Tag: eagle

  • Tinubu hails Eagles’ resilience towards  W’Cup 2026 qualification

    Tinubu hails Eagles’ resilience towards  W’Cup 2026 qualification

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has congratulated the Super Eagles for their emphatic 4–0 victory over the Cheetahs of Benin Republic, describing the performance as a powerful reminder of Nigeria’s enduring football spirit and national pride.

    In a statement issued by his Special Adviser on Information and Strategy, Mr. Bayo Onanuga, the President commended the players for their “hunger, passion, and determination” during the World Cup qualifying match in Uyo.

    According to the President, the team’s dominant display rekindled optimism among Nigerians and strengthened belief in the Super Eagles’ qualification campaign for the 2026 FIFA World Cup.

    Read Also: NFF to review Chelle’s contract next month

     “While the job is not yet complete, I join millions of Nigerian football fans in wishing our team every success in the playoffs,” the President said.

     “The mood across the country reflects a shared belief that Nigeria deserves a place in the 2026 FIFA World Cup, which Canada, Mexico, and the United States will host”, he said.

    President Tinubu assured the players and coaching crew of the Federal Government’s full support as they continue their qualification journey.

     “As your President, I assure you and the coaching crew of the Federal Government’s support as you strive to secure your place at the tournament. Nigerians everywhere believe in you, and I do too. We look forward to seeing you fly our flag proudly on the world stage,” he added.

  • Eagle FM is Ogun’s best radio

    Eagle FM is Ogun’s best radio

    Eagle 102.5 FM has been crowned Radio Station of the Year in Ogun State at the prestigious RadioTracker Awards 2023.

    The recognition comes as a testament to the station’s unwavering commitment to delivering quality programming and engaging content to listeners.

    Eagle 102.5 FM, known for its diverse and entertaining shows, stood out among its peers, winning the coveted award for its outstanding contributions to the local radio landscape. The station’s dedication to community engagement, innovative broadcasting and a stellar lineup of talented on-air personalities played a pivotal role in clinching this accolade.

    Upon receiving the award, the Chairman, Otunba Kunle Kalejaye (SAN), expressed gratitude to its loyal audience and the dedicated team behind the scene. 

    Read Also: Tinubu to grace Uzodimma’s swearing in ceremony Monday

    “This achievement is a reflection of the hard work and passion our team puts into creating compelling content for our listeners. We are honoured to be recognised as the Radio Station of the Year in Ogun State.”

    The RadioTracker Awards, an esteemed platform within the broadcasting industry, acknowledges excellence and innovation in radio across regions. 

    Eagle 102.5 FM’s triumph serves as a source of pride not only for the station, but also for its audience, the radio’s management said, thus reaffirming the station’s position as a leader in delivering top-notch radio entertainment.

  • Eagle Schnapps felicitates with Alake of Egbaland at 80

    Eagle Schnapps felicitates with Alake of Egbaland at 80

    Eagle Aromatic Schnapps from the stable of Intercontinental Distillers Limited (IDL), has felicitated with the Alake of Egba and the Paramount Ruler of Egbaland, His Imperial Majesty, Oba (Dr.) Adedotun Aremu Gbadebo (CFR), Okukenu IV,  who turned 80 years old yesterday.

     In keeping with the brand’s long partnership with the revered Alake throne, a delegation from IDL on Wednesday, September 13th, paid a visit to Alake at his Ake Palace to pay homage to him as part of activities to celebrate the foremost traditional ruler’s 80th birthday and also present the brand,  Eagle Aromatic Schnapps, to the King and his Chiefs.

     The leader of the delegation, Regional Sales Manager, Lagos 2, Mr. Dele Adeyemi eulogised Oba Gbadebo as a man of peace, a great leader of his people, and an enabler of progress whose reign has impacted many positive developments on sons and daughters of Egbaland at home and in the Diaspora, as well as residents in the whole of Egba nation.

     He also described the royal father as an accomplished man of many parts whose enviable footprints in the public service, corporate sphere, and traditional institution are worthy of emulation.

     Adeyemi prayed for continued good health, peace of mind, and prosperity of Oba Gbadebo and wished him many more fruitful years, while also commending him for sustaining the long partnership between Eagle Schnapps and the Alake’s throne, which he described as very significant.

     “Eagle Schnapps as a cultural heritage brand is excited to celebrate with His Imperial Majesty, Oba (Dr.) Adedotun Aremu Gbadebo, CFR,  the Alake and Paramount Ruler of Egbaland on this historic milestone of his 80th birthday. We rejoice with Kabiyesi for the gift of good life that the Almighty God has graciously given to you.”

     “As you celebrate your 80th birthday, our prayer is that God will continue to renew your strength, and grant you good health and sound mind. We pray that you will continue to enjoy the peace of God that passes all understanding. We are indeed honoured to be associated with our highly-revered royal father, and we are proud of you for being a positive light to many generations. Happy birthday and many more happy returns, Kabiyesi,” he stated.

    Read Also: Gunmen kill PDP chieftain at wife’s shop in Osun

     Adeyemi noted that to further affirm the company’s commitment and deepen the partnership with the revered throne of Alake, the team was excited to introduce the captivating new-look Eagle Aromatic Schnapps to  Oba Gbadebo on his 80th birthday.

     He also rejoiced with Alake chiefs, sons, and daughters of Egba Kingdom at home and abroad on the occasion of the Alake’s 80th birthday, which he described as another unique opportunity to strengthen the unity of Egbaland.

     Oba Gbadebo, while receiving the Eagle Aromatic Schnapps’ team, expressed his appreciation to Intercontinental Distillers Limited for the visit and for honouring him in such a wonderful manner, and prayed with Eagle Aromatic Schnapps that  IDL would continue to prosper and flourish.

     While also expressing the gratitude of his senior chiefs and Egba people for the brand’s love for the Egba Kingdom, he prayed that peace would continue to reign in Egbaland, Ogun State, and Nigeria as a whole.

     “I want to say a big thank you to IDL and in particular Eagle Schnapps for celebrating with me in this awesome manner. I feel greatly honoured again. Thank you for always being a friend of the throne, which you have again demonstrated as a key partner for the celebration of my 80th  birthday. May IDL continue to prosper and flourish,” Oba Gbadebo said.

     Adeyemi added, “Eagle Aromatic Schnapps remains committed to upholding Nigeria’s cultural heritage and providing an authentic prayer drink that resonates with the people.”

     Among the senior chiefs present during the visit of IDL team to the Alake were the Aro of Egbaland, Chief Oluyinka Kufile, Asipa of Egbaland, Chief AbdulRasheed Raji; Ogboye of Egba Christians, Chief Ayinla Oke, and Baagbimo Egba, Chief Akanni Akinwale.

  • Ahmed: Soaring like an eagle

    Ahmed: Soaring like an eagle

    A key task of leadership is to chart the way forward for the people towards accomplishment of set goals. This task becomes more imperative during crisis period; when there is confusion and hopelessness all around; when there is a storm and people seek all avenues for survival. Little wonder it is said that crisis brings out the leadership in a man, and particularly in existing leadership, crisis brings out the best among those of them that are the very best.

    When, towards the end of the administration of former President Goodluck Jonathan, Kwara State government began to issue monthly statements announcing reduction in its federal allocation, many who were not on the same political page with the authority argued, most contemptuously and provocatively, that  it was pretentious. But when the same pattern continued under the current administration and extended to several other states such that many could no longer pay salaries and had to run to Abuja for bailout, the reality soon dawned on us all that Nigeria was in a grave economy quagmire.

    Between the last days of the Jonathan’s administration and the beginning of this year, Kwara must have lost close to half of its normal monthly allocation from the federation account. That is huge and considering the fact that a greater percentage of the state budget, like many other states, was based on the federal allocation, meeting the goals spelt out in the financial estimates generally became very difficult, if not impossible. Many states have had to abandon capital projects and concentrate mainly on paying salaries and even that too was not on regular basis. Some states openly confessed their inability to meet basic requirement of salary payment.

    It was a challenge. It was a storm. But like the eagle, it has brought out the best in Kwara State. For instead of sitting down to complain, the state government only sat down to think out of the box to ensure we do not sink with the storm. And it is that brainstorming that has given birth to IF-K; a novel way of funding infrastructure that has not been employed by any other government in Nigeria.

    Listening recently to Governor Abdulfatah Ahmed who led the thought-process that produced the model provided an inkling into the leadership focus of his administration despite the national economic challenges. According to him, “When we came in 2011, we were quite ambitious on what we wanted to do on human capital development; how to improve on infrastructure and of course, how to improve on the economy. We had a document which was part of our foundation process, the Medium Term Expenditure Framework for Kwara State. Under that framework, we had outlined financial requirements that will aid us in achieving the set target.

    “So, to that extent, we had to go back to the drawing board and work out how best to create a funding module that suits the current exigencies in Nigeria’s economy and, of course, Kwara State. We thought of going to the capital market, but then it became a bit cumbersome as we had to go through some hurdles within the specific timeframe that we had to come up with ingenuities in creating a funding model. That gave rise to the Infrastructure Development Fund.

    “We did a data review of what the financial gaps were and we came up with a deficit of about N250bn to move Kwara State to the desired level that will see Kwara State truly positioned among the comity of well positioned states not only in West Africa but, of course, in the world. Now getting to do a drive for a N250bn infrastructure looks a bit herculean, so we sought to create modules out of it. The modules require an uninterrupted financial inflow that guarantees sustainability. That was how we came up with the possibilities of creating an Infrastructure Development Fund.”

    “My confidence in this new model is that given the phenomenal success so far recorded by the state’s internal revenue generating agency, which, like IF-K, was also derided by our detractors but has become the golden bird; this new model will also succeed, even if men don’t give it the chance at inception.

    Imagine that before the KIRS began operation this year, we were making maximum of N600 million monthly as IGR but now without any new tax, the agency has been steady at about N1.7 billion”.

    It is another noble vision of Governor Ahmed which though derided at inception has become, no doubt, a testimony to good thinking; the evidence of a good policy. Ahmed concentrates on the formulation and implementation of good policies for sustainability as no matter how novel an idea is, it will soon fritter away without a policy backup.

    The governor recently told a group of journalists that “policies are pathways that create direction for government activities. Because, it will not only help focus on what’s needed to be done but also on critical areas that affect the people and how you could achieve these set policies within a specific time frame. So, policies are key to any developmental system as it allows optimization of resources. For us, polices are seen as part and parcel of main programme in directing what we want to do in government.”

    And for those who still don’t understand the workability of the model, Governor Ahmed explains: “This fund allows us to put some seed money, which we have put aside for a while and of course largely for capital development programmes, into a basket and this basket will be managed by financial trustees and of course, we created an irrevocable standing payment order from our internally generated revenue”.

    “By the way, I am happy to let you know that we saw the need to create this through the things we have seen in the country as not requiring us to rely on the federation allocation and immediately we changed the internally generated revenue module. This has given room for funding into the Infrastructure Development Fund and as a constant flow coming from our internally generated revenue, we now see a clear window to fund infrastructure on monthly basis with a minimum of N500m which creates a pool that is investible and, of course, we have gotten our contractors to see them as more of partners rather than contractors because the model allows them to participate with us in driving our infrastructural development needs. Contractors will now see themselves investing their fund and getting paid from the Infrastructure Development Fund.

    “We have looked at the workability of this model and its completely suit our need. That is how we will continue to carry on our development projects in Kwara State as a way forward. I want to assure Kwarans that with the model, we will begin to see projects executed from envelope basis. With the specific envelope that we are addressing, once we are through with that. In other words, as contractors are completing their jobs and are exiting, a fresh envelope will now come in and we will start key in and funding as such to drive infrastructure development. So for us, it brings to end the era of abandoned projects. Because, it gives that comfort that the lender and the partners require to see to invest their funds in driving capital development in partnership with Kwara State. So for us, it is one of the best things that has ever happened to us today and we see that model being sustained because it is also backed by law which gives it a sustainable platform to see it carrying on capital development projects for Kwara State.”

    With this innovation, the state is now on auto run in the execution of projects such as the Garin Alimi underpass, Osi and Ilesha Baruba roads, indoor sports hall of the Ilorin Stadium Complex , Michael Imoudu to Gamo road and dualisation of Sango to Uiversity of Ilorin Teaching Hospital road, among others.

     

    • Oba is Chief Press Secretary to Governor Ahmed.
  • Think like an eagle

    DEAR Aunty Temilolu, You are highly lifted. I am your huge fan. I’m a mature man and I literarily devour your write-ups on Sundays. Your preaching has given me so much peace and shown me how and why to love. You are a turning point in my life. I glorify Jesus in your life. Servant of God, you are favoured.

    Anonymous

    Dear Aunty Temilolu,

    I read your article in The Nation newspaper titled “Like mother, like daughter,” and I am glad I did because it’s an eye opener. May God continue to bless you and increase your wisdom and knowledge in Jesus name. Amen.

    Toyin

    Dear Aunty Temi,

    I am having challenges with keeping my chastity. I’ve got friends who go over the hook always and want me to do same. Sometimes, I feel like submitting to pressure but when I read your column, I’m always restrained. Please I need your advice on what to do as I’ll be stuck with my friends throughout my days at university. What can I do?

    Vivian, 17

    To all the Vivians out there

    To start with, we all have an opportunity to make choices in life and follow the path that best suits us; we also must prepare to face the consequences. Some can’t wait to get to the university and have a degree that’ll pave way for their dreams while some just want to go to the university and have all the freedom in the world to do everything they’ve ever wished to do but which they couldn’t because of their parents’ monitoring. So, where do you stand? The university is a citadel of learning and an incubator of greatness and I dare say it’s also the citadel of bad influence and over-exposure to vices. In other words, you have to decide what you are going in there for and what you expect to make out of it. Yes, you must socialise but with sense. I want you to remember not only your childhood dreams to become a star student and one of world’s female trail blazers but also your parents’ expectations. I also want you to have in mind, some family members and friends who have always for some reason or the other looked down on you and said that nothing good or serious can come out of you. Won’t it be so nice, glorious and wondrous to prove them wrong, outshine them, their children and become greater than the greatest in your family? Whoa! It’s more than possible and I tell you it doesn’t matter if you’ve not been having fantastic grades in high school. Right now, you can even strike a deal with God that if He would upgrade your brain and help you reach a G.P.A. that will fetch you a first class; you’ll remain chaste till your wedding night. Do you know what would happen? He will not only give you that but give you so much ease to achieve your dreams and cater for every single need whether your parents can afford to take care of your bills or not.

    This generation of youth ought to be the most intelligent in history because through technology we have an instant answer to our quest for knowledge. However, it’s sad that the average Nigerian girl is not interested in intellectual pursuits or anything that serious. I then begin to wonder how many female professors we would have in future. Who are those who will step into the shoes of the likes of Prof. Grace Alele-Williams, Sarah Oloko, Bolanle Awe, Sophie Oluwole and co.? These grandmas were not exposed to Google; in fact there was no internet in their days but they are saturated with knowledge and have built human institutions. Don’t we have a better opportunity now?

    I pray with all my heart that this present generation of Nigerian girls would have the highest number of global champions and not otherwise. Can you imagine the sort of children that we global champions would bring into the world?

    When it rains, most birds head for shelter; the Eagle is the only bird that, in order to avoid the rain, starts flying above the cloud. Think like an eagle; let your dreams fly you above distractions and inanities. God bless you!

  • Eagle and earthworm

    Eagle and earthworm

    He strode into the hall to the cheerful buzz of editors. After the hoopla and acrimony of the polls, Lagos was  serene with hope. The task of the new governor was to articulate what he wanted to do.

    No, he was quick to note, he was not going to address us on his plans. They are all public knowledge, enunciated during the barnstorming and debate of the election season. That night was for the bonhomie of conversation. Over meals and drinks, he could hear from the gate keepers of news and commentary their sense of the city, of what the people yearned for. He, too, would unveil the entrails of his minds.

    Very quickly, the quiet evening eased into intellectual repartee. Jokes came as jibes, jibes as jokes. Introspections burned out of fiery lips. Questions rippled in the air. Suggestions laced insights. In certain moments, it reminded me of what I read about salons of Enlightenment Europe where some of the great ideas were birthed. But that night did not soar that high, it just had intimations of it. At least, as it referred to Lagos State, the oasis of Nigeria.

    The man in the middle was Governor Akinwunmi Ambode. With his beige agbada and cap now illumined with a smile, now shaded with a somewhat beatific mien, he knew quite early that the editors were pregnant with curiosity.

    What was he going to do about Apapa and its congestions? Lekki is a new suburb out of control with its traffic snarl? What the hell is the story about Lagos’ over N400 billion debt? What about the Ikorodu and the Mile 12 roads and Ayobo and the Fourth Mainland Bridge?

    The governor understood that the fulcrum of the night’s obsession was how to move in Lagos. To move Lagos ahead, the residents have to move well. This harked back to my first-ever conversation with him over a year ago. His passion then was transportation. His thoughts chimed in with the concerns of the editors.

    Once he spoke, he wrapped up the audience in the methodical cadence of his speech. Never mellifluous but never boring, he spoke like a man working towards a mathematical solution. The accountant in him was in rhythm. Whether he spoke about the financing of Lagos in which he clarified that the debt was a mere three per cent of the state’s mammoth money and it was to be paid in between 25 and 30 years, or about the train project inherited from the Fashola administration, he was focused on the dynamic of a city on the move.

    He spoke with the mastery of figure and place. His about three decades of work in various parts of Lagos shone through. He spent most of those years in local governments. Whether on Mushin, or Badagry or Ajegunle, he spoke not with professorial abstraction, but with the familiarity of a yeoman. Remember Maracanã Stadium? Not the fable of Brazil, but the athletic audacity of Ajegunle that named a playground after the South American landmark. He referred to it when an editor spoke about a yet uncompleted stadium in another part of town. He said he had just discussed it in an earlier meeting, in which he laid out plans to rev up community sports in the city of Lagos.

    He had touted his immersion in the interstices of Lagos as his special resume for governorship. He showed that with superfine lucidity, in answer to every question. It was as though he had spent his entire life preparing for the job.

    So, what about the traffic situation. “We are going to have a traffic summit in Lagos soon,” he announced, indicating that he had anticipated the worry about how Lagosians move. He also articulated some ideas roiling his mind in specific areas. Should we continue with roundabouts on the Lekki corridor, or introduce American style intersections? Although he admits erecting flyovers could ease vehicular flow, it will take some time to accomplish. His eyes were focused on quick wins first.

    On Apapa, an APC government in the centre could lead to better collaboration to decongest traffic while also focusing on the need to develop the other ports. He would leverage that virtue to revamp that economic hub. All developments seem to move towards the island. Reversing that trend is one of the virtues of the rail project, he said. The cost to complete it is, however, humongous, but it is a task that beckons. So, he noted the advantages. The journey from Mile 2 to CMS is about 20 minutes, including about four stops. That means businesses can erupt along the way with improved property value, and development can move to other areas, such as Ikorodu and Ipaja. Another deep sea port also awaits in Badagry with its promise of tourism. All these will take attention away from the island.

    As people move, so they dream. Life is nothing without movement. “There is no such thing as perpetual tranquility of mind while we live here,” noted Thomas Hobbes, the philosopher of the human id. He said further that “life itself is but motion.” The whole purpose of movement is to stay still, so that we move again. When we leave home, it is because we want to stay at work, at that party, at that friend’s home, at the birthday, at that funeral. But eventually, as the philosopher Soren Kierkegaard notes, we want to go home. All literature from Soyinka’s The Road to Kerouac’s On the Road to Conrad’s Lord Jim to Eliot’s The Journey of the Magi, man’s chief aim is rest, an irony for a restless creature.

    The night left out some key discussions about health care and education, especially about Lagos as a melting pot, given the firestorm generated about lagoon and peaceful coexistence. It reflected either satisfaction with Ambode’s inaugural speech about building a rainbow coalition for all, or a sense that it was just a political distraction from a peaceful city.

    Governor Ambode told senior civil servants that he was not going to reinvent the wheel, but to oil it. As he simplified his mission to the editors, his dream is to make life easier and Lagosians happier.

    He is going to ride on the foundation set by the Asiwaju Bola Tinubu administration and built on by Fashola’s. As Seneca famously noted, “Every new beginning comes from some other beginning’s end.” With his clinical mind and ample experience, Lagos seems to have rolled into the hands of an able manager.

    Governor Ambode has the advantages of both the eagle and earthworm. As the eagle, he has been at the top tier of administration as the accountant-general of the state. He has walked through the portals of the world’s best schools from Harvard to Pennsylvania. As the earthworm, he has wallowed in the labyrinth of the people. He has worked and lived in Mushin, Ipaja, Ajegunle, etc. So, he has smelled the rose and touched the offal. He has the palate of the palace and poor. He has hugged kings and swaddled orphans.

    It’s time to turn these gifts into assets for Lagos. A man fondly called AA, Governor Ambode has an A-plus mind and has the potential to be Nigeria’s alpha governor, both in Alphabet and in Acts (AA). As the Nike add urges, just do it.

  • Parable of chicken and eagle

    Parable of chicken and eagle

    A certain man went into a forest, seeking any bird of interest he might find. He caught a young eagle and took it home; he put it among his fowls, ducks and turkeys and gave it chickens’ food, even though it was an eagle.

    Five years later, a naturalist came to see the man, and after passing through his garden, the naturalist said: “That bird is an eagle, not a chicken.” “Yes,” the owner replied, adding: “I have trained it to be a chicken; it is no longer an eagle but a chicken even though it measures fifteen feet in height.”

    “No,” said the naturalist, “it is an eagle still; it has the heart of an eagle and I will make it soar high up to the heavens.” The owner said: “No, it is now a chicken and it will never fly.”

    They agreed to test whether the eagle could fly or not. The naturalist held the eagle on his palm and said: “Eagle, thou art an eagle, thou dost not belong to the sky and not to this earth; stretch forth thy wings and fly.”

    The eagle looked at him and turned the other way to see the chickens eating food. It jumped down from the naturalist palm.

    Chuckling, the owner said: “I told you it is a chicken.” The naturalist disagreed. “It is an eagle,” he maintained, saying he would give it another chance the next day. He took it to the top of a house the next day and said: “Eagle, thou art an eagle; stretch forth thy wings and fly.” Again, the eagle saw chickens eating and jumped down to eat with them. The owner reminded the naturalist that the eagle was a chicken.

    The next morning, the naturalist rose early and took the eagle outside the city to the top of a mountain. He picked up the eagle and said: “Eagle, thou art an eagle; thou dost belong to the sky and not to this earth; stretch forth thy wings and fly.”

    The eagle looked around and trembled, but it did not fly. The naturalist then made it look straight at the sun. Suddenly, it stretched out its wings and flew away. It never returned. It was an eagle, though it had been kept and tamed as a chicken.

    The legend was Dr Aggrey’s best known sermon. Whoever Dr Aggrey was, I do not know – perhaps a clergy. But when I came across the story, the underlying message struck me hard and I didn’t give it a second thought before I decided to write on it. Without beating about the bush, the message in the story is discovering one’s ability.

    Different people discover themselves in different ways and at different speed. For some, the family background or lineage discovers them even before they discover themselves; these people are usually the type that finds themselves in a family that is known for a particular profession or ability.

    In the traditional Yoruba system, there are people who bear names that portray the vocation the family is known for. Such names include Ayanwole (drummers), Elegbede (singers) and Odeyemi (hunters) among others.

    Most people discover themselves in a society that has helped in taming their productivity. Using Nigeria as a case study, average youth finds it difficult to discover his talent. Most of young people make the mistake of following the trend and believe they have discovered themselves. Later, they get confused and frustrated about their chosen life.

    General, chickens are naturally weak and docile; they roam in restricted areas and eat what they are given. They easily surrender to be slaughtered. But we all know eagles are kings in their own world.

    Nigeria is like the owner in the above story; it does not encourage its youth to ‘fly’, it does not even believe in their creativity, passion and dreams. The reason why a youth who invented an Amphibian Jet during the regime of General Ibrahim Babangida is still waiting on the former Head of State’s promise till today.

    However, it is no news again that our society does not encourage the youths to discover their dream. But it does not mean we should automatically accept that fate. Like some people would say, Nigeria is bad but some people become successful.

    Yes, Nigeria has its problems, but people are achieving great things through their honest, God-inspired efforts.

    Most youth have been brainwashed to believe the only way they can make it in Nigeria is through fraud or robbery.

    Everyone has different potentials in them; everyone is created with something distinct to achieve great things.

     

    As an individual, we have our strength and our weaknesses.

    We have to discover ourselves.

    There is nothing impossible, even if the word itself says “I’m impossible”. One of the factors that kill people’s dreams is fear. From the story, the eagle finally realised where it was supposed to be – the sky. But it was afraid to try; it did and soared higher and higher. We are afraid to fail, but success can only be achieved if we try. Just like the eagle, there is only one thing we should aim: fly to the sky and discover our dream.

     

    Temitope, 300-Level English, UNILAG

     

     

  • Adieu ‘Eagle of resistance’

    Adieu ‘Eagle of resistance’

    The remains of former Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU)  president Prof Festus Iyayi, who died last month in a car crash, will be buried this weekend. In this tribute, one of his proteges, Evelyn Osagie says he will be remembered for his legacy of nurturing young talents.

    Last weekend was a moment of mind-drifting for me. Something strange happened as I was listening to James Blunt’sYou Are Beautiful at home.

    The room was dark. The television was switched off. The fan was at its highest. I was alone.

    I had a glass of currant juice with a blend of Angostura Aromatic Bitters in one hand and Osasu Ekpen Isibor’s MAMFE: This time tomorrow in the other. I had finished reading the novel which I had read 10 times over. Even though it’s an unedited copy, it never seizes to captivate me and reestablish the ‘writer as a prophet’.

    Interestingly, this time, the protagonist who died trying to change society, blended well with the life and times of former President of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), the late Prof Festus Iyayi.

    Ironically, it paints a picture of the red sun setting on an eagle in the sky, fighting hard to stop it from setting.

    And just as the thought hit me, Blunt’s words: “Goodbye my lover, goodbye my friend…You have been the one…You have been the one for me…change my life and change my goals…” that was still playing jolted me back to life.

    Alhough it was not planned, all of a sudden, the book and the song held different meaning – one that stripped me naked, emotionally.

    I fought back tears and struggled hard not to remember. But like torrents gushing through the floodgates, the scenes from the past came drifting by. I picked my pen and paper. With Blunt’s words: “I am a dreamer …and when I wake…You can’t break my spirit …” in the background, I reminisced.

    I remember Benin. I remember the red-coloured earth of creative vibrations that has inspired creative minds for decades. I remember the cultural allusions that marked the words and works of great minds…minds like the late Iyayi.

    That Iyayi that gave focus to our dreams and essences while directing our creative compasses on the right paths. That Iyayi that criticised us with the strong voice of an activist and spoke soft words of encouragement – that became food for thought to many – to strengthen our voices. That Iyayi that was the ‘financier of many creative dreams and ideas’. That Iyayi who discovered my true essence when my dreams and voice had not yet found expression in the public space.

    Iyayi was not just a great man, he was one who had eyes for greatness. He saw and nurtured greatness in many, especially the young. He knew the importance of raising foot soldiers who would carry on the struggle in the future. Anyone who knew him would agree that did not believe in making too much noise, but finances many creative ideas of the young.

    It is sad that one now talks of the ‘legend of struggle’in past tense. Sadder still is the fact that a man that had cultivated many creative talents for decades was taken so violently by the claws of death the way he was. His death speaks of a sad story of that nation that tears its own to shreds.

    As the legend would be laid to rest this weekend, I remember Benin…that land where creative pulsations call out to you from every junction. I remember the University of Benin (UNIBEN) and the arty tremors of those years. One cannot but remember the role Iyayi played for decades in nurturing many young talents there, especially those at Creative Writers Workshop (CWW), an organisation, spanning three decades that has cultivated scores of great minds after being established in the 70s by four brilliant minds: Isibor, the late Dafe Onojovho, Ohi Alegbe and Ba’abila Mutia (who were then students).

    Although Iyayi was not one of the founders, this lecturer of Business Administration, left his imprint on the lives and talents of many that passed through it as the association grew.

    I remember Esther (now Mrs Ogude), a former CWW Co-ordinator, taking me to his office at Ugbowo Road after I took over as co-ordinator from Kolawole Azeez. As a member, I had heard past co-ordinators speak so fondly of this patron that has stayed committed to the cause of promoting creative writing in the young. Esther stops at no chance to praise-sing him. “Don’t be afraid of his looks, he is really nice,” she had warned.

    I remember him, sitting and staring at me without a word, and me, feeling as if I was on a hot seat.

    “What do you write?” He asked.

    “I write everything: prose, drama, essays, poetry, articles…”

    “What do you enjoy writing?” he asked, cutting short my attempt to please. That was the Iyayi I remember – no long talk, no pretence, apt and straight to the point. That began a bubbly marriage of wits that would later help define my creative essence and path.

    Through Iyayi, I understood the unwritten mentorship code that runs in CWW: how a coordinator gets to mentor and inspire the one immediately after his/her tenure. And while complaining about lack of sponsors for creative ideas, then, he said ‘financial misery’ is a virus plaguing writers’ associations everywhere, “one must find creative ways to overcoming it”.

    I remember him, after reading my poetry collection saying: “Guard this jealously. Don’t stop here; keep writing until you find your voice. We all have to find it.”

    To him, we were not just students but great voices and future foot soldiers. His words gave one a feel of being part of the change – as if one had already become a voice and in the frontline of advocacy.

    I remember him talk of the writer as a conscience of society, more like a gatekeeper and how the writer must fight to protect that ‘conscience’. I didn’t understand then but the reality of his words is now constantly before me.

    He not only introduced me to past co-ordinators but to great literary minds even after I had graduated. I remember Iyayi talking about the sorry state of the Association of Nigerian Authors (ANA) in Benin, which Prof Diri Teilanyo and others had tried so hard to resuscitate with activist poet Nnimmo Bassey offering it a space at his Uselu office. Those were the years I was initiated into the literary-fold outside UNIBEN. Then, not writing meant not breathing.

    I remember him calling me up that morning in 2007 to come to his office, saying a surprise was waiting for me. I remeber him talking passionately about his friends, who were themselves revolutionaries in their own rights – Odia Ofeimun and Kunle Ajibade – whom he made me read about.

    “Bring your collection,” he had said. “Although I don’t write poetry but I know someone who does and could tell you a thing or two about writing poetry.”

    That evening I met Ofeimun and Ajibade for the first time and we talked poetry. He knew Ofeimun’s Benin Woman was one of my favourite poems and Ajibade’s story had touched me. Perhaps, he thought that meeting them in person, before leaving Benin in search of greener pasture, was the best way to keep my pen focused on the things that mattered most.

    I remember it was also the day I was in his house and met his wife for the first time. I remember how it felt as one his guests, meeting, sitting and eating with these great minds. It felt more like sitting with the United States President, yeah! That was the feel I got then. I remember telling myself, “Evelyn, this is truly the beginning of great things to come”.

    I didn’t want to go home. I wanted to talk on till eternity with them but ended up leaving reluctantly very late that night. I remember smiling all the way home and thinking Ofeimun and Ajibade would probably not remember me after that day, but it didn’t matter because I was going to cherish that moment for life.

    I remember him being impressed with my idea of performance poetry as a means of giving expression to my voice, and encouraging me to work on spectacle and rendition. I remember Iyayi encouraging me to send my poems be published in newspapers, saying it was a good avenue to test my voice. They were later published in The Guardian newspaper and eventually caught the attention of some editors, especially that of the strong force behind CORA, Jahman Anikulapo, who gave my poetic voice a space of expression. That too is a story for another day.

    But when it was time for me to leave Benin for greener pastures, I remember the fatherly role Iyayi played then.

    I remember November 12 in Niger State – the day he died. The sun set rather too early that Tuesday. Everything was set for the intellectual cum literary feast that was part of activities marking Niger State Governor Dr Mu’azu Babangida Aliyu’s birthday. But nothing prepared the scholars, writers, politicians and students at Justice Idris Legbo Kutigi Hall in Minna, the Niger State capital, for what was to come.

    The presence of two governors and a former Head of State and the intellectual tussle involving the gown, the pen and the power-brokers on the role of writers in galvanising the creative zest of the young for nation-building, added spice to the event.

    Rivers State Governor Rotimi Amaechi had fired the intellectuals to wake up to their responsibility. Dr Abubakar Saddique of Ahmadu Bello University had replied him, saying writing and intellectual brilliance are not enough to salvage the country, but visionary leadership with a sense of integrity.

    The atmosphere was charged , when, suddenly, Dr Amanze Akpuda mounted the podium and said: “Festus Iyayi is dead!” The statement seemed to melt the tension, giving way to a suffocating silence. “He died on his way to Kano for ASUU meeting…It is a miracle that creative writing takes place in this country with the hassles that writers are constantly faced with…”

    As my mind processed the words, something snapped within me; my pen fell from my hand. My feet collapsed beneath me. I held my chest and let out a deep but silent cry. I did not care whether the action would cause a scene. That I had attracted the attention of a group of students close by, who were laughing at the “dramatic art”, as one put it, did not bother me.

    To them, it was perhaps the death of another man faraway. To many, he was a radical, an extremist, but to me, I had lost a mentor, patron and friend. And I was not alone in my grief, scholars and writers wore long faces as they engaged in intellectual discourse.

    “All these for what,” I had asked. “Before now, writers and critics have been talking are they (the leaders) listening?”

    I have been grieving since then while a friend kept pushing me to write something as a way of get over it. And as I wrote down my thought, I discovered he was right: I remember the Director of Niger State Book Agency, Baba Mohammed Dzukogi, saying Iyayi is not dead. “Our comforts is in the fact that he is alive in us. We won’t stop talking.”

    “As I dropped my pen to rest with Blunt’s words: “Goodbye my lover, goodbye my friend…you have been the one…you have been the one for me…as you move on remember me…us”, fading into the air, I rose in salute to the Eagle of the resistance…whose legacies live on.

    On behalf of past and present coordinators and members of CWW in UNIBEN and all those you have inspired for decades, “rest well Eagle of Ugbegun!

     

     

  • The eagle on Iroko has flown home

    November 16, this year Chinua Achebe would have been 83 and so the yearly celebration to mark his birthday, an annual ritual for the literary world would at least assume a different form from this year. From primary school at St Phillips Central School Ogidi, Anambra State and Central School Nekede, Owerri, Imo State, Achebe left his footprints as a very brilliant student having obtained full scholarship to Dennis Memorial Grammar School Onitsha and Government College Umuahia. At Umuahia he completed his secondary school in a record four years instead of the five, passing the Cambridge ordinary level with five distinctions and one credit. The credit ironically was in English Literature. For a student nick-named “Dictionary”, he must have felt disappointed.

    He proceeded to University College Ibadan through a nation-wide entrance examination. At Ibadan, he was admitted to study medicine but changed to the arts at the expense of losing his bursary scholarship and had to pay tuition. After graduating, Achebe moved on and commenced a career with the Nigerian Broadcasting Service (NBS) in 1954.He moved rapidly up the ladder and was appointed Director of External Broadcasting. Whilst at NBS, he utilised his spare time in writing.

    The turning point however was an encounter at Ibadan with his English professor who told him that his entry in a short story competition” lacked form”. Achebe declared thereafter “it dawned on me that despite her excellent mind and background, she was not capable of teaching across cultures, from her English culture to mine. It was in these circumstances that I was moved to put down on paper the story that became Things Fall Apart.

    Yet, Things Fall Apart, the epic ground-breaking novel would have been lost to the world. Achebe himself told the story of how in his naivety he sent the original and only manuscript of the novel to a typing agency in London for an expert touch in typing and preparation for publishing. Strangely the agency went to sleep after receiving full payment of £32 (thirty two pounds) from Achebe. In 1956, this was a lot of money. Anyway by some fortuitous turn of event, his colleague at NBS, an English lady, Angela Beattie’s intervention saved the day and the agency returned to Achebe a typed and well prepared work ready for publishing.

    Achebe once reminisced “I look back now at those events and state categorically that had the manuscript been lost, I most certainly would have been irreversibly discouraged from continuing my writing career.” And the world never would have read such intriguing, captivating and enthralling stories of not only Things Fall Apart where Achebe expressed himself in naked gratitude to his Igbo culture and history but also No Longer At Ease, Arrow Of God, A Man Of The People, Anthills Of The Savannah etc. Nigerians especially would probably not have known Achebe’s perspective in what is arguably the most lucid diagnosis and remedy of the Nigerian problem in The Trouble With Nigeria. And indeed a most revealing account of the Nigeria-Biafra war may also have been lost in There Was A Country.

    Achebe was not just a great story-teller; he was a literary Pan-Africanist. Through his writing he contributed immensely in redirecting the orientation of the rest of the world on their dim perspective of African culture and history. He was literally saying particularly to our colonisers – before your arrival, we had a story and are proud to tell it. One of the more common features in the barrage of tributes and eulogies following the news of his death is that he was a patriot apart of course from his obvious literary feat. This is just as well because in his essays, lectures, interviews, books etc he had continued to engage the Nigerian question by not only pointing clearly at what the problem is in “The Trouble With Nigeria” where he put the problem squarely on leadership but also by suggesting remedies. His now famous rejection twice of the national honours was not as disrespect to Nigeria but as a protest of inept leadership. Similarly when he ignored sometime ago an appointment to the board of the Federal Radio Corporation of Nigeria (FRCN) made over the radio, he was simply telling the government that things are not done that way.

    Achebe’s long sojourn in the USA following a road accident which consigned him to the wheel chair for over two decades until his death did little to limit his intellectual contribution to the Nigerian project. Not long ago he gave a reverberating keynote address via video-conferencing at the 25th anniversary of The Guardian newspapers in Lagos, also his son Chidi Achebe delivered on his behalf an address at the Rainbow Book Club literary conference in Port Harcourt. Only recently, at the 2012 Achebe Colloquium on Africa held at Brown University Rhode Island USA December 2012, the large gathering of intellectuals brainstormed on the theme “Statecraft in the African Renaissance Amidst Regime Change”. His Excellency Babatunde Fashola, governor of Lagos State personally delivered a much acclaimed paper.

    Achebe’s’ contribution to the Ahiajoku Lecture Series will remain invaluable reference material for a long time in the future. He was a man who naturally respected money and material acquisition but had clearly delineated boundaries which they did not cross. The story is told of a popular American musician who chose to title his upcoming film “Things Fall Apart” and when informed that Achebe had a copyright to the title he bragged that he would pay him off and offered a million dollars which Achebe rejected, informing him the title was not for sale not even for one hundred million dollars. Achebe would be leaving not only a legacy of principle, forthrightness, uncommon courage, classic story-telling etc, but an intellectual family of a wife who is professor of psychology, four children, two of whom are professors of history, one assistant professor of medicine and the other a writer all in the USA. Recognition, honour, awards etc, competed for his attention.”Things Fall Apart” published in 50 languages and selling over 12 million copies contributed enormously in making Achebe easily the most widely read African Writer on the globe. Just to mention a few from the Publisher’s blurb—he received the Honourary Fellowship Of The American Academy Of Arts and Letters, honourary doctorate degrees from more than 30 institutions, Nigerian National Merit Award , Nigeria’s highest award for intellectual achievement. In 2007 he won the Man Booker international prize for lifetime achievement. Many expected he would have received the Nobel Prize for literature; the fact that he did not, never, in any way diminished his stature as the leading African writer in the world.

     

    • Emeana sent this piece from Abuja.