner of the maiden edition with her debut Fiction novel Bom Boy. She received £15,000 in Prize money and a fellowship at the University of East Anglia in the United Kingdom which she gifted to runner-up Yewande Omotoso.

  • ‘My regrets over pools business’

    ‘My regrets over pools business’

    For over three decades, Pa Julius Adelewa was into pool business. Today, he regrets getting into it. Taiwo Abiodun met the septuagenarian.

    He is always dressed in immaculate white: his buba and trousers are all white in colour. His cell phone and shoes are also white! Meeting him for the first time one would  wonder why he wears only white apparels. In fact, he has become so known with his white outfit that many do not know his real name. He is fondly  known as ‘Mr. White ‘or ‘Baba White’. Only his childhood friends who grew up with him in Ondo State know his real name. In Lagos, Ondo, Osun, Oyo and Edo states Pa Julius Adelewa is known as ‘Mr. White’ when he was in pool business in the late 70s.

    According to him, he wears white “because it is the best in the world. I have become synonymous with white.  When I was younger I used to go to  Owambe parties. I became Baba Egbe (leader) for many clubs and they used to give me clothes (aso ebi) but  I mistakenly wore the wrong one on a particular party or ceremony. This used to cause confusion no matter how I explained. Many of the celebrators did not like it.”

    As a way of saving himself from this, he resorted to wearing white to all occasions. “I became free as they all knew my  manner of dressing and could be predicted. I have been wearing white for over 40 years, I have never made a mistake not wearing the colour white since then”, he said.

     

    Why I abandoned Pool business

    Three decades after being in the pool business, he decided to abandon the trade that made him popular in the South West because according to him, “Playing pools is the easiest way to make a poor man poorer and the rich poor. The habit (pools betting) has broken many homes.”

    He added that he has seen  how those who play pools are being deceived daily and how many customers sold off their property. This made him leave the business. He said: “the pool agent will swear with everything that his prospective customer will get a ‘sure banker’ in the week. And when you put in all your money to play and in the end when you lose all the money you invested, you will again be looking forward to another week, which is false hope. This is bad.”

    Remembering the past he continued “I remember my nickname Adelink. I once worked  with the  Face to Face Pools for some years when I saw that the business was booming I went ahead to set up my own called Cardinal Pool, it was popular all over old Ondo State  and some neighbouring states. I used to travel to Lagos to print my coupon. Pool business was the main business and it thrived. When a customer wins he is paid his money, that is the credibility of Pool Houses. I started doing it but later I discovered that it is only a rich man who could do it and be successful. I mean a man who is not very, very rich  should not to go into pools betting, it will ruin him.”

    Asked if it is a profitable business, he shook his head, sat up and gave a heavy sigh. He said:“For  the  pool agents there is money  in it, it is a profitable business for them because  during our time the agent will take seven shillings  as commission on a pound, and every  Saturday I used to have  about 100pounds  as  my commission from my sales  which was a lot of money then. But, I did not like it – I have conscience, and I believe it was a rip- off. For those who did not win would be downcast and worried and out of pity I would give them money.”

    On why he decided to leave the business, Pa Adelewa said “I left the business for a reason too painful. The business is evil.” He, however, remembered some of the sad incidents he witnessed, “I could remember there was a man who  bet with his radiogram to play pools but did not win at all and all his money was gone and radiogram gone too. when he got home he started fighting his wife when she demanded for money for house keep. He was lying at home that the radiogram was with the repairer. So when I went to his house I discovered this, I did not like it. Many who lost in pools betting committed suicide because they borrowed money to bet while many could not afford to meet up family expenses. Some of these customers who patronize pool houses make  false promises that they would pay their debtors, and some would be looking forward to buying cars and when the pool result comes out and he does not succeed  .Seeing all these I was discouraged”, he said with pity .

    He described those who indulged in the pool business as haggard and unkempt.

    Asked whether he quit the business on  religious  ground but he said no, “It is not religion that made me to stop it.  I don’t go to church, I don’t go to mosque, so it is not religion that made me left it but seeing human beings wasting, rotting and dying because of coupon, no, no. I don’t like that. There  is no  shortcut to success. You will see these  pool betters who would stay indoors deceiving themselves with coupons, the day the coupon will click he would not have money and that is the spirit of money. I will not encourage anybody to patronise pool house”.

    Adelewa said he went into hotel business to establish White Palace Hotel after leaving the pool business, “when I left the pool business, I sat down and thought of what I could do and I discovered that whenever I had visitors I used to spend heavily in booking for hotels. I am a socialite, I have a lot of big men as friends. Each time they come visiting, I would be looking for hotels for them. I remember the late  magician Professor Peller  visited Akure in those days, I would go and book hotel for him. He was my very good friend , he used to come to me in Akure here. Later I decided that I should have a hotel.”

     

    I taught myself English

    Adelewa said he was illiterate in spite of his fame. According to him, he did not see the four walls of any school but forced himself to learn through friends and  by mixing with ladies who did not speak Yoruba but English. He said: “ I did not go to school but I had all kinds of latest English suits. Then in the 60s I had a bicycle and as a ladies’ man, I had a lot of girl friends  who were attracted  by my dressing and my decorated Raleigh bicycle, with my bicycle then I was a big man  but  I could not speak a word in English .

    “I started as a painter, I painted houses and  one day in 1964,  a Briton who was a principal of a school in Akure called me  and asked me to bring a grey paint, but I went to bring green paint. This annoyed him and he sent me away. I later went to tell a friend after bribing him with a tin of Bournvita that he should teach me how to tell the Briton that ‘I don’t understand English language when you speak to me’ he told me. I then memorised  the sentence but on my way to the Briton  which was about two miles  I forgot the sentence. I  had to return  to him  again and it was about a mile going back to my friend and when I got there he wrote it on a piece of paper  and asked me to give the Briton ,  again I paid by giving him another tin of Bournvita. When I got to the school I called a student and asked him to read what was in the paper and he read  ‘ I don’t understand English when you speak to me,’’ I then quickly ran into the principal’s office and told him  ‘I don’t understand  English when you speak to me ‘ the Briton took pity on me and asked his Bursar to be my interpreter. Later when I knew I needed to be speaking English if I needed  job or contracts I then  went to have  a lot of friends who were Ibo  and they started speaking  English to me while I would reply anyhow. Most of my girlfriends were  Igbo who could not speak Yoruba and one of them taught me how to quickly understand. He said  if  I could read alphabets then  ‘I should pronounce it as I spell it’, that was all. Later I went to buy lot of books and read about a great lot of people like Abraham Lincoln, Socrates, Plato , and a lot of literature books too like Macbeth, Julius Ceasar. Not only this I employed a teacher and was paying him. I bought motivational books and that is all. Today my children are well educated”

    He observed that life is ephemeral, “Life is like a flower in the morning it’s attractive but in the evening it withers. Early in our lives we were all handsome and beautiful but when we grow old things changed.

    “When I was young, I  used to watch Indian films where I used to watch beautiful girls and my wish then was to marry a  beautiful lady, not knowing that it has lot of problems. When you marry beauty you marry wahala , I didn’t know. Now I know better “

    Asked the secret of his good health, he said “I eat good food, and so I don’t get sick. I don’t think of anything that would increase my blood pressure, if I eat food that disturbs me I would stop it.”

  • ANA Lagos holds monthly reading

    The Association of Nigerian Authors (ANA) has held its monthly reading at the senior staff club, University of Lagos.

    The programme featured resolution of new policies, issues facing the association and profering solution and reading from different books by different authors.

    Femi Onileagbon, ANA, Lagos Chairman enjoined the members of the association to endeavour to study the constitution of the association, noting that for any organisation to function well, the constitution must be studied and understood.

    “It is high time we took this association more seriously. Things get done easily when you look at it dispassionately. ANA should not be run based on the whims and caprices of anyone”

    Besides, the writers discussed  was the “purported suspension of the General Secretary, in person of Tanko Okodua.

    In response, Tanko said that, “an individual cannot be bigger than the larger society. I was trained to be truthful and respectful. Integrity is a price that I have placed on myself and I will not sell it cheap. Since this matter began, I have apologized to the Congress.”

    This month reading was done from different books which were basically centered on prose and poetry. Femi Onileagbon read a poem titled Battles; Yemi Adebiyi read from a book, which encouraged young girls in secondary school to hold on to their virginity; Margaret Iragbo chose a poem named, “Golden Jubilee and True Independence”; Vincent Ikedinachi delivered a beautiful rendition of a poem titled This World My Hope authored by Femi Onileagbon; Ngwuli Oliver read from his book, The Naughty Sheep; Daggar Tolar read a poem titled, How the world gave us prison while Tanko Okodua read a lengthy poem titled An Island of Self.

    A major highlight of the reading was an acted out scene from Olatunbosun Taofeek’s yet to be published book, Mr. Grammar which he did with Iquo Eke. It illustrated how security workers in the country adopt an indifferent attitude towards the discharge of their duty.

    Subsequently the books and poems read were also criticized by the writers and different modern methods of writing were suggested in order to create a more creative and well-written books or poem.

    Onileagbon also unleashed proposed plan of organizing a play-reading workshop within the next four to five months. He explained that, “this will further enable a professional touch to the readings, and it will also help us to have a better and more interesting reading.”

    Conversely, another matter of discourse at the meeting was the release of the names of people in the Local Organizing Committee. It included distinguished individuals from different fields of human endeavour. It comprised names of journalists, writers, activists, poets among others.

    The names included; Chairman Editorial Board, the Nation newspaper, Sam Omatseye; Writer and lecturer, Prof Akachi Ezeigbo, a Medical doctor, Dr. Tolu Ajayi, Mrs Iquo Eke, activist and environmentalist, Mrs Sola Alamutu; Writer and poet, Austin Njokwu, A.J. Daggar Tolar, Dr. Arnold Ndoka, Akin Adeoya, Yemi Adebiyi, Oluwakemi Omoyare, Chukwuyere Chukwu, Adetokunbo Pierse, Chief Larry Williams, Nike Adesuyi Ojeikere among others.

  • Catching them young

    The 7th edition of the Children’s Art Competition/exhibition, organised by the King’s Children’s Foundation was held recently at the Terra Kulture, Victoria Island Lagos.

    The competition was set up in 2008 to encourage children gifted in Fine Arts.

    The theme of this year was Nigeria at 100.  The event drew pupils from primary schools across Lagos State. They included Indian Language School, Word of Power; Lagoon School, King’s School, Topgrade; Reagan Memorial Baptist; Avesina International School; Supreme Education Foundation; Regency College; Lagoon College and Amvil schools.

    This year’s edition was organised by King’s Children Foundation in conjunction with the National Gallery of Art. The judges were Mr Folusho Ajanaku; Mr Isreal Benamaisia; Mr John Igwatu and Mr Anointing Aminu.

    Director of the foundation, Mrs Victoria Tandoh, said that in the past such competitions were mostly held for adults and secondary school students. This, she said informed  the initiation of the competition to provide a unique way for the children to express themselves.

    “This is a platform that will allow them experiment with texture and colour shades. Their skills too will come to play,” she added.

    Head of Planning, Lagos State Ministry of Youth, Sports and Social Development, Mrs Shade Lawal, urged the  participants to see arts as life which is interpreted differently by different individuals and as a means of uplifting the inner minds. She noted that numerous opportunities abound in the world of art.

    “Dream of good dreams and begin to aspire for greater heights. Numerous opportunities abound in the industry because your parents have given you all it takes to excel.”

    Mr Ajanaku said the National Gallery of Art shares in the vision of Kings Foundation, thus the partnership. He noted that it is the concern of the foundation to see the growth of the young ones, just like great men of arts began in such fashion.

    He also explained that just as art encompasses every facet of life, those who ventured into the  profession don’t look for jobs as it is something one can begin alone. To him, the destinies of the young ones begin in such fashion.

    Among guests was a Magistrate of the Lagos State High Court Hon Funmi Demi-Ajayi, who recalled that such event reminded her of her childhood when she once ventured into the world of paintings.

    The Magistrate who applauded the talents and gift of the pupils, urged them to use such talents properly. Not only are the exhibits pleasing to the eye, they are of international standard .

    Principal of Redeemers Secondary School Mrs Olatundun Adetoye said God endowed people in different ways and it is the ability to use it wisely that sets one apart. she described art works as a means of expressing emotions and feelings, a feature that has been before the time of Jesus, where people sculpture using woods, iron and stone.

    She observed that the rich these days now store their wealth in form of artworks, which is the beginning of something big to come.

    “You will not only enjoy yourself doing what you love, it will be a source of wealth. We parents often emphasis academics more than arts, forgetting that it can also be a source of livelihood,” Mrs Adetoye added.

    The principal urged the students not to look down on whatever they do no matter how little, but rather take their God given talent to greater heights.

    The winning painting for the competition that was held in 2010 was displayed in the museum in England to commemorate Nigeria at 50. There will be a grand exhibition of the winning works in December, where they will be put on sale.

  • ‘Don’t call me a patriot’

    ‘Don’t call me a patriot’

    On the eve of his 80th birthday, Nobel Laureate, Professor Wole Soyinka, spoke to Aljazeera on a wide range of issues. Excerpts:

    AJ: Wole Soyinka, thank you very much for talking to us… Thak you for welcoming us to your very lovely home.

    WS: You’re welcome

    AJ: the abduction of more than 200 school girls in the north. Are you glad that the world is finally paying attention to a conflict that has been widely viewed as an exclusive Nigerian problem for a long time? Or are you saddened perhaps at the negative light it shed on Nigeria and on its leadership in particular?

    Ws: Well, glad would be the wrong word. I’ve said this the other time.The global community is coming to an awareness that certain problems are not specific to certain areas but are actually global both in actuality and in what it portends. And I have stressed the fat that our soldiers have served in so many places outside the world. And this kind of affliction is of the kind that requires both political and social understanding but also requires much as we don’t like the word, requires a state of war – a mind that is in a state of war. Other people are more experienced in certain aspects.

    It is somewhat surprising that Nigeria which has as you sayyourself one of the most reputed of the African continent with successful peace-keeping missions in countries like Liberia and Sierra Leone and so on hasn’t been able to maintain security within its own border. How do you explain all that?

    Well, in this particular case, it is very poor leadership – it’s overconcentration on the politics of the situation, you know – how to retain power. It has neglected what it is actually elected to do. And so the security situation which is quite obvious in its possibilities, in its developments to so many people, myself included, and voices have been crying out that we are in a serious security situation. But this was neglected and so it fested. And now, it is nearly very out of control.

    What do you make of the reaction of the abduction of the girls? It seems to have captured the world’s imagination with Hollywood getting involved, Mitchell Obama getting involved. Do you wonder sometimes what the world sees, saw in that particular event?

    The world didn’t get to see it the way I saw it without some very serious burden, both high level, the movement on and so forth. But also in true direct approaches. Some of the ambassadors, some of the diplomatic representatives were here to whom we were able to say, ‘listen, don’t isolate Nigeria over this issue. And fortunately, since they are intelligent people and they are on the ground, they knew exactly what we were talking about.  They knew that there is a history behind it which guaranteed that this would escalate in dimension.

    When I talk about capturing the imagination of the world, it almost seems like it’s a story that fitscertain expectation of what should happen in a country like Nigeria, like what should happen in Africa?

    What should happen. Before, it is worth paying attention to it. In other words, the negative aspect. Well, it’s a rebuke both against Nigeria and the world community. The sort of subconscious need to point a negative finger at Nigeria assists. And then you convert it to something positive which is concern.

    Some outside of Nigeria may see this as interesting time because Nigeria has become Africa’s leading economic power. There is oil, there is gas and so, the timing is certainly interesting.

    It is rather like the negative icing on a rotten cake. So, we should understand that there are people who love bad news and all that. At the same time, we have to recognise there are many people that are generally appalled and are concerned. Andthen,the group which sees this as part of a global menace which has got to be stopped before it expands to other places.

    How do you stop it Professor Soyinka?

    I see it both as the military solution sooner or later. But at the same time, anytime it requires, even if it a shock in the short term, it requires very subtle diplomatic deployment of intellectual resources.

    But, when you haven’t resolved the entrenched poverty, the issues that are affecting northern Nigeria, does it really come to you as a surprise that we are seeing a group like boko haram in some parts of Nigeria that are not being applauded but certainly people understand a certain resentment it seems towards the government in the north because they feel neglected and marginalised.

    Well, let’s divide Boko Haram into segments. Those who unleashed Boko Haram on the nation are not poverty stricken. They are politicians, very well-to-do but wants to do better, ‘in their own way’, desperate for power, intelligent enough or perceptive enough to recognise that the cocktail of politics and religion fundamentalism can only yield them dividends. They think they have nothing to lose. But the foot soldiers have been indoctrinated for years from childhood. And they believe, they been told for instance that your religion is in danger, ‘go and kill.’

    And Islam is endangered

    Their religion is not endangered. Islam is not endangered. It is the perverse followers, those who debase religion itself who are being used and who use others and proclaim that they are fighting for Islam. So, we have a situation where even those who unleashed this menace on the nation are now endangered because the foot soldiers in many cases have become ‘radicalised’ and they have looked at their mentors and said, ‘wait a minute, you’re not practicing true Islam. And so the perpetrators, the real organisers of boko haram are looking towards the government for support. So, the bottom line really is that we have a motivating aspect of this insurrection which cuts across class, position, status, wealth or poverty. Take a look at other nations of the world. Nigeria is not unique. Look at Algeria and this is part of the poverty of thought and knowledge of some other leaders. They cannot look outside and see what happens elsewhere. If you look at Algeria, if you look even at parts of Afghanistan, and so on, you’ll find out that religion on its own is a powerful motivating factor without complacency, government neglect.

    I’ll come back to the issue of religion in just a moment professor Soyinka. But just on that point, one gets the feeling and I might be wrong. One gets the feeling that even among Nigeria, the insurgency in the northern region was for a long time something that could be effectively contained and had little impact on the oil-rich south. It almost seemed as if Nigerians didn’t want to be confronted with the divisions and the fragmentation that exist within Nigerian society?

    Yes, I’ve remarked this often that the nation in the main is still not in denial. Those regions which are pretty well-to-do in resources and are not immediately affected by this insurgency – they believe it is something that can just be contained. That it is something remote. We have to keep reminding that ‘listen, look at the histories of the world. Boko Haram if not contained and eradicated will be found in the heart of Lagos before you now it. And we’ve been saying that for years. And indeed, it’s been established that there are cells which exist in the southern parts. So, I’ve urged and continued to urge that we better regard this as a national issue.

    You’ve strongly criticised the Nigerian military in the past. You’ve criticised people like Sani Abacha. Some Nigerians that I’ve talked to today, you’ll be surprised to hear say they long for the days of military dictatorship because at least then, there was security. What do you make of that?

    Nigeria is desperate. Nigerians are desperate. And it is not unusual to find people who long for not so much the good old days but the more capable, more efficient period of military governance. But a larger number recognise the fact that the military has shut its bolt and that they proved every bit as corrupt if not even more corrupt than civilians have been in the past and in the present. So, it’s a mixture

    So, when you were saying there were different administrations, whether civilian or military, what would you say is the most critical problem of government in Nigeria?

    Today, it is security. There are other issues of course, like public services, electricity, potable water for many areas still, in spite of the fact that they are sinking boreholes all over the place. And in fact, a small proportion of the people have access to potable water. And there is the mammoth problem of institutionalised corruption all the way down from the top to the bottom. Now, that is the reason why many people remember one or two military, should we say president or leaders who had no time at all for corruption. Then, that becomes the sole issue but it is not the sole issue.

    Let’s talk a bit about religion because you started talking about … you’ve written that there is an epidemic of religion in Nigeria and in the world and you say that you’ll be happy if religion were taken away altogether. So, do you think the world would be a better place without religion?

    My fear is that the devil would always find work for idle hands. If you take away religion, something even more nasty would take its place. So, I speak both subjectively and objectively that I’m tired historically of the amount of havoc religion has done to the world and is still doing to the world.

    You’re a religious man yourself. I mean, your parents were Christians and I can see you were brought up as a Christian

    I’ve studied religion. I cannot say I am a religious person, I think I’m a deeply spiritual person. But organised religion in my view is more of a curse than a blessing. I believe that religion should be very very personal. State should not interfere. I don’t understand for instance, why Nigerian government waste so much money in sponsoring people on pilgrimage to Mecca or Jerusalem. They call themselves Jerusalem Pilgrim today. And the amount of energy and resources actually spent on religion is staggering. Let people manage their own religion.

    It’s interesting to say that because an expert on religion in the US was saying that the paralysis of the Nigerian government and military in dealing with boko haram comes off out of its over-relying on religion if you will. That Nigerian government and the society is one that is to steeped in religion sometimes and this

    That is part of the reason for lack of development because people go and suck this sweet, this panacea in churches and forget their woes, the problems for several days and then, they go back again. They are given assurances of better place, all the suffering would be resolved either here soon, or on the other side. And some take this to the extreme that they believe that even the more they kill other religionists or those who don’t practice their own religion strictly the way they want to see it, that when they kill them, when they torture them, the gates of paradise opens wide. Can you imagine any kind of article of faith embody that. But, I’m afraid this what many of these Boko Haramites – what they believes in. and even, the religious extremists from other religions like Christianity are not much better in terms of belief but they are not so violent.

    You had political ambitions at one point of your life, professor Soyinka.  You founded a political party in 2010 called the Democratic Front for Peoples Federation. Why did you throw in the towel?

    I didn’t start a party for myself. I started a party for youths who were complaining that the old ….were not giving them space. It was strictly for them. And the reason why I sort of stepped aside, if I use the notorious quote of one of our military dictators was when I found that many joined the party because they thought I was running for president. Now, I said to myself, ‘you must be out of my mind. Would I start a party if I had some ambition? No, I would go join another party, let them do all the hard work and then I would run.

    Even so, you seem to have evaded seduction by the reigning political party or the power houses. Why is that? Why are you so outspoken when it comes to politics but yet, don’t get directly involved?

    Well, I have atemperament which is not suitable to a level of compromises which politics demand. Politics, you know, is a full time occupation and you have to study it, you have to be an apprentice, that means you have to learn everything good and bad and practice many things, both good and bad. And I’m a little bit inflexible, you know about my beliefs.

    Well, getting involved in politics got you into a lot of trouble in the past. You book, ‘The man died’ dealt with your period in jail during the 1967/1970 war that is Biafra war. Some of you might not know Biafra, the name assumed by the seceding southern Nigeria. The war saw the massacre of mostly Christian Ibos who lived in the predominantly northern part of Nigeria. You got involved in this Biafra issue which remains a sensitive issue in Nigeria and went on from being seen as a mediator in the Biafra crisis to a trouble-maker. Tell us about that time.

    Well, I didn’t know that I am trouble-maker. No.

    Some people did see you as a trouble maker

    (Chuckles) I wish life was as simple as that. Let’s put it this way, I grew up in certain circumstances – very conscious politically, nationalism, etcetra. In this Abeokuta where we are seated, my mother was involved in the politics, my aunty, Mrs. RansomeKuti was a leader

    Your cousin was FelaKuti

    Yes, Fela was my cousin. Yes, that one is a trouble maker, not me (chuckles). And I grew up among arguments – political arguments, issues which really concerned humanity. And I found out that basically, I gravitated towards recognising the basic worth of human beings. I sometimes tell people not to call me a patriot because I don’t agitate on behalf on some entity called a nation. I agitate on behalf of humanity.

    So, on which side were you on the Biafra issue?

    Oh, I was very much pro-Biafra in the sense that I recognised the fact that the Igbos had been wronged very desperately. They’ve been brutalised in a way that justified their feeling that they were not part of the nation. Let me also say this. Biafra was not entirely innocent in this affair. They were not. But the unleashing of such venom, such devastation on them as a people was sufficient to justify their decision not to want to be part of the nation. So, I was pro-Biafra in the sense that I felt they needed justice. It wasn’t that I was for Biafra as a national concept, no.

    Chinua Achebe said he was disappointed by the fact that Nigerians weren’t learning about Biafra in schools. Why is that?

    Officials especially do not want to confront their own history, especially the history of which in the making make themselves feel uncomfortable but if we don’t confront our own history and that is a cliché, if you don’t confront your past, you’re going to mess up your future. It’s obvious.

    It seems that Nigeria does not want to engage with its history with Biafra in particular

    In denial, that is the expression. Nigerians are still in denial.

    Many people worry that what Boko Haram is doing right now in the north might lead to a break-up of Nigeria. Others say we are too interwoven to split. Where do you stand on this?

    Ironically, Boko Haram might be one of the reasons why Nigeria would stay together. And this is because nobody who has a sense consciousness of neighbourliness would want to leave a neighbour in the lurch. A few years ago, I would say Nigeria was very close to a break-up. But, as I said, it’s a kind of paradox. Now, that one section of it is in trouble, there is a pulling together. It has led a critical mass to the identification with the area which is in trouble but the conscience of many Nigerians has been awakened and they feel they cannot abandon the section.

    So, how do you stay together with all these differences?

    If I will recognise the plurality of Nigeria, recognise its history, how it came together in the first place, then, we would be able to devise and adopt methods of governance -it can only be one massive decentralisation. That way, Nigeria can stay together. But when you continue to have central governance, Nigeria is on the brink.

    Do you still today feel because of your outspokenness, there is some threat?

    Fear arrest perhaps. No, these days, elimination seems to be the preferred…

    Elimination?

    We have more political assassinations, mysterious killings in the last ten years than even during the period of the military. It’s a strange phenomenon. And I don’t think it’s likely that anybody would want to imprison me at the moment. They’d probably think I’d find some other way of writing.

    In 1986, the Nobel committee awarded you the Nobel prize for literature. Why do you think it took such a long time for the wider world to recognise this African talent?

    Well, my answer tothat is very simple. It takes a while before people to be educated about others. Others are always at a remote distance. What pertains to others often strikes one as exotical since it doesn’t belong to the kind of discipline which you are accustom. And so for me, it has never been a surprise.

    What was it like? How did your life change after the Nobel?

    Oh, it’s become too hectic. Much much too hectic. My constituency which was already large enough just ballooned out of sense and proportion. And it’s a struggle to try and be yourself which you really are internally when you’re surrounded and overwhelmed by the sheer weight  and dimension of your constituency.

    Do you see anyone of your stature that can take over the mantle from you? Is there another Wole Soyinka in the making?

    Yes, several. The problem is that Wole Soyinka is still around and people are lazy. They don’t look in other directions. And they would find many, not just brilliant writers, but sincere political activists, concerned humanists. Oh, they are all over the place.

    Now, for any writer, there is the inevitable question of influence. What would you like your influence, your enduring legacy to be?

    Oh, simply recollection of the fact that I passed through.

    That’s it

    That’s enough