| Still on Soyinka and a divided Nigeria |
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| Written by George Onmonya | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Thursday, 15 February 2007 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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(This article has already been published in Daily Trust newspaper of Tuesday, February 13, 2007) After my article, Re: Kongis Rebellion, a reply to Mohammad Al-Ghazalis Kongis Rebellion of 23th January 2007, was published in Daily Trust newspaper of 6th February, 2007, I was bombarded by text messages and emails from all over the country. The first was from a Yoruba man who said and I quote, You are my man and God will surely multiply your wisdom. Im very glad reading your rejoinder on Kongis Rebellion and guess you have placed Al-Ghazali where he belongs. Thanks. Ill try to mail you. I am Ajibose Omotayo. The second was from an angry undergraduate in Faculty of Law, ABU, Zaria , and I quote, Just read your rejoinder in the Daily Trust. Since the Daily and Weekly Trust papers are sectional papers how comes you patronize them? It is a shame people like you still exist. What then is the difference between your rejoinder and that of Al-Ghazali piece? From Abdul Muhammad. And another goes like this, Re:Kongis Rebellion. George, Please try and be objective in future. Nobody can take it from Soyinka, he has proven over the years to be xenophobic towards the Hausas, and Moslems. The former was a Yoruba man who thought I was supporting a Yoruba man, and the latter were Hausas who thought I was condemning a Hausa man for a Yoruba man. It is the Nigerian way, and for me with no apologies, what I had written, Re:Kongis Rebellion, was my own personal opinion on Muhammad Al-Ghazalis Kongis Rebellion and nothing more. I have read The Man Died and it left me with no doubt why some section of the north see the writer of that piece as xenophobic and even accuse him of tribalism. Wole Soyinka , Nigeria s literary icon and 1986 winner of Nobel Prize for literature, has himself not done much to be tagged a nationalist. I would say he is not a nationalist, but who is or who has been in Nigerian history? Tell me. During my undergraduate years in Bayero University , Kano , studying History, I never came across Soyinkas The Man Died. I wish I had. It would have helped me more in understanding the 1967 to 1970 Nigerian civil war. The book was simply not available anywhere and I only had the opportunity of reading the book sometimes years after I had completed my NYSC. After the first three chapters of a very difficult book of lamentation I knew why the book was banned by the Yakubu Gowon administration, or so I heard that the book was banned. The Man Died is capable of inciting, stimulation, and provocation, and still is. Soyinka simply blamed the north for causing all the problems. Who wouldnt? This man had been locked up by the administration of Yakubu Gowon, a government perceived as a northern government, until the end of the war for conniving with the Biafran government which the Federal Government of Nigeria saw as treason. But then The Man Died is not a historical book. It is the experience of the author who was imprisoned during the civil war and his opinion about and of the war.
Wole Soyinka should have known that some posterity of northern breed would never forget or forgive him for The Man Died and that most of them would never see the book as a personal reflection of an authors experience but as an insult. But then in reality what has changed from Soyinkas The Man Died and todays Nigeria ? Not much I tell you. But then who wants reality? We are a superstitious and highly sentimental people and reality is the last thing we all want to hear in Nigeria . And the reality is that Igbos and other natives of Nigeria are still being massacred in Moslem dominated northern Nigeria on any flimsy reason, be it Danish cartoon or United States war on terror far off the shore of Africa. I have watched hundreds died in what seem like images from the movie Hotel Rwanda . Tribalism, nepotism, religious bigotry, and hypocrisy are still the garments of most Nigerians and we all wear it shamelessly. During the Sharia imbroglio hundreds were massacred in Kaduna , Jos, Kano , and they were retaliations in the Igbos eastern part of Nigeria . These were human beings we are talking about here. But who cares? I wouldnt mention the Niger-Delta because it is a different kind of problem all together. The Niger-Delta people claimed they are fighting against marginalization by the Nigerian government and the oil companies. It is not a tribal thing, religious or ethnicity. What Soyinka failed to do is identifying with the north. I havent heard him give lectures in Bayero University , Kano , or University of Sokoto , or in the University of Maiduguri . He has managed somehow to isolate himself from the north. Soyinka must know that as a Nobel Prize winner all Nigerians want to identify with him and isolating himself from certain parts would only result to mordant criticisms by the intelligentsias from that part that he never liked them anyway. I respect a man who says his mind and refuse to follow the crowd, and Wole Soyinka is that man. Like Karl Marx said, follow your beat no matter what people say. The replies I got from those fellow Nigerians shows a divided country. We are only united when the Nigerian Super Eagles are playing a football match, and after the match we withdraw back into our shells of suspicion, xenophobia, and even hatred and disgust for one another. I dont expect praises from any Yoruba or insult from any Hausa person because I express an opinion in a newspaper. Wole Soyinka to me is not a Hausa, Igbo or a Yoruba, from west, north, south or east, but a Nigeria who has excelled in the field of literature and is supposed to be a person to be celebrated by all Nigerians.
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Posted by Robot| 15.02.2007 23:50