IT was a night of radiant quality
stars, in December 2010, at the State House, Banquet Hall of the Ghanaian
Government, Accra,Ghana, where Professor Wole Soyinka was awarded the
Millennium Excellence Award and Lifetime Africa Achievement Prize, alongside
AshaHagi the Somalian activist and woman of courage.
Others equally honoured that night
were Bishop Desmond Tutu, the fiery clergy from South Africa; Ismail Se Ragel
Din, an international scientist of note from Egypt recognised for Scientific
Research in Africa; Amaechi Ndili from Nigeria, for his contributions to
Entrepreneurial Excellence in Africa; CyprilRamaphosa,the South African major
investor and trade unionist, recognised for African Economic Development; Lord
Paul Boateng, a member of the House of Lords in the UK, honoured for Action For
Africa; James Wolfensohn, from the US, for sustainable development in Africa.
Also, to everybody’s surprise,
Colonel Muammar AL – Gaddafi, the late maximum ruler of Libya,
emerged a recipient of one of the awards for his contributions to African
Unity; but Gaddafi never showed up, he was only represented by one of his top
aides.
We were rocking on a boat of
splashing colours into the night, especially when celebrities and heavies from
all continents gathered in a place to celebrate the best of our world. Our own
Asiwaju Bola Tinubu led the likes of Mr. BabatundeFashola, Governor of Lagos
State; OgbeniRauf Aregbesola of the state of Osun and Dr. Kayode Fayemi of
Ekiti State to the event. Mr. Kunle AJibade of The News Editorial Board,
Jahman Anikulapo, formerly of the Guardian Newspapers; our very good
friend, Makin Soyinka; MrAkeem Bello, S.A. to Gov. Fashola on media; Mr. Kunle
Abimbola of The Nation Editional Board were present too.
Interestingly, we, my twin brother
and I, sat next to Glo’s Chairman , Dr. Mike Adenuga’s table, another complete
gentleman, who had come like others to honour Professor Soyinka, a towering
figure in the art world, a man of fine reputation, whose performance in the
African literary space has been very explosive.
Known and easily spotted for his magnificently
snow white hair and benevolently soft and cherubic face, he is indeed a family
man of great look and good attitude, a great international literary
jurist, an African that can never be forgotten in a hurry, a priceless asset to
Africa. He is so famous that street galleries, with arts’ hustlers in charge,
adorn our public spaces with his portraits.
When it was Professor Soyinka’s turn
to receive his award for African Cultural and Traditional Preservation, a storm
of bubbles filled the hall. With the swiftness of a jungle lion, Professor
Soyinka mounted the stage, looking like a starlet in white attires.
This proved to be a day of
fulfillment for all proud sons and daughters of Africa. The late PresidentAttah
John Mills of Ghana had this to say about Soyinka after the award ceremonies:
“If Prof. Wole Soyinka is not tired now at his age we can’t afford to be
tired”.
His usage of English Language is
legendary; if you must take up Wole Soyinka, you must first take into
cognisance that he easily disarms his opponent with his command of English
Language. We tend to love him more when people call him Kongi, the Lion; these
are not his real names, but have become strongly synonymous with
Professor Soyinka over the years. In the midst of several violent and
retrogressive African regimes, Soyinka was awarded the Nobel Prize For
Literature in 1986, the first African to be so honoured.
In 1994, he was designated (UNESCO)
Goodwill Ambassador for the Promotion of African Culture, Human Rights, Freedom
of Expression, Media and Communication. He endured imprisonment for 22 months
as Nigeria backslided into a 30-month gruesome civil war, surviving only on the
jailers’ food.
A man of dogged determination, his
writing always captures the picture of a continent on the brinks; through his
writing he preaches that love is never found in the theatre of cruelty, that
religious fundamentalism and fanaticism could be very alcoholic.
What makes us cry oils the wheels of
his creativity. A man of large heart, he remains the symbol of political
resistance in the flesh of undemocratic government. Even the hostile political
climates of other nations of South America and Europe had so many times become
the focus of his (writings) work.
Soyinka looks very different from
every each one of us; he must have come from a revolutionary planet yet to be
identified by man, he has continued to be a beacon of hope to men, women and
children bound in straps of oppression around the world. Soyinka is like a
musical note of high-pitched rhythms cleverly inspiring generations after
generations, up to this present generations, after eight decades running. There
are these dynamism, charisma and beauty surrounding his personality, becoming
myths always and leaving this sense of satisfaction at the foothills of our
eyebrows whenever we see his portraits.
As twins, Prof. Soyinka has been our
idol right from our childhood days, facing up the skies and eagle-spread, we
read his poems to ourselves on grass coated fields of our secondary school
(Community Grammar School, Akanran) in Ibadan. Thirty years later,Prof. Wole
Soyinka on a certain happy day spoketo us on phone. Talking to Prof. was a
dream fulfilled; though poets ourselves, we drank from his own still waters of
poetry to nourish our writing talent at infancy.
Let us share with you our experience
one afternoon in Abeokuta, where Soyinka hails from. We were paying a visit to
Chief DotunOyewole, the scientist of Abeokuta, a mentor to us, with his
twin brother, the late Chief Femi Oyewole (the famous Oyewole twins). Dotun
Oyewole is presently 94 years; his wife, Madam LapeOyewole, who died last March
at the age of 84, said something about Prof Soyinka, that touched us so
much.
“We were classmates with Wole. But
suddenly, he was promoted from Primary 2 to5, leaving us all
behind; we envied him, as we were not happy about the whole development. The
news spread like a wild fire, without knowing it is pointing only to his future
glory as seen today.”
She continued: “Later we got to know
that Wole was not just pushed forward ahead of us because he was the son of a
school headmaster or the teacher’s favourite, but that our teachers were able
to see something rare and special in him, she went further, to be able to save
this shiny star, he was given a triple promotion to be able to develop him and
not delay his manifestation in life, she concluded, his brain runs at
the speed of sound, this is the last standing of the literary prophets”.
One can see that Professor Wole
Soyinka, from the onset has set forth at dawn according to the title of one of
his books, in the African context and traditions, from which much of Wole
Soyinka’s inspiration, has been drawn, Africans don’t want their good old ones
to continue living when events around them are taken bad twists or shapes,
“Ojuagbakiiriibi”.
Therefore, we wish Professor Wole
Soyinka never live long to continue watching Shekau in his savage rats’ colony
ranting and boasting on CNN and our National T.V Screen offending our sensibilities
and consciousness as a nation, may he never live long to continue seeing wheat
and barley grindstones becoming ceased in the land, may he never live long to
continue seeing gravestones becoming perpetually wet with innocent blood in
Borno and Bauchi on daily basis, may he never live long to continue seeing the
Nigerian project becoming a cracking dream on a daily basis, BUT, because this
old man is naturally good, we pray, may he live long to see our Chibok girls
returned safely to our hands, may he live long to see another Nobel Prize
Winner For Literature and Physics emerging (out) from Africa, may he live long
to see Jospeh Konnie, the jungle emperor, caught in the Uganda forest, caged
and extradited to the World Court in Hague, to face criminal charges against
the souls of African children and women, may he live long, may he live long,
may he live long to become and break the record of the oldest wise man in
Africa.
Taiwo & Kehinde Oluwafunso,
representatives of Panafest, wrote from Lagos.
Wole Soyinka, May He Never Live Long
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Friday, September 05, 2014
Rating:

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