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Chinua Achebe: A Writer And A Half And More

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By Akin Adesokan

He sits there in the front row, looking baffled by the effusion of encomiums falling all around him like snow, a little overshadowed in the serene placidity of a wise old man that he is. Once in a while, as the person reading on stage hits on a funny note, and the audience comes to life with muffled guffaws, he too shakes a bit from the effort of laughing. Chinua Achebe, Africa’s most famous novelist and author of Things Fall Apart, a classic of 20th century fiction, will be 70 in two weeks, but there is an early start to the celebration, this weekend of November 3-4.

Akin Adesokan

Akin Adesokan

That was in 2000, more than 12 years ago, when Bard College, the school in upstate New York that Achebe had made his home following his tragic accident in 1990, decided to honour this path-breaking man of letters, bringing an unprecedented number of writers and scholars together in Annandale, a tiny university town on the bank of the Hudson River. For me, it was the largest gathering of writers of African descent and intellectuals and scholars and business people with a stake in African arts and letters around a single moment, that is, since May 1988 when an international symposium took place in Lagos to celebrate Wole Soyinka’s Nobel Prize for Literature, earned two years before. Speaker after speaker, from Nelson Mandela (who sends a message from South Africa) through Toni Morrison to Ali Mazrui and John Edgar Wideman told the house what encountering Achebe’s masterpiece meant to them.

It was my first close encounter with Achebe, a writer that I had met in print since upper elementary school when I read but half-understood the story of a man named Obi who has a girlfriend named Clara whom he really cannot marry, but he has to go to jail for taking a bribe. And there was also the encounter from a distance, in 1989 or so, when he stepped out of a Jeep in front of  Trenchard Hall at the University of Ibadan, waving a feathered fan at a band of dancers and drummers serenading this guest arriving to receive an honorary degree from his alma mater. I would read the other books later, out of duty (A Man of the People; Girls at War) or curiosity (Arrow of God; Things Fall Apart; Anthills of the Savannah), and for someone trying to read his way toward an idea of how to make his own books, those novels became part of my growing imaginative world.

Not so their author, or not at first. Achebe the man came to me first through controversy—his startling statement in 1987 that the national burial accorded to the recently deceased Chief Obafemi Awolowo was a national swindle. Unlike Soyinka who first came into my consciousness in Civics quizzes as “the person who suggested Swahili [as lingua franca]”, there was no comparable context for identifying Achebe. “Who wrote Things Fall Apart?” is a joke trusting in the sophistication of Wit, elder sister of Humour. But although I took notice of the statement regarding Awolowo, it did not at the time play any role in my growing appreciation of Achebe’s work or person.

That—forming an opinion of the writers’ work or person through events happening outside the books—would come later, when my reading matured enough to nudge itself in the direction of the essays. In the stories, it was one thing to indulge in the proverbs and the idioms of the so-called “tribal life”, but quite another to be confronted by the phrase “Okonkwo almost choked on his anger” or the incredible imagery of a finger of sweat crawling down Captain Winterbottom’s back, like a fly. These were gems to make one want to write, but I also realised, quite intuitively that his limpid prose was not to my temperament. It was not so much that I disliked it as that it taught me that he was not my kind of writer. For me, Arrow of God is the best-achieved of Achebe’s novels, the one I am likely to be caught re-reading, as the author himself once revealed.

It was in the essays, in these works of cultural and political analysis, that I began to form an opinion that was specific, complex, and yet incomplete. In the essays—Morning Yet on Creation Day, Hopes and Impediments, Home and Exile, The Trouble with Nigeria, The Education of a British Protected Child—Achebe brings to life a particular literary and political attitude which could be appreciated apart from the novel, in a way that one cannot say for a writer like Gabriel Garcia Marquez or Jorge Amado, two contemporaries with whom he was sometimes compared. I might say that the essays help in clarifying for me what the deeper aims of his fictional works are. And if there is one essay that encapsulates these aims—assuming that there could be such a thing as a representational essay in Achebe’s prose work—it will have to be The Novelist as Teacher. It is here that he declares, in his evergreen and inimitable voice that “I would be quite satisfied if my novels (especially the ones I set in the past) did no more than teach their readers that their past—with all its imperfection—was not one long night of savagery from which the first Europeans acting on God’s behalf delivered them.”

The person reading on the stage has stopped, and applause is ceasing. He offers his reason for reading that particular excerpt about a small-town mock-warrior who wanted to take on Adolf Hitler: “This is just to show that we have our own fighters, our people of courage. It’s a tribute to Achebe, to the courage that Achebe’s life has given us. He has shown the beauty and importance of Christian life and family. We hope some of us will be around to attend your 80th birthday.” With those words Wole Soyinka, the performer, walks across the stage, hugs Ike Achebe along the way, and goes on to embrace the pensive figure sitting in a wheel-chair, recording a truly emotional moment in those two days of many emotional moments.

There are three other such instances. The first occurs soon after this fraternal act. Sonia Sanchez, the African-American poet and performer, reads a long poem that links Okonkwo’s act of resistance to the spirit of rebellion, the sense of historical duty which informs the creative choices of the Black Arts Movement of the 1960s. Sanchez is a prominent figure of this movement, and her poetry, like the poetry of Amiri Baraka and Haki Madhubuti, is marked by formal experimentation and spiritual rousing. When she is done with the first poem, such is the depth of emotion she has whipped up by intense chants and daring stage acts, and so complete her own exhaustion, that the audience simply rises at once, and goes on clapping and calling for more.

Later in the day, Achebe and Toni Morrison hold a Conversation. Leo Boestein, president of Bard College, moderates this session. The responses from the two authors are very uneven. Morrison tends to see the questions as linked to the dialectics of the creative process and her role as a user of language and metaphor in a “race-inflected milieu”, while Achebe gives straight and pungent answers with a simple sophistication that readers of his essays will find familiar. Then Boestein asks a fan question, something like, What’s your favourite novel?

Achebe answers: “Mine will be Toni Morrison’s Beloved. This is because Morrison is the only writer who is probing what James Baldwin calls ‘the African conundrum’. What happens when someone does the kind of thing that that woman does, by killing her own child? What happens when this happens, when you try to avoid abomination by committing another abomination? Because that child will come back to haunt you.” In this fascinating, deceptively simple way, Achebe links the problem of guilt and powerlessness that haunts Africans and African-Americans over the historical fact of the Atlantic Slave Trade.

A therapeutic sigh rises from the audience. Toni Morrison seems to be crying. Her voice quavers when Boestein turns to her. Achebe quips: “Well, it doesn’t have to be a novel of mine,” and everyone laughs. She gives an honest but ambiguous answer that I’ve heard her give before: that her favorite novel is the one she likes to read, and because it does not exist, she has to write it.

Achebe’s great theme is anti-colonialism, and in this he was not alone. The late Senegalese filmmaker Sembene Ousmane was like that, to some degree. Achebe was an Nkrumahist, a cultural figure who views the ideas and maybe the methods of the great Ghanaian leader as indispensable to forming a sense of self-awareness and dignity by Africans. But in his works, and especially in the early novels, he expressed this theme from the perspective of Igbo culture. The crisis faced by that culture, best exemplified by the civil war fought between the Nigerian government and the secessionist southeastern Republic of Biafra, affected Achebe’s literary productivity. He did not produce another novel until 1987 when he published the middling Anthills of the Savannah, 21 years after A Man of the People. He filled the hiatus with the essays, the books of stories and poem, the pamphlet The Trouble with Nigeria, and his tenure as a professor in Nigeria and American universities.

The theme of anti-colonialism is a complex and necessary one for writers and artists speaking for and about previously misrepresented communities to embrace. It is one to appreciate in this manner: to Soyinka’s famous quip about the tiger not needing to proclaim his “tigritude”, we have Leopold Senghor’s rejoinder that the tiger had to proclaim his being because it has been conclusively called into question in the past. One of the satisfying things about this kind of position-taking, to my way of looking at things, is that I don’t have to worry about them or choose between them as I try to make my way in the world. Why choose between Karl Marx’s “Thesis on Feuerbach” and Walter Benjamin’s “Theses on the Philosophy of History”? Does one not complement the other? Colonialism has left its indelible scars on the lives of the people it dominated (Achebe calls this “the wound in the soul”), and it has been the definitive experience for most modern African intellectuals. But there were colonialisms on the continent before the European one and there remain varieties of that phenomenon, in other guises. Every writer has to tell stories that suit his or her taste—that is the point of Morrison’s response to the fan question.

However, the civil war quickly gave Achebe another theme, and a cause—the championing of the Igbo in the uneasy contraption called Nigeria. This is why he had to write the divisive There Was A Country, and why it took him so long to do so.

Chika Okeke-Agulu, an artist and art historian said, after listening to my view of the writer’s personal account of the war, that Biafra, not literature, was the defining ideal for Achebe. That was a point of supreme importance. With it as a point of reference, it would not be difficult to understand why a writer of Achebe’s status continued to use the expression, “my people the Igbo”, and why he would describe Awolowo as a politician fighting for “his Yoruba people”. It stands to reason.

Now, but for his international stature as the author of Things Fall Apart it would have been difficult or impossible to argue forcefully for these two themes at once. He lost faith in Nigeria, the country with great but repeatedly undermined potentials, but he kept faith with Biafra, the country that is no more. While the controversy around There Was A Country raged, I opted to read Salman Rushdie’s Joseph Anton, published in the same month as Achebe’s work. Rushdie’s memoir is another account of a writer’s encounter with his deeply held values, one for which he was close to paying the supreme price. It is true that Rushdie has no dream of being the martyr of any cause—he was too ironical and sensuous for that. But he gave an unvarnished, remarkably honest, and frequently funny account of his experience in those nine difficult years. He did not spare himself. How many writers would confess that one of his best friends slept with his wife, and that he turned to this same friend later to publish his next book? How many will reveal directly that his son briefly engaged in pilfering? His account of his brief embrace of Islam during the ordeal was an admirable piece of self-criticism. On the contrary, reviewers of Achebe’s book have pointed to the author’s refusal to present a detailed account of his own involvement at the highest level of decision-making in Biafra as one of the unforgivable flaws of the book.

Yet Achebe invested in writing in other areas, especially during that long spell of drought. While he lectured and taught and wrote essays, he also initiated the founding of the Association of Nigerian Authors, co-founded Nwamife Publishers, a literature imprint, and Okike, a journal of new writing. During the Second Republic, he joined the left-leaning People’s Redemption Party, which he served as the Assistant National Vice-Chairman.

The third emotional moment occurs differently; it is perceptible throughout the two days. The gathering of virtually everyone interested in African literature, within and outside academia, from the US, Nigeria, South Africa, England, Australia, to celebrate the birthday of one of Africa’s illustrious sons is itself a matter to sigh and ponder, or dance and laugh over. In Soyinka’s excerpt from Aké and embrace of Achebe, in Sanchez’s evocative poem, in Achebe’s profound reading of Beloved, the community to which every self-aware writer caters, and which is located inside a room, in a country or in the entire universe, that community is enacted with memorable camaraderie. This is what I find at Bard College.

On the way to the birthday celebration, I read Achebe’s new book of essays, Home and Exile, texts of three lectures he gave at Harvard University in December 1998. It was 40 years after the publication of Things Fall Apart. The book chronicles the mental conditioning that gave rise to the novel—more of the same indignation at colonial novels of Africa by Joyce Cary and Joseph Conrad that one will find in Achebe’s previous essays. It also assesses the novel’s fortune for literatures from Africa and other previously colonised societies, and calls for a balance of stories in the world. There’s a straight-faced critique of trends in contemporary fiction, and the threat of cultural homogenisation posed by the usual suspect—the “Western culture”. The blurb says: “Achebe contends that to redress the inequities of global oppression, writers must focus on where they come from, insisting that their value systems are as legitimate as any other.”

I take just two issues with the fine book. The first is a minor error of fact that puts Tai Solarin’s period of sojourn in England at the 1950s (the late headmaster returned to Nigeria in 1951, after ten years abroad). The second is more substantial. Achebe misunderstands the dynamics of power between the hunter and the lion, as contained in a Masai proverb which goes thus: Until the lions produce their own historian, the story of the hunt will glorify only the hunter. He rejects the lion as a messenger of truth because it is also a powerful animal. The lion is truly powerful, but there is no balance in the exercise of power between this animal and the hunter. Unlike the lion, the hunter has a gun. I insist on this because dismissing the lion amounts to discounting the humanity of the weaker counterpart, and placing the burden of history on only the hunter. What is missing in the contest is the balance, not the potential, of power. That is why Achebe could contest Cary’s story.

– Akin Adesokan, author of Roots in the Sky and Postcolonial Artists and Global Aesthetics, is Associate Professor of Comparative Literature, Indiana University, Bloomington, USA.

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Kano Transfers Over 1,000 Almajiris To Different States Amidst COVID-19 Pandemic

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The Kano State Government on Saturday said it has transferred 1,098 ‘almajiris’ to different states of the country.

The commissioner for local government, Murtala Garo, disclosed this while presenting a report before the state’s task force on COVID-19 at the government house, Kano.

Almajiris are children who are supposed to be learning Islamic studies while living with their Islamic teachers. Majority of them, however, end up begging on the streets of Northern Nigeria. They constitute a large number of Nigeria’s over 10 million out-of-school children.

Mr Garo said the Kano government transported 419 almajiris to Katsina, 524 to Jigawa and 155 to Kaduna. He said all of them tested negative for coronavirus before leaving the Kano State.

Despite the coronavirus test done in Kano for the almajiris, the Jigawa government earlier said it would quarantine for two weeks all the almajiris that recently arrived from Kano.

Mr Garo said another 100 almajiris scheduled to be taken to Bauchi State also tested negative to COVID-19.

In a remark, Governor Abdullahi Ganduje said the COVID-19 situation in Kano was getting worse. He appealed for a collaborative effort to curtail the spread of the virus in the state.

Mr Ganduje, who commended residents for complying with the lockdown imposed in the state, said the decision was taken to halt the spread of the virus.

Kano State, as of Saturday night, has 77 coronavirus cases, according to the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control.

The decision to transfer the Kano almajiris is part of the agreement reached between Northern governors that almajiris in each state be transferred to their states of origin.

However, even before the latest agreement by the governors, the Kano government had been transferring almajiris to other states and neighbouring countries after it banned street begging in the state, most populous in Northern Nigeria.

Despite the transfers, however, no concrete step has been taken to ensure such children do not return to Kano streets as there is freedom of movement across Nigeria although interstate travel was recently banned to check the spread of the coronavirus.

 

Sourced From: Premium Times Nigeria

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COVID-19: ‘Bakassi Boys’ Foil Attempt To Smuggle 24 Women Into Abia In Container

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By Ugochukwu Alaribe

Operatives of the Abia State Vigilante Service, AVS, popularly known as ‘Bakassi Boys’ have arrested 24 market women hidden in a container truck, at Ekwereazu Ngwa, the boundary community between Abia and Akwa Ibom states.

The market women, said to be  from Akwa Ibom State, were on their way to Aba, when they were arrested with the truck driver and two of his conductors for violating the lockdown order by the state government.

Driver of the truck, Moses Asuquo, claimed he was going to Aba to purchase stock fish, but decided to assist the market women, because they were stranded.

A vigilante source told Sunday Vanguard that the vehicle was impounded while the market women were sent back to Akwa Ibom State.

Commissioner for Home Land Security, Prince Dan Okoli, who confirmed the incident, said that  smuggling of people into the state poses great threat to the state government’s efforts to contain the spread of COVID- 19.

 

Sourced From: Vanguard News

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Nigeria News

Woman Kills Her Maid Over Salary Request

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Operatives of the State Criminal Investigation and Intelligence Department (SCIID), Yaba of the Lagos State police command have arrested one Mrs Nene Steve for allegedly killing her maid, Joy Adole

The maid was allegedly beaten to death by Nene for requesting for her salary at their residence located at 18, Ogundola Street, Bariga area in Lagos.

Narrating the incident, Philips Ejeh, an elder brother to the deceased said that he was sad when they informed him that his sister was beaten to death.

He explained that the deceased was an indigene of Benue State brought to Lagos through an agent and started working with her as a maid  in January 2020.

‘’She reported that her boss refused to pay her and anytime she asked for her salary she will start beating her.

She was making an attempt to leave the place but due to the total lockdown she remained there until Sunday when her boss said she caught her stealing noodles and this led to her serious beating and death,’’ Ejeh said.

He called on Lagos State Government and well- meaning people in the country to help them in getting justice for the victim.

The police spokesman, Bala Elkana, stated that the woman and her husband came to Bariga Police  Station to a report that their house girl had committed suicide.

Detectives were said to have visited the house and suspected foul play with the position of the rope and bruises all over the body which confirmed that the girl had been tortured to death and the boss decided to hang up the girl to make it look like suicide.

He said: “The police moved on with their investigation and found a lot of sign of violence on her body that she has been tortured before a rope was put on her neck.’’

He added that the police removed the corpse and deposited it in the mortuary for autopsy to further ascertain the cause of the death.

Elkana said the matter has been transferred from Bariga police station to Panti for further investigation while the couple have been arrested and will be charged to court.

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Boko Haram Attacks: Buhari Summons Urgent Meeting Of Service Chiefs

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President Buhari and the Service Chiefs in a meeting. (File photo)

Ostensibly alarmed by the latest killings of dozens of soldiers by Boko Haram insurgents, President Muhammadu Buhari has summoned an urgent meeting of Service Chiefs to find ways to stop the trend. 

He has also dispatched the Minister of Defence, Mansur Dan Ali, to the neighbouring Republic of Chad for an urgent meeting with President Idris Deby and his defence counterpart. 

Knowledgeable sources said in Abuja on Friday that the president is worried by on the deterioration of security situation on the Nigeria – Chad Border that has led to the recently increased Boko Haram terrorism in the area.

The sources which did not want to be named in Abuja said: “Nigeria has a Chad  problem in the Multi-National Joint Task Force (MNJTF) put together to secure the Lake Chad basin areas and repeal the Boko Haram terrorist attacks against all the countries neighbouring the Lake.”

The sources noted that Chad is believed to be having their own internal security challenges and this has reportedly led to their pulling away their own troops manning their own border around Lake Chad,  saying: “That lacuna is being exploited by the Boko Haram terrorists, who go in and out of Nigeria, Niger and Cameroon to launch terrorist acts.  This is a clear illustration of the fact that terrorism is beyond national borders.”

When contacted, the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu, confirmed that the Defence Minister is going to Chad but said he is unaware of the purpose. 

Meanwhile, the military authorities are said to be in the process of identifying the families of the latest victims with a view to making contact with them. 

Credible sources revealed that it is the reason the president is yet to make any pronouncement on the matter. 

“The President has called an urgent meeting with the Service Chiefs, as well as the fact that families of the latest victims of the Boko Haram are being identified and contacts made before a government pronouncement on the tragic attacks. This, it is understood, is the reason for the silence of the government over the incident,” the source said. 

 

Sourced From: Tribune

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