Monday, December 20, 2010
How does a stargazer paint a star-studded sky?
How does a stargazer paint a star-studded sky?
Title: Moviedom…the Nollywood Narratives: Clips on the Pioneers
Author: Shaibu Husseini
Publisher: All Media International Ltd. [for African Film Academy: AFA)
Year of publication: 2010.
Reviewer: Professor Hyginus Ekwuazi
Moviedom…the Nollywood Narratives: Clips on Pioneers is somewhat like a sponge or a compressed towel. Its inherent absorbent capability vis-à-vis its information density, is, on the whole, remarkable. For neatly tucked into its 166 pages are: 67 biographical sketches of Nollywood stars [13 in Part 1: In the Beginning; 54 in Part 2: Nollywood is Born]; and a roll call of 17 tars [It’s a Wrap!] if we remove the 67 profiled stars in Parts 1 and 2, the balance of 120 becomes the number of stars yet to be profiled. In other words, Moviedom…the Nollywood Narratives is, like Nollywood itself, a continuing project—not necessarily like the typical Nollywood story that is incomplete if it doesn’t run into part 2 and beyond.
This book carries with it the burden of experience—the experience comprising Shuibu’s beat in and around Nollywood and his years as the Chair of the AMAA College of Screeners. However, in no instance does the work sag under such a heavy under. Rather, this rarefied experience has been nuanced into the work in a laidback manner that makes the book as highly reader friendly as it is readable. What more does one ask of a book?
If it is indeed true that every book contains within it the argument for how it should be read, then the subtle argument within these pages is this: a more revealing close-up on the work can result only from the interrogation of two inter-related contexts. In the first place, the broader context of the work—its antecedents, so to say. In the second place, the significance. Since the latter proceeds from the former, both are, to that extent, coterminous.
One needn’t look too far to see all too clearly how Moviedom…the Nollywood Narratives happens to be at the centre of a widening gyre of irony. In the early 90’s, Nigerian filmmakers signed a petition against Jimmy Ate, then the General Manager, National Theatre, for allowing reversal films/home videos to be screened in the cinema halls of the National Theatre—the very same National Theatre in whose banquet hall Nollywood stars gathered on Friday, 17th Dec, 2010] for the launch of this work that is to all intents and purposes a celebration of the home video. And that other blockbuster of an irony: till the middle 90’s the Nigerian Film Corporation [NFC] was still shouting from the roof tops that its statutory mandate didn’t include the video—the very same NFC whose current head and whose one time chairman have been profiled here among the stars of Nollywood.
The point here is that from 1903 when the first movie was shown in the country to 2005 when Nollywood was rated the second largest film industry in the world, the Nigerian film industry has passed through four defining stages: the Colonial Film Unit stage [the cine was the only format and the documentary the major genre]; the post-Independence period [again, the only format was the cine and the feature virtually eclipsed activities in any other genre]; the SAP [Structural Adjustment Programme] stage [the feature continued to dominate but the reversal film took over from the cine]; and, finally, the Post-SAP period [the home video completely took over the industry].
True, in the movement from periphery to social centricity, no single film, not even Living in Bondage, has done for us what The Sound of Music did for the United States. However, its short history notwithstanding, the home video has managed to become the cultural property of us all. It has joined politics and football as the admission tickets into the marketplace of social intercourse.
Herein, then, lies, perhaps, the greatest significance of this work: it provides us the much needed backward glance over the roads we have travelled.
Okome, unarguably one of the leading scholars of Nollywood, is insistent in his argument that the Nollywood film is, in effect, a broad canvass for the social history of this day and age. If we accept this argument, Moviedom…the Nollywood Narratives automatically acquires the value-added significance as the compendium of the films of the period from which this social history has to be distilled.
Two structural factors killed the celluloid film in Nigeria. One: the march of technology which brought with it a rival and cheaper means of making and packaging films. Two: Babangida’s structural adjustment programme which beggared the Naira in the international marketplace—making it impossible to sustain the celluloid culture.
But even while it was thriving, the celluloid was, as it were, wrapped in an asphyxiating blanket of anonymity. For instance, the British Film Institute dossier on the African film, issued in the early 80’s, lists only one non-Francophone filmmaker: Ola Balogun. In contradistinction, the home video is being very adequately documented both in academic studies and in works that target the general reader. An example of the latter that quickly comes to mind is Orji Onoko’s Glimpses of our Stars. Shaibu’s Moviedom…the Nollywood Narratives is spun from the same thread.
It is in the light of the foregoing that we must locate the gaps and dents in the work. Each profile here is like a citation. There is really nothing bad in this; but, to my mind, each profiled personality here would have come alive if only some words had been put in their mouth—if each star had spoken, briefly, on, say, their life value and or on their view of the industry, in the context of their role.
I know it’s arguable—but Nollywood is not unlike the child who stands on the shoulders of a giant and is, thereby, able to see much further than his mates: without the work done by the celluloid filmmakers, would Nollywood have been this big? I doubt it. All I am trying to say is that the tripod of the celluloid period ought to have been included or given adequate space in this work.
The tripod I’m alluding to? Ola Balogun/Francis Oladele [whose works were the first to put Nigeria on the global map of filmmaking]; Eddie Ugbomah [who holds the record for the highest number—13—of celluloid films]; and Hubert Ogunde/Ade Love [in whose footsteps the Yoruba filmmakers of today are following].
If Shaibu’s consistent featuring of Nollywood on the pages of The Guardian on Saturday and Sunday and his painstaking activities in the African Film Academy haven’t by now removed any lingering doubts about his love for the industry, this book should do that. Take it for all in all, Moviedom…the Nollywood Narratives does come across as Shaibu Hussein’s passionate love song to an industry he ardently loves—Nollywood, that burgeoning industry that we praise and cavil in the same breath.
~ Hyginus EKWUAZI
Department of Theatre Arts
University of Ibadan
Ibadan.
Emotions as Nokia Splashes Prizes in Cash Dash Promotion
Emotions as Nokia Splashes Prizes in Cash Dash Promotion
Mr. Rasheed Agoro is a Lagos based retiree who is being owed the sum of 450 thousand Naira as part of his retirement gratuity. Mr. Agoro’s optimism about prospect of being paid the money gradually waned as his repeated trips to Abuja yielded no fruits. Just when he gave, up got a call from Nokia informing him that he had just won the same amount of money in the Nokia Cash Splash promotion. In this age of scam calls, Mr. Agoro almost dismissed this call as another fast one by criminal elements in town. But this was real. Mr. Agoro was almost in tears when he picked up the check of 450 thousand naira in the Zain-Nokia Cash Splash promotion at a ceremony held at the Protea Hotel Ikeja. Other winners include Mrs. Bukola Aiyesimoju who was visibly excited as she received her cash prize of another 450 thousand naira.
The Zain-Nokia promotion, which was launched during Nigeria’s 50th Independence celebration, was Nigerians carting away a total of eighteen million naira in total. 5 people won N1millionwith with several others winning cash prizes ranging from 50 thousand Naira to 450 thousand naira. Before the grand draw in Lagos, draws were held in Abuja, Portharcourt and Kano.
Tunji Ademiluyi, Retail Customer Marketing Manager for Nokia West Africa said the move is part of effort by Nokia to reward loyal customers. He said the grand draw could not have come at a more auspicious time especial this yuletide when it is customary to give and receive gifts. The event is a climax of all the raffle draws that had been previously held in which several winners emerged. The promotion was aimed at encouraging Nigerians’ sense of pride in Nigeria as well as rewarding their loyalty to Nokia products and it was carried out across several states in the Nations four geo-political zones. The cash prizes ranged from fifty thousand Naira, one hundred thousand Naira, one hundred and fifty thousand Naira to four hundred and fifty thousand Naira only.
Other winners were, Okolo Victor, a student, Mrs Ronke Ajala, Wasiu Salami, Adeyinka Oshodi, Gabriel Adu and Theodore Gyuk who mentioned that the first thing he would do with the money was to purchase another Nokia phone.
Nokia is the world’s number one manufacturer of mobile devices by market share. Beyond its leadership status as a manufacturer of devices, Nokia is fast becoming a leading solutions provider in the converging Internet and communications industries providing internet services that enable users to experience media, messaging, maps and games.
President Goodluck Jonathan is going to Bring Back the Book
Photo Credit: Puku
President Goodluck Jonathan, GCFR, today launches the transformational "Bring Back the Book" literary campaign to revive a reading culture among Nigerian youths and he is also presenting his own book "My Friends and I: Conversations on Policy and Governance via Facebook". The venue is the Expo Hall of the Eko Hotel, Lagos.
"The time has come when educational opportunities must be for all; when knowledge must be promoted over the mad rush for materialism. Book culture, if properly put in place, will help promote a new Nigeria," said Mr. Oronto Douglas, Senior Special Assistant to the President on Research, Documentation and Strategy. "Four months after, the interactions with Nigerians on Facebook were turned into a book containing reactions and suggestions on issues of governance. The President joined Facebook not to belong but for the desire to engage, communicate and learn from Nigerians. In fact, the idea of government and governance being impenetrable and sacred should be smashed as government belongs to the people," he added.
Saturday, December 18, 2010
Who wants a MAMA when you can win the Grammy?
Nneka. Photo Credit:Nairaland
Who wants a MAMA when you can win the Grammy?
I read Lolade Sowoolu’s "Between Sasha and Nneka" in the Showtime magazine of the Saturday Vanguard on December 18, 2010, and it was quite an interesting critical analysis of how and why the Nigerian rap diva Sasha beat the more internationally acclaimed Nneka to win the Best Female Artiste award at the last MTV Africa Music Awards (MAMA) in Lagos, Nigeria, making Sasha the first Nigerian to win in the Best Female category after Kenyans dominated it in the last two years. Sowoolu reported that many people thought Nneka should have won the award, because she is considered a more internationally accepted Nigerian artiste as Asa .
Sasha
Asa
Nneka the Nigerian-German hip hop/soul singer and guitarist is a popular artiste internationally, but not locally, because presently majority of her fellow Nigerians and the rest of Africans do not appreciate her kind of music which is more of a revolutionary fusion of modern reggae and hip-hop and her unique style has taken her places from Europe to the US and then to Africa and she won the award for Best African Act at the 2009 MOBO Awards. And Nneka was on the Late Show with David Letterman in New York before her first concert tour of the United States publicized as the Concrete Jungle and she performed shows in New York City, Vienna (Washington DC), Boston, Philadelphia, Los Angeles and San Francisco. And she made the coveted hot list of Rolling Stone and no other Nigerian female artiste has made it and for what Nneka has achieved so far, she is ahead of Asa and Sasha in the world of music. And her ambition is above the MAMA. She is looking forward to winning the Grammy like Sade Adu has done and even a dummy knows that the Grammy is a more globally acclaimed recognition in music than MAMA, MOBO or Channel O.
~ By Ekenyerengozi Michael Chima
MAMA 2010 WINNERS IN FULL
Best Anglophone - Daddy Owen (Kenya)
Best Francophone - Fally Ipupa (DRC)
Best Lusophone - Cabo Snoop (Angola)
Artist of the Year- 2Face (Nigeria)
Best Female - Sasha (Nigeria)
Best Male - 2Face (Nigeria)
Best Video - Fally Ipupa (DRC): “Sexy Dance”
Best Group – P-Square (Nigeria)
Brand New Act - Mo Cheddah (Nigeria)
Best Performance - Big Nuz (South Africa)
Song of the Year - Liquideep (South Africa): “Fairytale”
MAMA Legend – Miriam Makeba (South Africa)
Best International – Eminem (USA).
Seasons Greetings from Nigeria Startup Weekend (Africa)
The Startup Weekend Crew would like to wish our alumni, mentors, speakers, judges, sponsors, and fans a happy holiday season spent with family and friends. We have had so much fun this year and have met hundreds of amazing entrepreneurs. Here's a brief look at some of our 2010 highlights:
- We received a grant from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, which will allow us to study the science of entrepreneurship
- We officially became a 501(c)3 non-profit organization!
- We held a global summit of our key facilitators in Kansas City, Missouri
- Our core team grew from two to nine full time employees
- We launched our first Global Startup Battle, which was so successful we're planning to on making it an annual event
We have an ambitious schedule planned for 2011. Our goal is to organize 130 events in just 12 months and we would love to see all of you at one of our events this year! To stay connected please
Fan us on Facebook
Follow us on Twitter
Visit our website
Best of luck with all of your current and future startup endeavors! If you, your team, or your startup have also had an amazing year--let us know! Any Startup Weekend alums or ventures that are rocking their startup scenes, email us atsuccess@startupweekend.org.
We hope you have a peaceful and merry holiday season!
~ From Nigeria Startup Weekend (Africa)
Friday, December 17, 2010
Top Nollywood Stars grace Shaibu Husseini’s 40th Birthday and movie book launch
Top Nollywood Stars grace Shaibu Husseini’s 40th Birthday and movie book launch
Top Nollywood Stars grace Shaibu Husseini’s 40th Birthday and movie book launch
The ever graceful Nollywood black beauty Kate Henshaw-Nuttal was the mistress of ceremony as the crème de la crème of Nollywood graced the book launch of "Moviedom.....the Nollywood Narratives---Clips on the Pioneers" authored by popular Nigerian Arts journalist and film critic Shaibu Husseini of The Guardian newspaper on Friday December 17, 2010, at the National Theatre, Ignamu, Lagos. The occasion was also a celebration of his the 40th birthday.
The celebrant Shaibu Husseini
Famous Nigerian filmmaker Chief Eddie Ugbomah spoke on the brilliance and humility of the celebrant and his senior colleague at The Guardian Jahman Anikulapo said Mr. Husseini is still one of the best dancers in dance drama in Nigeria whose expertise in choreography attracted him before discovering his literary skills and editing his reports on the Nigerian film industry in what Husseini called “MOVIEDOM”.
The top dignitaries from Nollywood at the event included Okey Oguejiofor aka Paulo of the "Living in Bondage" fame, Zeb Ejiro, Greg Odutayo, Izu Ojukwu, Kunle Afolayan, Opa Willaims, Paul Obazele, Fred Amata, Francis Onwuchie, Chike Ibekwe,Segun Arinze, Fidelis Duker, Emeka Ossai, Uche Macaulay, Omoni Oboli and her handsome husband Nnamdi. These distinguished guests and other VIPs of the Nigerian film industry and news media made the occasion very colourful and a day to remember.
The event was co-sponsored by African Film Academy (AFA), organizers of the annual African Movie Academy Award (AMAA) and the illustrious Peace Anyiam-Osigwe, founder/CEO of AMAA was there with her associates, including Ilaria Chessa of ION international Film Festival to make sure that Shaibu Husseini had a great day.
~ By Ekenyerengozi Michael Chima
Thursday, December 16, 2010
Sade’s Highly Acclaimed SOLDIER OF LOVE Marches On With Two Grammy Nominations
Sade "Soldier Of Love" Video from My Little Boudoir on Vimeo.
Lest we forget our own Nigerian born Sade Adu received two Grammy nominations for her sixth album Soldier of Love and none of the over hyped FM radio and TV stations in Nigeria are celebrating her. Wow!
May we repeat that the artiste popularly known as Sade (pronounced /ʃɑːˈdeɪ/ shah-DAY) is the same Helen Folasade Adu, OBE, who was born in Ibadan, Oyo State, Nigeria on the 16th day of January in 1959. Her father Bisi Adu, was a Yoruba Nigerian lecturer in economics, and her mother Anne Hayes, an English district nurse.
She is not new to the Grammy Awards since she won the Grammy for the Best New Artist in 1986 with the debut album, Diamond Life that has sold over 50 million albums. Sade is the most successful solo female artist in British history.
Soldier of Love went straight to number one on the US Billboard 200 with first-week sales of 502,000 copies in the United States and it is Sade’s first US number-one debut, and was at the top of music charts in several other countries in the world. For more details I have posted the official news release on the success story.
~ By Ekeyerengozi Michael Chima
Dec 2, 2010 12:26 ET
Sade’s Highly Acclaimed SOLDIER OF LOVE Marches On With Two Grammy Nominations
NEW YORK, Dec. 2, 2010 /PRNewswire/ — On the heels of an epic year for Sade, the band’s platinum selling SOLDIER OF LOVE, marks another milestone today by garnering two Grammy nominations for Best Pop Vocal by a Group for “Babyfather” and Best R&B Vocal by a Group for “Soldier of Love”. Holding down the top spot on the charts for three weeks upon its release, the critically acclaimed album takes its rightful place among the vast collection of iconic Sade albums.
After a decade out of the spotlight, Sade’s eighth album, SOLDIER OF LOVE exploded onto the charts in February and instantly made music history. The album ranked in the top 10 among Billboard’s 200 making them the first group since Led Zeppelin to hold this accomplishment. The attention grabbing first single “Soldier of Love” made radio history debuting at # 11 on the Urban Hot AC chart, making it the highest debut of the decade and the third highest all-time on the Urban Hot AC chart. “Soldier of Love” also debuted at # 5 on the Smooth Jazz airplay chart while also becoming the first ever vocal to hit # 1 on the Smooth Jazz Top 20 Countdown.
Entertainment Weekly featured SOLDIER OF LOVE in their “Must List” and gave the album an “A”, Rolling Stone wrote, “it’s unimpeachably excellent,” and The Boston Globe calls it, “a rich and rewarding album.” But the accolades don’t stop there. Associated Press raved, “like a long-ago lover not quite forgotten, Sade has returned to steal our hearts with more beautiful, uncategorizable music,” Billboard was quoted as saying, “it’s been 10 years since Sade released an album, but be forewarned – the giant has awoken,” while People Magazine reminds us that “Sade remains the voice of comfort to the wounded heart.”
Sade recently announced their highly anticipated return to the world’s stage. The North American leg, produced by Live Nation, begins on June 16th in Baltimore, Maryland at the 1st Mariner’s Arena. Tickets are on sale at LiveNation.com.
Known for their one of a kind timeless sound, Sade has enjoyed phenomenal success both internationally and stateside throughout the span of their twenty-five year career. Since the release of their debut album, Diamond Life in 1984 the band has seen all five of their studio albums land in the Top 10 on Billboard’s Top 200 Album Chart selling a total of more than 50 million albums worldwide to date. They’ve been nominated for American Music Awards, MTV Video Music Awards and have won three Grammy Awards – first in 1986 for Best New Artist, then in 1994 for Best R&B Performance By A Duo Or Group for “No Ordinary Love”, and again in 2002 for Best Pop Vocal Album with Lovers Rock.
SADE.COM
SOURCE Epic Records
CONTACT: Lauren Ceradini, Sony Music Entertainment, +1-212-833-7965, Lauren.Ceradini@sonymusic.com
Web Site: http://www.sade.com
Nigeria, others call on Cancun conference chair to rise above partisanship
December 16, 2010 02:44 ET
Nigeria, others call on Cancun conference chair to rise above partisanship
CANCUN, December 15, 2010/location>)/ -- A number of developing countries present at the Cancun conference negotiations have decried serious gaps in the possible elements of the conference outcome, calling on its president to rise above partisanship, according to the Information and Communication Service (ICS) of the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) covering the event.
The NGO, Pan African Climate Justice Alliance (PACJA) issued a statement, a copy of which was sent to ICS, regretting that “issues of justice had been omitted in the chair's text”, which is “full of objectives and principles without substantive issues like loss and damage to poor communities largely impacted by the adverse effects of climate change”.
It accuses the North-South divide in the ongoing negotiations for being “an impediment to making substantial progress in Cancun”.
The statement points out that although the president repeatedly assured delegates of transparency and progressive achievements on certain elements, concerns expressed by Nigeria and a number of other developing countries “is a clear testimony that the manner in which consultations are being conducted leaves much to be desired, requiring the COP Presidency to rise above partisanship”.
Bolivia, Venezuela, Barbados and Tuvalu are among the other countries that complained about lack of transparency, the statement reveals.
“We believe that Mexico should be a neutral broker of this process, but what we are sadly seeing is that they have decided to be a front of Annex 1 countries in evading their responsibilities. The practice of exclusion and green room maneuvers should cease forthwith if parties are to build trust among each other”, the statement says.
It calls on Parties to resist “with the force it deserves, any deliberate attempt to sneak the World Bank and its affiliates into the centre of negotiations”, and praises Nigeria for “raising the red flag on the text's singular mention of the World Bank while leaving no space for other options”.
After a week of negotiations Parties fear the 16th COP is “not anywhere near a fair, just and equitable agreement that will lead to deep emission cuts and the provision of finances to help safeguard the planet and its people from the imminent peril occasioned by the changing climate.
The statement decries what it calls “adamant negligence of the warning that the sciences have given to the effect that if the world does not drastically reduce its greenhouse gas emissions urgently, we stand the risk of global warming of up to 4 degrees Celsius”.
The countries complaining of lack of transparency share the view that parties which are “wavering in their political responsibility to the Kyoto Protocol should not be a hindrance for the global community to agree on the second commitment period of the Kyoto Protocol”.
They insist that the outcome of Cancun and any other negotiations must be two tracks “to correspond to with the ad hoc working group and the long term cooperative action negotiations”
Unity among the developing countries in Cancun is seen as critical because “the divide-and-rule and the dangling of carrots stunts of the rich industrialized countries that are responsible for causing climate change must be rejected”, the statement concludes.
Source: Economic Commission for Africa (ECA)
Note:
The United Nations Climate Change Conference took place in Cancun, Mexico, from 29 November to 10 December 2010. It encompassed the sixteenth Conference of the Parties (COP) and the sixth Conference of the Parties serving as the Meeting of the Parties to the Kyoto Protocol (CMP), as well as the thirty-third sessions of both the Subsidiary Body for Implementation (SBI) and the Subsidiary Body for Scientific and Technological Advice (SBSTA), and the fifteenth session of the AWG-KP and thirteenth session of the AWG-LCA.
Author Of The Fugitive Offender: The Story Of A Political Prisoner Has Passed On
Chief Anthony Enahoro, (22nd July 1923-15th December 2010)
The author of the Fugitive offender: The story of a political prisoner and one of the greatest leaders of democracy in modern Africa, Chief Anthony Enahoro passed away yesterday. He was 87.
Chief Enahoro’s record as the youngest Editor of a mainstream Nigerian newspaper Southern Nigerian Defender at the young age of 21 in 1944 remains unbroken even in the computer age of the 21st century. The Southern Defender was published by the great African leader and Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, the first President of Nigeria. He was also the Editor of Dr. Azikiwe’s Comet in Kano from 1945-49, Associate Editor, West African Pilot, Lagos and Editor-in-Chief Morning Star, 1950-53.
Chief Enahoro joined the great Chief Obafemi Awolowo and other nationalists to form the Action Group party and was the Chairman and Secretary in Ishan Division Council; member Western House of Assembly and later member of the Federal House of Representatives in 1951. He was appointed the Minister of Home Affairs in the old western region. He was the Opposition spokesman on Foreign policy and Legislative Affairs in the Federal House of Representatives, 1959-63. In 1953 he attempted the first motion for the independence of Nigeria in the Nigerian Parliament.
Chief Enahoro was accused of treason as an accomplice of Chief Awolowo, but he escaped to the United Kingdom in 1963. He was extradited from the UK and joined Chief Awolowo in prison, but he was released by the Military Government in 1966.
His memoirs Fugitive offender: The story of a political prisoner chronicled this period of his colourful life.
His last herculean battle was against the tyrannical dictatorship of the despotic General Sani Abacha as the Chairman of the National Democratic Coalition (NADECO), the frontline pro-democracy group that protested against the military junta of the Abacha from 1994-1998.
Chief Anthony Enahoro will be remembered as one of the founding fathers of the Republic of Nigeria and one of the heroes of Nigerian democracy.
~ By Ekenyerengozi Michael Chima
Monday, December 13, 2010
A Letter from Rwanda: Seed of Discord – are they truly human?
Seed of Discord – are they truly human?
A report of Sam’s visit to Rwanda and on the trauma of the Rwandan Genocide by Samuel Olu, a Nigerian reporter and Christian minister.
It is 1.45pm. The high school students are on their way home listening to the world news in our native language Yoruba . So interesting and captivating that the trouble of ethnic unrest and violence around the world formed a major part of the news. The Iraq war and that in Bosnia Herzegovina was alarming. However few years later, I was too busy as an undergraduate (in 1994) to listen to any world news just at the time that the horrible incident called genocide occurred in the central part of Africa-
Rwanda. I thought Africans would be celebrating the release of Nelson Mandela and dethronement of apartheid as well as looking forward to constructive African nations but, once again came a dirty blow on the land that was hardly known by many people including Africans. More also, I searched for almost 3 -4 minutes before locating Rwanda on the African map.
I arrived in Kigali on 9th September 2002 on a bright day with light showers. I had a fulfilled journey as I stepped down from a Kenya airline and being driven through the capital city of Rwanda where business activities and life goes on peacefully. Though, I took a clue form some Rwandans about their country but it was short of the information relayed to me before leaving Nigeria.
"Amahoro," they greeted me! The people of Rwanda are welcoming and for few days of my arrival I got to know about their unique dance pattern and music. I had a taste of their local food- shapati and matoke (cooked unripe banana). I was able to see President Kagame’s non-elegant lifestyle with simple dressing. He will obey traffic lights and goes everywhere without this enormous entourage of escort that we have in Nigeria.
Transportation is cheap in Kigali and I didn’t find it difficult to spend Amafaranga (Rwanda currency). However it wasn’t long before I realized that the community I came into was void of real comfort and shrinking inside.
Known for Genocide
Our house help is a young and hardworking man. Many like Athanas have to do any kind of work to survive and take care of their families. Sharing his experience, he said, ‘we journeyed for days through forest to Burundi eating Avocado; we dare not stop for long in order to save our lives.’ Athanas hardly communicates in English , however, the utterance of his speech reflected the struggle he had gone through during the genocide period.
During my stay, the situation in the country was not as serious though. Taking my time to settle down at the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG) Kigali with my Nigerian host; Jean-Marie, a Rwandan gave testimony that his sister that he lost contact with since 1994 came back and that is an answer to his prayer. I was overwhelmed with news about people who died of AIDS, women with HIV, orphanage, street children, incomplete families-father, no mother, and children without parent; and deep cry of the young people for their lost ones.
Then I began to esquire about this act that is called genocide. Just as Adolph Hitler’s evil war to wipe out the Jews in Germany, thus the Hutu–led Government purposed to eradicate the Tutsi from the surface of the earth. Cruel, ungodly, crazy, why and for what reasons are words that were sprinkling down my cheeks. Therefore, I decided to visit Gisozi Genocide centre to find out from a reliable source:
What happened on a day that the sun refused to shine?
When humans put judgment in their hands, their unmerciful ally-friends looked at them slaughtering themselves; while enemies outside helped those inside and the delivers came forcefully to unite their people.
My experience
• Visit to Gisozi
Amakuru you are welcome to Gisozi our visitors, she greeted- ‘this is where part of the remains of over 800,000 Rwanda's Tutsis and Hutus who were slaughtered in the terrible genocide of 1994 were buried and their bones are being kept’. She went on explaining the catastrophic incident involving the killings of Tutsi and the moderate Hutus that did not support them by Hutus and the Interhamwe (those who fight together).
Come and see burial ground and caskets! What are inside? Only bones-mass burial of discovered bones. Inside the hall are guns, machetes, skulls, bones and clothes stripped from the dead people displayed on different shelves. I thought, I have had enough until I heard, ‘some of these killers cut off the wombs of pregnant Tutsi women; they said they wanted to see how Tutsi children would look like.’ At this point I started to suffer emotional pain that left me with improper eating and loss of appetite for nearly a week. I couldn’t get my head off this incident anytime I remember the Gisozi memorial Genocide centre.
My visit to Gisozi humbled me and gave me a different meaning to life.
• Walking on the bones
My attitude charged and I became more compassionate and getting closer to my dear friends because I wanted to share the feelings of their pain and the new life they found themselves after the 100 days of genocide. I promised to give myself to help rebuild the country.
Whenever I am walking up and down the hills of Kigali or traveling along the boarders through Uganda, I never stopped thinking about living among the dead and walking on the dry bones of the departed souls. In every province in Rwanda families of the dead people are still picking up bones in order to give their loved ones a resting place.
• April experience
Every April, during the memorial of the genocide, the documentary of the killings is relayed on television and I saw many people who were traumatically affected and would end up in hospitals, because they could not imagine the cruel ways their children, husbands, wives and relations were “macheted”.
The scars of the Rwanda genocide cannot be easily wiped out of a loving heart.
Aftermath of Genocide
Majority of young men and ladies are breadwinners of their families, they have their old and young ones to care for. Some are head of families because there is no older person again. Few have opportunities at their late age or twenties to start primary and secondary education. The day I saw an old woman walking on our street at Kacyiru, I wept because I thought all of them are dead and no wisdom hairs to counsel and give moral support to the young ones.
Who will give them hope?
Several NGOs, churches and UN workers were available afterward to give support. Moreover it is unfortunate, while the UN council were only concentrating on the Arusha peaceful meeting between the government of Habyarimana and the RPF in April 1994, they failed to address the underground master plan of the Hutu killers and unable to found a way to disengage the crooked acts of the Interhamwe who had been preparing for the days of trouble.
During genocide, the international community including the sleeping giant of African did not intervene. Per-adventure, the umbrella of the UN Security Council was not extended to Rwanda-the tiny country isn’t worth attention, it is not a gulf region. After all, what good can come out of the Afrique- Rwandese?
Seed of discord
An African adage says, if one asks a lame why his load bends, he replies that you should not look at the top but look below. Underneath the genocide is a seed of discord that had been planted for over 78 years and it has grown to produce the root of hatred, stem of wrath, branches of unforgiveness, leaves of bitterness, flowers of disunity, and, fruits and fragrance of death.
The Belgian colonists on their arrival in 1916 saw the two major ethnic groups that speak the same language and follow same tradition as distinct entities, and they brought an idea of segregation by producing identity cards classifying people according to their ethnicity. They also considered Tutsis as superior to the Hutus and this idea of Hutus being inferior to their Tutsi neighbours developed into the first series of riots in 1959 where thousands of Tutsi were killed. This eventually led to the present president’s parents to leave Rwanda for Uganda.
After the independence in 1962 the Belgians gave power to the Hutus and it was time for them to take revenge on the Tutsi who they thought had moderated them. All through 1959 to 1994, the peak of violence the people that use to live in harmony and having intermarriage now live in fear and danger.
Where were the African kings and rulers when the evil doers struck?
They will have to live with the sorrow as well: those who discovered Rwanda and gave it up; those who colonized and planted the seed of discord; those who allowed themselves to be made cats and dogs and brainwashed; those who killed neighbors and friends and wives; those supposed to protect lives but turned to killers, rapist; the clergy that meant to be people’s shepherd but gave them up to be killed; and those that eradicated the children of tomorrow.
Lament
1. O the land of plains and hills
With beautiful terrains;
Why did you swallow the blood of your sons and daughters?
Those born to beautify and make you glorious
2. O the river of Lake Kivu
The water destined to source of life to the people
Where fishes and crabs used to live,
now filled with flesh and bones of humans
3. Who will console you?
The promising nation of peace
Like the Biblical Rachael that wept and refused to be comforted,
Abayarwanda crieth for the souls of her departed children.
4. Rise-up to a glorious day
after all the ruins
Let your sun be no more darkened
And the sun of righteousness shines over you (with healings in his wings)
Conclusion
Under the government of National unity there are no more separate ID cards. The traveling passport bears the identity of a unified Rwanda country. The jobless youths are finding their way back to school as unemployment gradually decreases and economy improves.
I sighted some precious stones at ‘Musee National, Du Rwanda’ (National Museum of Rwanda). I was wondering this nation is blessed and has potential for greatness though landlocked. Why the diversion from the source of their God-given productive land filled with riches in cattle and agricultural produce. I believe the music, the smiles and the enthusiasm of the vibrant dwellers will keep them going for years though rebuilding their fallen places. Developments are in progress in the educational sector, and a bi-lateral relationship with other countries is a good move on the part of the government. It is good to see in attendance the UN Secretary General Ben ki –Moon at the 15th Anniversary of genocide.
However as much as we can’t forget the April through July of every year, so we keep asking the question- those who planted the seed of discord, the people that perpetrated the genocide, those who heard and did not respond; are they truly human? To be truly human is to love your neighbour as yourself and do good to others as much as you will want them to do to you (and sacrifice if need be).
Comeza cyani , Comeza Rwanda through the people of peace. Amahoro
Notes:
1. Yoruba people are from Nigeria West African speaking Yoruba language
2. Amahoro means peaceful greeting
3. spoken languages in Rwanda are Kinya-rwanda, Swahili and French
4. "How are you?"
5. Another source suggests there is another minority people-group called Twa
And the sun of righteousness shines over you (with healings in his wings)