Thursday, September 11, 2014

State of Emergency… Look back at the Nigerian Letter Spring…



I have been off the blog for a while but today I read through some posts I made in the past and I recalled the piece on the ‘Nigerian Letter Spring’…

It was a season of letters and I arrived at a conclusion that “…It is indeed a season of letters; it is an era of the Nigerian Letter-Spring… Take it or leave it… something is definitely about to happen!”

Let’s reflect a bit… what happened? What was the result of the letters…any difference…certainly not?

Sad as it may seem the anxiety and positive pulse I thought the letter spring will elicit all went with the wind “the Nigerian factor” stole the show.

Talk about the Nigerian factor? What on earth is it?

Rather than see the positive change, we see our great nation plunge deep into unfathomable crisis occasioned by the reckless corruption spring, Boko Haram spring, Ebola spring…which has sadly thought us the basic ethos of hygiene.

Nigeria is in a state of emergency…or does America know something?

Which way Nigeria?      



Thursday, December 19, 2013

The Nigerian Letter-Spring...




We’re in a season of letters and the whole world suddenly has its eye on Nigeria.

Seems like we’re bringing back the letters in terms of letter writing which was gradually fading into oblivion as our 21st century kids would have had to read in history books that once upon a time there was a world of letter writing (not pinging, texts, emails and the general social media bug).

Suddenly we have the letter bug… Thanks to our very own controversial yet comical ‘Baba’, the general that has refused to retire. His letter which I choose not to analyze has thrown open a wave of dialogues, monologues prologues, epilogues and all the ‘logues…’ that single letter has led to another letter from a daughter to a father; in the center stage we have his Excellency GEJ who for some strange reasons has had course to keep referring to letters in all his speeches.

Suddenly there’s an avalanche of responses, letters and counter letters to one letter written by a retired general not tired of the power of the pen.

Revolutions have happened at some point the world over, with some acts of valor sparking off such revolutions…

                                                              
The Arab spring was a product of a young man who set himself ablaze, leading to a massive ripple effect; The Tunisian revolution forces President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali to resign and flee the country, and sets free elections. The 2011 Egyptian revolution brings down the regime of President Hosni Mubarak. In the Libyan civil war rebel forces gradually take control of the country, and kill the leader Muammar Gaddafi. Post-civil war violence in Libya (ongoing); Syrian civil war (ongoing); 2010–2012 Algerian protests, Bahraini uprising (ongoing); 2011 Iraqi protests; 2011 Jordanian protests;  2011–2012 Moroccan protests; 2011 Omani protests; The 2011 Yemeni revolution leads to the eventual resignation of Ali Abdullah Saleh as President of Yemen. 2011–2012 Iranian protests; 2011–2013 Spanish protests; 2011-2012 Maldives political crisis: Public protests and police mutiny lead to resignation of President Mohammed Nasheed; 2012 Tuareg rebellion; Central African Republic conflict (2012–present)–François BozizĂ©, president of the Central African Republic, is overthrown by the rebel coalition Seleka, led by Michel Djotodia.

I am just wondering where our Nigerian letter-spring is leading us. Is it ushering in a new wave of an awakening in letter writing or is it setting the stage for a major political change in Nigeria.

While the ‘Occupy Nigeria’ drama lasted and yielded next to nothing; would it be right for us to draw a likely possibility of a letter occupation?

It is indeed a season of letters; it is an era of the Nigerian Letter-Spring…

Take it or leave it… something is definitely about to happen! 

@omedekina





Monday, March 19, 2012

Nostalgia: Cock crow at dawn Bongos Ikwue

Lets go down memory lane, can you feel the music...talk about the good old days.

 How many of us remember the drama..."Cock crow at Dawn" a beautiful TV drama from the cradle of the good old NTA. ..."will we ever get there, can we ever make it, will we ever hear the sound, of the cock crow at dawn?"...think about it.

@omedekina

I Can See Clearly Now

This beautiful song by Jimmy Cliff is specially dedicated to my beloved country Nigeria. I see the dark clouds giving way to a bright shinny day. The pain is giving way...Join me in singing this song for Nigeria.

 Lets believe in the Nigeria Rising!...it is time.

@omedekina

For Odia Ofeimun at 61, Its Nigeria The Beautiful

Perhaps, no one believes so much in the workability of Nigeria more than poet, political activist and playwright, Mr. Odia Ofeimun, as he deploys his creative prowess to how the country can overcome its myriads of challenges.

FROM the not-so humble poetic flowering with his controversial The Poet Lied in the 1970s and to his assertive voice as a poet of note to his numerous political essays and finally to the stage, Ofeimun has shown his total commitment to using literature to save humanity.

And so, from Under African Skies, where he let the “Intermeshing of myth, fiction and reality to yield space for a positive representation of Africa” and wean the continent away from being a part of “Europe’s celebration of five hundred years of Christopher Columbus’ discovery of the New World”; to using A Feast of Return to tell the story of Africa from the beginning of time to the liberation struggles and the story of South Africa to her eventual liberation alongside the freeing Nelson Mandela from prison.

Now, Ofeimun has returned again to the stage with his new work Nigeria The Beautiful, a dance drama, which he and its director Mr. Felix Okolo said was a work in progress. Its sneak preview took place at the MUSON Centre, Onikan, Lagos, last Wednesday as part of his 61st birthday celebration. Indeed, it’s a work certainly in progress but brimming with hope for a possible future greatness both in thematic scope and its visual feast in celebrating a country so much put down as directionless and visionless by those who inhabit it. This makes the work all the more significant in its apparent rejection of hopelessness as fait accompli for Nigeria that seems all too glaring; it’s a prayer for signs of positivity to emerge.

For those familiar with Ofeimun, this view may not be new. While he is impatient with those who have long led the country into its dark night at noonday, his positive outlook that Nigeria can indeed rise again from the anomie she has been sunk is matchless. He has often expressed the view that literature, and indeed, poetry, can save humanity and that Nigeria is eminently save-able if only Nigerians can try a little bit more.
This grand vision is what he has designed into an equally grand artistic statement in Nigeria The Beautiful, a dance drama that takes a historical sweep of the diversity that is Nigeria, her contentious politics, her abiding oneness in diversity and the greatness she is striving desperately to live up with. In spite of all these, there’s affirmation that hope abounds. So, indeed, in spite of all the flouderings that has been the lot of the nation, Nigeria’s beauty is inescapable; it does shine out of the mud she seems mired.

With a set that tells her colonial history and interspersed with what she is capable of becoming (symbolised by Jack, the British flag and the white green and white flag), the tone is set for the explosive and turbulent history that has been Nigeria’s. The voices of Lord Luggard, Ahmadu Bello and others speaking their minds and roles in the formation of the country in an uncertain journey (Nnamdi Azikiwe and Obafemi Awolowo would also speak when completed – not all was given away yet), Nigeria’s history is made to unfold before the audience in its amazing labyrinths and mazes until its arrives 2011, the present.

But what becomes of the future trajectory the country is headed? That is the crux of the matter. It’s the stuff the dance drama is made of; it’s the visual and artistic feast Ofeimun has call on all Nigerians to have in all of theatre’s grandeur.

Interestingly, the sneak preview served as part of his 61st birthday celebration. So, also, it turned out a typical Odian moment to give life to the best of poetry reading and performances. Drawing from a large member of the literary and culture community in attendance, the audience was treated to a thrilling moment of poetic renditions and musical performances, too.

To kick start proceedings was the Segun Adefila-led Crown Troupe of Africa giving snippets of the paradox that is often Nigeria. Then it was time for readings. The poems were largely from Ofeimun’s definitive collection of poets mulling on the inimitable city of Lagos titled Lagos of the Poets. Bangkong Obi opened the reading session with ‘Apparition on Allen’; then Funmi Aluko read ‘Lagoon Skies’; Ikuo Eke partly read and partly performed Femi Fatoba’s ‘Eko’.

Then it was time for the young female live band performing group ‘Topsticks’ led by Tope, who plays the drum set with two other young girls blowing away at the saxophones and a fourth strumming away at the gangan Yoruba talking-drum. Jumoke Verissimo read her piece ‘A Monday Morning in Lagos’ while Toni Kan also read his piece ‘Sanusi Fafunwa at Noon’. But it was Akeem Lasisi that set the hall aflame when he performed ‘A Song for Lagos’.

After which the all-female coral group Neffertiti came on stage with their soul-lifting songs and serenaded the celebrant Ofeimun. Then other performers followed: Uzor maxim Uzuator (Molue poet, Lagos blues); Ausyn Njoku (Flood Lagos); Nike Adesuyi (The New Testament), Tade Ipadeola (Platinum Meridians), Dr. Wunmi Raji (On seeing a dead body at Oshodi), Vicky Sylvester (A Night and a Day), Prof. Akachi Ezeigbo (Lagos Slums), Prof. Femi Osofisan (Go to Lagos, They said), while Dagga Tolar read J.P. Clark’s ‘Maroko’.
However, Remi Raji refused to read the piece ‘In Memorial: Lagos’. He cited Ofeimun’s inability to respond to the beckoning talking-drum by Topsticks to come out and dance as reason, saying it was Ofeimun’s day and wondered why he would not dance. Crown Troupe of Africa again performed Wole Soyinka’s recorded satirical music on the paradox that is Nigeria ‘I love dis Lagos, I no go lie’. Then Ofeimun read to the delight of the audience his poem ‘Lagoon’.

It was a well-attended event; this was not surprising given that it was a free show. Ofeimun, however, expressed the hope that Nigerians would begin to see the need to pay fees to attend even poetry reading as a way of boosting the art form and giving encouragement to poets and performers in all forms. After which, Ofeimun dinned with some of his guests at upscale restaurant La Scala Restaurant to round off a remarkable day.

Amongst those in attendance were Kunle Ajibade, Mr. and Mrs. Omo Uwaifo, Alumona Jenkins, Richard Umaru, Bayo Onanuga, Sam Omatseye, Mr. and Mrs. Gbenro Adegbola and Mrs. Francesca Emmanuel.
culled from: www.thenigeriandaily.com

Dancing with the Stars!

http://beta.abc.go.com/shows/dancing-with-the-stars/index

Thursday, February 23, 2012

what lessons can we draw from the life of Whitney?

@omedekina