Tuesday, 14 March 2017

2face Could Have Been A Future Contender Of A Nobel Prize If



In 1913, Bengali Polymath, Rabindranath Tagore was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature, ‘because of his profoundly sensitive, fresh and beautiful verse, by which, with consummate skill, he has made his poetic thought, expressed in his own English words, a part of the literature of the West’. Tagore was a songwriter whose unique poetic overtone hitherto defines Indian and Bengali musical arts. With over a century gap between, the American Songwriter Bob Dylan won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2016 ‘for having created new poetic expressions within the great American Song.’

The above facts have been stated quite clearly to show those who may laugh off the title of this article that Songwriters, like novelists, playwrights and poets, still have a stake in the most distinguish literary prize.


Nigeria's 2face Idibia

Nigeria’s 2face is a Songwriter and an award-winning singer, whose songs (especially ‘African Queen’) have earned him the trademark as Nigeria’s finest artist. His songs – since the beginning of the last decade – have continued to revolutionize Africa’s singing culture.

But recently, he could have added another glory to his crown – by being a future contender of a Nobel Prize either in peace or in literature – if he had carried on with his planned protest of showcasing to the world the hardship this dispensation chaired by Buhari has melted on Nigerians across the social strata.

2face’s protest had become necessary. It came up at that time the downtrodden were yawning for an intervention to address the hike of the prices of market commodities which stood above hundred percent. This protest, if it was not aborted, could have exposed our sufferings to the world and then channelled 2face to the highest international recognition which could have earned him a spot in the Nobel Prize constellation.

But amid threats and counter-threats, the protest was cancelled, and I do not blame 2face for his action. At least, he deserves accolade for taking the bold steps to announce a protest. For me, he has already shown his disapproval. With the secret threats he received and open intimidations he received from the government and even compatriots, it was enough to put an end to an already publicized protest. Yet, I must say here that if he should have continued with the protest, he may have earned the respect of the Swedish Academy or the Norwegians.


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Why I Love You: Poem by Ohikhuare Isuku

I do not love you
because I long to cast
a life-long smile
upon your flashy cheeks,

or caress your darling sheen
while your awesome lips
cave into mine
like two rainbows embracing,

rather do I adore you
because of your comeliness;
for when the dry comes,
the verdant field loses
Its greenness and beauty
to the acrid dust


I love you because I must;
because like my breath,
without your tender touch
like the dew of dawn, 
or your mellifluous whispering,
or your ageless kisses,
I would be lifeless –
long gone into the abyss.

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Friday, 10 March 2017

Why And When I Began Writing (A Brief Autobiography)

Author: Ohikhuare Isuku

When I was quite younger, I had this childish belief that those who wrote books were of celestial perfection. They never inhabited this world, or if at all they did, they were as precious as saints. I reverend books because it struck me sometimes how stories were imagined; how characters were moulded and allowed to play definitive roles throughout a book.  There was no writer closed by which could neutralize this claim. I was silent too: I sought no one’s consent as regards the thought I had brewed. So, throughout my infant years, this thought led me through, and thus I saw printed books as sacred: things which fell from the sky and those whose names were inscribed on the cover as authors, I saw them as gods of books.

We were not taught Literature throughout primary. Then, the subject – Literature – was not in the state’s educational curriculum. But my mum bought books for me sometimes when she went to the market. So, I was not alien to literature, and in fact, we read comprehension passages in our English texts adapted from such great African classics as Chinua Achebe’s Chike and the River and Things Fall Apart, as well as Kenneth Kauda’s Zambia Must Be Free.

Before entering Secondary, I had read all the children books my mum bought for me, from Ngozi Goes to the Market (a pamphlet with so much picture illustrations) to Sugar Girl (a book which first pulled tears from my eyes). My elder sister was already in Secondary by then and she bought all the recommended literature texts, such as: Rag to Riches, Shattered Dream and Medicine for Money. I read those books when she came back from school during weekends or holidays.

By the time I got into Junior Secondary, I was already well-prepared for literature than any of my mates. The day we travelled down to school – to the apartment my sister and brother were already living – I found Cyprian Ekwesi’s An African Night Entertainment somewhere on the pile of books. It was a novel my brother had read in Class One: about Zainobe and Kumurikiki – a book of love and vengeance. My brother had told me about this book and it had formed a solid thought in my mind even before I travelled to join them in Secondary School. I read that book in one stretch because the language was friendly and the plotting was genuine.

In Class One, we read three novels. In first term, it was Eze Goes to School. Second term was Lamb’s Tales from Shakespeare and third term was Treasure Island. Our Literature teacher was the principal of the school. He was an old man with protruded tommy and a spirited walk. He knew me personally, so I had to be attentive whenever he was in class.

His teaching was thorough; full of life, and for the first time in my life, fictions became real. I wanted to be Eze in Eze Goes to School, live in the little hamlet of Ohia under thatched roof, and trek three miles to the village of Ama to attend school. When we began reading Lamb’s Tales, I loved The Tempest, Much Ado About Nothing, A Midsummer Night Dream, Twelfth Night, Merchant of Venice and Macbeth. I wished I existed in the period in which the plays are set. Sometimes, I imagined being in the vividly described settings, dining and chatting with the characters whose pictures have become real in my thought.

In Class Two, apart from Cyprian Ekwesi’s Passport of Mallam Ilia we read, other books we read were plays such as: City of God, The Verdict of the Gods, Yawning Hollow, etc, and then poems such as: Abiku by J.P. Clark, Abiku by Wole Soyinka, The Vultures by David Diop, Piano and Drum by Gabriel Okara. Our Literature teacher was a dedicated woman who taught us these works passionately by going as far as outlining the figure of speeches as well as the themes of these fabulous works. This flared my literary interest and would later have a positive impact on my literary odyssey.

In Class Three, the literary interest fell because we had a new teacher for literature. The new teacher was dedicated of course, but her aim (either intentionally or unintentionally) was to cover the syllabus so we could do well in our forthcoming external exams. But we read novels such as: My Only Son, College days of John Ojo and Ngozi My Daughter. In Class Four, we read the plays: Sons and Daughters and Government Inspector; and in Class Five which was my last Literature year, we read the Novels: Silas Marner and Buchi Emencheta’s The Joys of Motherhood.

But I had started writing earlier on. In Class Two, after reading the Plays: City of God, The Verdict of the Gods and Yawning Hollow, one afternoon I returned from school to begin writing what I intended to be a few-leafed play, but as I wrote, the story expanded and took a different form in my brain. I remember the storyline was about accusations and vindication. After writing many different leaves before sunset, I bound them together using a broomstick. Not long after, I wrote a novella – John Laslie – and began a novel – The Slave Twins – which I later abandoned because the storyline would not wind up into a close.

In those days, whenever I wrote, I read and appreciated my works alone. My immediate family had never thought it was sane for someone who had once aspired to be a Mechanical Engineer, to be seen doing what those who would major in the arts should do. But they did not discourage me though, and even if they had tried, my strong-willed soul would have spurned any attempt.

In my home, my brother was a bit close to literature. He had read all the books I had read, but there were some of the books he read that was kept away from me intentionally or otherwise. I was still young when he read Things Fall Apart. Our mother bought it for him, because she too had been obsessed with the character – Unoka – when she read the book in her own days. She spoke to us about Unoka as if she had met the fictitious character once in her life. When she teased me as being lazy, she saw me as Unoka – Okonkwo’s father – who was improvident; a man who while men crossed seven forests and rivers in search of virgin land, pitched his farm in an expired land closed by. I did not read Things Fall Apart because our mother felt I was still too young to comprehend the vocabularies used. But, before then, I had begun to search Michael West Dictionary, for unfamiliar words. Perhaps, the old lady knew little about this progress.

It was after my secondary education I actually began an active literary life. Before now, my novel manuscript which I had dreamt of working on had got missing while packing out of my dormitory, and the damsel I was so obsessed with in secondary had parted ways with me. Due to these occurrences, I reclined to solitude for one year I sought admission into the University.


Our home was a brown bungalow almost on the tail of an isolated street. The compound was a very large one, lined with coconut, pear and mango trees at the edge where it bordered the wide red-earth street. During the dry season, especially afternoons, when the sun took a fierce look at the world from the peak of the bluish sky, it was under the mango tree we camped. Here in this partially isolated home, I stayed for several months, reading and writing poems and plays – those infant works I have since disowned.

It was the poetic trail my brother crossed that led me into the world of poetry. I remember he had written two fascinating poems – Marriage and Matrimony and The Black Gold. Taking up the challenge, I drew out my first poems for him to see. I became engrossed with the art soon afterward, so that when he stopped writing poetry, I continued with the craft. During this period, I bought a phone which could access the internet. It was with the aid of this device, I read over two thousands poems: great works from W.B. Yeast, Edgar Alan Poe, T.S. Elliot, Maya Angelou, Pablo Neruda, William Shakespeare, Andrew Marvell, Rudyard Kipling, Ralph Waldo Emerson, and so many other great poets of the western world. At this same time, my friend – Victor – who was also in love with literature gave me an African Anthology. In that Anthology, I rediscovered wonderful African poets like J.P. Clark, Wole Soyinka, David Diop, Leopold Senghor, MJC Echeruo, Gabriel Okara, Kofi Awoonor, Kwesi Brew, etc. Later, after reading Poems of Black Africa edited by Wole Soyinka, I would discover other younger generation of African poets like Odia Ofeimun, Afam Akeh, etc.

It was the same friend of mine – Victor – who is worthy of my thanks that gave me many of Shakespearean plays to read. Plays such as: A Midsummer Night Dream, Twelfth Night, Julio Caesar, Merchant of Venice, Macbath, Romeo and Juliet and Hamlet. Also from him, I got Wole Soyinka’s The Lion and the Jewel and J.P. Clark’s Three plays: The Songs of Goat, The raft and The Masquerade. These last few books moulded my playwriting life forever.  Later on, I would read Soyinka’s The Jero’s Plays, The Strong Breed, Mad and Specialists, A Dance of the Forest, Kongi’s Harvest, Death and the King Horseman, A Play of Giant, The Interpreter, Ake: The Years of my Childhood, as well as Ola Rotimi’s The Gods Are Not To Blame.

Of recent, I read all of Chinua Achebe’s fictions and read and reread Chimamanda Adichie’s wonderful novels. My writing skill has also been nurtured over the years and I am trying to build a very unique voice. I have written many play manuscripts and so many poems. Poema so many hearts have enjoyed. The first draft of my novel is underway. My debut play – The Ballot and the Sanctuary (written with the name: Emmanuel Isuku) – was published in 2014 by University Press PLC Ibadan.


Yet, as I advance in my writing age, I have got to realize that I do not write for people to be happy (they may be). I actually write because it is my life; and if I dare don’t do it, I will fall into depression. 

Ohikhuare Isuku,
(Author of The Ballot and the Sanctuary)
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Thursday, 9 March 2017

Shades of Love: Poem by Chidinma Ahika






Pretty pretty sprouts not the nitty-gritty,
Much burnt in infatuation flame,
Darkness falls and glisten wings,
After time shall tell today's in shrewd shame.

The curtain draws close,
When spectacles play sweetest,
A foe of love the heart does pose,
Bleeding in hemorrhage, breathing listless.

If only her gaze will scale before the now,
If only truth will defend my Vows,
Love pangs will set reality down.

At times love seems like a seed sown,
When tendered right its stems  grow,
When gardened wrong roots folds to sleep,
With harvest to nothing reap.

Other times love comes as a terrible liar;

It tells you light is getting nearer,
When night is blazing fairer.
It says the sun will sound later,
When dusk is blowing better,
Love can come as a terrible liar.



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Tuesday, 7 March 2017

My One Silly Suggestion

Recently, I visited some friends at the University of Benin who are medical students. In their off campus apartment at Osasogie, we branched off into an argument relevant to the unemployment state in Nigeria today. I began by telling them how compressed the labour market was; how graduates jostled for jobs which paid lesser than the minimum wage.

‘I have consistently watched graduates produced since 2010,’ I said, ‘none I know of has had a well-paying job.’

‘That is even better,’ Precious said. He was lying face-up on the only bed in the self-contain, and there was a smile on his face, a kind of perfect smile which made all he spoke bear certitude. ‘My brother’s friend graduated since 2009 without a job. If that was all, it would have been nice. He got scholarship to study in the United Kingdom and came back to embrace a job paying less than thirty thousand naira.’

‘Even the medical field is no longer safer as before.’ I said.

‘You are right,’ he replied frankly, ‘now a days, after medical school, it is very difficult to get a house-job.’

‘It is true,’ Confidence replied me rather gloomily, ‘and once you fail to do your house-manship for three years, your licence might be withdraw until you are able to pass a given exam.’


I felt it was too extreme: the case of unemployment in the country. The situation has started to affect doctors already as it does engineers. I suggested then, that in order to prevent medicine to go worthless the way other courses went as a result of unemployment, the number of persons who are admitted into the course should be further reduced. They both asked how, and when I told them only federal universities should be allowed to admit into medicine and the maximum number of students they should be allowed to admit should be twenty, my friends smiled as if my suggestion were silly. Smiling back at them, I further affirm that it would make doctors scarce, and vacancies available for employment. I nodded reluctantly while digesting my suggestion
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Monday, 6 March 2017

Coward Tales: Bright Afeikhe


Hardly had I dropped the phone
I was Just about slipping into
Bodily stillness and rest
When suddenly another ringing came.
Who could it be?
From sleep dazed eyes,
12am, No number, anxiety building up,
Sluggishly I fumbled with the thumb
Of my hand on the answer button
What came a voice!....pick that?
What if it was those people?
It could be those little people:
Seven dwarfs living alone in the
Woods, or maybe Allen strange.
A creepy feeling bugged at me;
My heart skipped and raced.
This is Nigeria I reasoned, those
Fairy tales be Disneyland making
I proceeded to make the answer button relevant
away from blurry thoughts, click and drag
when sudden sounds of music,
strange like voices whispering
Or was that hissing?! Hissing?! Snake!!!
Snake in my phone! or on it!
I broke a few world records
Jumping off my bed or flew rather
As time stood still, and menacing
When to my horror, beside my feet
Lay the handset,i kicked with
All fury, survival instinct
My shadow took on the stance
Of Hector when facing Hercules
And tonight was Troy to be.
I must survive this night to tell
my story! I whispered amidst shivering
lips
I am a relevant member of society
I don't smoke or drink, I obey rules.
I argued with death or reasoned rather
My ears arched back like a wolf
Scanning the room, listening while
My fists clenched, pictures of Jet Li
Scrolled in my memory, I preferred
Monkey style, or was it snake in the
Eagle shadow,that killed the cat
In the stillness of the woeful night,
Lets be alert I told my soul,
never mind came his reply, should we be
Outnumbered we could always scram
For the door, the door? Tempting
I felt like hugging that sweet voice
But now came remembrance...my keys!
Tied to the jack of my phone, a necessary
Precaution against alien Invasion,
I was an optimist in alien existence
but damned if I was going to be
a guinea pig in some galactic lab
In a scientific journal I had read that
aliens prefer to enter through doors
and exit through windows
The earth had stopped it's rotation
And now my phone under the bed
Where the hissing sound continued hissing
Like humming hissing, under the bed
As a man of action I knew I had to strike
Fast and scram,

I cleaned the sweat off my brows again
I dashed with the swiftness of a sudden strike
And lunged at my sneakers, I would be needing
That for the long journey ahead as supernaturally
I Tied up the ropes in a second, all the while darting
My eyes under the bed, nothing escaped my sight
I will remember this night I told myself as the night
where I came face to face with the dragon and survived
The night was still young and I wished
Day would suddenly come along with relative
Safety, just then the cries of Cicadas came
pouring in from outside adding to the horror
but just as I was in strategic planning
Considering all possible angles
On the best way to grab my keys and
Make a run for the door, a voice came
From under the bed, cool and automated
The blood in my skin ran dry and cold
The voice said "thank u for selecting
this song as your caller ringtone, bye"
The room went silent...as silent as a
Ticking bomb, like a zombie i
tiptoed to the foot of the bed and
cautiously stuck my fingers under
I felt my keys and......something else
cold unmoving, sinister....and waiting
Like a bolt of lightning, I struck the door
I was flying on my feet into the greying night
AFEIKHE BRIGHT
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Friday, 3 March 2017

Death is not an Enemy


Once a man wearies in years, he thinks more of another life; an eternal reunion with his forbears. Then, the mystery behind death is unarmed and his own death could be discussed over tea while he beams with smile as if it were his fortune that is being spoken of. I strongly see those who speak about their own death as the bravest people on earth. This is because, these set of persons, can attempt a far length to achieve what they set out to achieve even in the face of demise.

I was young once and I knew how the thought of death pricked me like needle; made me cry while in the dark; made me scared when at night I was alone at home. When people die in our climes, it is believed that their spirits find rest somewhere in the underworld where they wait patiently to be reincarnated into a full-fledged being.

As an infant, people always claimed they saw a spirit go before cries announced the passing to the silent night. They had given descriptions of their claims so that they became so real: sometimes they described spirit as a flash of silver light which cut through the moonless night momentarily and then faded forever, or as a huge giant that appeared at night with white garment and chilled aura, and whose head pierced into the clouds. Other time, it was the barking of dogs or their digging of the earth around the house or a wild chase of goats or sheep at night when nobody was actually chasing them.

These signs became so real in my infant mind, it scared me whenever dogs barked indiscriminately at night or there was a wild run of sheep or goat straying under the full moon. Whenever I saw a stray dog digging a shallow hole beside our brown bungalow, I would chase it off as though if there would be death at all, my vigorous chasing of the dog would halt it. That was the extent to which the fear of death pinned me down and flogged my infant reasoning. But now, due to aging, I have lost all these fears and doubted severally the virility of death’s superstitious claims. Nowadays, I think of my own aging and death with light heart. My discussion of my own demise as if it were a prize sometimes baffles me. Of course, it is one big prize, because somehow it would complement my life.  

When I recline to solitude and muse about the abstraction called life, I would mold myself into an immortal being or scenery like the mountains, valleys, the rivers, the oceans and their vast shores; and like the aforementioned, I would imagine my ageless self without (a glimpse of a beginning or an end) watch a baby born by his young parents and cared for by his grandparents. They visit the sea shore together for relaxation. Then, the child grows into a father, gets a wife and bears a son. His grandparents die and his parents become grandparents who visit the same sea shore with them. His parents die; he and his wife sooner become grandparents while their little boy grows into a man, marries and bears a son. The man (now as grandfather) visits that same sea shore with his wife, son, son’s wife and grandson for relaxation. When he dies eventually, the cycle continues till eternity, yet the sea shore remains bluntly unchanged. Sometimes, when I think deeply and place myself in the shoe of that sea shore which will watch many generations rise and fall under its unblinking gaze for eternity, I shiver and bless Death for his one salvation.  


Yes, being eternal scares me; living for eternity, watching the sun rise above the strands of clouds against the eastern horizon and setting in west scares me. Thus, if my wish is granted, after this one eventful life of consciousness, I would desire a peaceful rest of eternal unconsciousness, or a life where I would be reborn with zero memory of the previous life I had lived, grow old to die and be reborn into another world recurrently. I would desire a new start, not one stretch of eternity in which transformation would be denied me. I hate being in one location for a long time, hence, I say thanks to death for his kind rescue.  
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