Tag: Wole Soyinka

  • Soyinka’s fallacy on Amaechi

    Soyinka’s fallacy on Amaechi

    When former transportation minister Rotimi Amaechi marked his 60th birthday, he was a glum man, or pretended to be. Dressed in a bright shirt with distinctive Niger Delta beads, he basked in the moment of his celebration like a sad man. A celebrant in sackcloth.

    “I am hungry” he declared, falling short of saying it in the tone of the Ebi np awa populism because, although he bears the name Rotimi, he cannot speak Yoruba. Anytime he has an opportunity to speak, he roars inelegantly about removing the president, as though it were military uprising or push for a putsch he was trying to inspire.

    If he says he is hungry, Hardball would like to know how much he spent on his birthday bash, and if it was not enough to feed a thousand Naira. If his bash could slake thirsts and stop rumbling stomach, where is the place of his hunger? He is plenty crying like empty. Hardball also wants his response to his kinsman and successor as Rivers State governor, Nyesom Wike, that he only decided he was hungry after serving in government, not as a clerk, but as a helmsman from 1999 to 2023. Hefty 24 years. He was speaker, governor, minister. People say he was too privileged to complain. They say he had ‘juicy’ positions all through. Joblessness has not juice, so the man is crying in public like an agitator. Crying without tears. He only knew he was hungry because he has not been in government for a mere two years.

    But Hardball sees that as only a tangential affair for this page today. Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka, who has made it a point of interest to align with the former minister for whatever reason, committed a fallacy of comparison on his birthday.

    He said he admired Amaechi because he was giving President Bola Tinubu a dose of his own medicine. He adverted to the primary that Tinubu won when candidate after candidate withdrew for the Jagaban. He confessed he was not in the country but followed it from his base in Abu Dhabi.

    “…it gave me a great, most malicious pleasure, rascally, if you like, pleasure to see the incumbent president being given a dose of his own medicine,” he said. He asserted that Tinubu fought former president Olusegun Obasanjo “to a standstill” for trying to change the constitution and impose a third term. Obsasanjo also cowed other governors but not Tinubu, the laureate reminded the audience.

    “But one man. He was the last man standing. Well, he obtained a dose of his own medicine from Rotimi Amaechi during the primaries. I enjoyed that very much.”

    Read Also: British Deputy High Commissioner visits Rugby School Nigeria

    Well, Soyinka got two things abysmally wrong. Tinubu’s fight against OBJ were for fundamental principles of our democracy. He fought to save it from an autocrat who wanted to upturn a republican idea and make a fiefdom of the country. Secondly, OBJ pursued a policy of suffocating the federal idea by taking their funds. Tinubu fought against OBJ for these issues the way he fought against the army. Soyinka was a partner with Tinubu in the now NADECO Abroad. Amaechi was only fighting for power, not for any grand ideal because he never enunciated any. It was a a quest for personal power, a massage of a juvenile ego. Soyinka knows what a grand idea is and he never attributed any to the celebrant that day. Where was Amaechi when Tinubu was drawing swords against OBJ, who Kongi loves to barb.

    More potently, Tinubu won in all his fights. Amaechi, on that night of the primaries, did not step down, but in the language of our politics, o lule in the primaries. And who won? The last man standing. That is why he is bitter. He has no medal, but Tinubu is president. It seems to be his nightmare. I wonder whether he can stand to watch Tinubu on television playing his role as leader of the country.

    So, when our Nobel Laureate praises his man, he should not enjoy a barker, the noise of an empty barrel of a loser “very much.”

  • The Noble Warrior for Soyinka at 91

    The Noble Warrior for Soyinka at 91

    Nigerian-American playwright and producer, Cash Onadele, also known as Aiye-Ko-Ooto, will stage The Noble Warrior (Eni Ogun) in honour of Nobel Laureate, Prof Wole Soyinka, who turns 91 on July 13. The production will run from July 11 to 13 at Glover Memorial Hall, Lagos, with two shows daily — a 3 pm matinee and a 6 pm champagne show.

    A suspense-filled Black musical theatre, the play blends music, dance and drama to celebrate Soyinka’s legacy. Organisers said this year’s edition will feature an innovative set design and immersive audience experience.

    Read Also: British varsity offers Nigerians scholarships

    Reflecting on last year’s edition, organisers noted the need for more audience engagement. This year, souvenir books and branded merchandise will be included. “We are going for glamour and depth,” they said. Artistic director, Ade Fila, returns with an updated vision. The team also plans to stage student-focused versions at University of Lagos and University of Ibadan, and others with subsidised tickets.

    The long-term goal is to make the production annual, with other works like Moriti Ometa and Ajogi (The Foreigner), for a broader literary fiesta.

    Though Soyinka’s attendance has not been confirmed, organisers remain hopeful.

    “This is more than a tribute,” they said, “it is a celebration of legacy and a push toward the future of Nigerian theatre.”

  • Why Nigeria must promote local languages, culture, by Soyinka

    Why Nigeria must promote local languages, culture, by Soyinka

    Nobel laureate, Prof. Wole Soyinka, has said there is a need for Nigeria to promote its local languages and culture to drive national development.

    Soyinka said this while addressing reporters yesterday after visiting the Centre for Cultural Studies and Creative Arts at the University of Ilorin (UNILORIN) in Kwara State. It was part of activities lined up for the institution’s maiden Cultural Week.

    The literary icon described a language as a repository of a people and community, adding that young people should be encouraged to understand the language of their forefathers.

    According to him, language is a beautiful tool for expression.

    “In the last head count, it was discovered that there were 300 languages in Nigeria.

    “We need to learn foreign languages that are spoken and recognised around the world to develop ourselves and the country, but this should not be to the detriment of our local language.

    “We need to learn to read, write, and invent in our local languages, even before we think or compose in other languages, to be able to conduct research and develop our country,” Soyinka said.

    READ ALSO: National Assembly should reconsider rotational presidency

    The noble laureate stressed that there is a need to transform the old traditional ways of living into modern ones to get cultural value.

    “This is by introducing the local foods, songs, and ways of solving issues in the past to modern-day living.

    “We can start by asking our mothers how they did it perfectly in the past and use the method on our children.

    “This is for them to be knowledgeable about their origin and make judicious use of the method to solve many issues in their present,” Soyinka said.

    He also said that there is a need for local languages to be made compulsory in schools and for Nigerians to know their history and culture for them to be proud of their heritage.

    “We need to cherish our culture and traditions as an African country to maintain our dignity and value.

    The Vice Chancellor of UNILORIN, Prof. Wahab Egbewole, described Soyinka’s visit as a moment of pride and historical importance to the institution.

    Egbewole, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), expressed the collective joy of the academic community for hosting a global cultural figure of Soyinka’s stature.

    He noted that the establishment of the Centre for Cultural Studies and Creative Arts was inspired by a vision that aligned closely with the noble laureate’s lifelong dedication to arts and humanities.

    The vice chancellor explained that the centre was conceptualised with figures like Soyinka in mind.

    According to him, the initiative was borne out of genuine intentions to contribute meaningfully to cultural scholarship and global discourse.

    Egbewole explained that the vision for the centre had been nurtured over time and had now materialised with students enrolled in programmes across various levels, including diploma, undergraduate, Master’s, and doctoral degrees.

    The vice chancellor expressed optimism that the centre would grow to become one of the foremost institutions of its kind globally, especially with the involvement and endorsement of Prof. Soyinka.

  • Soyinka slams NBC over ban on song

    Soyinka slams NBC over ban on song

    Nobel Laureate Prof Wole Soyinka yesterday chided the National  Broadcasting Commission (NBC) for barring broadcast stations from playing  Eedris Abdulkareem’s latest song, “Tell Your Papa”

    In the song is a message to Seyi Tinubu, son of President Bola Tinubu, urging him to tell his father that Nigerians are suffering because of his economic policies.

    The album was released in the wake of the implementation of bold economic reforms, hailed by some global organisations, but decried by critics due to the effects of inflation and drop in value of the naira.

    The Federal Government has asked for patience on the part of citizens, assuring that the pains are temporary

    In a statement titled: ‘Surely, Not Again’ sued from New York University, Abu Dhabi, Doyinka  said the ban signaled a return to the culture of censorship and a threat to the right to free expression.

    He ssid: “Courtesy of an artist operating in a different genre – the cartoon – who sent me his recent graphic comment on the event, I learnt recently of a return to the culture of censorship with the banning of the product of a music artist, Eedris Abdulkareem.”

    Read Also; Naira-for-crude: Shareholders call on Dangote to reciprocate by listing on stock market 

    Soyinka said the ban did not go far enough, adding: “It is not only the allegedly offensive record that should be banned – the musician himself should be proscribed. Next, PMAN, or whatever musical association of which Abdulkareem is member, should also go under the hammer.”

    Soyinka who admitted that he has not listened to the banned song, said the issue transcended the content and concerned a fundamental democratic principle.

    He added: “It cannot be flouted. That, surely is basic. This is why I feel that we should look on the bright side of any picture and thus recommend the Aleshinloye cartoon – and others in allied vein – as an easy-to-apprehend, easy-to-digest summation of the wisdom of attempting to stifle unpalatable works of art or socio-political commentary.”

    Soyinka observed that censorship often benefits the targeted artist, saying that it could be inadvertently promotional.

     He said: “The ban is a boost to the artist’s nest egg, thanks to free governmental promotion. Mr. Abdulkareem must be currently warbling his merry way all the way to the bank. I envy him.”

    The Nobel Laureate described the censorship as not only counterproductive, but also dangerous to democratic development.

    He added: “We have been through this before, over and over again, ad nauseum. We know where it all ends. It is boring, time-wasting, diversionary but most essential of all, subversive of all seizures of the fundamental right of free expression.”

    Soyinka warned that censorship could create “a permissive atmosphere of trickle-down power,” where state authorities feel emboldened to clamp down on dissent.

    Also reflecting on ecent lynching of travelers in Uromi, Edo State, hecommiserated with the families and colleagues of the victims.

    He said: “My heart goes out to friends, colleagues and families of victims and traumatised survivors of this senseless slaughter. Our thirst for justice must remain unslaked.”

    Recalling the killing of Deborah Samuel in Sokoto in 2022, he condemned the culture of impunity.

    Soyinka said: “Identified killers were set free to gloat, and paste their photos on the Social Media… in full daylight glare, in the presence of both citizen voyeurs and security forces.”

  • Intellectual Slavery and the Colonial Subject

    Intellectual Slavery and the Colonial Subject

    A fool and his intellectual capital are soonest parted.  As it was in the beginning, so it it is proving to be at this late and probably closing phase of western domination of the universe. As the Black month unfolds, it is appropriate to dwell on the issue of intellectual slavery and the mental constitution of the colonial subject. The greatest wars take place in the territory of the human mind, and it is the unchallenged domination of this vital front by the western imagination that is responsible for its six-century domination over the rest of the world..

    There is a consensus among anthropologists that slavery has always existed in human society. It is an offshoot of warfare.  Old Britain, for example, was a colony of the Roman Empire. People have always colonised and enslaved each other. But intellectual slavery, that is the mental colonisation or the deliberate and systematic inferiorisation of the other, has achieved its most potent form and formula with western imperialism and its variant of modernity.

     Physical enslavement and actual colonisation can be savage and abusive of human dignity, but intellectual slavery, because it works insidiously at the level of the mind, is even more cruel and exacting. Once a people’s mind is conquered and enslaved, the dominion and domination naturally extend to other domains such as the political, the economic and even the spiritual. The mentally enslaved is thus comprehensively de-humanized, that is stripped of their humanity— which makes the work of the conqueror easier.

     So it is, then, that today, the Black person, unlike the Chinese and Indians, has no viable religion of his own, no economic system, no political institution, no traditional epic genre as Isidore Okpewho spent a life time refuting, no literature as they impishly and impudently told Wole Soyinka as a Knight’s fellow in Cambridge, no culture as they taught Chinua Achebe, and of course no history but a barbaric void as Lord Hugh Trevor-Roper grandly claimed.

    Having been a combatant in the global theatre of mental decolonisation for over four decades, yours sincerely is often amused by the antics of the mentally colonised. But one must not fail to notice when some delicious ironies appear in the horizon to lift the universal gloom about the unhappy fate of the Black person.

    Just as the Black month of February(2013) was unfolding, there on television was a group of retired Nigerian rulers together with the incumbent stoutly defending the government decision to spend billions of naira to commemorate the centenary of the amalgamation of the protectorates of Nigeria. There is a lot to celebrate about the amalgamation, they all chorused as if on cue and without any sense of irony.

    It was a most beguiling and historic snapshot, particularly with the most combatively unenlightened among the lot railing and thundering with the usual combustible gusto.  There may be a lot to celebrate about Nigeria despite everything. But the amalgamation was not a Nigerian event.

    The “Dual Mandate” of Lord Lugard is a famous piece of fiction and a pious fraud since there is no evidence to show that the overrun nationalities ever gave their consent. It is a consecration of empire and imperial might, a testimony to its awesome power of colonial coercion and ability to territorialise and re-territorialise Africa at will.

    If this singular feat of human supremacy should be celebrated at all, it should be by relics of empire glorifying the might and power of their ancestors and not the descendants of those who were herded in like human cattle. The celebration and commemoration of one’s own enslavement is a classic instance of mental colonisation and the most depressing example of Afro-Saxony in recent political history. By the same token, the Japanese ought to commemorate the arrival of Commodore Perry on their shores, and the Chinese the seizure of Hong Kong.

     Yet as we have hinted, a lack of self-awareness and its ironic possibilities is a logical corollary of mental slavery. The Secretary to the Federal Government was widely quoted to have repeated Lord Lugard’s words with warm approval that Nigeria was “the product of a long and mature consideration”. Snooper will like to ask the burly and amiable Anyim Pius Anyim if any of his ancestors was present at the deliberation.

    If the Nigerian officials had wanted to be fair to themselves and to history they ought to have gone a bit farther in time to the Berlin Conference which began in 1884 and effectively saw to the colonial partitioning of old Africa. It was in 1884 that Henry Morton Stanley, the footloose Welsh explorer who managed to fight on both sides of the American Civil War, arrived in Berlin clutching a raft of treaties with traditional African chiefs who had willingly signed away their possession in exchange for meretricious trash.

    Next year, it will be 130 years since 1884, even though the Berlin Conference actually concluded in 1885. Since this tradition of frittering away immense natural resources has continued in Africa, particularly in Nigeria, we must not be afraid of celebrating and lionizing our worthy ancestors. Where it comes to a celebration of self-dispossession, the Nigerian government must accord this date a priority over mere amalgamation.

    But there may be more mundane matters hiding under this grandiose nonsense. The goat eats where it is tethered, says a famous Cameroonian proverb.  Even if one cannot discount an element of deliberate mischief in all this, it is noteworthy that virtually all the newspapers reporting on the centenary extravaganza published a curious picture of Anyim with his mouth apparently salivating with intent. It could not have been at the prospects of the giant Ohaozara yam or rice from his native Ishiagwu.

        What will Equaino, Du Bois, Blyden, Martin Luther King,  Cheikh Anta Diop, Azikiwe, Nkrumah, Macaulay, Senghor, Sapara Williams and all the avatars of the great project of mental decolonisation say about this desecration of history by the ruling elite in Nigeria?  How will Frantz Fanon, the great psychiatrist of cultural deracination and political schizophrenia, describe the ruling class that presides over the current post-colonial anomie of Nigeria?

    It should be noted that while this capitulation to neo-colonial slavery is going on in Nigeria, two great sons of the Third World, one a Nigerian, the other an India and both Nobel laureates in different fields, are engaged in stellar decolonising projects.  Soyinka and Sen are two of a different kind, but both are united in their passion and affection for their respective countries and continent.

      While in a new book, Wole Soyinka is deepening and refining his time-honoured quest and engagement with the recovery and recuperation of a noble and heroic African past as a weapon for confronting the neo-colonial devastation of the continent, Amartya Sen is chairing a committee in India to revive Nalanda, the world’s oldest university, after an 800 year recess.

    Read Also: Holocaust Remembrance Day versus the Slavery Heritage

     Soyinka surely has his Marxist and neo-Marxist critics who accuse him of romanticizing Africa’s feudal and unedifying past. The debate and the fundamental flaw in this argument are beyond the purview of this column. But suffice it to note that the decolonizing project is more than a matter of life and death for its heroic protagonists. Exile, humiliation, torture and death have been their lot. Francois Mitterrand, the late French president, famously described Thomas Sankara as “a cutting edge that cuts too sharply”. His childhood friend and comrade in arms, the same fellow who was taken in as an orphan by Sankara’s noble parents, was persuaded to do him in. The rest is history and Ibrahim Taore. The question is: why has it proved so costly proving to the rest of the world that all people are equal and that even if Africa is no longer at the cutting edge of civilisation, it was at least the cradle of current civilization as evolved?

    The reason is the size, scope and scale of ambition of western modernity. For the first time in the history of the world, we have a vision of modernisation which can only expand and grow by denying or suppressing everything that came before it and by obliterating all that is parallel and contemporaneous to it.

    Hence the costly struggle to re-establish the Egyptian foundation of western modernity and the momentous inspiration it derived from classical Islam. Once the link and the trail of human achievement are re-established, the myth of the primitive Africa savage is very hard to sustain indeed. And so by the same taken is the project of mental colonisation..

    In 1809, more than half a century before the outbreak of the American civil war, the Abbe Henri-Baptiste Gregoire, sent a manuscript of a new work to Thomas Jefferson, a founding father and the third president of the United States. The book was a celebration and commemoration of essayists, writers and scientists of African extraction who had found their way to the west. It was titled, De La Litterature des Negress.

    As we have had cause to note in this column, despite his principled opposition to slavery, Jefferson’s view of the intellectual capacities of black people was notoriously truculent and characterised by savage dismissals. In an infamous passage from his Notes on the State of Virginia, Jefferson noted thus of the African American: “It appears to me that in memory they are equal to whites: in reason much inferior, as I think one could scarcely be found capable of tracing and comprehending the investigations of Euclid; and that in imagination they are dull, tasteless, and anomalous”.

    This remarkable diatribe was coming on the heels of the literary exploits  of the trio Equaino, Cuguano and Sancho, former slaves of African descent, who seized late eighteenth century literary London by the scruff of the neck and were feted in all the leading saloons of England’s capital for their astounding feats of imagination. Being very well-connected to the metropolitan circuits of the old world, Jefferson could not have been unaware of the literary triumphs of these exemplars. Perhaps it was a case of prejudice compounded by deliberate ignorance. Gregoire’s treatise could have been a well-aimed and profoundly clandestine attempt to help Jefferson modify or moderate his unhelpful worldview.

    But it was an uphill task. The same views resonate in the works of European intellectuals and philosophers such as David Hume, Emmanuel Kant, Friedrich Hegel and even Karl Marx. As far as Marx was concerned, India and the African continent lost nothing in the wanton destruction of their old culture by the European conquerors as it was a culture shot through with idiotic superstitions and morbid myths. 

     Nowhere else in human history had there been such a systematic and concerted attempt to cast a whole race as inferior. It was a pan-Western project of mental colonisation in which conservative, liberal, reactionary and radical intellectuals shared a unified vision of the world based on collective mental conditioning and the assumption of the “natural” superiority of western modernity.

    The consequences of mental colonisation are still very much with us, despite the cessation of physical colonisation,. They can be seen in nation-states that are inferior and poor copies of the original, political institutions that are not up to scratch, political elites that are a miscegenated breed of thieving nuisance, economic systems that are uncritically and uncreatively borrowed without any thought for the local conditions and in borrowed religions that lack race-specific nutrients.

     It will take a new intellectual elite with a new dream of Africa and a new visionary conception of human redemption to free the Black race from the clutches of mental colonisation. Before this mental revolution, all political revolutions are null and void.

    •First published in March, 2013. An earlier version of the essay was published as part of the proceedings of an international conference  held in London in August, 1997 to commemorate forty years of Ghana’s independence.(ed, Ad’obe Obe) 

    Natasha was here

    Reading you yet again one wondered whether it’s the manner or the matter or the inimitably felicitous interweave of content and form that enthrals to the last syllable of the incandescent quill. Such is your invaluable contribution to human enlightenment, and, impliedly, global gnosis that even transition to ancestor realm would be a colossal loss of epochal, if not, apocalyptic proportions. Long may you live, old master. In your earlier intervention on the Natasha saga, you did hint on the less-than- prepossessing and propitious metaphysical conceits of her Eastern onomastic etymology. Very easily, Natasha’s striking elegance and nubile litheness compels a ready comparison with heroines of myth on the one hand and countervailing Amazons of history on the other: we recall female avatars such as Joan of Arc, Cleopatra, Juliet, Queen Amina of Zauzau, Moremi of Ile-Ife and others. However, there is a sense in which all female homo sapiens carry congenitally the germ of  erotical Manichaeism such that, on the one hand, they can be considered benignant, gracious, good; a beauty, and on the other hand, malignant, fiendish, evil; a Gorgon.  As Wole Soyinka tells us in his Myth, Literature and the African World, the kitchen cleaver is at once both a domestic implement and a blood-letter. This Janus-facedness, this Ogunian duality, this Pharmakos element is what Natasha seems to emblematize in Nigeria’s body politic. As she cuts caper, swaggering about the place, her spiritual precursors headed by the incomparable Helen of Troy egg her on….Like them, Natasha is a latter-day femme fatale singeing to cinders the unwary Alpha males like feckless moths in her inflaming flares. What is the use of her physical comeliness? A potential banana peel for men; a healing, therapeutic sight for sore eyes? Is it ultimately a bane or boon  both to self and society? This poisoned chalice requires further interrogation and societal problematization going forward. Whilst it is in order to reprimand the privileged rogues of the NASS for their shameful philandering and the accompanying loutish dereliction of duty, it is important also to note that in realpolitik, class loyalty, like the word, is an egg, once broken, it cannot be patched up. Today, Natasha is making hay or social capital from male-bashing at the highest levels of national power and authority. But, sadly, she is equally singing her own swansong as far as political relevance and leadership recruitment are concerned. Natasha was here.

    Name withheld. The rejoinder is from a former student and current Professor of English at the University of Lagos. 

    And from a retired female professor, former dean and former DVC at OAU

    Baba Agba, I am not impressed by the lady’s antics at all.

  • I won’t be stampeded to assess Tinubu, Soyinka tells critics

    I won’t be stampeded to assess Tinubu, Soyinka tells critics

    Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka has advised those asking why he has remained silent on President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s scorecard to back off.

    He said he would allow no one to stampede him into assessing the Tinubu administration simply because he had in 2023 said he would do so.

    “People should stop trying to work on my timetable for me, I had not swallowed an alarm clock, I don’t see why I should put my alarm on and say — one year has passed, now, I must make an assessment,” the playwright said on a national television programme yesterday.

    “This business of you have not come to do this, I do not understand it,” he added and reminded those calling on him to give his verdict that assessing any government was a collective responsibility.

    Read Also: Wike distributes 10, 000 bags of rice to religion bodies, others

    Soyinka said he usually gives a President one year to stabilise because they often took  off from “lower than ground zero.”

    He added: “The one year is up which means you have a right and I have a responsibility to respond when you call me on certain issues. But if you are saying that I would call a press conference and say — one year is up, let us now make an assessment.

    “The only question I would ask you is — did I do that with Jonathan? Did I do that with Buhari? Did I do that with Obasanjo? Did I do that with anybody? So, why is it expected of me?

    “All it means is that one year is up. If I am around, and you want to get hold of me, I would speak. That’s all that statement meant.

    “Other people are doing the same (speaking); this is a collective effort. The Falanas and the Baiyewus speak consistently. The Sowores come out and try to lead demonstrations.”  

  • World Poetry Day: Nigerian,Cuban poets to honour Soyinka

    World Poetry Day: Nigerian,Cuban poets to honour Soyinka

    Ten distinguished poets from Nigeria and Cuba will grace the stage in tribute to Nobel laureate Prof. Wole Soyinka on Friday, March 21, at the 6th Providus Bank Poetry Café, an event marking the 2025 World Poetry Day.

    Tagged An Evening with Wole Soyinka, the event will take place at Terra Kulture Arena, Tiamiyu Savage Street, Victoria Island, Lagos, and will feature poetry renditions and performances in celebration of the literary icon.

    Read Also: Maitama Hospital unveils VIP ward named after Wike to reduce health tourism among Nigeria’s elite

    With the theme Sand Dune and Ocean Bed: The Template of Dispersal, this year’s edition also commemorates the beginning of the United Nations Second Decade of African Descendants (2025–2034) in alignment with the ongoing UN anniversary for Enslaved Peoples and Reparatory Justice.

    Established in 2020 by Providus Bank, the series is curated by Jahman Anikulapo for the Culture Advocates Caucus (CAC), under the encouragement of Prof. Soyinka, former UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador.

    “We could not think of any other iconic and preeminently qualified persona than the legend, Prof. Soyinka, to be the grand patron and, in some sense, the ‘patron saint’ for the project and for the many young people who have graced the stage since the inception of the series,” Providus Bank stated.

    The five Nigerian poets featured in this edition are Kafayat Quadri (Kaffe of Life), Evelyn Osagie (Evelyn D’Poet), Tijani Usman (Tijaywebster), Yusuf Àlàbí Balógun (Àrẹ̀mọ Gemini), and Chinelo Nwora. Notably, this edition will also host a delegation of five poets and a 15-piece musical orchestra from Cuba, which has been designated as the “Special Guest-Nation.” The Cuban poets include Alex Pausides, Edelmis Anoceto Vega, Israel Domínguez, Emiliano Sardinas Copello, and Sinecio Verdecia Díaz (based in Canada). The event will also feature a special guest artist, multi-instrumentalist Wole Alade.

    “Since the Cuban guests will be presenting content rooted in their performance culture and heritage, the selection of local poets has been carefully made to ensure the guests experience a diverse array of Nigerian cultural expressions. The five Nigerian poets were chosen based on their varied styles of delivery, showcasing a rich spectrum of poetry performance techniques in Nigeria,” Anikulapo added.

  • Soyinka’s The Man Died for Atlanta, Jo’Burg festivals

    Soyinka’s The Man Died for Atlanta, Jo’Burg festivals

    In continuation of its screening across global festivals, The Man Died, a feature film inspired by the prison notes of the Nobel laureate, Wole Soyinka, will be on screen at the 7th Jo’Burg International Film Festival, which started yesterday and runs till March 16.

    It will be screened twice in Johannesburg today, March 12 at Theatre on the Square, Sandton City, by 8pm; and on Saturday, March 15 at the Nu Metro Cinema in Hydepark, at 1pm.

    Same day, Saturday, , the film will also be at the African Film Festival, Atlanta, USA, where it will be screened from 3pm at the Cinefest Film Theatre 66 Courtland Street Southeast #262 Atlanta, GA 30303.

    Organised by the African Film & Arts Foundation Inc. (AFAF), the AFFATL, among other objectives, aims to “magnify and celebrate the visions, voices, lives and stories of people from Africa and the African Diaspora through the lens of film and the arts.”

    The current screenings across the globe are coming on the heels of its outing at the Pan African Film Festival (PAFF), February between 4 and 17 in Los Angeles; and at the “Nollywood in Hollywood”, the famous film exhibition project that spotlights Nigerian movies in the heart of Hollywood.

    Read Also: Don’t relent in praying for Nigeria’s peace, prosperity, Tinubu tells Muslims

    The Jo’Burg Film Festival (JFF) outing is the first time the film will be in the Southern part of Africa, having done two times each in Northern and Western parts of the continent.

    The promo from the directorate of the Jo’Burg Film Festival reads: “Wole Soyinka’s gripping prison memoir comes to life in The Man Died, a powerful autobiographical film that digs into the Nobel Laureate’s harrowing imprisonment without trial under a brutal military regime. A story of resilience and resistance, the film shows Soyinka’s unwavering defiance against oppression.”

    Directed by Awam Amkpa and produced by Femi Odugbemi under Zuri 24 Media, The Man Died boasts a stellar cast featuring Wale Ojo, Sam Dede, Norbert Young, Ropo Ewenla, and Kelechi Udegbe.

  • Cancer: Why every man must listen to his prostate

    Cancer: Why every man must listen to his prostate

    With scary statistics such as 15 men dying every day from prostate cancer in Nigeria, and many celebrities coming out in recent years to tell stories of their brushes with the disease, it becomes pertinent to take another look. Why have there been so much quiet despite such horrendous facts? Gboyega Alaka explores.

    Professor Wole Soyinka, Kola Oyewo, Charly Boy. These are some notable Nigerian men who have publicly declared their battle with prostate cancer. Knowing how secretive Nigerians can be, one could safely say that many more abound – both among the celebrities/public figures and the ordinary man on the street, who have kept theirs to themselves, ostensibly because they see it as private/secret, or even something to be ashamed of.

    Outside Nigeria, one can easily reel out names like late South African freedom fighter and president, Nelson Mandela; former governor of California, Jerry Brown; British actor Sir Ian McKellen; American Academy Award Winning actor, Robert De Niro; retired US Army General and former Secretary of State, Collin Powell; business magnate and philanthropist Warren Buffett.

    Most of these men survived because they subjected themselves to regular medical checks, detected early, and had access to quality medical personnel and facilities, plus the wherewithal, to pay.

    Many in Africa are not so lucky, for obvious reasons. Nigeria, the self-styled ‘Giant of Africa’ is not left out. 

    According to a report by Project PINK BLUE, a cancer organisation engaged in cancer awareness, free cancer screenings, support to people battling with cancer etc, one in four persons of black heritage will be diagnosed with prostate cancer in their lifetime. It gets scarier, when it states further that a man of African descent is 70% more likely to develop prostate cancer than men of other races. But wait for this – in Nigeria, cancer leads to 700,000 deaths per annum (28,000 for male and 42,000 for female).

    And then this: “Current data suggest that at least 15 Nigerian men die every day due to prostate cancer, resulting in about 5,806 deaths yearly with 13,078 new cases recorded.”

    In another part, PINK BLUE declared: “Prostate cancer is the third leading cause of cancer death in Nigeria and the leading cause of cancer deaths in Nigerian men.”

    Project PINK BLUE, however regrets that, “Despite these troubling indices, there is still public quiet about prostate cancer, with a lot of people unaware of the disease and its risk factors.”

    The question therefore is, “How so or Why so? Why would any group of people choose to be quiet in the face of such threat? Ignorance is a disease; so states a popular Nigerian parlance. If people do not know about this disease, how would they have information about it or suspect when their bodies begin to experience the symptoms? One could comfortably argue that in the past decades, more noise have been made about breast cancer, culminating in more awareness of that variety of cancer among women, than has been made about prostate. If the women are not ashamed to confront their devil, why are the men seemingly chickening out? Or is it case of being carefree or reckless?

    A case of shame?

    Speaking of his run with prostate cancer when he was diagnosed in 2014, Nobel Laureate, Professor Wole Soyinka, said the first thing he admitted was that he was not going to be a good patient; as a result, the doctor solicited the help of his wife to ensure he followed through religiously with the treatment procedure.

    However, one notable thing he told the BBC after his survival was that, “there is no shame in having any disease”, plus the fact that “cancer is not a death sentence but requires willpower to be victorious.”

    Notably, he recalled telling the wife not to despair: “don’t worry; we are going to fight this together…”

    Ultimately, he said: “Mine for me was an easy ride, uncomfortable in many ways but for me, but it is painless.”

    Most importantly, Soyinka overcame and told the world his story, so that people could be inspired.

    Recalling his own experience, Charles Oputa aka Charly Boy said: “The sooner you check up to know what’s happening in your body, the better, the more prepared you are.”

    Read Also: Nigeria’s GDP to grow by 3.6% in 2025, says World Bank

    For him, the story wasn’t as sweet as the prof’s, as he recently told the world that the treatment took away his sexual ability.

    “I had to tell my fellow men that it’s alright not to be alright. I had to tell my fellow men to desist from not being able to be as open as I was going about my challenges, that there’s something sinister, something technically wrong with not being open, and I know most of this comes from how we men have been brainwashed over the years,” he told journalists in November last year in Lagos.

    “So, here I was feeling cool with myself, but I was going through changes, and what are those changes? There was a period that I was wearing diapers all the time, because I was constantly leaking. I was constantly going to the bathroom, no sooner had I taken a pee, in the next three minutes, I want to go back to the bathroom, and most of the times, by the time I get to the bathroom, I would have already peed on myself. There was no way I could have worn one underwear or boxer for more than half a day, because it would just stink the whole place, so I had to keep changing, but it was also attacking my brain. I started to have performance anxiety, because I noticed that my erections were becoming irregular, it was like my organ had a mind of its own, it would erect at its own time, not my time. I noticed that I had lost command of my own organ, and I couldn’t understand it,” he further told the shocked audience that was so used to the outgoing, confident Charly Boy.

    But like the Professor, he survived, albeit, not unscathed.

  • Kano, Wole Soyinka Centre praise PRNigeria’s Young Communication Fellowship

    Kano, Wole Soyinka Centre praise PRNigeria’s Young Communication Fellowship

    Kano State Government and Wole Soyinka Centre for Investigative Journalism (WSCIJ) have commended PRNigeria’s Young Communication Fellowship for its pivotal role in mentoring and empowering the next generation of communicators.

    During the latest cohort’s graduation at the PRNigeria Centre in Kano, Motunrayo Alaka, Executive Director/CEO of WSCIJ, praised Image Merchant Promotion Limited (IMPR) for its transformative efforts in redefining journalism and public relations in Nigeria.

    Alaka acknowledged the media organisation’s commitment to bridging the knowledge gap between theoretical understanding and practical application through various mentorship and training initiatives.

    She highlighted the importance of equipping young communicators with modern skills, including proficiency in Artificial Intelligence (AI) tools, fact-checking techniques, and investigative reporting.

    “The digital tools and PR skills the Fellows acquired during the training are indispensable for success and effective within the journalism and PR sectors. These technological competencies extend beyond journalism to academia, enhancing research capabilities, documentation, and data mining,” Alaka remarked.

    Governor Abba Kabir Yusuf’s spokesperson, Sanusi Bature, praised the management of IMPR for conducting transformative mentorship programs at the PRNigeria Centre in Kano and other locations.

    Bature said the fellowship was a groundbreaking initiative that has contributed to the professional development of aspiring communicators. He awarded the Best Fellow, Abubakar Musa Idris, a scholarship to the Public Relations Finishing School in Abuja, along with cash prizes to the runners-up.

    “Participants received education in digital tools, AI applications, multimedia, drone technology, contemporary communication techniques, investigative journalism, PR, media research, and data analysis. The skills you have acquired position you as competitive professionals in a fast-evolving digital landscape,” he noted.

    IMPR CEO, Yushau Shuaib said: “The goal of the annual fellowship is to bridge the gap between theoretical knowledge and practical expertise in journalism and strategic communication, ensuring that young professionals are well-prepared to lead in an increasingly dynamic world.

    “The program has provided training to 30 participants across Nigeria. Our centers in Abuja, Ilorin, and Kano will continue to serve as incubators for burgeoning professionals in communication and public relations,” the publisher added.

    Read Also: UI launches Wole Soyinka Institute to immortalise Nobel Laureate

    Alh. Bello Maitama, Sarkin Kofar Dukawuya, presented certificates to the Fellows at the event attended by Kano Chairman, Nigerian Institute of Public Relations (NIPR), Aliyu Yusuf; Correspondents Chapel Chairman, Aminu Garko; Vice Chairman, Nigerian Union of Journalists (NUJ), Mustapha Gambo; Dr. Musa Abdullahi Sufi, Coordinator, Adamu Abubakar Gwarzo Foundation, and Editor-in-Chief, Solabase, Abdullateef Jos.

    Launched in 2024, the PRNigeria Young Communication Fellowship, organized by IMPR and supported by WSCIJ and MacArthur Foundation, aims to enhance excellence in journalism and public relations. Zara Ibrahim and Esther Ajibade emerged Best Fellows of the Abuja and Ilorin cohorts.