Friends, as you know, the human experience is a mixed bag, encompassing the good and the ugly. The thoughtful questions posed by Dr. Oluwatoyin Adepoju are in order. In our sinful world, can individuals be falsely accused even by relatives? You bet, it happens. Do both men and women engage in domestic disputes? You bet, disputes happen, but not all the time. No human relationship is perfect, and anyone who claims perfection in his/her own relationships is self-evidently fake. The African cultural universe embraces its own sense of due process and requires a methodical adjudication of claims by both a plaintiff and a defendant before a verdict of guilty or innocence is rendered. So, the legal principle that an accused should be deemed innocent until proven guilty is not an exclusive Western jurisprudential expectation. I presume that each one of us expects this right of presumption of innocence until proven guilty to be extended to us if we ever get entangled in the judicial system. “Nobody knows tomorrow,” reads a common note of wisdom that we often see on the external frames of public transportation buses that traverse our bustling cities.
An age-old adage says that what's good for the goose is good for the gander. We should, at all times, not sometimes, unreservedly extend to others, rights which we believe we are entitled to. And so, anyone on this forum who subscribes to the universal principle that a person must be presumed innocent until proven guilty should deem Ngugi Wa Thiong'O innocent of any and all accusations leveled against him by whomever during his earthly sojourn, given that the said accusations were not subjected to the scrutiny of due process. That said, one thing is for certain: each of us will ultimately answer to our Creator, the owner of our lives, for how we led our earthly lives.
“I myself do not judge a man [or a woman] by the color of his [or her] skin. The yardstick that I use to judge a man [or a woman] is his [ or her] deeds, his [her] behavior, and his [or her] intentions." -- Malcolm X.
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This response is objective.All sides are not ignored nor declared innocent or faultless . Implying that both the son and the living mother should exercise the universal concept of forgiveness if indeed - truthfully speaking Ngugi ' s attitude or actions have not been maritally perfect especially with his wife and son . Above all let's rest the issue as it was because the major actor has passed on
an immortal journey.Sorry to hear about this.Don't worry.We- all of us should be students of tolerance till eternity.Nobofy or couple is perfect on planet earth no matter how highly placed or referred by few people.This is another raw material for fictional writings.May God Almighty bless his next home and forgive his imperfections on planet earth.Amen and Amen that should apply to us all still alive on this sinful world.
Gbemi Tijani MST
Paul Harris Fellow
Former Unesco Club founder Leader in Ogun State High School in the late 70s in Nigeria Southwest
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If we’re going to take the bull by the horns,
we’ve got to face facts: Domestic Violence in Africa
( Perhaps a good reason why Roman Catholic priests don't
get married and raise families, as then, they too would
not be exempt from the general malady and in no time
at all could find themselves singing “The Song of Ocol”
or LL Cool J after saying the Sunday morning mass
Not that wife-beating is a national pastime in Kenya. There's said to be a certain "tribe" /ethnic group in Sierra Leone ( not to cause offence I won't name them ) but it's reported that their woman believe that you don't love them if you don't beat them regularly. Ditto ,the last time that I was at Bonde Bar ( reggae music) a Swedish somebody came over to whisper some sweet nothings in my ear. So where's your boyfriend, I asked her. O I left him in Gothenburg , she replied, and I don't love him any more, she added, he beats me all the time. All the time indeed. Sweet love and affection.
Reminds me of this story about purported national characteristics back then, when Hashem offered the Torah to other nations but for one reason or the other they would not accept it.
Succinctly narrated here:
Anyway, today,
Domestic Violence is a worldwide problem
Nothing new under the sun :
Consider this juicy piece of gossip,
self-confessed by Nobel Literature Laureate Bertrand Russell:
“I went out bicycling one afternoon, and suddenly, as I was riding along a country road, I realised that I no longer loved Alys. I had had no idea until this moment that my love for her was even lessening. The problem presented by this discovery was very grave. We had lived ever since our marriage in the closest possible intimacy. We always shared a bed, and neither of us ever had a separate dressing-room. We talked over together everything that ever happened to us… I knew that she was still devoted to me. I had no wish to be unkind, but I believed in those days…that in intimate relations one should speak the truth.”
The serial monogamist Bertrand Russell was married four times…
I wonder what he thought of polygamy…
Reality :
So there could be the problem of sibling rivalry,
jealousies, unedited sob stories
and other complications arising
from wife number one
Sara and Hagar
Ishmael and Yitzhak
even Rabbi Ovadia chirping
that Hashem, ”regretted”
having made Ishmael &
his descendants
Once again we find ourselves standing
on dangerous, shadowy territory
willingly or unwillingly
disposed to committing
some painful, unholy,
Wa Thiong’o: Did he? Didn’t he?
Shit happens.
Personally, I understand that in some heated, domestic situation,
al-cohol combined with an excess of self-righteous emotion
or indignation, could be be an almost lethal combination
leading to domestic violence
The problem is not merely or peculiarly only African,
in Russia it may be enhanced by Vodka
it’s more or less a universal situation
the fundamental bitchin’ that goes on in every kitchen
As the bard sang,
“You got men who can't hold their peace and women who can't control their tongues
The rich seduce the poor and the old are seduced by the young.”
In some places it’s even worse than that :
“Adulterers in churches and pornography in the schools
You got gangsters in power and lawbreakers making rules”
It should be futile to speculate
that rumours about
Ngugi Wa Thiong'o being linked to Domestic Violence
cost him the Nobel Prize in Literature
several years running
There’s no smoke without fire, true, but we shouldn’t rush to conclusions on the basis of suspicion only. Not even if we are - without evidence, prepared to believe the very best or the very worst about somebody who, in terms of human nature, apart from the Jesus or the Shylock of our imagination, is not very different from you and me. After all, so far, the “unsubstantiated claims” have been made outside of a court of law with its own more rigid rules as to what can be legally admissible as reliable/ credible / verifiable evidence and truthful testimony, on oath, the outcome of rigorous cross examination
In the political context of the as yet never-ending Luo-Kikuyu rivalry, if the rumours of wife-beating were unsubstantiated, the cloud of suspicion that was being promoted by the media must have already, sufficiently tarnished his reputation, perhaps according to the Law of Jante, “ welcome to the club” as a man, husband, father but would not have necessarily tarnished his reputation as a writer, an ideologue and a decoloniser of the African mind.
Correction : Bonden Bar ( not Bonde Bar)
Sympathy, empathy, outrage : This sad story
Ethical relativism perspectives :
Another complicated case
https://www.google.de/search?q=Malik+Obama+on+Barack+Obama&sca_esv
Malik Obama on Barack Obama - Search
And last, but not least, Domestic Violence in Sierra Leone
where I suppose Joe is still bragging “Ai gee am good beat”
and Sally is still showing off to her best friend,
the love marks she got from the latest beating.
Best friend is a little envious and is complaining
that her man never beats her.
“Maybe, he doesn’t really love you”, says Sally
God have mercy
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Dr Oohay,
You hit the proverbial nail on its head right there :
“some obverse reality ALSO appears (for better or worse) anytime any HOT or suspicious “legal” or non-legal controversy appears.”
Ray Charles also hit on that mostly US reality in his hit song Child Support Alimony understandably ( sympathetic understanding ) alimony being one of the reasons why although St Paul advised “it’s better to get married than to burn “ ( to burn with lust and then to burn in the hell-fire afterwards) because of the spectre of alimony some men of substance don't want to get married, don’t wanna be fleeced like a sacrificial lamb in the divorce court, not even at Reno . About the celebrity alimony scandals , I think of Tiger Woods and smile. Because of the spectre of alimony, I suppose that polygamy would not be an economically wise or viable option for most weakly paid men over there in the United States.
When Wa Thiong’o made that statement “that Njeeri was his only legal wife, adding that although he had grown-up children with his first wife, Njeeri was his only wife and that he had “no valid marital bond with any other woman”, he was probably under some kind of pressure to clear the air, just in case some rival marriage claims were being made or should pop up in the usual African polygamic context, he himself an outcome of such an arrangement since his father Thiong'o wa Ndūcũ had four wives and twenty eight children , Ngugi born of his third wife, Wanjiku wa Ngũgĩ. So, given that traditionalists often complain about Christian missionaries interfering with their bountiful marriage customs and other cultural norms, we must admit that that statement of Ngugi’s represents a radical generational departure from the family culture and marriage customs. We may choose to call it modernity or according to Wa Thiongo’s mode of expression, refer to it as decolonisation of body and mind from the trammels of ancient tribal mores and marriage customs, hence his magnum opus in Gikiyu, “ I will marry when I want.”
Having mentioned Tiger Woods, I must say that last night as I followed proceedings at The Toyin Falola Interviews: A Panel Discussion on Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o: Life and Literature , as I listened to Okey Ndibe , I found myself thinking of tigritude and Blake’s The Tyger… Interestingly enough, after the matter of Wa Thiong’o excising the FGM scene in a later (Gikiyu?) edition of his The River Between was brought up, I was anxiously waiting and half-expecting Brother Ndibe to pounce ( like Soyinka's or Blake’s tyger) on this kind of controversy rearing its ugly head, but as Nobel Literature Laureate Bobby Dylan once humbly sang,
“Democracy don't rule the world
You better get that in your head
This world is ruled by violence
But I guess that's better left unsaid!”
So, so many possible things were left unsaid.
And so, even posthumously we may safely observe that Wa Thiong’o in this instance did wisely bow down or bend to societal pressure, as FGM even in the context of post-colonial modernity in Kenya and other African countries where FGM was practised by some ancestors, is still a very sensitive issue.
Now that the missionaries’ gold standard of “lay down your weapons and turn the other cheek”, “Love your enemies" etc is over, in the post-colonial modernity too, violence has its special language or indeed violence is also a language, in some cases, the only language which some people understand. As a language of resistance we had the Mau Mau Rebellion in tune with the Malik el Shabazz ethos “There is nothing in our book, the Koran, that teaches us to suffer peacefully.” - and therefore on the domestic front too , sometimes, the human factor, responsible for domestic violence
On Sunday, June 8, 2025, 1:16 AM, Cornelius Hamelberg <cornelius...@gmail.com> wrote:
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