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"Adichie gave a good account as to why
she is the shinning star of what Obiwu called the Age of Exile, that includes
the likes of Ben Okri, Emman Usman Shehu, Olu Oguibe, Ezenwa-Ohaeto, Wale
Okediran, Okey Ndibe, Maxim Uzoatu, Ike Oguine, T. Akachi-Ezeigbo, Uche Nduka,
Biyi Bandele-Thomas, Sola Osofisan, Esiaba Irobi, Ogaga Ifowodo, Chris Abani,
Nnorom Azuonye, Promise Okekwe, Helon Habila, Toyin Adewale-Gabriel, Obi
Nwakamma, Sumaila Umaisha, Maik Nwosu, Obiwu, Chidi Ngangah, Unoma Azuah, Akin
Adesokan, Isidore Diala, Nnedimma Okorafor, Chika Unigwe, Nana Embaga, Sefi
Attah, Helen Oyeyemi, and Uzodinma Iweala."
Dear Rudolf,
You may not be aware of this fact but the
question of who is an exile, and more particularly, a Nigerian writer currently in exile, has
been hotly debated on the only listserve I belong to: Krazitivity. You happen to belong to that list, if my memory serves me right. It is
comprised mostly of younger Nigerian writers, journalists, cultural enthusiasts
and a handful of non-Nigerians who work on or are interested in Nigerian
literature. As it happened, I was the central reference point of that debate
for the reason that I DENY vehemently the claim that I am an exile.
I do not intend to repeat the grounds for
my denial of that undeserved label here.
Suffice it to say that I left Nigeria
voluntarily, and have enjoyed an unimpeded freedom to return several times
since. That freedom is not in any apparent danger of being infringed, despite
the lamentable state of our country. When indeed I faced the conditions that
should have approximated a need for me to go into exile, and the opportunity
was given to me in Germany in 1998, I spurned it. Not even then did I think exile an option -
I wasn't then facing imminent death or the threat of such unthinkable danger as
only exile could obviate. And if I didn't find it an option then, what on earth
would make it an option now or when I left Nigeria
for the unfashionable goal of pursuing post-graduate studies in literature, a
field dear to my heart and which I always knew I would leave the law for some
day?
Exile to me is not an academic thing, a
chic label to be assumed for whatever reasons. Exile for those who have been
truly forced into its horrendous condition is akin to death. It is in fact what
it meant from antiquity: banishment from, and so death to, the father/mother-land.
It is not a metaphor; not just another term to be drawn out of postmodernism's
capacious bag of chic radicalism posing as rigorous intellectual thought. Ask
those who have been or are still exiles; consult the late Edward Said!
Listen, I am not an exile, and hope never
to be an exile. If Obiwu considers himself an exile, good for him. I wish him
all the pleasures minus the pains of such an existence. Let the exile be, and
let the non-exile also be, I remember saying to him and his fellow-travellers
then. To one like me who is not an exile, I wish that he would be decent
enough to allow me the right of defining who I am. Identity politics is not the
prerogative of scholars and would-be scholars. Actually, I am shocked that you
take his word for it as to those Nigerians who are in exile. When did Obiwu
become the oracle on the subject?
I thought at first not to respond to that
objectionable passage in your report of the Okigbo conference in Boston, but this is
the age of the Internet and the knowledge that
your readers might go away thinking that I am an exile riled me enough
to enter this demurral. Please be informed that I am not an exile of any sort,
not even of the mind (psychological exiles, they call them!) -- that dubious
category that pseudo intellectuals like to deploy to cover every case that
resists their definitions.

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Posted by Robot| 02.10.2007 04:58