Patrick Iroegbu Ph.D

Patrick Iroegbu Ph.D

Patrick Iroegbu is a Social and Cultural (Medical) Anthropologist and lectures Anthropology in Canada. He is the author of Marrying Wealth, Marrying Poverty: Gender and Bridewealth Power in a Changing African Society: The Igbo of Nigeria (2007). He equally co-ordinates the Kpim Book Series Project of Father-Prof. Pantaleon Foundation based at Owerri, Nigeria. Research interests include gender and development, migration, race and ethnic relation issues, as well as Igbo Medicine, Social Mental Health and Cultural Studies.

Msgr. Peter Okpalaeke has been Ordained the New Bishop of the over-heated up Ahiara Diocese of Nigeria. His acceptance speech at the occasion is significant for the Diocese and the Catholic See. What did he say and how? Here are some critical highlights per se. It is very clear that becoming a Bishop in Ahiara Diocese has challenged the Catholic tradition and  way of doing things. As such, what happened in the past months cannot be taken for granted. How far did the Bishop's acceptance speech capture and respond to the issues?

In other words, this write up submits a highlight of the post Episcopal Acceptance Speech delivered by the new Bishop of Ahiara Diocese of Nigeria, Bishop Peter Okpalaeke. Not long ago, Peter Claver Opara who is based at Lagos, wrote a powerful article posted in this column and called for a truce to let the troubled waters lie still and to now join hands to grow the Diocese with the leadership of the new Bishop donated to her. A personal comment is added at the end. The questions here for us are therefore to highlight the significant issues the Bishop’s speech raised. How did he do things in the face of agitation for change and inclusion given the tradition of catholic clergy and appointments, crisis and promise for healing the verbal bruises and reconciliation of the events of past months in the Diocese in particular and the Holy See of Catholicism in general?  

Drawing from the scary episode of frustrations and protests against his appointment as an outsider, the Bishop was friendly with his choice of words and way of applying them. For example, he states: Nde ebe ke anyi, nde Ahiara Diocese, let me address you personally. First, ours (he means service to the community of the faithful and God) is the lord of history and He turns everything to the good of those who love Him (Rom 8:28). The turbulence of the last months and even the unsettledness of the situation now should not leave us gloomy, dejected or fearful. I dare say that nde Ahiara Diocese anyi love God and God will surely, through the events of the past months, strengthen us all in faith, hope and love.

The Bishop offered his personal insight and devotion to Christ and states “I want us to focus our attention on Jesus. My ordination today is a celebration of my marriage to the Church of God in Ahiara. Just like wives married into your families, I have left my people and have become onye Ahiara Diocese.

He also draws from music and melody and further refers that “I remember a piece of music by the monks of Weston Priory in the State of Vermont USA which I love so much. The monks set into song Ruth's response to Naomi: "wherever you go, I shall go, wherever you live, I shall live. Your people will be my people, and your God will be my God. Wherever you die, I shall die and there I shall be buried." (Ruth 1:16).
The Bishop also bows down to faith, tradition and culture and said: “I know, for certain, that at the end of my earthly life, if it is God's will, my bones will rest n'ala Mbaise.

Reflecting on the crisis at Mbaise because of his appointment, the Bishop doubles down that: So, as the turbulence raged, I used the time to educate myself more about my people, our great history – pre-colonial, colonial and post-colonial, the teeming Catholic population, the enormous manpower resource in the general populace and among the clergy - diocesan as well as religious - and the many consecrated men and women working in many parts of Nigeria, Africa and the world at large. Our people are the greatest witnesses to the universality of the Church. Our sons and daughters are found almost everywhere working as priests and religious men and women and our lay faithful carry Catholicism with them wherever they are.

For emphasis, the Bishop pleads “my dear people of God, nde ebe ke m, nde Ahiara Diocese, as St. Paul admonished, let us always be joyful, pray constantly and give thanks for all things in the knowledge that this is God's will for us in Christ Jesus (1 Thess 5:12-18). We can give thanks to God for events of the last months, painful and confusing though they may be, by taking seriously the lessons learnt and keeping ourselves open to the healing touch of God.” Bishop further said, “after all said and done, we are brothers and sisters in Christ; sons and daughters of the same Father; we have one Lord, one faith, one baptism (Eph 4:5); we are one family - the family of God.”

The Bishop did not pretend and he said: “I understand the anger and frustration generated by my appointment in some sections of the Diocesan family as fueled by the undeniable fact of the enormous pool and quality of manpower that we have in Ahiara Diocese and in our sons in the religious congregations. Other sons of ours, especially from outside the diocese, however tapped into this initial and understandable frustration and went on a rhetorical over-drive. They spread a lot of stories and negative propaganda to cause confusion and misunderstanding among our peaceful people.

By standing firm the Bishop noted: Be that as it may, we stand to learn from every event. The greatest lesson for me and the Church is our understanding and manner of exercise of ministry as priests and bishops. We have to go back to the understanding of ministry as service in love and total self-gift in imitation of Jesus Christ, the good Shepherd, who laid down his life for his sheep. This has been my understanding and the events of the past months have sharpened that understanding and commitment. 

Going personal, the Bishop insists: On a personal note, saying 'Yes!' to God as regards my Episcopal appointment was agonizing. For example, he argues, “the venue of this ordination also confirms that the dust has not completely settled. I am well aware of the volatility of the situation and the enormity of the work ahead in terms of healing of memory and reconciliation. These notwithstanding, I am at peace. I am confident and hopeful. I put my faith in God who knows how to make all things, including our hearts, new (Rev. 21:5).”

Earlier on, the Bishop reflects and questions history: “I had asked myself why it was taking so long to appoint a bishop to the See of Ahiara. Convoluted News were flying around and I had heard many stories, founded or unfounded, about what was going on. My instinct of self-preservation spontaneously inclined me towards saying 'No!'

In his travail, the third consideration is what I call inertia - ¬the tendency for objects to remain in a state of rest or uniform motion unless an external force is made to act on them. I was happy where I was and with what I was doing. As these were going through my mind; it also became clear to me that without any other reasons to give to the Holy Father, except these self-serving ones, saying 'No!' would amount to reneging on my understanding of the core of my priestly existence as total self-gift to God in the service of the Church.

Bishop Okpalaeke went bold to recognize the sufferings and humiliations which people who were at the centre of the storm faced. In a special way he thanked them for what they worked for and believed in – to reaching a truce that made his Episcopal opportunity to be that of God’s anointed. Congratulations, Bishop Okpalaeke of Ahiara Diocese of Nigeria.

Better still, we can join hands and make anew the old Diocese a Centre for Immediate Peace and Reconciliation for the Christian Catholic Faithful. Why not? When things happen, we learn lessons, so it is possible to do so in a complex society of Mbaise and Elsewhere. In our modern world, times and situations change – and so it must be considered and understood that ideas, beliefs, practices and approaches to respond to the needs of the faithful and the apostolate can also embrace change and continuity ever.

Having said that, let us equally and critically put it forward as I have face-booked it elsewhere on the cyber-wave that “when God chooses whom to work with in the Spiritual Vineyard, no one should put asunder to derail the Holy Path. It is not a crime for a community of Christians to make their concerns heard. By hearing their critical voices, they can only be understood and administered more faithfully. This is the case for Ahiara of this era. Congrats Bishop Okpaleke and all the Parishioners of Ahiara Diocese. Leehee Nnukwu Ukochukwu, onye mere ihe na-aso Chineke, ka o na-abia! Embraced, Hurrah! When God wins, the people win indeed. 

Pointedly, this Bishop is not the winner. He is the object and way through which God made victory inevitable for the people of Mbaise and the entire Christian faithful and stakeholders of the Diocese. Be happy. It is written, it will be the way it happened because Chidera ya mee. Omego! O si na-akaraka ya na nke ndi Mabise as a total whole.

Rejoice with that which God has cordoned off with grace to build the Diocese up in crisis, peace and valued growth of his Christian Empire. Done!   

 

Americanah, when it was published and launched in April, I face-booked it that anyone in diaspora, including those coming abroad for the first time for diaspora lifestyle should read it. It made eloquent sense as reviewers have come to show. The entire work shows in new ways as captured, imagined and experienced by the author a vivid exploration of being African in America, and indeed, any where else Nigerians and Africans converge with their complex dreams in pursuit of more valued things of life.

Americanah, a novel, is the very most recent entry by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, and it is published by Random House, with a voluminous 477 pages counting and prized at $26.95 for a copy. Ambrose Ehirim contests his passion for this recent novel and other works of the author, Adichie. He paints the picture of a common knowledge and notion immigrants coming from Nigeria carry with them and vigorously discuss them at meeting places and at the same time tend to use explorative chatting expeditions of the "been to" and "checking out" craze to learn and adapt in new areas that they settle down to live a life. 

Ambrose Ehirim highlights that Adichie's "Half of a Yellow Sun" stands out in all her stables as the biggest score in marketing and popularity, including positioning in literature which most prizes had gone to, giving her the brand name to sell any novel with her signature attached to it, whether the book was well written and made sense or not, which seems to be the case in her newest entry "Americanah."

For Ambrose Ehirim in a critical and passionate stand point, Americanah" is not a great tale considering the expectations and the following that shot her second novel to the top. Nigerian authors - home and Diaspora - always have the pleasure to begin the enterprise of their books on the home turf where the turnouts in book launchings are huge, graced by festivities and merry-making, big volume sales and sometimes, ridiculously bankrolled when details of the book has not been known or reviewed.

Reuters photo-journalist Akintunde Akinleye, Associated Press' Sunday Alamba, host of related international press and local Nigerian journalists were handy during Adichie's book launch and signing ceremony Saturday, April 27, 2013, in Lagos. The lukewarm photogenic author sat and stood in front of the cameras posing with her new book, signing autographs along the novel and answering questions from curious readers and the press on the thoughts and writing of "Americanah." Adichie had a new hair-do and fascinated about it all drawing from the books Ifemelu character, multicolored dress and classically figured, except for the not needed heavy make-ups she was wearing obviously displaying she wasn't much comfortble with the excessiveness of painting on her face.

Most folks who explored the United States and elsewhere in the Western Hemisphere during the push factor years, the economic, social, religious and reasons of things like that to why one was compelled to relocate and the aspirations for further academic pursuits is what Adichie is now telling us in the "Americanah" saga, from around which some lost hope but kept sticking around, keeping body and soul one, for opportunities that may knock on their doors as sighs of relief in what had been a stretch, to survive, doing whatever it took out of the very worst situations to overcome their predicaments.

It was common. But, though, some had no difficulties from the goodwill that came from either generated government welfare programs or their respective families who had adequate cash possessions.

Stories so similar and told over and over the years, Adichie goes on to tell us the uncertainties that had clouded the survival instincts and the determination to fulfill what had been ambitiously waited for before departure only to be confronted with what had been totally strange, taking culture into account, and the social aspect of the new world they had come to adopt and call home. The similarities of the long hurdle to adapt to the situations and become normal, and being used to what goes, surviving all odds, fulfilling what had been the dream and, realizing what it had taken and the time spent to be accomplished, which had been desired through diligence, patience, commitment and, eventually, hard work in which there was no substitute, ultimately becoming the pursued ideal, is nothing new to the push factor most Nigerians encountered over the years in their quest for a better life Adichie brought up in her new entry.

And the adventure had popped up with the zeal not to fail when caught up in crossroads in between having to make decisions on two choices as option; the consequences of having made the wrong choice which could turn out disastrous by its nature and what the future might hold; the pains after all attempts with nothing seemingly working out; the high expectations from native-land where all eyes watched for prospects of a promising future, and, what the consequences could be for a life time, if all had failed, including the expectations from a relationship elsewhere on the globe, in the United Kingdom; had not been clear and in limbo  with immigration problems which surely wasn't promising until that stroke of luck unshackled what had been a barrier and an emerged breakthrough that changed everything, and fortune coming his way though not what had been planned and anticipated.

No question, Adichie has catapulted herself to the top, in the ranks of respected Nigerian novelists and inventing "Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie" as a public intellectual on the parallel with most, and somewhere in between Flora Nwapa, Wole Soyinka and Chinua Achebe. In her apparent tribute to the latter who passed away on March 21, 2013 in Boston, Adichie showed appreciation and acknowledgement to the man who had driven the force and how she trooped on from a mark that is now defining her, and owing much to the man's work, and also, much to her own efforts as to how far she came even though in reviewing the man's "There Was A Country", and despite giving credits to the points made in the book as far as the story goes on the said war, she derided the publication as carelessly done with repetitions, wordiness and avoidable mistakes.

"Americanah" is unnecessarily wordy, too. The events that unfolded from the native-land in preparedness to relocate from an unstable country that was full of uncertainties was retold in many instances. The cities - New Haven, Baltimore, Brooklyn, Princeton and Trenton; the Gothic structures; the motorists while she poked around; the niteclubs; visit to her aunt Uju at the Flatlands and several other encounters with people of race, culture - and what that meant to Ifemelu, describing them the way she thought desirable for each like the cities with its distinct kind of smell except Princeton being smell free is pretty much close Adichie was telling her own story and life experiences in a typical relationship with partners attached to each other and denied access to be together in the United States by the unfortunate events of 9/11 and the restrictions on immigration.

There are no expectations of something significantly different from the "Americanah" adventure begun by Ifemelu, from the usual concept of bad regimes typical of Nigeria's dominance by military juntas and situations in that regard which compels one to seek decent life elsewhere that we haven't known or seen practically like the case of Ifemelu who had moved to the shores of the United States commencing an entirely new life with aspirations in a world totally different from where she had escaped.

Enter Obinze, Ifemelu's sweetheart originally established as first lovers from what the story tells us, back in Nigeria as students in a military regime that is not encouraging for one to keep staying in the country which had both lovers become desperate to leave the country. Obinze had problems with the restrictions imposed by the United States on the effects of 9/11 which denied him access, leaving him with an option to go elsewhere besides America. He founds himself in the United Kingdom where the going got tougher, unlike Ifemelu in the US, though tough but better overall, Obinze did what he had to do.  He had cash while Ifemelu blogged successfully. Both made it back home missing each other for 15 years and unsure of how to continue and get along.

"Americanah"  is a typical story told from an immigrant's perspective coupled by the encounters and revelations and the blogging of events as it unfolded in contrast to Obinze's unfavorable engagements in the United Kingdom, though eventually wealthy and all in all, in a journey that had taken 15 years to decide if both were still meant for each other remains a puzzle the author intends to unveil elsewhere, or probably bent on tales of love, distant relationship, misfortunes and both finally accomplished on different platforms and, now hard to reach decisions on whether to continue with a relationship that had been marred by circumstances beyond their control.

From: Adichie's Love Tales And The Push Factor

Scrutinized by Ambrose Ehirim/The Ambrose Ehirim Files 

Saturday, 11 May 2013 04:02

Mothers' Day and Rosary Promises

This brief greets mothers at mothers' day. It highlights the rosary and its huge promises to those who relate to the Holy Mother Mary. It asks why can't we take the chance at mothers' day celebration and obtain the everlasting promises? It is a go for all mothers out there.  

On Mothers' Day which comes on SUNDAY in Canada and USA, May 12, 2013; the promises of Holy Mother Mary in Heaven to those who pray the rosary especially Catholics all over the universe will rain down. But do you truly know and understand what those promises of Holy Mary are?

I will help by listing them here. Take your chance and obtain them as you celebrate Mothers' Day in a special way. A moment ago, before making the outline of the promises, I made a serious comment to my friends which I stated as follows: A sweet mother is that mother who captures the meaning of being sweet by doing and offering a sweet day that will be experienced with sweet activities and meals that shape a sweet woman and her social connect, and obviously her world around us. We have always held the best practices and views that men should celebrate by investing resources on the mothers' day for their mothers, wives, daughters, girlfriends, close community members, church fellows and colleagues.

What is wrong if women will take over their day and celebrate their being mothers themselves as they think and deserve? Why should mothers merely wait to be celebrated by someone else for them? What is being a mom will become clearer when mothers realize it is all theirs to show who they are as mothers and what becoming a mother should entail and capture. Men seem to float the idea that mothers are wonderful this and splendid that; and we all know that truly, mothers are great people with a great social and biological role. But is it enough to celebrate mothers as successes alone? 

By encouraging women to get real and tell us what motherhood is and how to improve on being mother, we will stand a better chance to empower and enrich the philosophy of mothering than we think we know the question of being a mom. It further goes to ask, why are some mothers more mothers and some less mothers? These are critical and ecumenical questions that are yet to be addressed. Perhaps, the best postulations for answers will come from mothers themselves than from the praises of men.

Having said that, the promises of Holy Mary to those who need blessings through rosary praying at this moment of the year should be clear to all women and men. Mothers are special blessings to the world.

Our existence and continuity through procreation and nurturing will not lessen for it is written and promised in the rosary of the greatest of all mothers. Every mother at the celebration of this year’s Mothering Day will get greater in motherhood blessings as promised in the rosary of Holy Mary. Pray the rosary and have your portion endorsed and graced. 

1. Whoever shall serve me by the recitation of the rosary, shall receive signal graces.

2. I promise my special protection and the greatest graces to all those who shall recite the rosary.

3. The rosary shall be powerful armour against hell; it will destroy vice, decrease sin, and defeat heresies.


4. It will cause virtue and good works to flourish; it will obtain for souls the abundant mercy of God; it will withdraw the hearts of men from the love of the world and its vanities, and will lift them to the desire of eternal things. Oh, that souls would sanctify themselves by this means.

5. The soul which recommends itself to me by the recitation of the rosary, shall not perish.

6. Whoever shall recite the rosary devoutly, applying himself to the consideration of its sacred mysteries shall never be conquered by misfortune. God will not chastise him in his justice, he shall not perish by an un-provided death; if he be just he shall remain in the grace of God, and become worthy of eternal life.

7. Whoever shall have a true devotion for the rosary shall not die without the sacraments of the Church.

8. Those who are faithful to recite the rosary shall have during their life and at their death the light of God and the plenitude of His graces; at the moment of death they shall participate in the merits of the saints in paradise.

9. I shall deliver from purgatory those who have been devoted to the rosary.

10. The faithful children of the rosary shall merit a high degree of glory in heaven.

11. You shall obtain all you ask of me by the recitation of the rosary.

12. All those who propagate the holy rosary shall be aided by me in their necessities.

13. I have obtained from my Divine Son that all the advocates of the rosary shall have for intercessors the entire celestial court during their life and at the hour of death.

14. All those who recite the rosary are my sons, daughters, brothers and sisters of my only son Jesus Christ.

15. Devotion to my rosary is a great sign of predestination.

(Source: Given to St. Dominic and Blessed Alan de la Roche)     
Imprimatur: + Patrick J. Hayes, D.D., Archbishop of New York.

And To all those who answer, Mary, like my mother, remain specially blessed and prayerful. 

HAPPY MOTHERS’ DAY to all Canadian and USA mothers and to all mothers elsewhere.

Tribute to My Friend, Chinua Achebe (Ikejimba; 1930-2013) was written by Chike Momah in honour of late Prof. Chinua Achebe, which I consider a must read by those who have not had the general or particular opportunity to share in it. He highlights that "this tribute is a second revision of a piece (REFLECTIONS ON CHINUA ACHEBE) which I wrote in 2000, and revised in 2007. His passing, in the third week of March 2013, has necessitated this revision." First published in May 2, 2013 In Achebe: Exit of a Literary Giant. Below is even what one of Achebe's children touts his father to be in a family humour. 

“Apropos of this, Ethel sometimes teasingly told Chinua he was the least educated member of his family!!” A show, indeed, of what greatness is meant to be for - to produce greater greatness!

Chike Momah delights us and writes that Chinua Achebe was a compelling figure, straight out of a Biblical saga. He was also, rather more prosaically, a friend who was so close, he was like a brother. A few hours after his death was blazed around the world, I received a condolence call from a member of our Dallas, TX Igbo community. This friend asked me if I was sure Chinua and I did not share an umbilical cord. Another person, this time a Reverend gentleman, expressed his condolences in rather more risqué language. “Your friendship with Chinua,” he said, “reminds me of the biblical story of David and Jonathan.”

I would be lying through my teeth if I said I was not flattered by the language in which the two condolences were couched. But while I gloried in the way my friendship with Chinua was perceived by these two gentlemen, two things struck me about the manner their perceptions were expressed. The reference to Chinua and I sharing an umbilical cord will be easily recognized for what it was: a humorous turn of phrase. But when the clergyman reached for his Bible in search of relational equivalences, he lighted on one of the most emotional passages in Holy Scripture: David lamenting the death of Jonathan, whose love for him, David sang, “was wonderful, passing the love of women!” The love of women? I ask you!

The clergyman’s Biblically inspired phraseology also set me thinking in an unusual direction. I thought about it for a long while, and then – eureka! – it hit me. Chinua Achebe’s story, the saga of his life, is a story of almost Biblical proportions. He rose so far above his humble birth, and above his innate humility – as a human being, a classmate in school, and a friend – that nothing about him seemed ordinary. And, amazingly, his stratospheric rise to greatness, fame and universal acclaim was, at least, twice predicted: first, in 1943, by his and my primary school Headmaster, Mr. Okongwu, as sagacious an observer of humanity as you are likely to meet; and, about a dozen years later, by Chinua himself, albeit innocently.

Chinua did not prophecy, in so many words, that he would, one day, be a great man. But, about two years BEFORE he even began to write his epochal novel (THINGS FALL APART; published in 1958), he wrote the following words to a mutual friend: “Yes, there may be many stars in the firmament, but some shine brighter than others.” My memory, at my fairly advanced age, is like a sieve but, as near as I can remember, those were his exact words. I know this because I saw and read the letter he wrote to the friend, and I was involved in the sequence of events that led to that innocent prediction. The mutual friend, I am happy to relate, also achieved considerable success, in his own right, as a novelist. Glory be!

Headmaster Okongwu’s prophecy was couched in more straightforward and unambiguous language. In 1943, as I was sweating over my preparations for the entrance examination to Government College, Umuahia (G.C.U. – a boys’ high school), along came my Headmaster. He regarded me for a moment or two, and then uttered his immortal words: “If,” he said, “you do well enough in the exam to gain admission to the school, I predict you will there meet a boy called Albert Achebe, and Albert will make the rain that will drench you!!!!!!” (This was a boy he last saw in 1940, when Chinua was ten years old.) In the upshot, I gained admission to GCU. Chinua also did, on a merit scholarship! This was in January 1944.                  

Acclaimed Nigerian author Chinua Achebe (L) and former South African President Nelson Mandela chat on September 12, 2002 prior to Achebe receiving an honorary degree of Doctor of Literature and delivering the third Steve Biko Memorial Lecture at the University of Cape Town.

The rest is history. In the middle of 1944, our first year in high school, Chinua was promoted, with five other boys, to class two. First drenching! From then till his high school graduation in 1948, he was the best student in his new class. That same year, he won a merit scholarship (one of only six or seven awarded that year) to the University College, Ibadan (U.C.I.). To study MEDICINE!! U.C.I. was then the only institution for tertiary education in the country. He changed courses at the end of his freshman year, and I caught up with him one more time. This was in 1949. We both graduated, Bachelor of Arts, in the same subjects, in 1953. Throughout those four years, our professors and lecturers, again and again, let us know that Chinua was, not only the best student in the class, but also the best writer of English. He achieved the best result in our degree examination. Second drenching!!

I need not belabor the point. More drenching followed, fast and furious! Within five years of our graduation, Chinua published THINGS FALL APART. Other novels followed, and success followed hard on success. The inevitable consequence followed. Chinua, force majeure, began to shift out of my orbit. He discovered, as his friends did too, that he had been drawn onto a world stage – to all of humanity, and not just to a narrow circle of friends and admirers.

He was, as I have dared to proclaim elsewhere, the best writer of English that I think I have ever read. He is, for me, its most mellifluous exponent. If the reader disagrees with this spectacular claim, I plead that beauty is in the beholder’s eye. I speak for myself and, perhaps, for a continent. There is no writer, living or dead, who has demonstrated, in greater measure than Chinua, the ability to weave a tapestry of words taken from the Queen’s English and from the proverbs and aphorisms of his own mother tongue, Igbo.

He certainly rose above the British colonial quagmire to which our people were condemned for a century and more, to write the language of Chaucer, Shakespeare, Milton, Dickens, Stevenson and, yes, even Conrad, with a mastery that takes the breath away. When we were reading those authors, in high school and in college, we did not think – we dared not think – that we would produce a Chinua Achebe. Later, he was to pick a bone or two with Conrad’s racially slanted writings, but that is another story!

I might have sometimes been tempted to look at Chinua, and think (again, Biblically): Is this not the carpenter’s son? But I can say, truthfully, that I never succumbed to that temptation. He bestrode my world like the colossus that he was, and I rejoiced with him as he scaled the heights of literature to its pinnacle. No, he was no mere carpenter’s son for me. During the years Chinua and I were in high school and university, my contacts with the senior Achebe were few and far between. My memory of him is, at best, very sketchy now. But Chinua’s old man was no carpenter, though I have no doubt that he was largely responsible for chiseling Chinua, in his formative years, into the exquisite product that has dazzled the world for more than half a century, since THINGS FALL APART was published in 1958.

Chinua should have won the Nobel Prize for Literature. The Nobel Prize committee members are probably the only persons, on earth, who know why he was denied this recognition of his literary stature, and of his influence on more than two or three generations of African writers. And on other writers worldwide! Tony Morrison (the Nobel laureate) acknowledged Chinua as one of her main literary inspirations in writing about her own people. Chinua’s most celebrated contemporary and fellow Nigerian writer, Wole Soyinka, the 1986 Nobel laureate, also acknowledged Chinua as a trail-blazer. Enough said!

Chinua now belongs to the ages, his work on earth magnificently done. No one could have asked for more from even a genius of his breath-taking dimensions. Regrettably, Chinua had to live out the last twenty-three years of his life wheelchair-bound – the result of a vehicular accident in 1990. This is the reason, above all else, that my wife, Ethel and I (and Chinua’s other friends) are especially appreciative of the love and devotion of Odozi-ngwulu, his beautiful wife, Professor Dr. Christiana Achebe – Ana to Chinua himself, Christie to the rest of us! My appreciation also extends to their children, Chinelo, Ike, Chidi and Nwando, of whom one is a medical doctor, and the other three achieved doctorates in academia. Apropos of this, Ethel sometimes teasingly told Chinua he was the least educated member of his family!! I was his best-man when he married Christie, and he was godfather to my son, Chukwudi (Chidi).

His last book, THERE WAS A COUNTRY – the story of Biafra, and of man’s inhumanity to man – was like a concluding and thunderous exclamation mark on his life as a writer!! The buzz it generated has scarcely died down, as I write this.

I stand, in humility, in the shadow of his greatness and, yes, of his almost Biblical stature!!! In the language of the Bard, when comes such another?

Let me therefore add, we are waiting for another Chinua Achebe like we are waiting for Fr. Prof. Pantaleon to be resent to us from God. For God knows when to release such geniuses that break grounds in their fields and prove that God makes the difference through his chosen writers.   

By using the power of personal experiences, like social and cultural anthropologists would engage in at any moment of becoming a participant observer and executor, Dr. Nduka Otiono has insightfully shown various aspects of the family, kinship and pragmatics of knowledge of the life and personality of prof. Chinua Achebe who died on March 21, 2013. Whereas anyone can write through the prizen of one's interest about Chinua Achebe, what we have heard, read, witnessed or even did together with him consists in drawing out that which made him a person in persons, community in communities, nation in nations and a serial intellectual in cultural intellectualisms. Below is Otiono's tribute shared and entitled "Achebe and I" first published in PMnews, April 2, 2013. I have therefore re-titled the post as in the above caption to capture what the power of personal experiences amounts to by telling a compelling story and constructing cultural knowledge of importance. Hope you will enjoy reading it.        

No one who met the venerable Chinua Achebe–in flesh and blood or in his writings–would ever forget him. I first encountered him in his writing as a child, on the pages of an often neglected little masterpiece called Chike and the River (1966). The book, recently republished abroad for the first time after over 45 years of its first publication, is part of the corpus of four books for children produced by the author whose bestselling novel, Things Fall Apart, unfortunately overshadowed the rest of his masterpieces. The other titles of children’s literature include: How the Leopard Got His Claws (with John Iroaganachi) (1972); The Flute (1975); The Drum (1978). But so overpowering has been the success of Things Fall Apart that the author’s exceptional achievement as a writer of children stories, short stories, and an award-winning poet are hardly mentioned in discussions of his enviable stature as “Father of African Literature” – a title that he continued to reject with characteristic humility. Beyond his already documented protestations against the title, I witnessed Achebe “award” the title to an older contemporary. We were at a meeting at Brown University discussing the organisation of an event, Conversations in Africana, which featured Achebe himself, former poet laureate of Louisiana, Brenda Marie Osbey, and Gabriel Okara, octogenarian poet and arguably one of the oldest living writers in the world. Achebe, happy that his abiding desire to share the stage with Okara, whose work he admired greatly, was coming to fruition said to me between his trademark soft smiles: “People often call me the Father of African literature; the title should actually go to Dr. Gabriel Okara. He is our father.”

Yet, the evidence of literary history supports the ascription of the appellation Father of African Literature to Achebe: from Achebe’s own account in the chapter “The Empire Fights Back” in his collection of essays Home and Exile, to the submissions of eminent scholars of African literature such as Lyn Innes, Kwame Anthony Appiah, Douglas Killam, and Charles Larson, the author of Things Fall Apart and the first series editor of Heinemann’s African Writers Series emerges as the first African writer who, to appropriate Appiah’s words in a recent tribute, “established, for those who wanted to write fiction in English about African life, the first great model of how it could be done” and “acted as midwife to scores of other writers”. Always lucid, Achebe, while cognisant of Africa’s great indigenous literary tradition–oral and written–that preceded him and from which he drew inspiration, acknowledges his pioneering role toward the emergence of modern African literature in the following revealing excerpt from Home and Exile: “The launching of Heinemann’s African Writers Series was like the umpire’s signal for which African writers had been waiting on the starting line. In one short generation, an immense library of new writing had sprung into being from all over the continent and for the first time in history, Africa’s future generations of readers and writers–youngsters in schools and colleges–began to read not only David Copperfield and other English classics that I and my generation had read, but also works by their won writers about their own people.”

But it was not until my initial career as a journalist with ThisDay newspaper that I had the opportunity to meet the writer of my dreams. It was in August 1999. He was visiting home after nine years in exile, following a life-changing auto crash on 22 March 1990. The eventful trip to see Achebe in his hometown of Ogidi, across the River Niger that he had celebrated in Chike and the River, evoked in me the title of James Baldwin’s 1965 psychological short story, Going to Meet the Man.

My initial anxiety on going to meet the man melted on my actual encounter with him. His simplicity and unassuming, accommodating nature ignited confidence in me and fired me on through my journalistic assignment. The support of members of his close-knit family made my mission easier. The report, “Homecoming of a Master Storyteller” was published afterwards in ThisDay the Sunday paper. How well-received the story turned out to be manifested in my first meeting with Ngozi Okonjo-Iwela, World Bank executive then, and now Nigeria’s Finance Minister; in search of photographs for Chinua Achebe: Teacher of Light (2004), a biography of Chinua Achebe, which she co-authored with Tijan M. Salah, Gambian writer and economist, Dr. Okonjo-Iweala had sought me out. The ThisDay story, more importantly, opened a new chapter in life for me. For one year after its publication, the master storyteller and humanist sent me a surprise invitation to his 70th birthday at Bard College in the US. The visit cemented my relationship with him and the family. I was again invited to Frankfurt, when Achebe received the prestigious German Book Trade prize for literature, and had the opportunity for my first long interview with him. The interview was published in The Insider magazine.

Achebe’s generous spirit and deep sense of appreciation of little things were legendary. At the 70th birthday celebration at Bard College, I recall highlights from some of the tributes, which included the often quoted excerpt from Nelson Mandela’s– “the writer in whose company the prison walls collapsed”. Amongst other memorable testimonies was Nurrudin Farah’s recollection of a trip to Ogidi to visit Achebe at the latter’s invitation. According to the Somalian writer: “A day before they parted, they talked about the most mundane of matters: money.” In the course of their discussion, Achebe learnt that Farah had difficulties accessing money in his account at a bank in Jos, which accrued from Farah’s two years salary teaching at the University of Jos from 1981 to 1983. In response, revealed Farah, “Achebe went upstairs to his rooms and returned shortly with a cheque in sterling to be drawn at a bank of my choice.” Farah added: “It was thanks to this seed money that I was in the comfortable position of being able to set home in The Gambia to begin serious work on my second trilogy, Blood in the Sun, of which Maps is the first, Gifts the second, and Secrets the third.”

I got to know the master storyteller more closely and to benefit from his generosity when I joined him at the Department of Africana Studies at Brown University as a postdoctoral fellow and Senior Research Assistant to him. The negotiation of the terms of my fellowship gave me the opportunity to witness the compassionate consciousness that created that memorable character Unoka in Things Fall Apart and made Achebe to declare the flutist and Okonkwo’s “lazy” father, whom many would loathe and describe as a loafer, as his favourite character in the novel. For Achebe, despite Unoka’s flaws, his artistic integrity and unpretentious, child-like innocence set him aside from the other more calculating characters. From the moment Achebe suggested that he would like me to work with him, I was struck by his humbling humility. He had laid out reasons why he thought I was a perfect fit for the position and had, to my utter dismay, asked me to take my time to consider the proposition before reverting to him. There was no hint of self-importance in his voice. Nor was there any allusion to the fact that most people in my position as a doctoral candidate in Postcolonial Studies would jump at an offer to work with a writer who had contributed immensely to shaping the field and who earned the rare distinction of being the first living author included in Everyman’s Library.

As he addressed me in the presence of his son, Ike, his voice as soft and reassuring as ever, I tried to suppress my excitement and fulfillment of a childhood fantasy. But even then, I was mindful of the weight of his characteristically measured words, an acknowledgment that as a family man myself, relocating from Alberta, Canada, to Rhode Island, USA, where Brown was located, was not like going on an excursion. Throughout the process of negotiation for my relocation, Achebe placed the interest and well-being of my family on the front burner. Not for once did I get the impression that the work I would be doing for, and with, him mattered more than my own research and family’s wellbeing. He was particularly concerned about the challenging American health insurance policy, and suggested I didn’t take that lightly.

When I finally joined him at Brown, he made my settling-in relatively easy by ensuring that I got the resources to work at Churchill House on Angell Street, home of Africana Studies at Brown.

Although he had lived all of five decades of his life in the limelight–following the publication of Things Fall Apart while he was 28 years old only–Achebe never seemed comfortable with fame and attention. Indeed, as Charles Larson has noted, “Few writers live to observe the fiftieth anniversary of their novels–let alone with increasing readership.” But Achebe’s modesty forbade him from exhibiting any signs of greatness. He would stay quiet at most meetings, yielding space for younger colleagues to talk, and offering wise counsel only when extremely necessary. At the meetings we had to plan the annual Achebe Colloquium, a major initiative which he inaugurated at Brown in keeping with his life’s work to foster greater knowledge of Africa, he would resist any attempts to assign prominent roles to him. He would argue instead that the Colloquium was not about him and that he should not be made the focus. Not even the occasion of his 50th wedding anniversary in 2012 celebration, a modest family party, would make him embrace the spotlight and make a speech; he preferred, instead, quiet interaction with his guests and his grandchildren.

Ever willing to give so much of himself, official work for him was not limited to the office even in his twilight years and on a wheelchair. Working closely with him enabled me to better appreciate what Christie Achebe, his wonderful wife and scholar in her own right, had told me during our first meeting in 1999 as published in the ThisDay report. Describing the patriarch of the family as a very humane, caring, kind and loyal husband, Mrs. Achebe also revealed that even as a paraplegic, her husband did not isolate himself to write.

He was so at ease and at peace with himself, and cautious with criticism during conversations. He would quietly say O ko mada be (it’s the limit of their knowledge) in describing the short-sightedness of the political leaders during discussions of Nigerian politics, which we frequently engaged in. His humility and measured words generally made most visitors, including children, comfortable in his company. He would joke and banter with my 13-year-old daughter Kika, as if he was talking with a colleague. Not really surprising, seeing how at home he was with his grandchildren, and also given the kind of consciousness with which he wrote Chike and the River and other children’s books. Additionally, I could see in his carriage, the kind of cosmopolitan vision that enabled him to support his two daughters to marry non-Igbo men in an often ethnically-charged society. Yet, some of his worst critics following the publication of There was a Country have accused him of hating Yorubas because he criticised an icon of the Yorubas, Chief Obafemi Awolowo (something he had done multiple times in the past). Such critics are thus oblivious of the fact that Achebe’s grandchildren have Yoruba and Itsekiri blood, and therefore in “hating” the Yoruba, Achebe would have to hate his very family.

Very few writers have demonstrated the power of the written word as Achebe has done, and in fact, only a handful of writers are fortunate to generate the kind of stormy debate he has generated with his books and life. Amongst many other scholars, the critic, Charles Larson, and Lyn Innes, with whom Achebe edited an anthology of new writing that included Ben Okri respectively capture the significance of Achebe’s work. In Larson’s words, “Nigerians on the street are certainly proud of the novel [Things Fall Apart] and of their compatriot’s fame; it is the one novel they are most likely to have read or at least to know about.” For her part, Innes notes that “Achebe demonstrated that it is possible for a novelist to be creative, original, formally innovative, interrogating language and genre, and at the same time reach out to and involve a wide audience. In this sense Achebe’s novels are profoundly democratic because they respect the reader as an equal, calling on his or her involvement, interpretation and judgement.” Similarly, Farah acknowledged that Achebe is “enviably the most quotable of writers, every utterance of his proving to be a gem, every single thing he has penned containing vignettes cast in the currency of his wisdom. He is a man for all occasions, a writer, whom Queen Elizabeth II may quote with the same panache as a taxi driver in The Bronx, or a villager sinking a well in Onitsha.”

Achebe’s democratic credentials transcend his art and coalesce into his social commitment as a dissident citizen. Operating from an ideological standpoint that invests the artist with an activist vision, he had written in his novel Anthills of the Savannah: “Storytellers are a threat. They threaten all champions of control, they frighten usurpers of the right-to-freedom of the human spirit–in state, in church or mosque, in party congress, in the university or wherever.” In the same vein he averred that “Writers don’t give prescriptions. They give headaches!” Thus, beneath his telling quiet disposition was an insurrectionary temperament against the trouble with the postcolonial state in Africa symbolised by his native Nigeria which he described as “simply and squarely a failure of leadership”.

Although better known and celebrated as a distinguished novelist, Prof Achebe’s volume of poetry Christmas in Biafra and Other Poems, written during the Biafran War, was jointly awarded the first Commonwealth Poetry Prize. The volume grew out of an earlier collection, Beware Soul Brother and Other Poems, and both collections have also been merged in his Collected Poems. The poems are meditations on life and death, a collective testament to the Biafran war during which, together with his family, he narrowly escaped a bombing attack.

It is understandable, therefore, that Achebe’s personal history of Biafra articulated in There was a Country, was perhaps the most difficult book for him to write. As I learned, he clung onto the project like his final testament, and as a perfectionist working and reworking it up to the point of its publication. The book was a particularly important work for him, one that he may never have finished writing because the memories were sore, the recollections never exhaustive. Clearly, he had more to say. But being a man who preferred verbal economy to verbose pontificating, he knew he could never say all. It is a triumph of his resilient spirit and career that the book was published in his life-time. His sensitivity to the Biafran subject is reflected in the fact that one of the few creative works he wrote in Igbo language was his poem for his friend and marvellous poet, Christopher Okigbo. A major regret of Achebe’s passing, even at the age of 82, is his unfulfilled dream of having his poems and the iconic novel Things Fall Apart personally translated into Igbo.

– Dr. Nduka Otiono, a Banting Postdoctoral Fellow at the Institute of African Studies, Carleton University, Canada, was Senior Research Assistant to Professor Chinua Achebe at Brown University, USA.

 

It is obvious that when people of the PEN, not of the Sword, I call them 'PEN HEROES' die, the pen-world is lifted from the archives to the scenes and sights of life and history. So it is happenning now since the passing on of the literary genius, Igbo, Nigerian and African ICON, Prof. Chinua Achebe. He is dead, he is not yet buried. Today, various tributes are being poured forward to give honour to whom it is due - alive or dead. Prof. Achebe deserves all the tributes published or not because when a good and achieved hero dies, he must be talked about at home and at the market squares.
I seem now to be reading wide enough to capture what commentators are saying and canvassing as tributes to Achebe's standing. Like I did for Ikemba, Chief Emeka Ojukwu, I hope to gather and post what things are being said and what lessons such tributes to Achebe can make for knowledge and development. Prof. Chinua Achebe is too much to be articulated by one writer. No matter how elaborate or stingy one can write, no one single writer can sufficiently do a perspective so just to what he accomplished through his published works, scholarly activities and community engagements. If you have some releases, tributes, critical perceptions and soft minded statements and remarks to this fallen PEN HERO, please in-box or post them to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. for use in an upcoming post on "Collected Tributes to Prof. Chinua Achebe" which I will professionally organize and publish in this column.

Before that, I found this piece below by Chika Ezeanya fascinating to read and reflect with. I consider you may also like to read it. All yours.

The Fear Of Things Fall Apart By Chika Ezeanya

Posted: March 22, 2013 - 21:25 

I read Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart for the first time in 2008. As a child, I had watched the movie on Nigerian Television and experienced nightmares for months afterwards. The screams of Ikemefuna as he was being sacrificed stayed with me for years. For subsequent re-runs of the movie, I would flee the sitting room at exactly 8:28 p.m., two minutes before the melancholic opening dirge massaged the image to reality in my young mind. As I write, I can still see that haunting picture clearly; of Okonkwo unsheathing his machete as Ikemefuna ran to him for protection calling him “Nna anyi”.   I would grow up to search out and read most of Pa Achebe’s work but never Things Fall Apart. I felt that I could not emotionally handle the book.

When in 2008 I got information that Pa Achebe was coming to the Library of Congress (my backyard, then) on occasion of the 50th anniversary of Things Fall Apart, I knew I had stepped beyond the borders of reason in evading the book. I decided that I would rather check myself into psychiatry than enter that meeting armed with only the nightmarish clip of a movie etched in my subconscious.

So I read Thing Fall Apart. In the place of my childhood nightmares, Things Fall Apart the book, left me with wounds. Each sentence I read tore at my soul like a barbed wire on the feet of a trespasser. I felt as if I was trespassing an era that forbade my kind; an era I could not account for; an era that should belong to my history and narrative, but for which I was declared an illegal occupier owing to my ignorance. Questions festered like wounds deep within my soul. I asked myself what, as a human being, I was doing to myself, for myself, to Africa and for Africa.  I became afraid of myself and for myself. Fear clutched my soul for the many whose immediate post-natal reality brought to them the realization of their Africanness. I tossed and turned on my bed as I searched my soul for a glimpse of a reality that existed in Things Fall Apart, but which was alien to my existence. “You are living a false life. You are trying to be something you are not. You have been trying to be that for a very long time. Until you change, unless you change, except you change, you will keep striving fruitlessly to be, to belong, to become, until exhausted you fall by the wayside.”  That was the only reality my soul could offer in return. 

We as a people, as Africans, have been striving so hard to do things we have been told to do by others. We have been begging, apologizing, and regretting our authenticity for so many years. Things Fall Apart brought us face to face with our own story for the first time ever in the history of modern writing. It barely scratched the surface, but it opened the doors in the hearts of many other African writers to start telling their stories. Ngugi Wa Thiong’o, Ayi Kwei Armah, and others.

However, these writers wrote and were published widely, mostly because the western world, intrigued by Things Fall Apart wanted to read more stories from the “Dark Continent”. Soon, the west would lose interest; this was sometimes in the 80s and 90s. In accordance with our overriding followership temperament, several African writers lost interest in writing authentic African stories. Instead, they placed besides their writing pads, writing manuals from English teachers who with invisible canes, bulala or koboko, purged them of their rich African proverbs, syntax, expressions and mannerisms. Writing among Africans became a show of shame, a humiliating race for who can write better English than the English. It ceased, for the most part, to be about who best can capture the realities of Africans, as close as possible to the way it is. African writers began to light the midnight candle of western expositions in their desperation to get published.  And yet publishers snubbed and rejected them in thousands. It must be in the name, some writers thought. So Chinedu Udemueze became Chris  Dealy, Akinfolu Adefarasin became Archer Dickson, Kwame Atularke became Cane Tulane. But still, the publishers would not be deceived, they would rather publish one of their kind.

Unfortunately, much of those who were published in the 60s and 70s were lured to the west to teach in the universities.  There they were provided with the comforts of life in order to teach Americans and Europeans how to glean the African’s soul and society and write on his behalf. As a result, a huge mentorship gap befell those young Africans back home whose chests were heavy with untold stories.

But there is good news. Although that mentorship gap has not yet been closed, something else is happening to young African writers of this digital age. There is a new song rising out of the continent of Africa. The song is fading-in. It is not loud in the public hearing yet – it need not be. The song is loud and echoing in the hearts and minds of several Africans who have felt insulted enough for being themselves. Its octane rises above the taunts of prim and proper English syntax and the American way of doing things. From the streets, young women and men are placing fingers on the keyboard to express themselves and to publish their thoughts sans the judgments of ill-informed and often ignorant foreigners. There is a growing renaissance of authentic African expressions. In our music African voices are being heard. In the movies, more and more Africans will rather go for their own production than that of foreigners.

In African writing , writers – those who know – are no longer impressed by big, big grammar and superimposed, “modern” realities. The modern is being redefined as simply change in the direction of progress, based on locally sourced and easily available materials. In a short while, our academic institutions will catch the fire, the curricula will be overhauled to reflect our reality and to herald spontaneity of thought and speech, the harbinger of creativity and innovation.

Pa Achebe has made a graceful exit. He must have rejoiced to have seen the internet blossom. For it pained him – he said as much in interviews - that not enough authentic stories are coming out of Africa.  The internet as a medium has finally detached the muzzle previously placed upon the mouth of Africans who have something concrete and worthwhile to say. It is a thing of joy that Pa Achebe lived to see the liberalization  of communication, the emergence of a platform that is wide open for anyone who wishes to utilize it to project his or her deepest convictions and progressive thoughts about the continent .  We thank Pa Achebe for instilling the fear of things falling apart within us and around us. We are now being led to make valid and authentic choices for our progress regardless of so-called “global structures”. We have begun the journey and we shall complete it.  Ka chi foo, Nna anyi ukwu. Jee ofuma.

Chika Ezeanya is the author of Penguin Publishers Award for African Writing Shortlisted Before We Set Sail www.beforewesetsail.com. She blogs at www.chikaforafrica.com

 

Following here also is another tribute well crafted by Prof. Okey Ndibe whose personal experiences with Prof. Chinua Achebe ushers in a deep significant feel of the man, Achebe, from University of Nigeria Nsuka, USA and others. You will surely enjoy reading this.

 Chinua Achebe: A Legend and Master Storyteller By Okey Ndibe

Posted: March 23, 2013 - 12:47
Posted by siteadmin
Okey Ndibe and Prof. Achebe
              Columnist:
Okey Ndibe

The death last night of Professor Chinua Achebe meant the dimming of one of the world’s brightest literary stars. Yet Mr. Achebe, whose works included the inimitable Things Fall Apart and four other highly celebrated novels as well as four collections of essays, a short story collection, several children’s books and last year’s widely debated memoir, There Was a Country: A Personal History of Biafra, was in person one of the most approachable men I ever met. His personal modesty sometimes masked the fact he was a writer of such staggering talent, ambitious range, and intellectual power. His surpassing gifts as a writer as well as his admirable personal attributes will combine to make him – one can confidently predict – an imperishable presence in global letters and life. 

I had the rare honor and luck of being close to the revered Achebe for some thirty years. In that time, he was an inspiration, model, beacon of moral clarity and intellectual integrity as well as my teacher in the best, broadest sense of that word.

I first met Achebe when I was a young journalist at the now defunct African Concord magazine. My first major assignment was to interview him at his office then at the Institute of African Studies at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka. The encounter taught me something about the man’s genial and generous nature—and the depth of his humanity. I will get to that first encounter later, but must recall a more recent memory.

Five years ago, I drove from my home in central Connecticut to the quiescent country precincts of Annandale-on-Hudson to visit Chinua Achebe, who then held a prestigious endowed professorial chair at Bard College and whose novel Things Fall Apart was enjoying a cheery 50th anniversary. 
 Achebe's self-effacing, soft-spoken personality was always in ironic contrast with the exuberant celebration that erupted around his first – and most widely read and translated – novel. I was in his home to coax him to look back on 50 years of his book's extraordinary journey. Achebe disclosed that I was one of perhaps more than a hundred interviewers he'd hosted that year. Even so, I dared convince myself that there was something special about my interview with him. Let me explain.

I had interviewed Achebe several times in the past – first in 1983, when I was a rookie correspondent for the now defunct African Concord, the last time in 1987, shortly after the publication of his latest novel, Anthills of the Savannah. That first interview set a mood for my relationship with the author. Quite simply, he saved my career. 


I met Achebe by sheer serendipity. It was 1983 and I had just graduated from college. Visiting Ogidi, his hometown, to see my girlfriend at the time, I raved and raved about Achebe and Things Fall Apart. The young woman listened for a while, a bemused smile creasing her cheeks. Then she said: "Achebe is my uncle. His house is a short walk away. And he happens to be home this weekend. Do you want to visit him?" 
Did I ever! 



The Achebe I met in his country home personified grace. I still remember that he served us biscuits and chilled Coca Cola. He regarded me with penetrating eyes as I gushed about his novels, his short stories, his essays, even reciting favorite lines I had memorized from years of devoted reading. I told him I had just got a job with the Concord and would be honored to interview him. He gave me his telephone number at Nsukka, the university town where he lived and ran the Institute of African Studies. 
A week later I flew to Lagos, reported for work, and told the weekly magazine's editor that I had Achebe's telephone number – and a standing commitment that he would give me an interview. Elated, the editor dispatched me on the assignment. It was my first real task as a correspondent. 



Achebe and I retreated to his book-lined office at the institute. The air in the office seemed flavored with the scent of books stretching and heaving. Five minutes into the interview I paused and rewound the tape. The recording sounded fine and our interview continued for another two hours. Afterwards Achebe told me it was one of the most exhaustive interviews he'd ever done. I took leave of him and, heady with excitement, took a cab to the local bus stop where I paid the fare for a bus headed for Enugu – the state capital where I had booked a hotel.

That evening several of my friends gathered in my hotel room. They asked questions about Achebe, and then said they wanted to hear his voice. Happy to oblige them, I fetched the tape recorder and pressed its play button. We waited – not a word! I put in two other tapes, the same futile result. How was I going to explain this mishap to my editor who had scheduled the interview as a forthcoming cover? 


I phoned Achebe’s home in panic. In a desperate tone I begged that he let me return the next day for a short retake. "Thirty minutes – even twenty – would do," I pleaded. I half-expected him to scold me for lack of professional fastidiousness and hang up, leaving me to stew in my distress. Instead he calmly explained that he had commitments for the next day. If I could return the day after, he'd be delighted to grant me another interview. And he gave me permission to make the next session as elaborate as the first.

Two days later we were back in his office for my second chance. This time I paused every few minutes to check on the equipment. I stretched the interview to an hour-and-a-half before guilt – mixed with gratitude – compelled me to stop. It was not as exhaustive as the first outing, nor did it have the spontaneity of our first interview, but it gave me – and the readers of the magazine – a prized harvest. My friends got a chance to savor Achebe's voice, with its mix of faint lisps and accentuated locutions. 


That interview happened thirty years ago. It had been followed by several other encounters with Achebe, but it still stands out in my mind. I had admired the man from a distance, in awe of his extraordinary powers as a writer. After he saved my career, I was inspired by his uncommon generosity.

I was so impressed by Achebe’s example that I became something of a lifelong student of his work, my PhD dissertation focusing partly on his deployment of history and memory in his writing.

In 2009, Brown University lured Achebe away from Bard College, scoring a major transfer of intellectual assets. At the Ivy League Brown, Achebe assumed the chair of the David and Marianna Fisher University Professor of Africana Studies and Literary Arts. With his blessing, Brown University also invited me to take up a visiting appointment.

Achebe was a widely honored and highly decorated writer, winning some of the most prestigious literary prizes, including the Man Booker for the sustained excellence of his oeuvre. In 2010, he was awarded the Gish Prize, established in 1994 as a bequest of two sisters, Dorothy and Lillian. The $300,000 prize is bestowed each year on “a man or woman who has made an outstanding contribution to the beauty of the world and to mankind’s enjoyment and understanding of life.” Part of Achebe’s particular contribution was his insistence to speak courageously to power, to bear truthful witness. His genius lay also, I suggest, in his signature clarity of language and brevity of utterance. He did not seek to confound. And he respected language too much to indulge in superfluity. Among us lived a man who for eighty-two years never wasted a word! 

The sentiment behind the Gish Prize sums up, for me, the essence of Achebe the man, writer and citizen. He strove in his own quiet, stubborn way to make the world more beautiful. I was blessed to have known him at close quarters, ennobled by his extraordinary example as a writer and human, and ever indebted for the opportunity to learn at his feet.

Okey Ndibe, a visiting professor of Africana literature at Brown University, is the author of the novel Arrows of Rain and the forthcoming novel foreign gods inc.

 

Yet here is an on-going reading in this column by Sonala Olumhense and I think is standing out as a good tribute to share.

Chinua Achebe: Larger In Death

  By Sonala Olumhense

 

 

I join the world in bidding Chinua Achebe the wordsmith we lost nine days ago, goodbye.

Several things distinguished this famous Nigerian. The best-known and most celebrated was his ability to tell a compelling story. When Achebe told you a story, you became his messenger, re-telling that story in one way or another forever.

That magic was Achebe’s passport to travel through time and space. Using it, as we all came to know, he sold himself to the world, eliminating any need to repeat his name or to raise his voice that he may be heard. When he cleared his throat to speak to a crowd, Achebe did not need a microphone: the crowd fell into silence so deep it was almost in a trance, raising his roof to the rafters.

But he was not your normal storyteller in the tradition of a circus performer whose entertainment ended when you left for home. That was why, if you were not sufficiently careful, you missed the most important truth about Achebe: he was a man who dispensed fiction so he could disburse truth.

That, I am certain will become clear when he is laid to rest and men and women of all kinds try to claim a part of him for themselves in the words of a decent goodbye.

To say goodbye, especially in a Nigerian funeral, is not easy. We often celebrate in death what we denied in life. That is why, to say goodbye to a decent Nigerian of the quality and symbolism of Achebe by a society as indecent as ours would be a Nollywood tale that even Achebe could not have penned.

To bury Achebe among his people is the right thing to do. I believe that is what he would have loved, even if he did not make that decision himself.

But that will throw up all kinds of questions about his people if that happened to be defined less tightly than his immediate family. It would be fascinating to hear some of those who will want the microphone by which to say “a few words.”

A few words.

In Achebe’s final two decades on earth, God seemed to have given him two thrones to say whatever he wanted. The first was the global fame that his fiction had earned him. From Ogidi, his village, to the farthest corners of the earth, he came to symbolize the power of great writing. The world sought him wherever he rested; wherever he went, so did the world as it sought his voice.

The second throne, alas, was a wheelchair. Following his widely-known road crash in 1990, Achebe recovered into a wheelchair, from where he cast his considerable wisdom far and wide. At the foot of that chair, a worldwide horde of admirers came to hear him say whatever he wished.

But a few words were often all he said. A skilful, power user of language, he was a man who got a lot of mileage out of every word and every nuance.

His was a deep well of wisdom, but some of those words, especially when he turned his attention to Nigeria, were angry ones, especially when he identified the trouble with Nigeria.

His book of that title was published 30 years before his death. In it, he bluntly declared that “trouble” to be “simply and squarely a failure of leadership.”

When Achebe brought home the glories and accolades of foreign lands, he was the hero of every Nigerian, including its leadership, but when he turned his attention inwards, that leadership was resentful. It would rather claim him and own him.

That was why, in 2004 under President Olusegun Obasanjo, and again in 2011 under President Goodluck Jonathan, Nigeria offered Achebe the National Honour of the Commander of the Federal Republic.

In his rejection letter in 2004, Achebe cited his “alarm and dismay” over developments in Nigeria, using as an example the chaos in his home state of Anambra, “where a small clique of renegades, openly boasting its connections in high places.” That clique, he said, seemed determined to turn the state into a bankrupt and lawless fiefdom.

“I am appalled by the brazenness of this clique and the silence, if not connivance, of the Presidency,” he said.

Despite that, Achebe again found his name on the National Honours List nearly two years ago. Again, he refused to accept, as "the reasons for rejecting the offer when it was first made have not been addressed let alone solved.”

It is remarkable to recall the response of Nigeria’s leadership to Achebe’s rejections. In 2004, the government bitterly disowned him, declaring that if the award was not good enough for him he was not good enough for Nigeria. In 2011, he was accused of ignorance, and invited home on his wheelchair to come and see how things had “improved” under President Jonathan.

Things have “improved” so much under Mr. Jonathan that mediocrity and official dubiousness have become pronounced principles of public life; the so-called National Honours are now increasingly given to friends and their friends.

Things have “improved” so much that such top government officials as the President, Vice-President and the President of the Senate do not in their speeches refer to such values as integrity, example, character, or honour.

Things have “improved” so much that President Jonathan told the country he “does not give damn” about declaration of assets, and routinely appoints to office men of poor character. Only two weeks ago, he offered State pardon to Dipreye Alamieyesegha, one of Nigeria’s most reviled symbols of corruption.

All of this will form the background when Nigeria honours Achebe by means of a state burial, as has been proposed, or in “a few words” of tribute.

To say a few words is the most difficult things in the world when those words are dishonest.

Achebe mastered the art of saying a few meaningful words because his agenda and the prism through which he viewed his country never rotted. His views on right and wrong did not shift so that he might obtain a federal contract. His views did not change in the new budget year because he wanted to smuggle one of his children into a job at State House, as many two-faced Nigerians do.

The same heart that was beating in the heart of Achebe, the Nigerian, beat in him until the end. He advocated a country of excellence, one in which leaders led the people with patriotism, honesty and determination, not with self-interest and greed and corruption.

This is why his words and his advocacy never will die. He leaves behind a country that makes up what it lacks in heroes with historic levels of mediocrity and hypocrisy.

He leaves behind the same “alarm and dismay” about which he spoke in 2004, of a small clique of renegades, openly boasting its connections in high places…that has run Nigeria into a bankrupt and lawless fiefdom…” He leaves behind the same shameless, lying, effeminate, unpatriotic and deceitful leadership that remains the trouble with Nigeria.

Achebe’s achievements as a writer will always inspire the world. In his home country, it will accomplish considerably more than that, forever casting illumination on the army of locusts that has taken Nigeria hostage and made her an under-developing country. His voice will be larger in death than it was in life.

Goodbye, Warrior.

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Let me add a fourth piece of the tributes and you surely will grapple with the author's perspective.

Chinua Achebe as a Moral Standard – A Tribute

By Osita Ebiem (March 31, 2013, New York City, Sri Lanka Guardian)

Chinua Achebe one of the most important pioneers in African literature and the advancement of world knowledge and understanding died on the 21st of March, 2013 at 82. We join with millions of others around the world with a deep sense of loss to mourn Achebe’s passing. But we also take consolation in the fact that he lived well and has left us with many clear examples of how we should conduct our human affairs. Achebe was a formidable fighter while he lived.

Intellectually he fought to dissipate and disabuse the numerous misconceptions that the rest of the world held about Africa and its peoples. He fought so unreservedly on the side of truth and justice especially when he voluntarily enlisted in the rank of those that championed the struggle for the freedom and independence of his Biafran people. And for more than one decade of the last part of his life he fought without complaining a debilitating handicap where he was paralyzed from waist down and restricted to the wheelchair after a car accident on a Nigerian road. Characteristically, Achebe in spite of this restricting health problem fought his way through and remained active and productive till his last moments. Throughout this period of health troubles he still continued to teach and conduct academic seminars and conferences such as his world famous Achebe Colloquium that held annually every December at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island in the United States. Achebe had one of the best and astute of minds but most of all he was an unassailable honest intellectual and truth teller with an impeccable character. Though this can be considered a period of transition and the realigning of many long-established world orders yet there is a general consensus amongst many chroniclers of world events and epochs that the moral standard of our world is currently struggling. This, most people agree, results from the many decades of lack of enough credible voices of people of influence with integrity that speak from the high ground of morality, honesty, truth and sincerity.

On another hand there seems to be the over-abundance of people with compromised and unreliable characters in places of influence and authority. Across the globe today there are noticeable diffused morality lines or near total lack of moral standards. In some societies this negative and even dangerous lack of social/personal moral standards and a sense of what is right is being defended as social liberalism or “freedoms”. As much as we cherish true freedom as the most essential ingredient for all human progress and civilization but we are very much aware that there will always be standards and the legitimate demand from members of any responsible society that those of them in positions of authority and influence show leadership and accountability if such a society will survive and prosper. Freedom is not equivalent to recklessness and lack of individual and collective responsibility. Experiences have proved that it is through the path of responsible freedom and enforceable social standards that societies attain that coveted level of prosperity, greatness, civility, security and the seemingly elusive sense of the brotherhood of man.

Given our present human experience it seems that there may never come a time when any society in the world will be able to afford to do without the mandatory imposition of the rule of law, individual and collective responsibilities and still hope to succeed. So, for a society to succeed the members must find a way to establish and insist on enforcing these standards and collective social goals. And because we know that the mere letters of the law and the best law enforcement agents are never enough and because human beings learn faster and better through emulation then every successful society must find and project to the fore their own human standard bearers; the beacons that the rest of the society aspire to emulate. These epitomes of who we should look like, do not only become mirrors, they also become the conscience of the society. These people do not get to be appointed by any politician or through any ballot box, they achieve this enviable position through dint of hard work and the will to transcend self and maintain stability; consistency in the midst of the vagaries and influences of situations, institutions, environments and persons around them.

It is in this area of being the society’s mirror and conscience that Achebe the artist, intellectual and a human being shines forth so unmistakably. Chinua Achebe through hard work and personal discipline became the mirror and conscience of the society: The Nigerian society and beyond. Through personal choice and conscious effort, Achebe became one of the most important credible truth tellers and unassailable honest individuals of all time who would neither be corrupted nor compromised by powers or tainted honors. It was consistent with his character that though Achebe had accepted numerous local and international merit awards in the past but he would not accept, on two different occasions, national awards from Nigeria’s government in 2004 and 2011 respectively. He rejected these awards because as he said, Nigeria has become too dangerous, unjustifiably genocidal, irretrievably corrupt and unwilling to succeed as a society or country. It should be noted here that his friend Christopher Okigbo, the internationally acclaimed poet and Biafran soldier who died fighting for Biafra’s freedom and independence had exhibited the similar characteristic too. Okigbo would not accept an international literary award in 1965 on the basis that it was couched in a discriminatory nomenclature. When anyone person has a strong enough character and moral strength they would always look at even the proverbial gift horse in the mouth because they will not for reason accept personal gains and promotions at the expense of the greater good.

Achebe lived through an era when truth, justice and the will to do what is right experienced their most difficult moments amongst world leading politicians and policy makers. In Achebe’s prime in the 1960s world leaders and politicians were merely concerned about what will be for their parochial individual interests and were willing to employ every form of chicanery and even immoral brazen display of official power, arm-twisting and undue influences in thwarting justice and what is right. Like official position bullies they overreached themselves and sought to destroy small people and imaginary enemies with disproportional jackboots and sledge hammers. (In those days Britain under the leadership of Harold Wilson did not see anything wrong in the death of more than 3 million Biafrans; Chinua Achebe’s people, so long as the sacrifice of Biafra’s children and women of that number would preserve a hopeless one Nigeria). The Biafran crisis of 1966 to 1970 afforded Great Britain under Prime Minister Harold Wilson one of the best opportunities of all time to do what is right in regards with Nigeria. That was the time when Britain should have acted as an impartial arbiter and helped to re-divide the country as it should be: Along the pre-colonial and still existing ethnic/religious dividing lines. Right from the onset of the ill-fated amalgamation of 1914 by the British colonialist Frederick Lugard it has always been known that the various ethnic/religious groups in Nigeria have very irreconcilable cultural, social, religious and linguistic differences and that they can never coexist and build a successful society as citizens of the same country. Had Britain then honestly taken this most appropriate, reasonable and honorable line of action, the terrible and unconscionable disgraceful murderous events that are taking place in Nigeria today would have been avoided. That Britain was inexcusably wrong in supporting the continued existence of one Nigeria especially at the time when events presented themselves for the division of the country can easily be proved. Two examples among numerous others will suffice here.

All through the colonial era when Britain controlled Nigeria there were several warning signs that were ignored which clearly showed and still show that the peoples that are being forced to live as citizens of one country in Nigeria can never become one and will only end up (as in the physicist’s matter/antimatter phenomenon) annihilating one another should they continue as one Nigeria. The 1945 and 1953 ethnic/religious cleansing in Jos and Kano respectively are just two apt examples. Jos and Kano are two Islamic North of Nigeria cities that have continued to be in the news for exactly the same reasons of ethnic/religious genocides till today.

Today Nigeria as a country has become an abysmal nightmare, the scourge of the civilized world and the graveyard of truth, justice, honesty, sincerity, secured existence of citizens and every positive trait that should normally be found in a modern society. Nigeria has become a bedlam, a thriving center of world Islamic terrorism and the seat of the worst kind of corrupt sociopolitical management. British and other Western nationals are being kidnapped and murdered on a regular basis in Nigeria by Islamic fundamentalist groups like Boko Haram, Ansaru and others which are known to have working relationships with al Qaeda worldwide network and those at the Maghreb in North Africa, AQIM. This mayhem is taking place in Nigeria today because Nigeria is a hopelessly failed government and political state. And this failure has its root in the initiation and perpetuation of an unworkable one Nigeria by the colonial British. This unnecessary Islamic violence to persons and properties, bad governance of society and waste of resources would have easily been avoided in the 1960s when the Biafran crisis afforded the opportunity. The peoples of the former Eastern Region of Nigeria under the assumed name of Biafra were pushed into opting out of the Nigerian union and they sought for a separate existence through the exercise of their legal and legitimate right to Self Determination and national independence. But Britain led a coalition of allies to fight them back and defeat them. But nevertheless, and because the Biafran effort was just, honest and right, Chinua Achebe who was always known for his honesty, incorruptible integrity and sterling strength of character was among those at the vanguard that championed Biafra’s independence.

Though Britain under the leadership of Harold Wilson spearheaded the counter move, yet it did not diminish the justness and the necessity of the Biafran effort. During the 1960s while the crisis was on Wilson as the Prime Minister of Britain worked with the then Soviet Union as he mobilized Egypt, the Islamic Arab League of Nations, the United Nations of U Thant, African Union, then known as Organization of African Unity and a number of other political power centers around the world and worked to frustrate what would have been a redemptive opportunity for Britain. Britain in Biafra was offered a very rare golden opportunity to redeem itself and show that the colonial mistake they made in creating one Nigeria was a mistake of bad judgment and not a deliberate act to create a monstrous demon that would eventually self-destruct while “entertaining” the spectators as in the gruesomeness of the gladiatorial fashion in the Amphitheater of the old Rome. The Self Determination and independence move made by Biafrans in the 1960s offered the British and still do the chance to fix one of the most terrible devastating mistakes of the colonial Europe in Africa (please refer to the 1884 to 1885 Berlin Conference). Unfortunately that opportunity was bungled but it is never too late to do the right thing.

The time is just right today as it was then in 1960s; to divide Nigeria. Dividing Nigeria today will solve permanently Nigeria’s problem of Islamic terrorism, British and other foreign nationals’ kidnappings and killings and end the seemingly unending genocides and ethnic/religious cleansings. Emphatically, dividing Nigeria is Chinua Achebe’s last testament and wishes as he stated in his last and the most important of all his books. Achebe’s memoir was published only a few months before his death and it is the final word on the most reliable solution to one Nigeria: Divide Nigeria. There was A Country: A Personal History of Biafra by Chinua Achebe (published by Penguin Press, New York, 2012) tells us that for the sake of our children and their own children, Nigeria must be divided now. Achebe witnessed the injustices of Biafra and after more than fifty years he concludes in the book that Britain and other former colonial powers that created the unworkable modern states of Africa must help to unravel and disentangle the irreconcilable national unions like in one Nigeria. It is a general consensus that Achebe contributed positively and immensely to the collective global knowledge, progress and understanding through his excellent intellectual efforts. And the best way the world can show gratitude and appreciation for this invaluable contribution now that Achebe is dead is to help fulfill his last wishes: The security and freedom of his people.

The greatest tribute that anyone or group can bestow on Achebe is to prove to our common humanity that it is still right to live honestly and support what is right like Chinua Achebe demonstrated with his life and works. The killings of Achebe’s people in Nigeria as in the 1960s when Achebe and his fellow compatriots had to go to war to prove their right to life and human dignity continues today unabated. Achebe’s memory is asking all humanity to help end these kidnappings and killings by dividing Nigeria and setting Achebe’s people free.

The people of the former Eastern Region of Nigeria; Chinua Achebe’s people, are still as anxious to leave Nigeria and become a separate sovereign independent country today as they were in the 1960s. And Achebe as the quintessential specimen of the best things anyone can hope for in the finest of human beings, in parting offers to us the only answer to the many troubles of Nigeria and the only hope for his Biafran people: The division of Nigeria now. (Osita Ebiem is a Biafran citizen and the Sri Lanka Guardian's special correspondent on Nigeria. He can be reached at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. )

Published On:Sunday, March 31, 2013
Chinua Achebe as a Moral Standard – A Tribute

| by Osita Ebiem

( March 31, 2013, New York City, Sri Lanka Guardian) Chinua Achebe one of the most important pioneers in African literature and the advancement of world knowledge and understanding died on the 21st of March, 2013 at 82. We join with millions of others around the world with a deep sense of loss to mourn Achebe’s passing. But we also take consolation in the fact that he lived well and has left us with many clear examples of how we should conduct our human affairs. Achebe was a formidable fighter while he lived. Intellectually he fought to dissipate and disabuse the numerous misconceptions that the rest of the world held about Africa and its peoples. He fought so unreservedly on the side of truth and justice especially when he voluntarily enlisted in the rank of those that championed the struggle for the freedom and independence of his Biafran people. And for more than one decade of the last part of his life he fought without complaining a debilitating handicap where he was paralyzed from waist down and restricted to the wheelchair after a car accident on a Nigerian road. Characteristically, Achebe in spite of this restricting health problem fought his way through and remained active and productive till his last moments. Throughout this period of health troubles he still continued to teach and conduct academic seminars and conferences such as his world famous Achebe Colloquium that held annually every December at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island in the United States. Achebe had one of the best and astute of minds but most of all he was an unassailable honest intellectual and truth teller with an impeccable character.

Though this can be considered a period of transition and the realigning of many long-established world orders yet there is a general consensus amongst many chroniclers of world events and epochs that the moral standard of our world is currently struggling. This, most people agree, results from the many decades of lack of enough credible voices of people of influence with integrity that speak from the high ground of morality, honesty, truth and sincerity. On another hand there seems to be the over-abundance of people with compromised and unreliable characters in places of influence and authority. Across the globe today there are noticeable diffused morality lines or near total lack of moral standards. In some societies this negative and even dangerous lack of social/personal moral standards and a sense of what is right is being defended as social liberalism or “freedoms”. As much as we cherish true freedom as the most essential ingredient for all human progress and civilization but we are very much aware that there will always be standards and the legitimate demand from members of any responsible society that those of them in positions of authority and influence show leadership and accountability if such a society will survive and prosper. Freedom is not equivalent to recklessness and lack of individual and collective responsibility.

Experiences have proved that it is through the path of responsible freedom and enforceable social standards that societies attain that coveted level of prosperity, greatness, civility, security and the seemingly elusive sense of the brotherhood of man. Given our present human experience it seems that there may never come a time when any society in the world will be able to afford to do without the mandatory imposition of the rule of law, individual and collective responsibilities and still hope to succeed. So, for a society to succeed the members must find a way to establish and insist on enforcing these standards and collective social goals. And because we know that the mere letters of the law and the best law enforcement agents are never enough and because human beings learn faster and better through emulation then every successful society must find and project to the fore their own human standard bearers; the beacons that the rest of the society aspire to emulate. These epitomes of who we should look like, do not only become mirrors, they also become the conscience of the society. These people do not get to be appointed by any politician or through any ballot box, they achieve this enviable position through dint of hard work and the will to transcend self and maintain stability; consistency in the midst of the vagaries and influences of situations, institutions, environments and persons around them.

It is in this area of being the society’s mirror and conscience that Achebe the artist, intellectual and a human being shines forth so unmistakably. Chinua Achebe through hard work and personal discipline became the mirror and conscience of the society: The Nigerian society and beyond. Through personal choice and conscious effort, Achebe became one of the most important credible truth tellers and unassailable honest individuals of all time who would neither be corrupted nor compromised by powers or tainted honors. It was consistent with his character that though Achebe had accepted numerous local and international merit awards in the past but he would not accept, on two different occasions, national awards from Nigeria’s government in 2004 and 2011 respectively. He rejected these awards because as he said, Nigeria has become too dangerous, unjustifiably genocidal, irretrievably corrupt and unwilling to succeed as a society or country. It should be noted here that his friend Christopher Okigbo, the internationally acclaimed poet and Biafran soldier who died fighting for Biafra’s freedom and independence had exhibited the similar characteristic too. Okigbo would not accept an international literary award in 1965 on the basis that it was couched in a discriminatory nomenclature. When anyone person has a strong enough character and moral strength they would always look at even the proverbial gift horse in the mouth because they will not for reason accept personal gains and promotions at the expense of the greater good.

Achebe lived through an era when truth, justice and the will to do what is right experienced their most difficult moments amongst world leading politicians and policy makers. In Achebe’s prime in the 1960s world leaders and politicians were merely concerned about what will be for their parochial individual interests and were willing to employ every form of chicanery and even immoral brazen display of official power, arm-twisting and undue influences in thwarting justice and what is right. Like official position bullies they overreached themselves and sought to destroy small people and imaginary enemies with disproportional jackboots and sledge hammers. (In those days Britain under the leadership of Harold Wilson did not see anything wrong in the death of more than 3 million Biafrans; Chinua Achebe’s people, so long as the sacrifice of Biafra’s children and women of that number would preserve a hopeless one Nigeria).

The Biafran crisis of 1966 to 1970 afforded Great Britain under Prime Minister Harold Wilson one of the best opportunities of all time to do what is right in regards with Nigeria. That was the time when Britain should have acted as an impartial arbiter and helped to re-divide the country as it should be: Along the pre-colonial and still existing ethnic/religious dividing lines. Right from the onset of the ill-fated amalgamation of 1914 by the British colonialist Frederick Lugard it has always been known that the various ethnic/religious groups in Nigeria have very irreconcilable cultural, social, religious and linguistic differences and that they can never coexist and build a successful society as citizens of the same country. Had Britain then honestly taken this most appropriate, reasonable and honorable line of action, the terrible and unconscionable disgraceful murderous events that are taking place in Nigeria today would have been avoided. That Britain was inexcusably wrong in supporting the continued existence of one Nigeria especially at the time when events presented themselves for the division of the country can easily be proved. Two examples among numerous others will suffice here. All through the colonial era when Britain controlled Nigeria there were several warning signs that were ignored which clearly showed and still show that the peoples that are being forced to live as citizens of one country in Nigeria can never become one and will only end up (as in the physicist’s matter/antimatter phenomenon) annihilating one another should they continue as one Nigeria. The 1945 and 1953 ethnic/religious cleansing in Jos and Kano respectively are just two apt examples. Jos and Kano are two Islamic North of Nigeria cities that have continued to be in the news for exactly the same reasons of ethnic/religious genocides till today.

Today Nigeria as a country has become an abysmal nightmare, the scourge of the civilized world and the graveyard of truth, justice, honesty, sincerity, secured existence of citizens and every positive trait that should normally be found in a modern society. Nigeria has become a bedlam, a thriving center of world Islamic terrorism and the seat of the worst kind of corrupt sociopolitical management. British and other Western nationals are being kidnapped and murdered on a regular basis in Nigeria by Islamic fundamentalist groups like Boko Haram, Ansaru and others which are known to have working relationships with al Qaeda worldwide network and those at the Maghreb in North Africa, AQIM. This mayhem is taking place in Nigeria today because Nigeria is a hopelessly failed government and political state. And this failure has its root in the initiation and perpetuation of an unworkable one Nigeria by the colonial British. This unnecessary Islamic violence to persons and properties, bad governance of society and waste of resources would have easily been avoided in the 1960s when the Biafran crisis afforded the opportunity. The peoples of the former Eastern Region of Nigeria under the assumed name of Biafra were pushed into opting out of the Nigerian union and they sought for a separate existence through the exercise of their legal and legitimate right to Self Determination and national independence. But Britain led a coalition of allies to fight them back and defeat them.

But nevertheless, and because the Biafran effort was just, honest and right, Chinua Achebe who was always known for his honesty, incorruptible integrity and sterling strength of character was among those at the vanguard that championed Biafra’s independence. Though Britain under the leadership of Harold Wilson spearheaded the counter move, yet it did not diminish the justness and the necessity of the Biafran effort. During the 1960s while the crisis was on Wilson as the Prime Minister of Britain worked with the then Soviet Union as he mobilized Egypt, the Islamic Arab League of Nations, the United Nations of U Thant, African Union, then known as Organization of African Unity and a number of other political power centers around the world and worked to frustrate what would have been a redemptive opportunity for Britain.

Britain in Biafra was offered a very rare golden opportunity to redeem itself and show that the colonial mistake they made in creating one Nigeria was a mistake of bad judgment and not a deliberate act to create a monstrous demon that would eventually self-destruct while “entertaining” the spectators as in the gruesomeness of the gladiatorial fashion in the Amphitheater of the old Rome. The Self Determination and independence move made by Biafrans in the 1960s offered the British and still do the chance to fix one of the most terrible devastating mistakes of the colonial Europe in Africa (please refer to the 1884 to 1885 Berlin Conference). Unfortunately that opportunity was bungled but it is never too late to do the right thing. The time is just right today as it was then in 1960s; to divide Nigeria. Dividing Nigeria today will solve permanently Nigeria’s problem of Islamic terrorism, British and other foreign nationals’ kidnappings and killings and end the seemingly unending genocides and ethnic/religious cleansings.

Emphatically, dividing Nigeria is Chinua Achebe’s last testament and wishes as he stated in his last and the most important of all his books. Achebe’s memoir was published only a few months before his death and it is the final word on the most reliable solution to one Nigeria: Divide Nigeria. There was A Country: A Personal History of Biafra by Chinua Achebe (published by Penguin Press, New York, 2012) tells us that for the sake of our children and their own children, Nigeria must be divided now. Achebe witnessed the injustices of Biafra and after more than fifty years he concludes in the book that Britain and other former colonial powers that created the unworkable modern states of Africa must help to unravel and disentangle the irreconcilable national unions like in one Nigeria. It is a general consensus that Achebe contributed positively and immensely to the collective global knowledge, progress and understanding through his excellent intellectual efforts. And the best way the world can show gratitude and appreciation for this invaluable contribution now that Achebe is dead is to help fulfill his last wishes: The security and freedom of his people. The greatest tribute that anyone or group can bestow on Achebe is to prove to our common humanity that it is still right to live honestly and support what is right like Chinua Achebe demonstrated with his life and works. The killings of Achebe’s people in Nigeria as in the 1960s when Achebe and his fellow compatriots had to go to war to prove their right to life and human dignity continues today unabated. Achebe’s memory is asking all humanity to help end these kidnappings and killings by dividing Nigeria and setting Achebe’s people free. The people of the former Eastern Region of Nigeria; Chinua Achebe’s people, are still as anxious to leave Nigeria and become a separate sovereign independent country today as they were in the 1960s. And Achebe as the quintessential specimen of the best things anyone can hope for in the finest of human beings, in parting offers to us the only answer to the many troubles of Nigeria and the only hope for his Biafran people: The division of Nigeria now.
( Osita Ebiem is a Biafran citizen and the Sri Lanka Guardian's special correspondent on Nigeria. He can be reached at 
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As I have been posting and reposting these writings, I see Prof. Achebe is different from others because he taught us how to use our learning to correct those in power by providing them indices of provocative feelings and actions to do better. And as never before put in a clear critical and unambivalent way on what is the trouble with Nigeria, and indeed Africa by extension, Achebe’s way brought some pontificating of the Nigerian situation with regard to poverty of leadership skills to turn life and society around for the better.

 

 

We announce with deep excitement the press release of our New Book entitled: The Kpim of Social Order: A Season of Inquiry, Meaning and Significance in the Modern World. Published by Xlibris Publishing Corporation, USA. Detailed in 678 pages and organized in 40 chapters. Edited by three professors, beautifully designed and easy to read. Copies are available through local bookstore's order desk or at these Online bookstores: www.amazon.com, www.barnesandnoble.com, www.xlibris.com or by phone at 1-888-795-4274 ext. 7879.

By reading this crisscrossing brilliant book, The Kpim of Social Order, you will learn more about what it means to shape order from disorder; sustain interest and the culture of compromise to serve people and society. It is the central key or kpim, the core of an issue that makes governments and people cohere to build a good community that the book sought out the triggers and solutions through philosophical, psychological, historical, religious and cultural questioning and answers. It will make for a good read and as a gift to institutions, agencies, schools and friends.       

Overview of the Book:

A brilliant and very beautifully designed book. This is a dream book well realized. And it is edited by three professors and stands out as a highly commendable work. By and large, a book review of this significant work will follow soon. But rejoice with me with this breaking news of the publication of "The Kpim of Social Order: A Season of Inquiry, Meaning and Significance in the Modern World (2013)". This very book had long been awaited to come out from the press. It has got 678 pages organized in 40 chapters. To be fair, I cannot hold my excitement and appreciation to all who made it happen. Thank you so much.

However, in the book, we will discover that frequently overlooked in the search of knowing and acting wisely are some important philosophical and cultural ideas  and questions. The kpim of Social Order boldly captures  such ideas and questions for awareness through critical  thinking. The current volume in the Kpim Book Series makes  the point that for a systematic analysis and significance of Social Order to be attained, we need to ask, "What is the kpim or central core of Social Order of things? Where does the deepest layer, notion, symbolism, reality and application of social order, programs, human rights, institutions, communities, diplomacy, uprising, social  asset, social power, policy action, inter-culturalism, global forces and all else lie? How can we reach and  understand the innermost part of Social Order in the modern world?" By gathering articles from seasoned, experienced,  and emerged scholars from various backgrounds, the book  explores deep-rooted questions touching on African context  and related societies. The refreshing perspectives,  analyses, deep reflections, vigorous arguments, and  representations shown by the essays are distinctive and  have been referred to as a comprehensive reader in the season of inquiry, meaning and significance of social order in the contemporary time. This is a book no one should  ignore. Students, scholars, researchers, universities, colleges, educationists, institutions, policy makers, governments, legislatures, agencies, labour unions, civil society organizations, occupy movements, religious groups, entrepreneurs and the general public will find this book as  an asset and a must read. The kpim of Social Order is  therefore written out of the critical need to fill the gap  for a decisive knowledge society in the modern world.

Some comments:

1. Having the central object of this book as inquiry into social order, underlined is the central core or kpim of society, programs and human rights that shape order and life. – Dr. George U. Ukagba, University of Benin.

2. By questioning what is the kpim of social order of things; the insightful articles in a book of this value, have helped us to get to the innermost part of our social order of reality and existence. – Dr. Des Obi, Imo State University.

3. Apodictically, The Kpim of Social Order should be a most welcome idea, if not a panacea, to discerning the cultural and philosophical concepts and pragmatics of social order in this millennium and beyond – Dr. Iks J. Nwankwor, University of Uyo, Nigeria.

4. An important book at a time of season of uprising and Occupy Nigeria phenomenon. Vigorously argued and insightful. It deserves attention for the debate on social order and development for critical calm and hope renewal. – Dr. Patrick Iroegbu, Grant MacEwan University.

5. How else can we say it better? This is an excellent work and a major contribution to social science – a resource for everyone who seeks to understand important perspectives on social order as it should be critically viewed for any sharp philosophical, cultural, economic and social development – Editorial Team.

Copies of this book are available online. You can Download attachment below for help with how to order, addresses, faxes and phone contacts. In other words The Kpim of Social Order is available through your local bookstore's order dest or at these online bookstores: Amazon.com, Barnesandnoble.com, Xlibris.com or by phone at 1-888-795-4274 ext. 7879. In Nigeria, contact: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. and This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.    

STEPHEN KESHI: THE MAKING OF A NGERIAN SOCCER LEGEND OF OUR TIME

By Cyril Nwokeji, Belgium

Cyril Nwokeji of Belgium, a talented soccer analyst, wrote this article and I picked it up for a larger audience as we see it here. The article details a personal narrative of the author of how Stephen Keshi evolved as a legend we have come to know him today. You will learn about the courage of a soccer star and the hope to build, transmit and transform soccer in Nigeria. Was he called up or was it his akaraka, destiny and luck? The story tells it all.    

Stephen Okechukwu Keshi, born to Igbo and Delta parents, has no doubt profiled himself to a legendary status in Nigerian football. The beautiful football story of this great son of Nigeria started at the famed St. Finbarrs College Football 'Academy,' the precursor of the present football academies in Nigeria. Stephen Keshi, as a young man, otherwise - a teenager - was already a regular member of the famed St. Finbarrs College Football Team of 1977 that revolutionised school soccer, not only in Lagos state but in Nigeria as a whole; needless of saying that that beautiful soccer team won the 1977 edition of the Principals' Cup Competition in Lagos State. The team was comprised of highly talented young men - teenagers - who exhibited, a highly exhilarating, splendid, entertaining, technical and tactically organised soccer, in a 4-2-4 formation.

Kudos to the coach that raised that legendary team! Those young men were Eagles or potential Eagles materials. Those of them that eventually took to football, like Stephen Keshi, went quite far in soccer career. That legendary team comprised of the following players in the first eleven: Goalkeeper was the late Muri Sanni; right-full-back was Stephen 'Terry' Keshi, he was given the nickname of 'Terry’, after the legendary England right full-back - Terry Cooper- who revolutionised the playing style of full-backs, with his overlapping runs down the right flank, that way joined the attack and also fell back to defend, when necessary. This was in sharp contrast to the norm for full-backs then, who stayed in the defence to defend at all times. Stephen Keshi's then overlapping runs down the right flank earned him that nickname. At left-full back was Jones Nseyo; at centre-half back was Amechi Nwaogu - Livinus; at left-half back was my very good friend and football mentor JOACHINS ARONU OGUGUA, alias GORIMAPA. The two-man midfield comprised of Emeka James, as defensive mid-fielder and Nathaniel Ogedengbe, who was the team's captain, as creative mid-fielder. The four-man attack squard comprised the following: Wakilu Oyenuga at outside right; Samuel Owoh, at inside right; Henry Nwosu at centre-forward and the late Adedeji Obe at outside-left. They were a beauty to behold! In Hockey, if it were the case, they will be described as having a dynamic hockey chemistry.

Stephen Keshi and Henry Nwosu were called up and played for the Junior Eagles, the precursor of the present Flying Eagles. And later on they were called up again to the Super Eagles. In preparation for the 1980, African Cup of Nation's competition, the following members of that legendary school boys’ team were invited to the Super Eagles camp for screening, namely my very good friend and mentor JOACHINS ARONU OGUGUA, Wakilu Oyenuga, Samuel Owoh, Henry Nwosu and Stephen Keshi. My good friend JOACHINS ARONU, left the Eagles camp, due to injury, sustained in training, he was later to leave for the United - states of America via Enugu Rangers, in search of the Golden Fleece. Henry Nwosu, made the final 22-man list for the Nation's Cup, while the other players fell short of the requirements. Keshi was one of them.

Notwithstanding that initial set-back, Stephen Keshi trudged on like the true Trojan Horse Person he is; playing for clubs in Lagos state like: Wema Bank and ACB Football Clubs. At the end of his college studies at St. Finbarrs, he relocated to Benin City, and was enrolled at Eghosa Grammar School, in Benin City. While there in Benin City, he played for and eventually captained the New-Nigerian Bank Football Club of Benin City, winning the WAFU cup twice.

He finally made it to the Super Eagles Team, debuting in the friendly game against Uganda in 1981 in Benin during preparations for the final world-cup qualifier against Algeria. He was later to play his first competitive match for the Super Eagles against Algeria in Lagos. He came into the match as a substitute, to replace the much rusty Christian Chukwu in the second-half, with the Eagles down 2-O. He made his impact felt, with his long throws, power packed shots and his characteristic overlapping runs. I still remember how he stopped the rampaging Mustapha Koichi, who hitherto terrorised our Nigerian defence.

Keshi made his Nation's Cup debut, in Libya, in 1982; scoring two goals in the opening match against Ethiopia, a match in which the Eagles triumphed 3-0. As a result of our early elimination from that tournament, the then NFA, sacked the Brazilian Coach and disbanded the Eagles. Chief Festus Adegboye Onigbinde, was charged with the task of rebuilding the Eagles. He made Keshi captain of the new -look Super Eagles. The team under his tutelage, qualified for the 1984 edition of the Nation's cup competition. After a not too impressive first round performance, reached the Semi-finals, and confronted the pharaohs of Egypt. Within the first 15 minutes, the Eagles were 2 goals down. I thought it was all over; but the Eagles under the leadership of Keshi fought back. And towards the end of the first half, they earned, a penalty when the rampaging Chibuzor Ehilegbu, was brought down in the penalty box. The resultant spot-kick was initially missed by Keshi, but he was alert enough to score from the rebound for which he was hailed.

With scores 2-1, the Eagles piled on the pressure in the second half and were rewarded in the 75th minute, when Bala Ali scored with a glancing header ,off a Stephen Keshi lob in , for the equaliser. From then onwards, the momentum, was on our side and we eventually won the penalty shoot-out, when scores remained 2-2, after 120 minutes. The young dynamic and inexperienced Nigerian side lost to the more experienced Cameroonian side in the finals 3-1.

In 1985, Stephen Keshi's career with the Super Eagles, nose-dived, when as a consequence of reporting late to the Eagles camp, was banned for 2 years by then NFA, alongside Henry Nwosu, Bright Omokaro, Sunday Eboigbe, and Clement Temile. Keshi was eventually stripped of the captain's band. Having failed to convince the NFA for a grant of pardon, after due apologies, Stephen Keshi left for the Ivory Coast that gave him the opportunity to play soccer without NFA's clearance. He played for ASEC Mimosas and later on Stella Football Clubs of Abidjan. His sterling performances caught the attention of Belgian scouts, where he consequently earned a professional contract in Belgium. There he vigorously played for FC Lokeren and RSC Anderlecht club sides. He won many titles as a key player with Anderlecht. His high-point being having played the finals of the European Cup Winner's Cup Competition in 1990, and losing narrowly in extra time to Juventus of Italy. It must be recalled and be put to note that Stephen Keshi was a household name in Belgium and, indeed, served as a pioneer and contact medium for Nigerian soccer pros to Europe. He stood tall and broke grounds that turned attention to Nigeria to look for his likes. 

However, Keshi later on played for Strasbourg FC of France, a second division side. And he eagerly helped earn the club a promotion to the first division. He later on played for RWDM of Belgium before relocating to the United States for MLS soccer.

At the National team level, Keshi's truncated career was reignited in 1987. He helped Nigeria qualify for the AFCON 1988 - MAROC '88 - losing narrowly to Cameroun in the finals. A final that would be remembered for the brilliant goal scored by Henry Nwosu - off of a brilliant right-wing cross by the mesmerising Ndubuisi Okosieme, the son of the legendary Rangers/Bendel Insurance goal-keeper, Cyril Okosieme. This star player single handedly tore the Cameroonian defence to shreds - which was unfairly cancelled by the referee. No wonder sometimes, they say, that soccer sucks!

In 1989, under pressure from the media, after a sterling performance in Angola, during a 1990 world-cup qualifier against Angola, in which he scored the equaliser that levelled scores 2-2, Stephen Keshi, was re-appointed Super Eagles Captain - after an interregnum of 4 years. In his absence and in goodfaith, Henry Nwosu and Peter Rufai filed in for him as Captains of the Super Eagles. The Super Eagles under the leadership of Keshi failed to qualify for the World Cup in Italy in 1990. They were treated so after having been stopped by Cameroun, in Yaounde, in 1989.

After the 1990 world cup failure, the Dutch man Clemens Westerhoff was charged with the task of rebuilding the Eagles - as a favoured foreign coach. He did this with Stephen Keshi as the captain of the Eagles. The Eagles finished runners-up in the AFCON, 1990 in Algeria; finished in third place in AFCON 1992 in Senegal and won the AFCON, 1994 in Tunisia. That same year, the Eagles qualified for the 1994 World Cup Competition, for the first time in the United - States of America. The Eagles, under the captaincy of Stephen Keshi - then largely a non-playing captain - was one of three countries that represented Africa in the World Cup. The Eagles impressed all and sundry, with their scintillating brand of attacking soccer; losing narrowly to Italy in the second round 2-1. Stephen Keshi only played one game, in the 2-0 victory over Greece. He kept the spirit; nutured his guys with international relevance.

After the 1994 World Cup, Stephen Keshi left the national side, with the ovation at its loudest, and began studying for his Coaching Diploma. His first coaching assignment was as an Assistant Coach to Bonfree Jo, during preparations for the 2000 nation's cup competition. The tournament was jointly hosted by Nigeria and Ghana. That competition was particularly noteworthy by the way we lost in the finals; through a dubious decision of the Tunisian Referee, who cancelled a penalty goal scored by Victor Ikpeba. The Cameroonians won the penalty shoot-out 4 - 3.

As a consequence of a faltering 2002 World Cup qualifying campaign, Bonfree Jo was sacked; Keshi assisted Amodu Shaibu in tinkering the Eagles. The World Cup ticket was eventually won by Nigeria under the tutelage of Stephen Keshi and Amodu Shaibu. However, after a semi-final loss to Senegal at the 2002 Nation's Cup Competition, which was blamed on a players' revolt, Keshi and Amodu were sacked by the NFA, for what was perceived to be the coaches' sympathy for the players. Keshi thus missed the opportunity to help in coaching the Eagles at the 2002 World Cup!

In another turn of events, Togo snapped up Keshi, to help tinker their national side. It was to be his first fully fledged assignment as coach; he did not fail, as he helped Togo, qualify for their first ever world cup finals, in Germany. However, misfortune struck him once again, when he was sacked, as a consequence of having lost all the first round games at the 2006 Nations' cup competition, coupled with a disagreement with Emmanuel Adebayor. He thus missed another opportunity, to take a national side he helped qualify for the world cup to the world cup proper!

The Togolese later made up for this, reappointing him, after the 2006 world cup. He later coached Mali, and qualified them for the 2010 Nations' cup competition, in Angola. A not- too impressive performance in Angola saw the Malians terminate his contract. When the Nigeria job became available, in 2010, he contested with Samson Siasia, for the plum job. Siasia was selected - largely due to the overwhelming public opinion in favour of Siasia's appointment. When Sissia failed, the job came naturally to Keshi, who inherited a team in tatters. He inherited the onerous task of rebuilding the Super Eagles - then ranked 63rd in the world; 10th in Africa and rightly or wrongly called the 'Super Chickens' by the Elephants of Ivory Coast. In 15 months, Keshi remarkably turned around the fortunes of the Super Eagles, unexpectedly, making them the African Champions to the bargain!

Now we are back to the pinnacle of African soccer at the highest level. It is a seasoned time, I must suggest, for Keshi to keep his feet firmly on the ground. He should not be carried away by the encomiums he is getting now, including being named after a stadium in Delta State. He should concentrate on the task of rebuilding the Eagles. I am so happy he learns from experience and that he realises he does not have his dream team yet. This timely coming back to win the African Nations Cup for Nigeria is priceless, and indeed, calls for every good intention he needs to move on and do more. We want him to constantly remember that a coach is as good as his last match! For now a very, very big Kudos to this great son of Nigeria!

My friend Chukwudi Dikko has commented on this article when it was first posted on my Facebook last Sunday, Feb. 17, 2013. He said it is an amazing depth, which in his opinion is historically accurate and brilliantly analyzed as only an ”eye-witness" could have done. As a Finbarrian eye-witness, Chukwudi Dikko compliments that the write-up is a fine job to post the article in the way it appeared. However, I appreciate his inclusion of the name of the great Coach at St. Finbarrs who happened to be Mike Malagu. My friend was happy he later played with him for Shell Club in Lagos. He further mentioned that Emeka James and himself ended up as roommates at University of Lagos (UNILAG).

Another important name that was left out which my friend gracefully filled in was Father Slattery, the Great Principal at Finbarrs who created the most successful Football Academy that produced the bulk of players for the Super Eagles throughout the 70s, 80s and 90s. One of the regrets he listed in a sad note is this: “It is sad that Governor Jakande's free education program in Lagos State and the hijacking of all private Missionary Schools unintentionally destroyed great schools and great programs like St. Finbarrs, St. Gregory, and CMS Grammar Schools among others. The collapse of these great programs ultimately and inevitably led to the collapse of Nigerian football, as the supply chain of great talents became disrupted.”

In general, one can praise Stephen Keshi for the feat he has accomplished over his soccer career which has taken him across countries with huge experiences and bigger dreams of how to transmit what he acquired to younger Nigerians in the field. Stephen Keshi, as I must recall, has always beamed himself to search-sports cameras as a star and model to Nigerian football. With discipline and strong character to focus on issues and make the connections with less arrogance, Nigerians will continue to shower him with praises due to a legend. His contemporaries such as Amokachi, Nwankwo, Okocha, Amunike, Siasia, Finidi, Nwanu, Oliseh and Taribo have rallied around him - mentally, physically and through messages like no other soccer legend in Nigeria. The goodwill and massive support at the moment which Stephen Keshi, his colleagues and fans are flying around with should carry the business of soccer to no limits for all Nigerians and Africans who are in this career field.

To put it simply, “praise” is a good word and a follower of a hero, a legend and a goal getter. It is Keshi of our time in Nigerian soccer story, the man of the moment with demonstrated ability and capacity to lead and win as a home guy. Soccer is a popular aggressive team sport where young players clash with their skills, energies, experiences and opportunities, including the manner in which calling of the shot-egos by the powers that be and administrative styles can either make or unmake championship dreams come true. In Keshi, we saw, we shouted, we supported, we transformed and we won with him.

Nigeria ran infectiously wild with jubilation in Keshi and his soccer boys. Bravo! All we are saying is get us more championships by doing what legendary figures do best! They do not quit, nor threaten to quit, rather they surprise you, despite challenges, with timely results as you caused to happen with the African Nations Cup Championship victory as a player and as a coach.            

Let us not forget that we celebrate the Black History Month in February of every year. African Spirituality and Emancipation is an article posted in Otedo.com of which I have read and learnt some historical backgrounds about how slaves in the west were given a religious belief for a new life in cultural history. Though contrary to theirs (religious lives) at home and at exportation, the slaves were to cope with the realities of their time. I guess any reader will appreciate what I saw in this article too. It can make you cry, agree or disagree with the slave owners and missionaries of the time. 

Today, we see various arguments around why gun is law in the American so-called Second Amendment - The Right to Bear Arms - and the question that quickly strikes one to ask is this: to bear arms against who? Figuring the answer out, first is to tame the conquered slaves in the Americas when slaves were the main source of fear to the slave-owners because slave uprising was in vogue to seek freedom to become normal humans. You will surely follow the website's argument in which it is made clear that enslavement of the slaves was systematically and sporadically approached through religious engagement - in a new mental state and material poverty to gain loyalty of the slave population. February like you all know is the month known as the Black History Month. Reviews of life experiences of the slaves and particularly Africans in the diaspora is worth the struggles for change, opportunity, security and intercultural accommodation of the human population groups.    

Otedo.com states in the article that the relationship between slavery and religion is a well-attested one, with Christianity playing a prominent role both in the continuation of slavery and in the abolitionist movement. Every year, the British West Indies celebrate the abolition of slavery in the British Empire, which took place 1 August 1834 (approximately thirty years before all blacks became free in the “Land of the Free”). In remembrance of the suppression of indigenous African beliefs by Christian slave-owners, the people of Trinidad and Tobago mark the occasion with a Blessing of the Ground ceremony, celebrating the survival of native spiritual traditions as a symbol of black freedom from white religious orthodoxy. 

 The imposition of Christian dogma on slaves forced native beliefs underground, but slaves continued to show a faith in primal religion despite the risk of discovery by their owners. In an attempt at wholesale subjugation, the white man enslaved his fellow man not only physically, but also mentally, using religion as the tool. As Dara E. Healey of Trinidad and Tobago’s Guardian explains, The process of mental enslavement—religion is a spiritual weapon, witchcraft, superstition, heathenism, loathsome pagan idolatry[—]these are just a few of the degrading descriptions of traditional African religion used during the centuries of   enslavement. 

 By preaching with absolute, adamant certainty that the sole path to salvation lay in Jesus Christ (a kindly white man with a chestnut beard, white robe, and red sash), and that eternal torment awaited those who could not believe in the need for a blood sacrifice, white clergy employed spiritual guilt and shame to chip away at the slave’s psyche and eventually break her down into a compliant, malleable laborer. But the white, evangelical Christian god was not to be too accommodating—only enough to show slaves their sin. “Paradoxically”, Healey continues, “while Christianity was introduced both on the African continent and in the diaspora to show the heathens the error of their ways, there were just as many vigorous attempts to prevent them from being able to read the Bible”, explaining that, Learning about a better, whiter god was one thing, but there was real fear that if the enslaved actually began to read the Bible and learnt of the teachings of Jesus, that they would have begun to entertain notions of equality. 

 Essentially, then, slave-owners would lull their slaves into a stupor with the hope of salvation offered by the white man’s god-figure while concealing from them the ideas of equality present in the sacred and religious literature of that very same religion. The message was loud and clear, “While we will show you spiritual salvation, we will deny you earthly freedom.” 

 This clever tactic of intimidation and indoctrination still exists today, with the same goal of wheedling stray sheep back into the flock by preaching that the one and only ticket to heaven is belief in atonement through the crucifixion of Jesus Christ, and that any other path to spiritual salvation is a wicked detour, an insolent and premeditated slap in God’s face. Most of these “wayward paths”, as Healey notes, are outside the monotheistic ecclesiastical spectrum. In a truly inspiring passage from the evangelical Inspire magazine, dogmatist Dr. Don Carson warned Christians at a recent Keswick convention about following a spiritual path not centered on the Christ avatar:

 I don’t want you to think that Christians today should be robustly doctrinal and not emotional, or without any sense of the mystical experience of God. I’m merely saying that the pursuit of the mystical experience of God, abstracted from the gospel,   abstracted from the mediation of Christ, abstracted from the way we are reconciled to God, can actually become a kind of idolatry, a kind of paganism that sidesteps the cross.  

In other words, don’t be just robustly doctrinal—be robustly doctrinal and emotional. And, on top of that, it is dangerous to pursue spirituality (such as African shamanism) for its own sake. The spokesperson for spirituality (e.g. Jesus Christ) is more important than spirituality itself; the man who says “do good to your neighbor” is more venerable than the actual deed of doing good to your neighbor. But good deeds are beside the point in a religion preoccupied with the doctrines of grace and atonement. The basic message is, “God became a human and committed suicide so that he would not have to torture you for eternity due to the imperfection that he created in you (and blood must be drawn, no matter what), and, folks, the good news is that he won’t torture you for eternity if you believe he killed himself for you.” Moreover, what is truly ironic about Carson’s accusation of idolatry among primal religions is the fact that the fixation on the Christ figure itself constitutes the supreme idolatry—an excessive devotion to and adoration of a supernatural figure, all in spite of good deeds. 

 At the same convention, speaker Jonathan Stephens heightened the irony when he said on the same theme, “It is hugely important that we open our minds to see the Christ-centeredness of the whole Bible—it is all about Him. How do we improve our holiness? By fixing our eyes on Jesus. If Christ is the center of your life and your thinking, then your life will be transformed by His grace.” In other words, we should open our minds to the idea of closing our minds to every other conduit to spirituality than the holy teacher Jesus Christ of Nazareth. Jesus. Jesus, Jesus, Jesus. Not feeding the hungry, not giving to the poor, not living in harmony with nature. Jesus. Makes one want to break out in song: “Jesus, Jesus, Jesus—sweetest name I know. / Fills my every longing, keeps me singing as I go.” Following this logic, the man who speaks the message is more important than the message itself, despite the fact that the man was extolling the actual words he spoke, and not himself. 

 But what does all this have to do with celebrating traditional African religion on Emancipation Day, with the Blessing of the Ground ceremony which marks a primal return to a more holistic spirituality? Perhaps the black community of Trinidad and Tobago, and the other former West Indian slave colonies, seek to liberate their spiritual conscience from a self-styled authority. Like other pagans and heathens burdened with the guilt that they have been winnowed out of paradise, they proudly refute the unreasonable doctrine that an earth-centered polytheistic religion which nurtures social stability, coping mechanisms, and a respect for nature, should constitute a malicious threat to some distant, jealous god—especially when their god is not so distinct from nature in the first place.

Link to Otedo.com for this culled essay to reflect on Black History Month - 2013. http://ihuanedo.ning.com/?xg_source=msg_mes_network

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