Noble
laureate, Prof. Wole Soyinka, yesterday, gave a rebuttal to former President
Olusegun Obasanjo’s latest book, My Watch describing it as a narrative by a career
liar always determined to crookedly project himself above his true standing
among men.
Affirming
his general detestation of such men, Soyinka said the Obasanjo brand was
compounded by the inclination of even foisting the lies on members of the younger
generation.
www.odogwublog.com
recalled that Obasanjo had in his book flayed Soyinka as a self serving critic
who he said always sought to shine out among men claiming that the Nobel
Laureate is a “misfit as a political analyst, commentator or critic.”
He
had written “For Wole, no one can be good, nor can anything be spot-on
politically except that which emanates from him or is ordained by him.”
Continuing
his assessment of Soyinka, Obasanjo had said: “He is surely a better wine
connoisseur and a more successful “aparo” (guinea fowl) hunter than a political
critic, not to talk of what he would do as a politician,” adding “I take him
seriously on almost all issues except on the political particularly Nigerian
politics.”
Soyinka’s
treatise
Replying,
yesterday, in a treatise, titled Watch and Pray, Watch and Prey, Soyinka said:
“I had fully attuned myself to the fact that our Owu retiree soldier and
prolific author is an infliction that those of us who share the same era and
nation space must learn to endure. However, it does appear that there is no end
to this individual’s capacity for infantile mischief, and for needless,
mind-boggling provocations, such as his recent ‘literary’ intrusion on my
peace.
Perhaps
I ought to interrupt myself here with an apology to some mutual acquaintances –
‘blessed peacemakers’ and all – especially in this season of ‘peace and
goodwill to all men’. Please know that your efforts have not been entirely in
vain. I had a cordial exchange with Obasanjo over the phone recently –
engineered by himself, his ground staff and/or a chance visitor – when I
had cause to visit his Presidential Laundromat for the first time ever. During
that exchange, I complemented him on making some quite positive use of landed
property that was acquired under morally dubious circumstances, and blatantly
developed through a process that I denounced as ‘executive extortionism’. That
obscene proceeding has certainly set a competitive precedent for impunity in
President Jonathan’s recent fund-raising shindig, editorialized in The Punch
(December 23, 2014) as “Impunity Taken too Far”. So much for the latest
from that direction – we mustn’t allow Handing-Over notes between presidents to
distract us for too long.
Creative
conversion
To
return to our main man, and friendly interventionists, you may like to note
that I went so far as to engage him in light banter, stating that some of his
lesser sins would be forgiven him for that creative conversion of the landscape
– a conversation that he shortly afterwards delightedly shared with at least
three mutual acquaintances. I promised a follow-up visit to view some
mysterious rock script whose existence, he informed me, was uncovered by
workers during ground clearing. The exchange was, in short, as good as ‘malice
towards none’ that any polemicist could hope to contribute to the ongoing
season of peace and goodwill. Obviously that visit will not now take place, any
more than the pursuit of vague notions of some creative collaboration with his
Centre that began to play around my mind.
That
much I do owe you from my report card. Perhaps you will now accept that there
are individuals who are born incorrigible but, more importantly, that some
issues transcend one’s personal preferences for harmonious human relationships
even in a season of traditional good will. The change in weather conditions
sits quite well with me, however, since we are both acquainted with the Yoruba
proverb that goes: the child that swears his mother will not sleep must
also prepare for a prolonged, sleepless infancy. So let it be with
Okikiola, the overgrown child of circumstance.
One
of the incessant ironies that leapt up at me as I read Obasanjo’s magnum opus
was that we are both victims of a number of distasteful impositions –
such as being compelled again and again to seek justice against libel in the
law courts. I felt genuine empathy to read that he still has a pending
thirty-year case instituted by him against his alleged libelers! Judgment was
delivered in my favour regarding one of the most nauseating only this year,
after surviving technical and other procrastinations, defendant evasions and
other legalistic impediments for nearly as long as his.
Resurrection
ritual language
That
leaves only a veritable Methuselah on the court list still awaiting re-listing
under the resurrection ritual language known as de novo. Unfortunately,
not all acts of defamation or willful misrepresentation are actionable,
otherwise, my personal list against this newly revealed fellow-sufferer would
have counted for an independent volume of the Nigerian Law Report since our
paths first crossed during the Civil War. My commitment to the belief in
the fundamental right of all human beings not to be lied against remains a life
obsession, and thus demands, at the very least, an obligation of non-commission
among fellow victims.
I
must, therefore, reserve a full, frontal dissection of Obasanjo’s My
Watch for later, most especially since the work itself is currently under legal
restraint and is not readily accessible to a general readership. So, for now,
let me single out just one of the most glaring instances of this man’s
compulsive career of lying, one sample that the media can readily check upon
and use as a touchstone – if they do need one – in assessing our author’s
multifaceted claims and commentaries on people and events. I refer here to the
grotesque and personally insulting statement that he has attributed to me for
some inscrutable but obviously diversionary reasons. In the process, this past
Master of Mendacity brazenly implicates an innocent young man, Akin Osuntokun,
who once served him as a Special Adviser. Instead of conferring dignity on a
direct rebuttal of an ignoble fabrication, I shall simply make a personal,
all-embracing attestation:
I
despise that species of humanity whose stock-in-trade is to concoct lies simply
to score a point, win an argument, puff up his or her own ego, denigrate or
attempt to destroy a fellow being. However, even within such deplorable
species, a special pit of universal opprobrium is surely reserved for those who
even lack the courage of their own lies, but must foist them on others.
Twilight
disgrace
When
an old man stuffs a lie into the throat of an age-mate of his own children –
omo inu e! – we can only pity an irredeemable egomaniac whose dotage is headed
for twilight disgrace.
D.O.
Fagunwa, the pioneer Yoruba novelist, was a compulsive moralist. I suspect that
he may have exerted some influence on our garrulous general, resulting in his
pupil’s tedious, misapplied and self-serving deluge of moralizing. It seems
quite likely indeed that the ghostly, moralistic hand of Fagunwa reached out
from the Great Beyond, sat his would-be competitor forcefully before a mirror and
bade him write what he saw in that image. I invoke Fagunwa because, at his
commemorative colloquium in Akure in August last year, I drew my audience’s
attention to a remarkable passage in Fagunwa’s Igbo Olodumare. The passage had
struck me during translation and stuck to my mind. I found it uncanny that the
original creative moralist, Fagunwa, had captured the psychological profile of
a being whom I have been compelled by circumstances to study as an eerie
creation, yet this was a character Fagunwa was unlikely to have encountered in
real life at the time that he produced that work.
The
section comes from an account of a visit to the abode of Iku, Death, the
terrifying host to Olowo-aiye, the narrative voice of the adventure. Iku,
the host, had been admonishing his guests through the histories of seven
creatures who were not permitted a straightforward passage to Heaven or Hell,
but were subjected to admonitory punishment at the halfway house to the abode
of the dead. The most horrendous tortures were reserved, it would seem, for the
last of the seven such ‘detainees’, and I invited my audience to ponder if they
could identify any prominent individual, a public figure whose life conduct
seamlessly fitted into Fagunwa’s portrayal, which went thus:
“The
seventh…. is not among those who set out to improve the world but rather to
cause distress to its inhabitants. It was through manipulations that he
attained a high position. Having achieved this however, he constantly blocked
the progress of those behind him, this being a most deplorable act in the eyes
of God, and rank behaviour in the judgment of the dwellers of heaven – that
anyone who has enjoyed upliftment in life should seek to be an obstacle for
those who follow him.
Creature
that worked in darkness
This
man forgot the beings of earth, forgot the beings of heaven, in turn, he forgot
the presence of God. The worst kind of behaviour agitated his hands – greed
occupied the centre of his heart, and he was a creature that walked in
darkness. This man wallowed in bribery, he was chairman of the circle of
scheming, head of the gang of double-dealing, field-marshal of those who crept
about in the dark of night.
With
his mouth, he ruined the work of others, while he used a big potsherd to cover
the good works of some, that others might not see their attainments. He nosed
around for secrets that would entrap his companions, and blew them up into
monumental crimes in the eyes of the world. He who turns the world upside down,
places the deceitful on the throne, casts the truthful down – because such is a
being of base earth, he will never stand as equal among the uplifted.”
My
co-occupants of the High Table, in side remarks, and those who came up from the
audience afterwards to volunteer their answer to the riddle, without exception
named one individual and one individual only, even as I remained non-committal.
Indeed, one or two tried to put up a defence of that nominee, and I had to
remind them that I had named no one! Fagunwa wrote largely of the world of
mongrelized creatures but, as I remarked, his fiction remains a prescient and
cautionary mirror of the society we inhabit, where beasts of the forest appear
to have a greater moral integrity than those who claim to be leading lights of
society.
Season
of goodwill
In
this season of goodwill, we owe a duty to our immediate and distant neighbours:
CAVEAT EMPTOR! Let all beware, who try to buy a Rolex from this
indefatigable watch peddler. His own hand-crafted, uniquely personalized
timepiece has been temporarily confiscated by NDLEA and other guardians of
public health but, there is no cause for despair. Such has been the fate of the
misunderstood and the envied, avatars descended from the heavens before their
time, the seers, and all who crave recognition. Our author invokes God
tirelessly, without provocation, without necessity and without justification,
perhaps preemptively, but does he really believe in such an entity? Does our
home-bred Double-O-Seven believe in anything outside his own Omnipotency? Could
he possibly have mistaken the Christian exhortation – ‘Watch and Pray’ for his
private inclination to “Watch and Prey?
This
is a seasoned predator on others’ achievements – he preys on their names, their
characters, their motivations, their true lives, preys on gossip and preys on
facts, preys on contributions to collective undertakings…..even preys on their
identities, substituting his own where possible. Well, hopefully he may
actually believe in the inevitable End to all vanities? So, let our Great
Immortal, the Unparalleled Achiever, Divinely appointed Watchman even on the
world that is yet to come remember Fagunwa’s Iku, the ultimate predator
whose visitation comes to us all, sooner or later.
Chei! There is Death o!
Chei! There is Death o!
Vanguard report
You are a liar, Soyinka replies Obasanjo
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Thursday, December 25, 2014
Rating:
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Thursday, December 25, 2014
Rating:


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