50 years after, Soyinka, Clark,
others remember Okigbo
Published September 22, 2017
The Christopher Okigbo Foundation
rallies family and friends and of legendary poet, Christopher Okigbo, to the
University of Ibadan, where the 50th anniversary of his death was marked, AKEEM
LASISI writes
The
legacies of poet and activist, Christopher Okigbo, were celebrated in Ibadan on
Wednesday, when the Okigbo Foundation held the 50th anniversary of his death.
Okigbo,
author of acclaimed poetry volumes, Labyrinth and Path of Thunder, died
on the battle field, fighting on the side of Biafra during the Nigerian Civil
War.
At
the event held at the University of Ibadan, writers, especially Okigbo’s contemporaries
such as Profs. Wole Soyinka, JP Clark, Chukwuemeka Ike and Dan Izevbaye, noted
that his contribution to the growth of literature in the country and beyond was
enormous.
Some
of them, however, situated his adventures in the country’s struggle for identity,
justice and progress.
According
to Soyinka, Okigbo lived his life on conviction. The Nobel laureate said that
he was not just an activist, but also someone who put his life on the line.
He
also described Okigbo as a “multi-variant and a renaissance person.
Expressing
worries that Nigeria was still stranded in the kind of situation in which
Okigbo died, he said, “It’s telling that his anniversary is taking place at a
critical period for us as a nation. We are confronting a choice brought up by
mis-governance, leadership alienation and lack of opportunities. We are moving
slowly, intermittently out of a menace called Boko Haram but which is now being
succeeded by cattle rearers who feel they own every square inch of the nation.”
At
the programme attended by Profs. Kole Omotosho, Remi Raji and The NEWS publisher,
Mr. Kunle Ajibade, Soyinka expressed regret about the Indigenous People of
Biafra issue, as well as the military’s reaction, saying there must be a
way out of what he called the periodic cycle of stupidity that overtakes the
country again and again.
He
condemned the militarisation of the country and asked the military to probe the
video of IPOB youths being punished by soldiers, as they were seen lying in
mud.
In
his keynote address, Izevbaye highlighted aspects of Okigbo’s life as an
accomplished poet and gave an insight into how musical his poetry is.
According
to him, Okigbo was a cosmopolitan poet as evident in the Greek and Latin that
echo in his works. He said his forage into war was an act of heroism, adding
that the deceased embraced the gun because he knew the limitation of poetry
when it comes to missiles and grenades.
Also
at the event were the Deputy Governor of Oyo State, Chief Alake Adeyemo;
Okigbo’s wife, Ambassador Judith Attah, revered publisher, Chief Joe Bekhout
and Chief Alex Ajayi, who was Okagbo’s principal at Fiditi Grammar School.
The
foundation’s head, Mrs. Obiageli Okigbo, who was supported by a former
President of the Association of Nigerian Authors, Dr. Wale Okediran, to
organise the programme, noted that several events and projects were being
carried out to propagate Okigbo’s ideals.
Copyright
PUNCH.
http://punchng.com/50-years-after-soyinka-clark-others-remember-okigbo/
No comments:
Post a Comment