Tag: young

  • Canon to train 60 young Nigerians at Abuja Film Festival

    Canon to train 60 young Nigerians at Abuja Film Festival

    Renowned camera maker, Canon, has partnered with the 14th Abuja International Film Festival to train young Nigerians in the basics of Canon DSLR filmmaking techniques and Photography.

    The training workshop, in conjunction with Canon Central and North Africa office will see 60 shortlisted Nigerians trained from October 5 to October 10, 2017 in the fundamental rudiments of cinematography and Photography.

    Katie Simmonds, Strategic Operations Professional of Canon, said the initiative comes under Project Maraisha Initiative which is Canon’s expansion into Africa.

    “The objective is to train groups of young Africans in the skills required for them to find sustainable employment or indeed to establish their own business,” said Simmonds.

    The founder of the Abuja International Film Festival, Fidelis Duker, reiterated the vision of the Abuja International Film festival which is to build capacity within the creative sector and also act as a catalyst and platform for economic empowerment of those working in the creative sector.

    In his words  “there is no way majority of this applicants will ever remain the same after completing this training workshop as we are simply teaching them how to fish rather than giving them fish to eat. They will ultimately garner skills and also become self-sustaining creative entrepreneurs.”

    Some movies slated for the festival include Code: The IF Project, The Listeners, Class Divide, Fastball, and High School 911 while a unique feature of this year’s festival will be the Fashion Photography by the trainees.

    On completion of the Cinematography training, five short films will be made and screened during the festival while the photographs of those in the Photography class will be exhibited during the Festival.

    Also returning for the second year running is the American Film Showcase which holds at the 14th Abuja International Film Festival from Oct 9-13, 2017 and is open to the public. The U.S. Embassy in Abuja will also showcase contemporary American documentaries, offering a view of American society and culture as seen by independent filmmakers. The screenings will also feature a Masterclass with the American filmmakers.

  • Ibadan Young Writers Summit holds

    Ibadan Young Writers Summit holds

    New literary stars were discovered at the recently held finale of the 2017 edition of the Ibadan Young Writers Summit.

    Held inside the iconic bowl of the Trenchard Hall, University of Ibadan on Tuesday, August 8, the event was graced by literati, educationists, school proprietors and administrators, publishers, educational support services providers, financial institutions, parents, members of the press and the general public.

    The new literary and creative writing hopefuls were drawn from about five hundred participants at the preliminaries of the Summit which took place in May this year.

    At the preliminaries, young writers were exposed to the craftsmanship behind fine prose, poetry, drama and songwriting. Finalists were drawn from the best entries of writing assignments given them at the end of their training.

    Award-winning columnist, poet and literary genius, Sam Omatseye, who is also the Chairman, Editorial Board of The Nation Newspaper, delivered an inspiring Keynote Address that literally lit up the participating audience.

    Overall, Miss Williams Neyen of Livingstone College emerged the winner 2017 edition of the Ibadan Young Writers Literary Challenge.

    The first runner-up is Oyedemi Idowu of Oba Akinyele High School and Bassey Karen of All Soul’s College was Second runner-up.

    In the junior category (Poetry), Iyeoluwa Adejumo-Bello of Kinderville College won, whilst Omobowale Jesusurefunmi of Christ the King College won in the Senior Category.

    Various cash prizes, winners’ medal, certificate and books were awarded all finalists and overall winners. Automatic qualification for the forthcoming Odu’a International Literary Challenge was also granted the finalists.

    At the end of all proceedings, the Ibadan Young Writers Academy was inaugurated.

  • Two Nigerians, 13 others in race for Young African Entrepreneurs prize

    •$100,000 up for grabs

    Fifteen young African entrepreneurs have emerged finalists from more than 800 applicants for the seventh annual Anzisha Prize, Africa’s premier award for young entrepreneurs.

    Supported by African Leadership Academy (ALA), in partnership with the Mastercard Foundation, the Anzisha Prize celebrates and cultivates the next generation of young African entrepreneurial leaders who are creating jobs, solving local development problems and driving economies.

    Selected from 14 countries, nearly half of candidates are young women representing diverse sectors, such as clean energy, agriculture, waste recycling and youth empowerment. For the first time, candidates from Angola, Liberia, Mauritius, and Sudan entered the competition.

    “We are excited by the number of young women finalists and thrilled that the prize is contributing to their economic empowerment,” Anzisha Prize Associate Melissa Mbazo said.

    She said the success of these women-led businesses would be accelerated by access to Anzisha’s financial and mentorship support.

    Among the young innovators is 15-year-old Nigerian Victoria Olimatunde, the founder of Bizkidz, a board game designed to teach children about financial literacy and the rudimentary aspects of starting a small scale business in a fun and interactive manner. Olimatunde, 15, has also been encouraging young people to create jobs as entrepreneurs, not just seek jobs as employees.

    She will be joined by her compatriot Ajiroghene Omanudhowo, the founder of 360 Needs, which is a social enterprise created to identify and solve logistical problems in his community. Omanudhowo, 22, one of  the 2017 finalists for the Anzisha Prize, is the founder of three businesses operating under the parent company 360 Needs.

    While ASAFOOD delivers food to universities, ASADROP is a logistics company specialising in parcel delivery and Beta Grades helps students prepare for their exams by providing computer training.

    Both Nigerian budding entrepreneurs’ businesses have been impactful and transformative. They are billed to fly to Johannesburg to attend a 10-day entrepreneurial leadership boot camp where they will be coached on how to pitch their businesses to a panel of judges for a share of the $100,000 prize money and support.

    The grand prize winner will receive $25,000, while the runners-up and third place winners will receive $15,000 and $12,500 respectively. The remainder of the prize will be divided among outstanding finalists, including a $10,000 agricultural prize funded by Louis Dreyfus Foundation, as well as four $5,000 challenge prizes to bolster initiatives led by past Anzisha Prize finalists.

    Other entrepreneurs include Liberian Satta Wahab, founder of Naz Naturals, a cosmetics company that creates organic hair care products that empower young girls and women to feel beautiful and confident with their natural hair, and Thowiba Alhaj, the founder of Work Jump-Up Sudan, an organisation empowering university students by linking them to job opportunities.

    “The calibre and diversity of the young men and women competing for this year’s Anzisha Prize is impressive and improves each year,” said Program Manager, Youth Livelihoods at the Mastercard Foundation, Koffi Assouan.

    According to him, as the pool of Anzisha fellows continues to grow, so too does their impact and influence on local communities and economies.

    All other finalists will each receive $2,500 prizes. They will also benefit from ALA’s Youth Entrepreneur Support Unit (YES-U), which provides consulting and training support to Anzisha finalists. This includes the Anzisha Accelerator boot camp, mentorship and consulting services, travel opportunities to network, and business equipment, valued at $7,500.

    Finalists will be evaluated by a panel of five experienced judges who have contributed to building youth entrepreneurship in Africa, such as Wendy Luhabe, a pioneering social entrepreneur and economic activist.

    Laureates will be announced during an inspiring gala evening on October 24, which will include a keynote address from serial entrepreneur Fred Swaniker, founder of both the ALA and African Leadership University.

  • Bibliophilia to hold Young Writers’ Summit

    Bibliophilia to hold Young Writers’ Summit

    With the aim of discovering and nurturing budding writers to greatness, Bibliophilia Nigeria, a literary development organization is putting together the Ibadan Young Writers Summit 2017.

    According to the CEO of the organization, Kayode Adejumo-Bello, the writers’ summit is held in partnership with Oyo State Government, the University of Ibadan and the Association of Nigerian Authors.

    Speaking with The Nation, Kayode said that Ibadan as a city is regarded as the literary capital of Africa.

    “It produced the likes of Wole Soyinka, Chinua Achebe and all of them. But their generation is going out. We need to create a new generation of young writers who could become great literary icons in the future. So we are inviting all the schools, all the students in secondary schools in Ibadan who have talent in writing,” he said.

    He explained that the preliminary which took place last month at the University of Ibadan had about 400 schools represented. The participating students, he said, were trained in all the genres of writing.

    “We invited accomplished people in those genres to train them, after which we gave them written assignments which were rated by the Association of Nigerian Authors. The best 100 candidates were then invited for the finals which will be coming up at the University of Ibadan in July,” Kayode added.

    He further revealed that the Chairman Editorial Board of The Nation, Mr Sam Omatseye is one of the guests of honour and he will also deliver the keynote address to these budding writers.

    “The reason is for the kids to see that it is possible to write their way to fame, to success and to glory. We need them to also know that writing can also guarantee them success,” he said.

    Speaking further, he said that prizes will be given to the top five students while the participants will be constituted into a club and they will be working together on book projects. Doing it once is not enough. They have to keep at it. We will send them for training within and outside the country.

    Among those expected to grace the event are Professor Remi Raji of the Department of English, University of Ibadan, Prof. Niyi Osundare, Dr Marinho and a host of others.

  • Ogun empowers young people

    Ogun empowers young people

    Babatunde Gbenga, mass communications graduate turned farmer  now  gives up his time to participate in the  farmers market  set  up by the  Ogun State Ministry of Agriculture  at the state’s  secretariat, Oke-mosan, Abeokuta.

    He  is  amazed by the sales  he makes  and the support shown by civil servants. The mart holds every Friday. He grows maize and raise chicken. His  farm has an array of agronomic practices that guarantee a year-round supply of produce.

    Though he operates from the state’s model market, he finds it irresistible coming to the market to sell his produce. Gbenga is one of the beneficiaries of the programme. After the very first outing, Gbenga was excited at the level of success.

    Another  farmer  is Oludare Tunde. He plants cassava that is intercropped with maize. Intercropping with maize, poultry and cassava helps him keep that income relatively steady year-round. He is fast on picking up ideas that see him become a better farmer.   He has found the Ogun state civil servants’ mart a veritable income source.

    Across Ogun State, small business entrepreneurs are exploring  market opportunities proving by the  farmers market   for civil servants.

    Spotting a lucrative opportunity, many farmers have agreed to sell their produce using the thriving market platform. It is now a Friday ritual for workers at the Secretariat, to stroll into the mart to buy fresh fruits, eggs and vegetables. Such markets are celebrated for providing fresh produce, such as eggs and fruits. The “foodie bazaar” gives civil servants an opportunity to pick up local produce and support small-time suppliers. Stalls sell everything from fruit and vegetables to   fresh fish. Stallholders are well aware that their livelihood depends on retaining loyal customers and this requires them to deliver great value.The program has empowered young people to become entrepreneurs and create a self-sustaining system linking farmers to markets.The feedback from most of the stalls was how fantastic it was.. But the main aim of the market was to bring something back to the secretariat that workers feel is missing.

    The PermanentSecretary, Ogun State Ministry of Agriculture, Mr. Steve Olusegun Ipinniwa, said the aim of establishing the mart was to provide a community get-together.

    He explained that workerscan do all the shopping at the secretariat at home and head home at the close of work to do the cooking.

    He said the initiative is the government’s way of helping entrepreneurial and talented farmers and small businesses.

    He added that the mart was conceived to stock and sell fresh farm produce as a way of linking up agricultural production to the markets to ensure that farmers receive a fair reward and encouragement to increase production.

    He said “the mart is meant to bring food nearer to the civil servants  at a very reasonable price in a healthy environment.

    He stated that this initiative will not only ensure all year round access to food supply at a wholesome quantity but will also create jobs across the agro-business value chain in collaboration with the private sector.

    Head of Service,Ogun State,Mr  Abayomi Sobande said the state is  committed to further development of  farmers skills so they can stand on their own as small business entrepreneurs. The success of the programme, according to him, would empower farmers, input agents and buyers to expand their networks, increase their overall profits, and rebuild their livelihoods.

  • Not Too Young To Run campaign hits Ilorin

    Not Too Young To Run campaign hits Ilorin

    The ongoing campaign against the exclusion of youths in leadership has hit Ilorin, the Kwara State capital.

    Dozens of students last Tuesday held a rally for the “Not Too Young To Run” legislation being proposed to be sent to the National Assembly.

    The rally was organised by Brain Builders International, a Non-governmental Organisation (NGO).

    The group led youths and members of civil society organisations across the state capital on a road walk, which ended at the state House of Assembly complex.

    The aim of the rally was to lobby the legislators to support the proposed legislation, which the organisers said, would improve youth political participation and leadership aspiration.

    The rally started at New Yidi Roundabout, with the participants sensitising the public on the importance of the bill.

    The campaigners marched to the Assembly complex in a carnival-like procession, drawing attention to the bill.

    At the state Assembly, they were received by the House Leader, Hon. Hassan Oyeleke, accompanied by some members.

    Brain Builders International National Coordinator, Olasupo Abideen, told the lawmakers that the rally was to solicit the Assembly’s support in ensuring the passage of the “Not Too Young To Run” Bill.

    He explained that the bill was introduced, following peaceful agitations by the youth groups across the country to increase political participation. He noted that similar rallies were held across states to draw support for the bill.

    Olasupo said: “It is a known fact that young people have made significant contributions to the growth and development of the country through their energies and creativity. As such, we should be given more opportunities to participate in decision-making and contribute our quota to governance of our country.”

    Oyeleke, who stood in for the Speaker, Rt. Hon. Ali Ahmad, said the Assembly had been supporting the youth in their quest for leadership roles, assuring the campaigners that the House would back the proposed bill as soon as it was presented.

    A member of the Assembly, Hon. Moshood Bakare, pledged support for the cause, promising to lobby his colleagues to do same.

    He said: “I am someone who believes in the capacity and brilliance of youths, because I had held leadership positions as a youth and I performed creditably well. If youths are doing well outside this nation, why should we restrict those brilliant minds from taking part in decision-making process?”

  • Women,young farmers count blessings in CADP project in Cross River

    Women,young farmers count blessings in CADP project in Cross River

    Women and youths that were beneficiaries of the Commercial Agricutlture Development Progamme in Cross River State have expressed gratitude for the programme, which they said have changed their lives for the better.

    The women and youths empowerment programme, which was launched in 2009 and would wind up on May 31, 2017 this year, is driven by the World Bank and the Federal Government to empower women and youths in the area of agro-business in five states.

    In Cross River State 700 women and youths have benefitted from the programme, and were trained across he value chains of oil-palm, cocoa, rice, poultry and aqua-culture.

    The beneficiaries were divided into three batches. The first batch of 100 who were trained from August to September 2015. According to the Project Coordinator in the state, Mr Duckham Ama, the first batch who had concluded their training at the Songhai Farms in Itighidi in Abi local government area were mobilized with N2.5 million each.

    The first batch consisted of 46 women and 54 young men, while the second and third batches have 298 women and 302 young men.

    The second and third batches trained from November and December last year received a higher sum of N3 million. According to the Coordinator, the money was non-refundable, but there were measures to ensure that beneficiaries do not use it for purposes other than what it was meant for.

    Speaking at an interactive session between the media and beneficiaries of the project in Calabar, farmers who participated in the first batch described how the programme had changed their lives.

    Mr Okon Augustine Ekeng, who is into fish farming said, “I am grateful for the World Bank for helping us to implement this. Today I am very successful person. You can see here I have my fresh and dry fish here. It is of high quality and hygienically prepared catfish that is free of sand and cancer free. What we use in drying it is smoke free. I thank God for what he has done and also went the CADP staff that helped us stand on our feet to also help the 600 batch that has just started.

    “I have been able to employ two persons. I have a garden behind my fish farm, so the waste water goes there. Nothing is wasted.”

    Also, Mr Elemi Williams, who is into rice farming said, “It has been wonderful. It started like a learning experience. But now I am experienced. I have gained knowledge and that has brought me to a level where I can bring a physical product for you to see as my product, not someone else’s product. I am into the native rice, which is totally de-stoned and is 100 per cent chaff free. It is our native rice. The passion is there. I see my future in this business. I see my dreams interpreted through this business the drive to do more is there. My dealing with the organizers have been wonderful in the sense that I had a passion for what I came for and used that passion in dealing with the people who funded this project. My dealing has been very sincere with them. My advise to the younger ones who are coming into doing it is for them to be sincere with themselves because if they are sincere the benefit of that sincerity will come.”

    Mrs Okoma Bassey Edet, who is into oil-palm said, “we make our oil such that we remove the fatty acids and cholesterol to a very low level. With this programme, we see that it has helped the youths and women in terms of unemployment. I mean look at me now. I am making my own money. We are no longer sitting at home and just receiving from our husbands. We go out there to keep ourselves busy and reduce unemployment. For instance I employ two people for now and I am still believing God as the business keeps growing I will employ more. The business is improving.”

    Ama urged the second and third batches of beneficiaries to be committed to the programme so their lives can be better. He said they were committed to the success of the programme.

    Commissioner for Agriculture, Prof Anthony Eneji, was grateful for the programme and assured the state will do all it can to support it.

    The Special Adviser on Agriculture, Yvonne Idem, said the governor, being an entrepreneur him, would do all can to support entrepreneurs.

    She said the first batch had been fully implemented and were doing very well, and urged the second and third batches of beneficiaries to be serious as they were privileged to be the few chosen from so many.

    She said under the program 55.77km of roads had been constructed to enable farmers bring out their products, reduce travel time and cost of transportation.

    She urged beneficiaries to help build others.

  • Catching them young

    Catching them young

    Nigerian and Spanish communities recently gathered in Lagos for the launch of FCBESCLA Academy, Lagos, the first in sub-Saharan Africa.  The event, described as a mini-cultural festival, paraded beautiful and well-costumed cultural and traditional dance troupes from the six  geo-political zones of the country, a gifted and talented five-man violin group and most-flexible Sasa dancers that made the experience captivating and a life-time memory.

    The ceremony, which held at the Teslim Balogun Stadium, Surulere, Lagos, was attended by dignitaries from all walks of life including Lagos State Governor Mr Akinwunmi Ambode, represented by Mr. Deji Tinubu, chairman, Lagos State Sports Commission.

    Others were Vice President FC Barcelona, Mr. Pau Vilanola; General Manager, FC Bacelona, Mr. Fran Carbo; former Chairman, Punch Newspapers Chief Ajibola Ogunshola, renowned actor and former Delta State Commissioner for Culture and Tourism, Mr. Richard Mofe Damijo; wife of Mr. Leslie Oghomienor, Mrs. Yetunde Oghomienor and Mr. Kayode Adeleke, Vice President, Russel Smith Group, among others.

    As early as 7am guests had already started arriving for an event scheduled to start by 10am. The fan zone was opened  at 10am to guests, thus offering  them unique opportunity to  enjoy themselves  and win various take home items, which included good quality branded polo shirts and brand manifestation materials.

    It was trendy and fun-filled to see many fans have their faces painted to the amusement of their children. The atmosphere was carnival-like.

    Barcelona  top shots, who flew in from Spain for the opening ceremony, were thrilled by a sensational acrobatic displays and mesmerising dance steps by the colorful Atilogu troupe. This was followed by sensual Tiv dancers that kept the spectators glued to their positions as their camera clicked. The emergence of the three Ekpe masquerades – symbol of honour, royalty, strength and dignity, of Efik people of South-south zone, changed the mood and tone of the scenery. The visitors from Spain and others were overwhelmed and thrilled. To the crowd, it was an uncommon memorable moment of glitz, elegance and glamour laced in the fiber of the Nigerian culture.

    Another crowd puller was the Eyo and Agere, the mystical cultural symbol of Lagos, which were amazing sight and sound to behold and admire as they paraded the vicinity of the venue with a live band.

    The fanciful and colorful combination of the Atilogu and Abang display was a different spectacle, affirming that the FCBESCOLA Lagos experience was bound to be different in setting standard. Nyok, Fulani, Hausa and Sasa dancers added other flavours and mouth watering taste to the epic outing of the brand in Nigeria.

    During the main ceremony, the state box and covered stand were filled to  capacity. The event brought out a youth population of over 5000 students invited from various education districts in Lagos.  The show climaxed in speeches, cultural display, match past and the official presentation of instrument of authority. After the dignitaries were introduced, a team of three talking drummers, led by Samson Onifade, set the stage agog with their drums beats. The two nations’ anthems were creatively done by the violin players.

    Chairman, Blaugrana Group, owners FCBESCOLA, Lagos, Mr. Leslie Oghomienor, commended the effort of the governor, his team and the entire people of Lagos and the officials from Spain for their support.  He also thanked parents, who were bold enough to take the step of faith with the visionary. He revealed that, ‘the brand is with the strong quest so that the talents we are growing imbibe the genuine essence of our diverse culture and, our value of effort, ambition, teamwork , and humility with integrity, love, unity and honesty as the spokes of our wheels of progress and youth empowerment’.

    “This project is our own way of giving back to this great community called Nigeria as we desire to grow a youthful and vibrant enviable society of ambitious and humble leaders who believe in themselves and working audacious as a team with a rewarding effort,” he said.

    Board member/Vice President FC Bacelona Mr. Pay Vilanona, said: ‘Our experience on this trip is inspiringly unfamiliar. Motivating and encouraging, we are bound to help this people to do more and better in teaching our most pride values, a backbone of a complete man, be such a footballer or teacher…’

    Governor Ambode. who spoke through Mr. Deji Tinubu, said: “This enviable project would outlived its visioners generation after generation, no doubt our confident, interest and partnership. This government will do everything humanly possible within our political will to better the lot of our people, through novel cause like the FCBESCOLA. Lagos. To us it is a dream that we are truly convinced would be well lived.”

    Mr Richard Mofe-Damijo, said: “Today’s ceremony is a tremendous exhibition of life of our people. That aside the diversity that we are bound in freedom and unity as one great indivisible entity using our culture and traditional values as pathfinder. Our act is in the arts. Sights and sounds have no language or boundaries. So is sport, especially the new Nigerian oil – football. It is the most cherished art of entertainer in recent times globally. Thus, my involvement. It is a good platform to use in giving back.”

    Mr. Oghomienor  said: “Our dream is to be the best internationally with full academic faculties, facilities and sessions. This, we believe will come to be in the nearest future. The Academy is here to make a difference.”

     

  • The young shall grow, even in Nigeria, even in the perilous times and world we live in (1)

    The young shall grow, even in Nigeria, even in the perilous times and world we live in (1)

    The young shall grow! As we all know, one of the biggest passenger luxury bus services in Nigeria bears that hopeful and endearing prayerful declaration as its company name. Since I first saw the slogan boldly inscribed on the buses of the company, I immediately, even if rather unconsciously, uttered a silent prayer. This is the prayer: on my road journeys across our country, may I never come across any of these buses as a crashed wreck rusting somewhere in thecountry’s hinterland! So far, praise be, that prayer has been answered. I have seen the battered hulks of other crashed buses in different parts of the country, but never one with those crystalline, prayerful words: the young shall live!

    Although I know that to this particular audience I do not need to explain the social and cultural roots of that prayer of mine that so far has been answered, I will do so all the same. Road accidents, needless and gruesome road accidents, are rife on our roads and highways throughout the country. If I should ever, heavens forbid, come across a crashed bus with the legend, “the young shall grow”, on its upturned side, I would have a chilling feeling that here is one instance where young and old lives, but mostly young lives, were cut short and denied the blessing of growing to old age. There is a sort of gruesome irony here and it is this: since in our country sooner or later, sooner rather than later, one will one day come across the crashed, rusting remains of a luxury bus, oh lord, let it have on its side “Destiny Cannot be Changed”; or “No Telephone To Heaven”; or even “God’s Case – No Appeal”; but not “The Young Shall Grow”! In our country and our continent, indeed in the entirety of the world we live in, every people, every group prays for its young not to die young and that is why there is a version of the words of the title of this talk in every language, in every cultural tradition of the world. But as universal as this cultural and existential phenomenon may undoubtedly be, it takes a particularly harrowing dimension in our country and our continent. Let me explain what I mean by this as a way of leading directly to the main substance of my talk this morning.

    In 1954, Dr. S.O. Onabamiro who was a lecturer in parasitology at this university at the time and would later go on to become a major cabinet member of Chief Obafemi Awolowo’s Western Regional Government, published a scientific monograph with a rather prosaic title, “Why Our Children Die”. I first became aware of Onabamiro’s book and the great impact it had when it was published from the account that I read of it in an essay by the late Chinua Achebe titled “The Truth of Fiction” that Achebe had initially delivered as a Convocation Lecture at the Obafemi Awolowo University, Ife, when I taught there. In referring to Onabamiro and his book in his lecture, Achebe had used the work of the scientist to clinch his claim for the truth of his own works of fiction. At a time when the majority of the people in his country believed that children die from the evil work of human beings and malevolent spirits, Onabamiro’s book had argued that parasites, especially the guinea worm parasite, were the main culprits. Study parasites and the conditions that make them thrive, wipe them out and create clean, sanitary environments everywhere and our children will live, the great parasitologist had argued, Achebe stated in his Convocation Lecture at OAU. The scientific truth of Onabamiro, the great novelist insisted, was completely compatible with the imaginative and metaphoric truth of the novels that he and other African writers were producing. How so?

    As a sort of meeting point between Onabamiro and Achebe, consider the following incident from Achebe’s first novel, Things Fall Apart. This pertains to one of the wives of the protagonist, Okonkwo, who was plagued by what she considered the curse of ogbanje (or abiku) children. At first, she gave variations of the nameOnwubiko, that implores death to please leave the dying and returning child alone. When this did not work, she resorted to variation of names asking death to do his worst – which of course he did! That is until, finally one child, Obiageli, did not die but lived to herself become a bride expecting to bear and raise children.

    Sigma Chief, Mr. Chairman, the honoree of this occasion, Professor Tola Atinmo, the Sigma Deputy Chief and Chief Scribe and members of the Sigma Club, invited guests, ladies and gentlemen, it is not because both Dr. Onabamiro and Professor Chinua Achebe had, like me, deep ties with this university that I cite them and their works as guiding posts for this lecture, though that is part of the reason. It is because in their different but profoundly related ways, they were deeply interested in the topic of this lecture, this being an inquiry into why, against all the odds stacked against the prayer, we must make sure in our part of the world that the young shall indeed grow. It seems so benign, almost anodyne in fact, this slogan, “the young shall grow”. However, in my talk, Mr. Chairman, I start from the premise that it is, to the contrary, a cry from a past and still unfolding history in which so many things conspire to make growth a futile prospect for most of the young in our region of the world. Mr. Chairman, I agreed to give the lecture because I was told that it would be delivered as one of the events in honor my old friend and Hall Chairman at Kuti Hall, Professor Tola Atinmo. To this agreeable inducement was added the additional pleasure of being informed that you, Professor Ayo Banjo, my former and deeply revered teacher here at UI, would be the Chairman of the occasion. So, I thank the Club for inviting me and congratulate Professor Atinmo with the assurance that it is a great pleasure for me to be part of the festivities in his honor.

    All protocols now duly observed, I return to where I left off in the lecture: the thesis that far from being just a benign expression or a simple act of prayer, the slogan, “the young shall grow”, is really a cry from the bottomless pit of the danger, insecurity, horror and privation that the young have faced and still face in our country, our continent and our world today. In the lecture, I shall not, of course, ignore the prayerful part; indeed, it is the basis for the distinctly hopeful note that I deliberately strike in the title of the talk. But if that hope is not to be merely wishful and naïve, it must first be subjected to what, for want of a better term, can be called a baptism of fire. Hope, let us remember, is nearly always the product of hopelessness and great hope is the child of a much greater hopelessness. And so, in the manner in which I brought Onabamiro and Achebe together at the start of the discussion, let us range widely over science and history, economics and fiction, politics and cinema, and statistics and “breaking news” as we take stock of what the young have faced and still continue to face in a history that seems like a nightmare from which we can never wake.

    Mr. Chairman, in the first week of September 2015, like the rest of the world, I was shocked and immeasurably saddened by the picture of the Kurdish-Syrian boy, Alan Kurdi, whose lifeless but still very lifelike body was found washed ashore on the Mediterranean coast of Turkey near the town of Bodrum. That picture of that little boy has remained one of the most widely circulated and haunting expressions of one fact concerning the generalized violence that causes massive populations displacements in many parts of the world. This is the fact that children, women and, especially, young people constitute the bulk of the victims, the displaced, the uprooted. The thousands that have perished in futile and fatal crossings of the Mediterranean   from North Africa into Southern Europe are, overwhelmingly, young people, especially the 360 that drowned in Lampedusa, Malta on 3 October, 2013.These thoughts went through my mind as I saw with the rest of the world that picture of the dead Alan Kurdi. But then something else flashed in my mind, the memory of an episode I had encountered many decades ago in Amos Tutuola’s classic phantasmagoric novel, Palm Wine Drinkard. What is the scene about?

    It is the scene in which the hero-protagonist, the “drinkard” himself, is driven out of what the author calls “Dead’s Town” by an extremely violent phalanx of the souls of dead children who died violent deaths at young ages. These undead avenging furies had no particular quarrel with the “drinkard”; their quarrel, their raging quarrel, was against everything in nature and life that had conspired to violently rob them of life before their allotted time. From what imagined or real experience had Tutuola plucked this episode in the Palm Wine Drinkard? At my first reading of the book, the answer to this question completely eluded me. It was to take a few decades before I understood: in this episode in The Palm Wine Drinkard, Tutuola was imaginatively memorializing the horrendous experience of hundreds and thousands of children and the young violently killed before “their time” through the countless internecine inter- and intra-tribal wars of our continent, through both internal slavery and the Trans-Atlantic slave trade and through innumerable plagues and natural disasters.

    Ken Saro-Wiwa’s Sozaboy and Uzodinma Iweala’s Beasts of No Nation come to mind here also. Both are powerful anti-war novels that focus on young, innocent and even naïve people as special victims, as unique specimens of the “collateral damage” of the innumerable meaningless wars that have ravaged many parts of Africa in the postcolonial era. The narrator-protagonists of both novels are perhaps the first portraits that we have in African literature of the notorious boy-soldiers that came to achieve worldwide notoriety for their barbarity in the civil wars of countries like Sierra Leone, Liberia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Uganda. In these two novels, we come to a slightly different real and imaginative territory than what we have in Tutuola and Achebe where the young are victims through and through. By contrast, in Sozaboy and, especially,Beast of No Nation, the young are also perpetrators of war and destruction on entire populations and on young people like themselves. This also marks a pivotal moment in this talk in which we are forced to take a more critical look at the young as a social category that can be as responsible for good and evil in society like any other social group. In other words, if the prayerful slogan that the young shall grow has so often met with negation in our country and our world, the young are sometimes the source of the problem, without forgetting that the young are also often part of the solution. At this juncture in the talk let us turn first, Mr. Chairman, to the good part, to the bounteous seeds of growth, progress and renewal often planted by young people,using examples from around the world but with particular reference to our country.

    • To be continued.

     

    Biodun Jeyifo

    bjeyifo@fas.harvard.edu

  • Imo community where pregnant girls are BANISHED for life

    Imo community where pregnant girls are BANISHED for life

    Maidens must walk to the market with bare breasts for initiation into womanhood

    Young female indigenes protest practice, say it’s initiation into marine kingdom

    Osu (caste system) is an ancient Igbo traditional practice that is well known within and outside the country but often condemned because of its perceived infringement on the fundamental rights of the affected people. But not many people are aware of Ikwe-ezi, a traditional festival in Mgbidi area of Imo State, which requires young girls to maintain a high level of morality before they perform the rites which are compulsory for every female indigene of the area. From the stone-age when the practice began till date, hordes of young girls who failed to keep to the rules of the tradition were said to have been publicly humiliated and banished from the community. INNOCENT DURU reports.

     

    THIS, obviously, is a season of celebration and anxiety for many families in Mgbidi, the headquarters of Oru Local Government Area, Imo State. It is a joyous moment for the entire community because it is the period when the people celebrate the Ikwe-ezi, a ceremony that is akin to what is commonly known as rite of passage. It is a huge celebration that draws indigenes of the community in other parts of the country and beyond home to take part, just the way many Igbo people travel home during the Yuletide season.

    The Ikwe-ezi is, however, a period of anxiety for many families whose daughters are ripe for the ceremony, because they have seen and heard of how many families in the land have had their daughters publicly embarrassed and even banished from the community for not being faithful to the rules of the tradition. The Nation gathered that the thought of the grave consequence sends shivers down the spines of parents whose daughters are old enough to take part in the ceremony.

    The Principal Palace Secretary to the traditional ruler, Chief Festus Orji Achonu, who spoke with our correspondent, said: “When a girl has attained maturity but has not performed the rites, her parents must guard her jealously to prevent her from becoming pregnant. If she becomes pregnant before performing the rites, she will be banished from Mgbidi and certain cleansing rites will be done for the family she comes from. The banished girl will never step into the community again. If for any reason she enters the community, the male children in the family will have to perform some cleansing rites in order not to attract the wrath of the gods of the land.”

    Some other respondents said the girl in question risks being lynched if she steps into the community after she has been banished.

    “When a girl has been banished from the community, on no account must she return. She can pass through the land in a vehicle, but she must not step on the soil. If she attempts it, she will be lynched and the family will pay dearly for it,“ a respondent said.

    Giving background information about the ceremony, Chief Achonu said: “Ikwe-ezi is a unique culture in Mgbidi which has not been affected by civilisation or Christianity. A young girl must have reached maturity age to qualify for participation. If you have not reached the age, you are not qualified to do it. It is a sort of check and balance on our young girls. It begins from January and ends in June annually.

    “The practice started from time immemorial with the daughter of a peasant. She was so beautiful that people became jealous of her. She eventually became pregnant, making the elders to gather and declare the development as a taboo. They consequently said she should be banished from the town. The helpless, poor father cried and swore that nothing would ever put an end to the practice in the land. That is why nothing has been able to stop this since then.

    “Every girl that performs the tradition will go to a river we call Nmiri nwata oma (water of a beautiful child) with a small yam that is thrown inside the shrine of the goddess of the river called Obana. That is the tradition we got from our forefathers. When she does this, it means she has done the Ikwe-ezi ceremony, and that signifies that she is now pure.

    “Every girl going through the rites makes use of large quantities of coconut and fish which she distributes to the guests that come to celebrate with her. There are two nights that they will come and perform the ceremony. The first is done on the Orie market day called Ikpoba ali udu ego. The second ceremony is done on Eke market day and it is called ibu oyo. On these two days, a coconut and a fish is given by the celebrant to as many people as come to congratulate her. In appreciation, you can give her money.

    “The Ikwe-ezi ceremony starts after a ceremony we call Chioha here in Mgbidi. Every parent whose daughter is ready will fire two gunshots on Eke day to inform the entire community that their child is ready for the ceremony. On the second day, which is Orie, they will perform the ikpoba ali udu ego. They will come to congratulate the family and take part in the ceremony.

    “There would be traditional folk music for the celebrant to dance to on these two days. On those days, the celebrant gets a lot of gifts. The ceremony lasts for two weeks during which she will not do anything. For a period of time, the celebrant will be in a hut grinding local chalk that she would rub on her body. During this period, they would be cooking delicious meals for her to eat.

    “On the final day, she would go to Eke Mgbidi Market to do izu ahia ezi, tying only wrapper and leaving their breasts open to go to the market. They will go round the market and people will see her that she did it without any blemish. If she is pregnant before entering the fat room, on the day she goes to the market with her breasts open, some old women will notice it and drive her out of the market. She would then be banished from the community.”

     

    Concerned parents

    The fear of falling victim of the unpleasant picture painted by Chief Achonu and other respondents was apparent when our correspondent visited the community. A mother, who gave her name simply as Elizabeth, said she had been seriously troubled since last year when her daughter started seeing her menstrual period. She said she had to keep a close watch on her to prevent her from getting into sexual relationships that could lead to pregnancy.

    Elizabeth said: “I have never kept a close watch on my daughter the way I have been doing since she started seeing her menstrual cycle late last year. I developed goose pimples the very day she told me that she had seen her period. Frightened, I exclaimed, ‘isi gini’ (what did you just say)? Have you been seeing any man?

    “Confused, she said, ‘Mummy, what do you mean? I see men everywhere.’

    “Mba (no)! I mean has any man ever touched you?

    “She looked more confused and said yes. Many males touch me now.

    “At that point, I said you seem not to understand. Has any man made love to you before?

    “She looked astounded as I bombarded her with unusual questions that thoroughly embarrassed the young girl.

    “I have never stopped asking the same question every day, no matter how embarrassed she feels. I will not rest until she has performed the ceremony and come out clean. The devil is always bringing temptations to the girls when they are approaching the time, just to humiliate them and their families. I pray that, that will never be my portion. During our time, there was no need for such because you could be naked and no man would touch you. But now, a baby that wears diaper is not spared by sexual perverts.”

    If Elizabeth was worried because of her only girl, Ada has more reasons to be worried as a good number of her children are females.

    She said: “I constantly suffer serious headache policing my daughters so that they don’t have anything to do with men, especially before they perform the ceremony. As a parent, I cherish and preach morality to my children. But the Ikwe-ezi ceremony requires one to be more than just a morality preacher.

    “I follow my daughters, especially the matured ones, bumper to bumper, because any slight mistake may lead to a lifetime regret. If I see any male around them, you will see me barking like a mad dog. If they go to school and have not returned at the time they are supposed to, my heart will be up.

    “At times, I kneel to beg my daughters to keep themselves pure. I would take time to narrate the consequence of not doing so and ask them if they would want to be banished to an unknown place where they would not see me again. It is tasking, especially for mothers, because if anything goes wrong, it is the women that would be at the receiving end.”

    Equally worried is Nneamaka, who is greatly haunted by stories of girls that have been banished. The fair-complexioned woman said apart from hearing that people were banished, she had seen it happen. The experience, according to her, reverberates in her memory, especially now that one of her daughters is getting ready to perform the rite.

    She said: “I enjoyed the ceremony before now and had no reason to be scared because I hadn’t any child old enough to take part in it. I am feeling the heat now that my child is ready for it. I am tensed up because I don’t want any unpalatable story. It could be entertaining to watch another woman’s child banished, but one would never pray to be a victim.

    “I know of a woman whose child was banished, and I can tell you that her life has never been the same since then. I don’t want to experience that, and that is why I would not sleep or slumber until my daughter has scaled the hurdle.

    “The shame and stigmatisation that come with one’s daughter being banished is too much. When a girl goes to the market half naked, some old women will conduct a check on her to see if she has violated the rules. If she has, they will make her sit down and paint her with charcoal. After that, she will be banished. As they are sending her out of the town, some people will be flogging her, others will be spitting on her, while some others will use brooms to sweep her feet away as she leaves. Immediately they drive her out, you will see men from other communities coming to take her as a wife without paying any bride price to the family.

    “There are so many of them in places like Izombe, Otulu and and neighbouring communities. When a young girl is taken away like that, anything can happen to her. She can be maltreated, used for rituals or any other terrible thing. I will not live for another 24 hours if such fate befalls my daughter. That is why I am doing everything possible to monitor them.”

     

    Young girls kick

    Some young girls who spoke with our correspondent expressed reservations with the practice, which they said is a subtle way of initiating them into occultism.

    One of them, who identified herself simply as Amarachi, said: “I have not done it because it is against my religious belief. I don’t need to do the ceremony to live a chaste life. What is my connection with the lady from which the problem began and why would I have to go to the river to dip my leg into the water and also drop yam and fowl in the shrine? It is nothing but an initiation and I will never take part in it.”

    For Onyinye, the practice has outlived its usefulness. She said: “Of what relevance is the ceremony in the modern time? I wonder why our people are holding on to the practice when many other communities have long jettisoned such primitive practices.

    “Some of my friends and I have vowed that we would not take part in it. There are some men of God that are also kicking against it. They have been organising prayers for young girls like us to break the curses and other evils attached to performing or not performing the ceremony. We say no to barbaric traditional practices that humiliate the female folk. All you have are cultural practices about females. Why are there none for males?”

     

    Different strokes for different folks

    It was, however, a different story with some people who had undergone the rite. Some of them said they actually relished the occasion and wish they could do it all over.

    Franca Ekwueme, who was filled with joy when our correspondent asked her about the practice, said: “This is a big festival here in Mgbidi. It is done in the Christmas period. I did mine and I was very happy about it. I feel like doing it again because it is a thing of pride.

    “It is always fun because many people will come and celebrate with you. When you are in the hut grinding the local chalk that you rub on your body, your skin will be glowing and you will come out looking robust. If you do it without any blemish, your parents are proud of you for not bringing them shame.

    “If you don’t perform the ceremony, nobody will marry you because you will be seen as a cursed person. Many people have been banished for not keeping to the rules of the rites.

    “When going to the river, you will go with a yam and a fowl. When you get to the river, you will put your toes in the river. There are some changes that will happen to the river if you are not pure. After dipping your toes in the river, you will take the fowl and fling it across your neck three times and throw the yam at a designated place.”

    Franca also shared the shocking fate that befell a girl who performed the rites while she was pregnant. She said: “There are grave consequences for those that succeed in doing it while they are pregnant. I know of somebody who succeeded in doing it while she was pregnant. But when she later got married, the husband developed mental challenges. She later remarried and stayed for a very long time before she got pregnant again.

    “When it was time for her to give birth, it was a bunch of hair attachment that came out of her instead of a baby. She died and later on, the husband died too.

    “It is better for one to keep herself pure and honourably observe the rites instead of trying to be smart and ending up in shame and lifetime regrets. The tradition is not treated with levity by our people. Even if you are resident in other states or outside the country, when the time comes, you must come and do it. Once the time to do it is announced, you will see many parents rushing back home with their qualified daughters from different parts of the country and beyond to observe the rites. Once a girl is banished, she would not be allowed to come back to the community again.”

    Another lover of the practice, Ngozi Emmanuel, says she wants her children to observe it without leaving out any aspect.

    She said: “I did full Ikwe-ezi and I will gladly want my children to do same. I enjoyed it so much because it was one moment in my life that people celebrated with me. There was no reason for me to be shy for leaving my breasts open. It was a thing of pride to show that you are pure and that your breasts are standing firmly.

    “When you are walking from your house to the market, your breasts will be bouncing in confirmation of your purity. I wish I could do it all over again. The distance you will trek could be far or short. It all depends on the distance from your house to the market. It is always fun.”

    Ngozi noted that there had always been attempts by Christians to put an end to the practice but the efforts always failed.

    “There was a time a Catholic priest tried to abolish it, but before you know it, many people started dying or having mental challenges. It later became a legal issue because the custodians of the tradition didn’t want it abolished. The priest eventually left the community,” she recalled.

     

    For the men, a piece of entertainment

    It is, however, not only the females that enjoy the ceremony. Chats with some males showed that it serves as a piece of entertainment for them too.

    One of the men who gave his name as Uzoma said: “We eagerly look forward to the ceremony. It entertains us very well as it gives you the opportunity of seeing maidens in their natural state. Apart from that, it gives us the opportunity of eating free coconut and fish provided by the celebrants. We don’t joke with the ceremony here. There was a pastor that vowed that he would not do it for his children. But the mother who knows the implication secretly did it for them.”

    Enumerating the benefits of the ceremony to the community, Chief Achonu said the elders had modified the ceremony to some extent.

    According to him: “The benefit is that it is a sort of checks and balances for our young girls. Anyone that has not performed it must be very careful to avoid the grave consequences. Nobody will like herself or her family members to be sent out of the community. That is why they need to be very careful so that such a nasty story does not come up. Many people have been banished.

    “The modification we have done is that they don’t go to the market anymore leaving their breasts open.  Some people don’t even go to the market again. The ceremony can even be performed now by proxy, especially for those who are abroad, as long as the person is pure.

    “Those who fail the test are forever banished and will never step into the community again. If for any reason she enters the community, the male members of the family will be affected. They will have to perform the cleansing again to be free from attracting the wrath of the gods of the land.”

    His assertion was, however, denied by some of the community members who claimed that some groups still go to the market with their breasts totally open.

    “It is not true that no one goes half naked to the market anymore. Some groups, especially those who are devotees of the water goddess, still do it. There was a family that did that recently and we all saw it,” a community member said.

     

    Knocks for practice

    The practice, like the Osu (caste system), has also attracted severe condemnation from religious leaders and gender activists. In a chat with our correspondent, the General Overseer of Living Souls Pentecostal Ministry, in Mgbidi, Bishop Paul Chukwu, said he does not support the Ikwe -ezi ceremony because “it causes the girls to be messed up.”

    The cleric, who did not hide his disdain for the practice, said: “They are always asked to go to the river to place their legs there and perform some rituals. They will strip themselves naked along the road and do all sorts of things in the public glare. After the whole exercise, the young girls would be told to go and have the freedom to fornicate. It is hard to bring the indigenes of this place into Pentecostal churches.

    “I have been speaking to the custodians of the tradition on the need to abolish it, but they are tightly holding on to it. At times, when you mention it to them, they will be harassing you. When you dare say anything that is against the practice, they will tell you it is a no-go area.”

    He dismissed the claims that the ceremony attracts a lot of benefits to the community, saying: “Forget their argument that the practice is aimed at making the girls to keep their virginity. We are here seeing everything that is happening. All the people that have gone through the ritual that I know of become promiscuous after doing it. Look around and you will see that this particular city is filled with touts and prostitutes even in residential buildings.

    “The name of the community is one of its undoing. Mgbidi means barrier, and everywhere you go and say that you are from Mgbidi, the next thing people will do is to scream. I have seen many girls that were banished because they became pregnant before going through the ritual. It is an abomination for anybody to banish fellow human beings. Did God ask us to kill or destroy another person? There are many things that I have seen here that are reprehensible.”

    On her part, the Executive Director of Project Alert, a non-governmental organisation based in Lagos, Dr Josephine Effah Chukwuma, said: “It is a discriminatory practice and very much out of line with the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women. It is discriminatory because they do not banish the boys/men who impregnate them. Did the young girls get pregnant on their own? Why do we keep holding on to cultural practices that are harmful and discriminatory to women and girls?

    In her remark, the Executive Director, Centre for Children’s Health Education, Orientation and Protection (CEE-HOPE), Betty Abah, said: “My view of it is that this is a cultural thing and cultures, traditions and norms should have a place in our society. That is what gives colour, candour and character to a society or a micro-society in this instance. We can’t throw the baby away with the bath water.

    “I suspect that this is a sort of rite of passage or coming of age ceremony, which applies in many indigenous societies with the various rites and ceremonies. What we should examine is the crude aspect of it so as to do away with it. And typically, as I can glean from this, the odds are against the womenfolk. First, does she really have to go half-naked in this age? To prove what point exactly?

    “Again, very importantly, what are the methods of ascertaining whether she is pregnant or not? Are those methods medically ethical or healthy? Are they done by a medical professional or a crude method that may pose the risk of infection or contamination all in the name of sustaining a tradition?

    “Ultimately, I would like to ask the elders, the custodians of this age-long tradition a quiet question: why should the girl be the only one to be banished? Does it no longer take two to tangle or did she somehow impregnate herself? What happens to her partner in crime? Leave him to continue impregnating more girls and then getting those girls banished?

    “While I do not condone extra-marital sex, I believe it will be great if both are punished. It can only be fair that way. Generally, I think the practice should be scrutinised and ‘polished’ in light of modern realities.”

    Taking a legal look at the practice, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Chief Ladi Williams, said the idea of banishing defaulters is out of place.

    He said: “Freedom of movement in any part of the country is a constitutional right which cannot be abrogated. The community has no right to do that. Any customary law that says that they have such powers to the extent that it is consistent with the constitution is null and void. If a customary court supports that, then it is nonsense.

    “The affected persons should proceed to the magistrate court. Such case can even go on up to the Supreme Court. The banished persons can sue for enforcement of human rights and also claim damages for preventing them from going to her primary place of abode.”