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Paul Adujie…Paul I. Adujie Print E-mail
Written by Mr. Sabella Ogbobode Abidde   
Tuesday, 15 January 2008

This is going to be a rather short commentary on a mutual friend of all those who have had the good fortune to read and or write for this and other venerable sites. This is about Mr. Paul I. Adujie. For quite sometime now Paul has been absent from the pages of NVS and other sites. And quiet frankly I miss his style; I miss his subject matters, I miss his stubbornness, and I also miss his unfaltering devotion to Nigeria and to the causes he believes him. He was a man who believed deeply in the dreams and positions President Obasanjo took; and for that he suffered in the hands of some Villagers.

 

After all this years, I am still not sure why he took the positions he took. I am not sure why he failed to abandon Obasanjo even when Obasanjo became a liability to himself and to the nation. I am not sure why he refused to abandon ship even when it became obvious he was in the minority. Paul didn’t care whether his position was popular or not. He didn’t give a razzass whether or not he was in the minority. He didn’t give a hoot about the booing, the name callings, and the catcalls. He was steadfast in his belief. How he was able to take all the verbal abuse was beyond me.

 

For a while, it was as if readers were waiting in the alley to punch and pound on him. His essays seem to irritate readers. I remember telling him on a number of occasions to “take it easy,” or not to respond to respondents. But he was a fighter. He had heart. He gave as much as he took. But there was never a time he complained about the punches, there was never a time he showed signs of fatigue. Through it all, he wrote and behaved like a man on a just cause. Perhaps he was. He believed strongly in the things he was writing and responding to.

 

There were times he annoyed me. There were times he pissed me off. And I remember telling him, on more than half-a-dozen occasions, that I was going to take him to the cleaners, shred him to pieces on the pages of the NVS, NIA, Gamji, and other sites. He’d laugh and tell me to “bring it on.” He was never afraid. I am not good at complimenting people, but Paul was. Even his criticisms of my essays were mild and respectful.

 

I am no longer sure of how and when I first came across his name and commentaries; I only now remember that we had a very rough and hostile beginning. That must have been in the summer of 2004 when I was at Norman , Oklahoma . But by the spring of 2005, we’d exchanged numbers and phone calls and all that.

 

From time to time, we’d exchange emails back and forth. Through it all, Paul refused to tell me his ethnic background. He even refused to tell my mother (when my mother asked him in the summer of 2006). For him, he was a Nigerian, an African. After all this years, I still couldn’t tell if he was an Igbo, Ijaw, Tiv, Urhobo or a mixture of this and that and everything in between. It was enough that he was a Nigerian. He was a proud Nigerian.

 

The last time Paul Adujie and I had any “meaningful conversation” was when I was planning a trip to New York (in May 2007). We were going to meet up in Manhattan and then invite Mr. Sonala Olumhense, who also lived in New York . Paul and I also broached asking Miss Folasayo Dele-Ogunrinde to join us for drinks and dinner. Since both of us had been somewhat hostile to her in the past, we wanted to make it up to her; but we weren’t sure who was going to call or email her. I knew I wasn’t going to make the move since I was used to women doing the asking. Fortunately or unfortunately, the trip didn’t take place. I only recently made it out to New York but didn’t meet with Paul.

 

Months later, Paul and I had our fallout. Or at least I thought we had our fallout. Over what? I couldn’t tell you. I couldn’t tell you because I really don’t know. But my guess is that he was mad at me for something I said or didn’t say. What is that something? I don’t know -- only that he has refused to acknowledge my emails and phone calls.

 

Paul’s last posting was on Saturday, 13 October 2007 (Nuhu Ribadu: A True Defender of The Rule of Law). However, one of his most memorable treatises was posted on Wednesday, 19 July 2006: “Mourning, Culture & the Individual.” From time to time, I still read it. It was real. It was honest. It was heartfelt. He was that kind of a writer: his writings have a way of touching one’s psyche. Hate or love his position, it is almost impossible to be indifferent to his worldview.

 

Wherever he may be, whatever he may be doing -- at home or abroad -- I wish him well. And I am sure a lot of Villagers misses him, and wish him well, too. Happy New Year, Paul Adujie...where are you?

 

Sabidde@yahoo.com

 

 




RobotRobot is offline 
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 # 1

var sbtitle2608=encodeURIComponent(Paul Adujie...Read the full article.

Posted by Robot| 15.01.2008 19:48

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Bode EluyeraBode Eluyera is offline 
In Purgatory

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 # 2

You won't believe it, but I was thinking about him just 10 minutes ago. I just noticed that I haven't seen his posts for some time now. I just hope that he is fine.

Posted by Bode Eluyera| 15.01.2008 20:01

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emjemj is offline 
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 # 3

Hmmmmm.......Sabella omo Abidde, sepe u did not know nor hear dat Paul has relocated to Barbados...chei.....do not say i told you o....but he got subdued by wan kain chikito laik dat...wat's dat her name again oo(afro-poet)........hmmm:lol::lol:

Really, i miss Paul ILN too...i remember those days of TT..wahala and Objoke's shenanigans...he's always going about in the village with his Support-Megaphone singing in da Hot-Sun Objoke's praises to high-heavens...and of-course ends up in da Dog-house or sent on complusory exile by da Don himself....lol:eek::p

PS.....but really, wia da....is NFL...Niaja4Life?:)

Posted by emj| 15.01.2008 21:32

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12345671234567 is offline 
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 # 4

I personally miss Paul’s writings / commentaries on NVS. I hope he is fine and can’t wait to read more from him on this site.I always admire his rugged stands on various controversial issues. Paul, if you still love Nigeria as you always claim, come out and say something.Dont you know that you have succeded in convincing some people to still have some love in their heart for Nigeria?I am an Example.

Posted by 1234567| 15.01.2008 22:11

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NWANZANWANZA is offline 
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 # 5

You never know what anyone is going through, may be he joined OBJ in retirement after May' 29.

Posted by NWANZA| 16.01.2008 01:50

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benniebennie is offline 
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 # 6

Sabella,

Happy new year to you.

I am encouraged that we can still be our brother's keepers on NVS! Those brothers who co-ordinated the protest on behalf of Osamuyi Aikpitanhi with Paul in New York/Washington last year should assist in contacting him if that is not asking for too much.

Paul, if you are reading this, I hope you are well. I also disagreed with some of your viewpoints on issues but we love you (hope I can say that) as you can see.

Thanks

Bennie

Posted by bennie| 16.01.2008 06:40

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AbraxasAbraxas is offline 
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 # 7

Hi, folks!

I Love Nigeria (pass Mojisola congo), alias Mr. Paul Adujie, Esq., is currently in purgatory, on a 30-month VOLUNTARY self exile, post-OBJ. His temporary transit visa into our Village of origin has been withdrawn unconditionally, for introducing several married women to his mentor, Baba Gbenga, General Okikiolakan Aremu Segun Obasanjo (GCFR)

Obrigado, ojare.

Muchas gracias.

Don Juan-Carlos ABRAXAS (III)

Posted by Abraxas| 16.01.2008 07:40

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overdryvoverdryv is offline 
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 # 8

In this village where anonymity is the rule, anything could happen to anybody any time. Our wives and closest friends dont even know our aliases. I hope Paul Adujie is his real name, if not how do we know he has not travel the way of Bola Ige,Abacha, Dele Giwa and co? We must invent a means to know those who are still around and kicking so as to avoid dialoguing with ghosts. I give Paul Adujie till 12 midday tomorrow to respond even with a line as short as " I still dey o"

Posted by overdryv| 16.01.2008 09:52

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WayoGuyWayoGuy is offline 
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 # 9

Did you guys ever consider the possibility that there never was a Paul Adujie and that all these years the villagers of NVS and the Nigerian Internet community had been hallucinating about his existence, and that the figment existed only in our imagination?

You know the Internet is a Twilight Zone.

Just a thought.

Posted by WayoGuy| 16.01.2008 09:58

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mulanmulan is offline 
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 # 10

I do miss ILN, that optimistic voice among the naysayers. He made me love naija even more...

Paul, where art thou?

Posted by mulan| 16.01.2008 10:48

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