The Palgrave Handbook of Africa and the Changing Global Order

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Toyin Falola

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Jan 3, 2022, 9:51:12 AM1/3/22
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https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-030-77481-3?token=HOLIDAY21&utm_campaign=3_fjp8312_springerlink_shopping_katte_HOLIDAY21&gclid=Cj0KCQiA2sqOBhCGARIsAPuPK0gmJShKqPeXNKv2bxZrZ7bhXegfGzmiJO13JOGCkDujJ-LEgXguk6saAlehEALw_wcB#toc

 

 

 

 

 

This handbook fills a large gap in the current knowledge about the critical role of Africa in the changing global order. By connecting the past, present, and future in a continuum that shows the paradox of existence for over one billion people, the Handbook underlines the centrality of the African continent to global knowledge production, the global economy, global security, and global creativity. Bringing together perspectives from top Africa scholars, it actively dispels myths of the continent as just a passive recipient of external influences, presenting instead an image of an active global agent that astutely projects soft power. Unlike previous handbooks, this book offers an eclectic mix of historical, contemporary, and interdisciplinary approaches that allow for a more holistic view of the many aspects of Africa’s relations with the world.

 

Oluwatoyin Adepoju

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Jan 3, 2022, 1:27:17 PM1/3/22
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Another powerful work from the Falola Network

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Oluwatoyin Adepoju

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Jan 3, 2022, 4:41:29 PM1/3/22
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My chapter in this book is titled  "Spatial Navigation as a Hermeneutic Paradigm: Ifa, Heidegger and Calvino".

 

Great thanks to Samuel Oloruntoba, one of the editors, for his role in alerting me to the possibility of publishing in this book.

 

The essay was actually written in 2004, at a time of my first experience with the near absolute freedom of postgraduate study in England after the more constricted character of studying in my university in Nigeria.

 

Unifying all my interests, I was at last able to integrate philosophy, literature, spirituality and the visual arts, bringing my explorations in Nigeria into dialogue with my discoveries in England, within a learning culture that prized multidisciplinary self education across disciplines.

 

The essay is actually inspired by a subject perhaps not mentioned within it, perhaps bcs that influence is subliminal rather than immediate- my experiences exploring Benin-City and it's surrounding landscapes and villages, on foot, motivated by the culture of sacred trees that marks the landscape, trees of great epistemic and  metaphysical significance, a subject awaiting adequate exploration.

 

This experience sensitised me to the hermeneutics of landscape, it's interpretive potential, it's embedding of physical, philosophical, spiritual, historical and other values, an interpretive zone in relation to the Benin landscape and the work of it's landscape designers still awaiting the study it deserves, to the best of my knowledge, but foreshadowed by the Benin expression, "aghase se Edo, Edo ree", "When you arrive in Edo, Edo is distant,indicating the discrepancy between physical presence in a location and adequate understanding of the levels of meaning represented by  that location, a cognitive distance even more striking in relation to the cultural density of Benin.

At the time I wrote the essay in question, even that striking piece of knowledge about Benin spatial and cultural theory still lay in my future, being encountered by chance in a news publication, and on which I wrote a short essay, self published online, and a longer one, yet unpublished, from what I recall, along with other work awaiting publication,  inspired by the evocative powers of the Benin landscape.

 

The essay published in the handbook develops in terms of the topography and dynamism of the London Underground, the sensitivities to the intersection of physical and social space first cultivated in me by the Benin landscape.

 

At the time, I was doing two concurrent MA degrees in comparative literature at the University of Kent and another at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, funded by my family in Nigeria, eager to do anything legitimate  to help their creatively restless brother find himself, using my experience in  both programs in feeding each other, adapting the theoretical scope of the SOAS program, Tania Tribe's class on art theory I audited and the research program of humanities public lectures run by  SOAS and nearby UCL in enriching the multi-disciplinary flexibility of the Kent program, the latter integrating broad studies in literature, along with being  open to other disciplines, with the MA in the Study of Mysticism and Religious Experience, the religion study  program a magnificent stimulant  to my yearning to synthesise  various spiritualities and philosophies.

 

What could the Yoruba origin  Ifa system of knowledge possibly have to do with the London Underground, Eshu, the Yoruba deity, with Martin Heidegger and all these with the Italian writer Italo Calvin's Invisible Cities, which creates a relationship between physical and imagined metropolises?

 

Spatial intersections within Yoruba and other African cosmologies as points of unification of possibilities, physical and spiritual?

 

The Underground as a network of intersections represented by various stations, where unanticipated encounters may emerge?


Heidegger's  metaphorisation of philosophical  exploration in terms of paths of enquiry in ceaselessly   unfolding spaces? 


Shapes of experience and imagination rising from motion within physical spaces and their possibilities for interpersonal  encounter, Calvino's take on city space?


Goegraphy as personal and communal cosmos?


thanks


toyin

 



On Mon, Jan 3, 2022, 15:51 Toyin Falola <toyin...@austin.utexas.edu> wrote:
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Oluwatoyin Adepoju

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Jan 3, 2022, 4:41:37 PM1/3/22
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Edited 

My chapter in this book is titled  "Spatial Navigation as a Hermeneutic Paradigm: IfaHeidegger and Calvino".

 

Great thanks to Samuel Oloruntoba, one of the editors, for his role in alerting me to the possibility of publishing in this book.

 

The essay was actually written in 2004, at a time of my first experience with the near absolute freedom of postgraduate study in England after the more constricted character of studying in my university in Nigeria.

 

Unifying all my interests, I was at last able to integrate philosophy, literature, spirituality and the visual arts, bringing my explorations in Nigeria into dialogue with my discoveries in England, within a learning culture that prized multidisciplinary self education across disciplines.

 

The essay is actually inspired by a subject perhaps not mentioned within it, perhaps bcs that influence is subliminal rather than immediate-my experiences exploring Benin-City and it's surrounding landscapes and villages, on foot, motivated by the culture of sacred trees that marks the landscape, trees of great epistemic and  metaphysical significance, a subject awaiting adequate exploration.

 

This experience sensitised me to the hermeneutics of landscape, it's interpretive potential, it's embedding of physical, philosophical, spiritual, historical and other values, an interpretive zone in relation to the Benin landscape and the work of it's classical landscape designers still awaiting the scope of study it deserves, to the best of my knowledge, but foreshadowed by the Benin expression, "aghase se Edo, Edo ree", "When you arrive in Edo, Edo is distant,indicating the discrepancy between physical presence in a location and adequate understanding of the levels of meaning represented by  that location, a cognitive distance even more striking in relation to the cultural density of Benin.

At the time I wrote the essay in question, even that pregnant  piece of knowledge about Benin spatial and cultural theory still lay in my future, being encountered by chance in a news publication, and on which I wrote a short essay, self published online, and a longer one, yet unpublished, from what I recall, along with other work awaiting publication,  inspired by the evocative powers of the Benin landscape.

 

The essay published in the handbook develops in terms of the topography and dynamism of the London Underground, the sensitivities to the intersection of physical and social space first cultivated in me by the Benin landscape.

 

At the time, I was doing two concurrent MA degrees in comparative literature at the University of Kent and another at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, funded by my family in Nigeria, determined to do anything legitimate  to help their creatively restless brother find himself, using my experience in  both programs in feeding each other, adapting the theoretical scope of the SOAS program, Tania Tribe's class on art theory I audited and the research program of humanities public lectures run by  SOAS and nearby UCL in enriching the multi-disciplinary flexibility of the Kent program, the latter integrating broad studies in literature, along with being  open to other disciplines, with the MA in the Study of Mysticism and Religious Experience, the religion study  program a magnificent stimulant  to my yearning to synthesise  various spiritualities and philosophies.

 

What could the Yoruba origin Ifa system of knowledge possibly have to do with the London Underground, Eshu, the Yoruba deity, with Martin Heidegger and all these with the Italian writer Italo Calvino's Invisible Cities, which creates a relationship between physical and imagined metropolises?

 

Spatial intersections within Yoruba and other African cosmologies as points of unification of possibilities, physical and spiritual?

 

The Underground as a network of convergences and divergences represented by various stations, where unanticipated encounters may emerge?


Heidegger's  metaphorization of philosophical  exploration in terms of paths of enquiry in ceaselessly   unfolding spaces? 


Eshu as fundamental hermeneute,  eyes overlooking  the circle of exploration of possibilities at the intersection of matter and spirit, of past, present and future that is the opon  ifa, the Ifa divination tray, his crossroads location evocative of the intersection of what is, what was and what may be, guide to the flight of the mind across these constellations of possibility?


Shapes of experience and imagination rising from motion within physical spaces and their possibilities for interpersonal  encounter, Calvino's take on city space?


Geography as personal and communal cosmos?


thanks


toyin

 

Cornelius Hamelberg

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Jan 4, 2022, 2:44:26 AM1/4/22
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Indeed, another powerful one from our Mighty Ojogbon of Africa & Diaspora 

Since Our roots begin in Africa we can’t escape the reality that everything flows and flowed from there.

On a much more mundane plane, one can’t help musing on Africa’s impact on contemporary music throughout the world

African Herbs, thinking of Nauclea Latifolia, also thinking about on the one hand what is the main Herb for the Rastafari, and on the other hand what Father Spyridon says about Cannabis and Christianity.

It should be interesting to see how Brother Biko Agozino would set about reconciling these two views. in the context of the ongoing globalisation of Marijuana...

Black Inventors and their inventions


Michael Afolayan

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Jan 4, 2022, 2:59:08 AM1/4/22
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Oluwatoyin:

Great background to the write-up. I have not read your chapter but you sure have tantalized my appetite and can't wait to read it. I appreciate your relentlessness (or is it restlessness or even both) in your pursuit of intellection. If there is an Oriṣa you remind one of, it is Eṣu (not Satan o, but the primordial spirit of the junction whose hermeneutic power birthed the universe of knowledge among the Yoruba), the agent provocateur of chaos and peace, an enemy like a friend and a friend with the appearance of an enemy. The "everlasting aide de camp to Olodumare" is among his panegyrics. Sometimes you don't want him, but often you can't do without him. Quite peculiar among the Oriṣas but very interesting. 

Keep it up and have a Happy and productive 2022!

MOA


Harrow, Kenneth

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Jan 4, 2022, 2:59:08 AM1/4/22
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the chapter sounds really wonderful, toyin.
ken

kenneth harrow

professor emeritus

dept of english

michigan state university

517 803-8839

har...@msu.edu


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Oluwatoyin Adepoju

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Jan 4, 2022, 10:57:09 AM1/4/22
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Great thanks, Ken and Michael.

Thanks for that superb  Eshu characterisation, Michael.  Striking and memorable, suggesting Eshu as one of the richest fruits of the  complexity and subtlety of the Yoruba imagination,  correlative with the harmony of contraries in Igbo thought highlighted by Achebe and scholarship on his work and embodied perhaps by the deity Agwu.

I was mesmerised by the technological marvel that is the London Underground, coming as I did from an environment where trains hardly existed, and electricity unreliable, and having first begun my educational career in this new environment in a small city, Kent, where there were no trains. 

The marshalling of sophisticated technological  structures  in relation to skilled human power at different levels, the logistical symmetry enabling the working of  such a  massive transportation system,  was spellbinding, thrilling me whenever I think of it, leading to reflection on the meaning, the mental, social and scientific parameters that enable a technological society, a culture of resource management that is a far cry from simply being able to consume the products of such societies, such as riding sophisticated cars over roads of various levels of quality, across environments where the struggle for such basics as water co-exists with Internet access.

This transportation system is  abstracted in terms of one of the iconic forms of the city's culture, the map of the London Underground, beautifully produced in many formats and colours, a visual delight and organisational wonder produced for carrying in one's pocket as one uses the network, evoking various kinds of spatial mapping in relation to motion,  Australian Aboriginal songlines integrating stories, fused with music,  of the journeys of mythic ancestors across landscape  as they created the world, to the contemporary Western Pagan understanding of  currents of energy underlying the earth,  to roads linking the  shrines marking various places in Benin, tree and human made shrines rich in history,  sites of intercourse between humans and spirits, dense with the atmospheric concentration of numinous spaces, the official shrine network amplified by my own exposure to various other trees I understood as sharing the numinous potency of such locations as the grove shrine at Ikpoba hill where the Oba of Benin communes with his ancestors, this tree shrine network  becoming for me  a cosmos of value, enchanted locations I would visit physically and in imagination, with at times startling outcomes, from sensing arcane presences, powerful but strange  intelligences, to entry into another dimension where one interacted with a mysterious  personage; a massive iroko tree of unimaginaginable ancientness  which I sensed as harbouring intense but invisible activity of unseen agents in aerial motion between the tree and locations beyond, another which I was convinced was conscious of itself, a self knowing but inanimate entity, an intelligence I could reach mentally if I tried, my effort at telepathic communication with one such iroko leading to the formation of an  idea I was convinced came from the tree, an abominable conception alien to my thinking yet consonant with legends about iroko, spiritually luminous in African folklore, the entire network centred for me in the Ogba forest, its atmosphere a classic demonstration of  ''an invisble but majestic presence that inspires both dread and fascination and constitutes the non-rational element of vital religion,'' as Webster's dictionary defines Rudolph Otto's idea, the numinous.

Spatial abstractions, physically visual or purely mental, maps of the existent, the probable and the improbable, links between what is, what was, what may be and what cannot be, conjuncting physical, mental, social and spiritual universes, geography and cosmology, space, time and infinity,  the map of the London Underground a visualisation of a physical network enabling both anticipated and unanticipated outcomes through the dynamism of human motion, the spatial womb of the opon ifa, the Ifa divination tray, the space where symbolic configurations of possibility emerge through the spatial patterns they assume as they are cast on that surface, evoking the space of possibility that is the "odu"of Olodumare, the egg from which the universe breaks open into being, as Ulli Beier puts it, the calabash of possibility from which each moment is born, the fathomless ground of all possibilities, correlating Rosenberg on Olodumare with Wariboko on Boehme's idea of the Ugrund, the fathomless abyss birthing all that is and may be.

Perhaps one's life may be imagined as a map of possibility, of environments where particular possibilities were realized and others unfulfilled, a constellation of possibility moving into a future predictable within the framework of the known but unpredictable in relation to the unknown, emerging from the mystery of individual beginning and transition into the unknown, conjunctive with the mystery of the "why" and "how" of  cosmic genesis and of it's ultimate progression, possibilities visualised in terms of stations akin to the Underground, their ultimate origination imagined in terms of the empty centre of the opon ifa, as Eshu's face looks on in the eyes on it's rim, evoking  quest for understanding within that which is  unanticipatable in it's entirety, the ikin and opele patterns breaking open from this empty centre as these instruments  are cast in divination representing the configurations of awareness and action constituting the journey of the self, subsumed within the circle of eternity, as Sanchez interprets the circular structure of opon ifa.

O masters, grant entry into such wisdom, thoughts and images fused within the mind, merging with  the All Knowing, dropped into the human mind as a drop from the fathomless ocean.

thanks
toyin



Harrow, Kenneth

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Jan 4, 2022, 10:57:21 AM1/4/22
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michael, i didn't know hegel and eshu were on speaking terms....
or is a question of the dialectic?
k

kenneth harrow

professor emeritus

dept of english

michigan state university

517 803-8839

har...@msu.edu


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Oluwatoyin Adepoju

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Jan 4, 2022, 11:24:13 AM1/4/22
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Fine insight.

Eshu, unifier of contraries, privileged embodiment of ase in it's ubiquitous dynamism across forms and states of being.

Hegel, philosopher of rhythmic progression unifying oppositions, dramatising the development of Geist as mind and spirit, cognitive, social, historical, cosmic.

The original reference was to Heidegger but Hegel is relevant in this context.

Thanks

Toyin


Harrow, Kenneth

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Jan 4, 2022, 12:11:16 PM1/4/22
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well, to be truthful. the final analysis of the trickster's work is that it brings restoration of an order. that's the old anthropological understanding, and i believe it was true, in terms of trickster tales and myths.

hegel was the same. we needed a nappy--napolean, to advance history by unsetting the apple cart. call it the dialectical negative--in order to get to the next higher level.

all this presupposes a purposeful motion, now dubbed progress. it is a teleological view of history, with a backward past, a present that works through conflicts, toward a future that realizes the potential in the present.

this is the worst of modernist aspects of thinking, its most self-satisfied un-reflexive manner of dismissing the past, arrogating superiority for the present, seeing fulfilment in the future.

well, i won't go on. no one likes fulminating. but i am glad we are no longer in the throes of dialectical thought, idealist or materialist. if eshu got smart, he left the apples scattered on the floor and didn't correct the disarrangement.
k

kenneth harrow

professor emeritus

dept of english

michigan state university

517 803-8839

har...@msu.edu


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Cornelius Hamelberg

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Jan 4, 2022, 12:11:17 PM1/4/22
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Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju,

It must have been a tremendous task putting it all together.

Mighty Congratulations to the Editors Samuel Ojo Oloruntoba, Toyin Falola and all the contributors to

The Palgrave Handbook of Africa and the Changing Global Order, a necessary reference book for the Africaphile people...

Mighty congratulations to you too , personally, for Spatial Navigation as a Hermeneutic Paradigm Ifa, Heidegger and Calvino as your contribution.

You must have also had some fun writing it to illuminates Ifa, but lo and behold, you have been keeping this under your hat all this time. Kudos. I’m impressed. Some other kind of fellow would have let the cat out of the bag a along time ago and been boasting about it full-time. I daresay the title of your contribution sounds sufficiently complicated / sophisticated / forbidding to scare something out of a humble soul like yours truly and I suppose other non-specialists who may be interested in African Spirituality/African spiritual realms too , but at the same time, to whet our interest to learn something new, because most humble folks have scarcely heard of Heidegger or Calvino and as for me , I remain a total ignoramus about all three ( Ifa, Heidegger , and Calvino). However, the 54 contributions have a general, broad appeal - a little something for everyone. I notice that the contributions about music and the export of culture, etc., all come under the “Africa and Global Religions and Creativity” section of the book. Kudos everybody! During this on-going changing of the Global order - with all the politics and economic that undergirds these changes, this handbook latest is surely a landmark in the American Publishing world for the year 2022.

 The book is quite expensive. No nice price, special concessions for the poverty stricken?  I know that we should be forced to pay through the nose for real quality, eh ?

Even as an independent scholar, don't you think that it's time for your appointment as Adjunct Professor or researcher -in-residence   - more money for your electricity generator, more money from the royalties

More music:

Nyboma : Zatcha ( 1982)

Nyboma: Malcolm X ( 1995)

Oluwatoyin Adepoju

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Jan 4, 2022, 8:50:18 PM1/4/22
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Thanks Ken.

I see your striking depiction of Eshu in your last paragraph as similar to one of his images in the tradition, yet in tension with characterizations of him as a restorer of order  indicated in your first paragraph, if I have understood you well enough.

Leaving the apples scattered rather than trying to ''correct the disarrangement,''  like the Zen Buddist teacher insisting that the leaves fallen on the ground are more beautiful than a ground swept clean.

Eshu, who turns right into wrong, wrong into right, cramped in the verandah and the house but stretches  luxuriantly in the groundnut shell, part of a wonderful oriki Eshu, sums up that way of looking at him.

Perhaps one could reference different approaches to the idea of dialectical progression. Is its value really completely dismissable?

Is the idea not applicable across various systems, from the cosmological to the social to the cognitive, without holding to the simplistic idea that the past  necessarily implies an inadequacy superseded by the future?

Indian Hindu theories of cosmological development and its relationship to cognition, as in yantra theory and Abhinavagupta on the Goddess Kali  embodying this conjunction in the image of the Twelve Kalis, may also be understood as dialectical, developing this idea by insisting on the equal value of every element, every stage in the progression, the totality eventually unified in terms of a circle in which all parts are equidistant from the centre. 

thanks

toyin



Oluwatoyin Adepoju

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Jan 4, 2022, 8:50:28 PM1/4/22
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Thanks, Cornelius.

I bought the Calvino book as a battered second hand copy at the Oba Market in Benin, possibly having had to step through muddy paths after rain, bypassing the tomato, pepper and other food sellers to reach the book stalls where I bought some of my very best books ever, including a pristine copy of Ulli Beier's book on Yoruba cosmology through the art and thought of Susanne Wenger, The Return of the Gods: The Sacred Art of Susanne Wenger, one of the best books on Yoruba thought, a book part of which I copied out by hand when I first encountered  it at the then Bendel Library in Benin when it had no photocopiers and which I saw again eventually locked  behind glass as a special book at Oxfam's bookshop in Cambridge.

On sighting the book on that day in Oba Market, I composed myself stealthily and asked its price in a nonchalant manner, so that my burning desire would not lead to a price hike. Having eventually paid for it a price that I understood as practically nothing in relation to the value of the book, I took it home, leaving the bookseller happy with what he understood as a good sale, careful to avoid any untoward interaction on the way  that would negatively affect the new child I had acquired.

Calvino's Invisible Cities is a fantastic  re-imagining of Marco Polo's  accounts of his travels in marvellous places around the world. Calvino uses the motif of the city as a means of reflecting on human communities in cities, the possibilities they generate, the interactions and imaginings they enable. Stories told in small, poetic chapters.

Heidegger has something to offer a broad range of readers in his many writings, from his reflections on van Gogh's painting of a battered pair of shoes to questions about what is meant by the idea of existing, an idea taken for granted but inadequately understood.

Ifa is distinctive for its vast network of stories. Perhaps one may relate to it in terms of the idea of the cosmos as an unfolding  narrative comprising  the individual narratives of its various existents, narratives organised in terms of constellations of imaginative possibility known as odu,   an idea correlative with Hasidic narrative theories in Judaism, particularly  those of Nahman of Bratslav, who understood stories as vital in linking heaven and Earth.

I did not publish the essay earlier beceause I had little clue about the kind of scholar I wanted to be besides being  simply happy to research and write. 

On the issue of book pricing, we have a problem. The Western academic publishing system thrives on relationships between high quality and high cost, an issue addressed in the favour of their communities by their robust currencies and vigorous library systems which greatly facilitate  access to these books. A good number of the best books on Africa and at times, by Africans on Africa, are published by those publishing houses. 

What happens to Africans in countries with weak currencies and fledgling public library systems? How developed are their university library systems? As a publisher, what should be my position on shadow libraries, which cheat publishers and authors of their monies by making books accessible across the world at little or no cost to those who otherwise  might not have access to them?

Thanks.

toyin



Harrow, Kenneth

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Jan 5, 2022, 4:06:56 AM1/5/22
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toyin falola could speak to this issue of publication. it isn't quite the way you put it, toyin.
we have to distinguish between commercial houses that aim at global audiences--most african materials do not fit there, with the well known exceptions of adichie and company.
the rest are smaller independent presses and university presses. i edit a series for msu press, so i know a drop about this from the inside.
the presses are very marginal in their finances. most barely survive. the costs of printing are very high. the readership is very low. thus, the prices can be too high for most people. libraries are the primary market for hard cover. after a year, if lucky, it will come out in paper, for $35 or so, not $150 or so. and more and more, e-books are filling in the gap.
go to amazon and you'll see what i am saying.
it has nothing to do with high quality, nothing to do with the currencies of the country. it is simply the costs and the number of books that can be sold. nowadays, the priorities of libraries include journals required for key fields, like the sciences, which are expensive and required. the budget for novels or fiction or africanist studies is smaller. and yet, they are the first market. think about this is you were the publisher. the run might be a few hundred books, that's all.
that's reality.
ken

kenneth harrow

professor emeritus

dept of english

michigan state university

517 803-8839

har...@msu.edu


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Toyin Falola

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Jan 5, 2022, 6:02:23 AM1/5/22
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Ken:

This problem has been with us forever. Until we all worry about the impact of our scholarship on development, liberation, etc., what we do may be of marginal value.

TF

Cornelius Hamelberg

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Jan 7, 2022, 6:50:37 AM1/7/22
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 Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju: Thank you.

Pope wrote his An Essay on Criticism when he was 23 years old, Alexander the Great passed away at 32 years of age, Purcell was through with composing by the time he was 36, Buber’s I and Thou was published in 1923 when he was a mature 45, and last night, I was listening in on your man who never left town, nevertheless arriving in the space-time dimension known as the Hereafter at a ripe 79...

From the point of view of all of the above, it’s really amazing that your contribution to this monumental 2022 publication was written as far back as 2004 when you were a slightly different kind of person, perhaps, less cerebrally advanced and cosmologically speaking, with all that modern science and philosophy since then , less well-informed than you are today. If any of the other contributions on the political and economic issues had been written that far back in time, they would probably be outdated by now – however, when it comes to Ifa, Heidegger , and Calvino, I suppose insights may change about the still evolving Ifa, and whereas Calvino is gone, God willing, the ghost of Heidegger and the sins of his Nazi past will never be laid to rest, will continue to be exhumed for re-examination for many generations to come. Talking about “Nazi past”, Pope Benedict’s is also there to haunt him.

I suppose that as underdog, there’s no other way but to use comparative philosophy/comparative mythology / comparative religion to explain the mysteries in something as uniquely indigenous as Ifa.

I have looked through all of the chapter titles/ topics , they are all very interesting indeed, and I’m intrigued that Malami Buba who I associate with language and literature has a chapter entitled Look East” and Look Back: Lessons for Africa in the Changing Global Order “ - a very topical issue indeed, with China on the march in Africa.

(By the way, have you looked at his ( Malami Buba’s) The legacies of the Sokoto Caliphate in contemporary Nigeria and if you haven’t, you know that you ought to, needless to say, in conjunction with Moses Ochonu’s Colonialism by Proxy: Hausa Imperial Agents and Middle Belt Consciousness in Nigeria – since you are forever going on about “Northern Hegemony “ Miyetti Allah, dear President Buhari, and our dearest Fulani Herdsmen

You and Chidi have been singing the praises of blogging, online self-publishing , that you are both plentifully available on the WWW., but I suspect that it should be a little more satisfying/ fulfilling to refer to your books. We ( Better Half and I ) were handed one ( a book) on new year’s eve by our guest, the author, Karl-Gunnar Norén – the book “ Polarfararnas kläder” – På liv och död” and I could see the glint of satisfaction in his eyes as he autographed it and handed it over. Factor in what Ken Harrow says in this thread, about the profit motive in publishing ; among other things, it means that Nigeria is potentiality a huge market, once the soon to be 300 million strong nation re-incarnates as a reading generation (sadly, for now, even in this digital age, more than a hundred million Naira souls belong to the non-reading generation….

Your walk in your then favourite haunt , the Benin City Market was not very different from my prowls in the Mile One Market in Port Harcourt and the market places in Aba where to my great surprise you’d always find stalls with the Seal of Solomon, all kinds of magical pentagrams and assorted magical talismans, the so called sixth and seventh books of Moses on display , which means that there’s a profitable market for that kind of paraphernalia that feed the great appetite for the hocus-pocus, the rank superstition, the supernatural, the practitioners of witchcraft, namely the witches and wizards , and some of the other supernatural beings such as mami wata that I have never seen in Sweden - but there’s at least one in Denmark.

As for book stores - in a Cairo bookshop, intuition moved my eyes one shelf up and lo and behold there was Ghana an Diplomacy - Ghana's Foreign Policy, 1957-1966: Diplomacy, Ideology and the New State by W. Scott Thompson – a book that I had been searching for , for years…

BTW , when I returned to Sweden from Nigeria, it was my dream to start a bookshop ( to be known as “ Sunshine House” . The world has changed so much since then . Today, such an enterprise couldn’t possibly thrive, talk less of survive , thanks to the www, the cell phone, the tablet

Some Congolese style Ghanaian Highlife : Nyboma : Amba


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Oluwatoyin Adepoju

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Jan 9, 2022, 7:35:59 AM1/9/22
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Thanks, Cornelius.

ill check out the Buba and Ochonu essays to help me broaden my perspective.

why would your bookshop not thrive? Are there not still physical book shops everywhere, although their existence is riskier than before?

i dont think ive advanced in Ifa Studies beyond the level of that 2004 essay. perhaps my most ambitious work on ifa was done at that period. what followed may be seen as more  complementary to those works  than extending their interpretive and applicatory possibilities radically. to go beyond those levels, i might need something different or significantly deeper. 

the MAs  were like refresher courses, well after my BA and after years as an academic. such reinvigoration should be a regular part of a scholarly career.

thanks for the suggestion on books. books are priceless. im working my way towards that. im beginning by creating links to my work in different places.

benin too was good in occult literature. that was where my entry into the occult began. 

this discussion has helped me reflect on where i am coming from, where i am and where i could go from here. i cut out most of the thoughts it inspired in me so as not to bore reasders, but im keeping them for my own reflection.

great thanks
toyin

Cornelius Hamelberg

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Jan 13, 2022, 6:31:04 AM1/13/22
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 Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju,

You are an incorrigible optimist and maybe not a great economist with a good nose for market possibilities and impossibilities.

About my proposed Bookshop, "Sunshine House" - way back in 1985 not surviving to see daylight in 2021, speak less of thriving, you should know that even successes like the once upon a time great little Stockholm bookshop known as "Agora" folded up a long time ago and some of its personnel moved to Hedengrens , the best bookshop in town, along with Akademibokhandeln. Nota bene: Amazon has moved in on Sweden, to muscle in on the book trade, which means that it should be easier - maybe a little cheaper to order some Ta-Nehisi Coates from them than from anyone else in Sweden. When that excellent little fortnightly West Africa Magazine also folded up by 2005, it was time to lose heart , since for the specialist book-store I had in mind, the most guaranteed sales would have been African and African - diaspora music, newspapers, magazines, political & literary journals, and of course crème de la crème in third world literature , and that includes a big chunk of first literary world India , Black Britain, the Caribbean, some Sweden, Canada, and of course, Mighty top dog, the Mighty Mastiff United States, in real or surreal English.

They say that our Shakespeare knew "small Latin and less Greek." In that respect, I guess he was just like some of us ( a little Latin, and less Greek)

And you yourself, where to place you? Are you a postmodernist / a postmodern philosopher or do you elude definition?

At least Ojogbon and some of the most eminent scholars in this forum recognise and identify as one of them, swimming in the same ocean of inquiry. And this very good thing : You don't start putting on airs about it. As you know, you evince a strong attraction and such a great passion for the world of the academe. Indeed, you are swimming in its waters as a part of it, although you sometimes when self-effacing ( a good quality) give the impression - appear to be a little hesitant and apprehensive like the Sadhu before plunging into the ocean against his own will, afraid of being swallowed up entirely, swept away by some really swift, strong, powerful, overwhelming current, into the vast ocean of consciousness and like Sri Ramana Maharshi and Nisargadatta Maharaj becoming at-one-ment with it ?

In that case, on the existential level you probably harbour the kind of fear captured by Khalil Gibran in this poem - Fear

Sometimes, what's done can't be undone - for instance should one be swayed by some conspiracy theory or other about not taking the vaccine , it could be - too late - if you have already taken the vaccine you cannot intake it, one cannot " vaccinate" - we ( all of us ) can only hope on The Resurrection

To Ken, you say, “ I speak from a history of struggle”... jihad !

According to Wole Soyinka,“ a tiger does not proclaim his tigritude he pounces" , so that if Ifa had been a woman/ big booty, I imagine you would have pounced on her (the little tigress, Queen of the Slipstream ) long ago and she would have surely surrendered and by now would have been writing some sublime poetry in her dairy, unlike Anais Nin, about the ecstasy of submission, and singing the kinds of songs you find in Court and Spark. I can't help imagining this

Of course, no one else is capable of standing in your shoes for you , artistically speaking, even if equipped with the necessary negative capability. I daresay it’s no coincidence that your middle name is Vincent or that you were conscious of this when you chose to write about your namesake Vincent Van Gogh

And, of course, there’s sometimes the fear of rejection even amongst the bravest of us all. Perhaps, only a gifted few are exempt or distant from that kind of fear. I’m thinking here of e.g. Kwame Anthony Appiah who as the new kid on the block I’m sure entertained no fear of rejection when he submitted his manuscript for that his early 1992 publication "In My Father's House - Africa in the Philosophy of Culture "

Now here’s the nitty-gritty : When you talk about, " At the beginning of my journeys in Ifa studies..." - those imprecise years of so long ago when I suppose you were initiated into the Ifa cult, it's not unreasonable to expect that by now you have undergone more than the fifteen years of understudy/ rigorous discipleship/ apprenticeship to have qualified as a bona fide Babalawo , so that you are equipped to speak more authoritatively from the inside and in speaking more authoritatively from the inside you'll find that adherents of that faith( cult and your fellow academics who are practitioners of that faith ( cult, and others who merely teach but do not practice or are not authorised to practice those mysteries, begin to take you much more seriously.

"I don't think I've advanced in Ifa Studies, beyond the level of that 2004 essay" ( Humility is really my first name, hello, that was our Oluwatoyin Vincent Adejoju the most humble speaking) although the fact is we don't get that impression from his recent altercations with Lord Olayinka Agbetuyi his forum interlocutor. Furthermore , if Oluwatoyin hasn't advanced beyond the level of that 2004 essay, we are to assume that he has voluntarily, chosen not to do so, since we all know and so does he, that he have more than the required capacity/ brain power and sense of righteousness to become a fully fledged Babalawo

About that type of capacity, the list is long. when you add Susan Wenger ( an initiate) and her husband Ulli Beier...

You could be to Ifa what Sir Richard Francis Burton is to so called "Muhammadan studies" ( I read most his Personal Narrative Of A Pilgrimage to Al-Madinah & Mecca, on the 17th of June 1981, my first night in Ahoada, Rivers State , Nigeria - prior to which I knew zilch about al-Islam) . You could be to Ifa that too , shining the light of Ifa in both the East and the West - like what Sir John Woodroffe is to Hindu Tantra, what Agehananda Bharati is to Hindu Sadhana, you could be a garlanded cult leader in the West, like Adi Da with his awesome library which is free, or what Henry Corbin is to Shia Mysticism, what Idries Shah was to Sufism generally, in the West, at a popular level ( he converted Robert Graves - Oxford Professor of poetry to Sufism!) and so you too could be what Laurence Galian is recently, contemporaneously with Peter Lambourn Wilson. I know that you could easily attain to some of these, but the question remains: What about JESUS? As the Second Person of the Holy Trinity, I wonder how Jesus would have about "Atrocities/war crimes condoned in the Bible" if his disciples or the Pharisees had asked him that sort of question. I'm in a bad mood -feeling a little shattered after watching Professor Diarmaid MacCulloch's "A History of Christianity" , last night. If only you could research for me the claim that "Salvation cannot be found outside of the Catholic Church"

I've got it all mapped out for you ( shmile).

Take heart. The Prophet Moses, Jesus the Redeemer, the Prophet Muhammad salallahu alaihi wa salaam were not PhD students either, nor was Baruch Spinoza or the great Moshe Chaim Luzzatto

The only criticism I've heard from fellow ignoramuses here and there is that Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju seems incapable of saying anything about Ifa and allied Nigerian phenomena without reaching out to explain everything in terms of Western categories of philosophy, metaphysics, etc. I guess that if you were writing in Yoruba, for a traditional Yoruba audience/ readership you would dispense with ranting on about Kant, Heidegger, Dion Fortune, the Dalai Lama, etc.

By the way, it was on Swedish text TV just the other day that 200 villagers in Zamfara had been massacred , getting everyone shivering and wondering, when is the carnage going to stop? My take is that this is a very bad omen, considering that Zamfara was the first state in Nigeria to adopt Sharia Law and meanwhile their governor and special constabulary seem to be sitting on their hands and doing nothing to bring the agents of Shaitan to justice. For some time now Brother Buhari has been saying that he's going to do something about the mayhem. The question is WHEN? Failing to do something about it my prediction is that the military will soon declare a state of emergency in the North East and the North West , which means that the next de facto military coup - a logical consequence of what's going on, is on the horizon - at which time Mr President will be on the sidelines until the next elections which of course will have to be postponed indefinitely, especially if free and fair elections cannot possibly be held in the Northern citadels of terror, mayhem, ransom kidnappings and mass murder. It's not an atmosphere conducive to free and fair elections. Should the chaos and anarchy escalate, you shouldn't have too long to wait, before the no-nonsense military takes over completely, to establish some law and order in the country. The genie is out of the bottle. Time will tell. Martial law is coming. Pray that the mayhem doesn't move down South to where you are at the moment, and if it does , maybe it's time to be relocating to a safe haven in the United States , the alternative being , " To take up arms against a sea of troubles, and by opposing, end them ?"

One of the last things that Obadiah Mailafia said in his last major interview was that nobody knows how much the current administration has been borrowing , from China, among others. But to all intents and purposes, the Nigerian economy is doing very well. Otherwise, the old proven formula going back to the days of Shehu Shagari is that when the treasury is empty , the military usually takes over , and by dispensing with the expensive senate & senators, a military administration is at least the most cost-effective way of administrating the country and establishing at least a semblance of law and order.

Since I'm a great fan of the African Oral Tradition, my New Year's Wish is that this year you will be interviewed/ participate in a meaningful discussion with relevant persons such as Nimi Wariboko or Ojogbon himself, in an appropriate forum and book press where you can disseminate your ideas.

Pepe Ndombe & Madilu System : Santa ( 2021 Album

Nimi Wariboko

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Jan 13, 2022, 11:26:19 AM1/13/22
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Dear Elder Cornelius:
Your prognosis of a military coup has touched a nerve in me. Last Tuesday, January 11,  I gave a lecture on Nigeria to a group of high school teachers of history and social studies from all over America. During the Q/A, one of them asked me if a coup was imminent given the poor security situation in the country?

I responded by saying it was unlikely at this point and if one was staged it might not last long. I proceeded to give six factors which informed my response. 

First, I stated that coups are less likely in Nigeria today than say 40 years ago. The mood and ethos of the country are not conducive for the acceptance of military coups as they were in the past. 

Second,  Nigerians are more likely to resist military coups today. Given the current ethnic divisions in the country, I said Nigerians might interpret coups as ethnic agenda more than ever before and therefore resist them—especially, by people in ethnic groups different from the leaders of the coups. 

Third, I explained that the Nigerian ruling class has reached some sort of convention or consensus for now: the best way to compete for the capture of state power, which can be used for primitive accumulation, is through the crude or fraudulent electoral system. The officers of the military are part of the thieving ruling class and most of them understand this emerging consensus. The military itself is much more divided today than ever before and rely on this emerging consensus to safeguard the fraud and corruption within it. They aid civilian leaders to rig elections in exchange for a share of the loot of state treasury. 

Fourth, it would be difficult to sustain a coup or military rule as a large number of the ruling class now have arms or access to arms. Some of the aggrieved political or displaced leaders might restore to armed struggles against the military government and transformed themselves into warlords. Such warlords might carve out territories for themselves within the country. This is a scary thought. 

Fifth, any military coup from the usual originating regions for coups in Nigeria at this point will just add fuel to secessionist movements like IPOB. Other militant groups in other parts of the country might escalate their operations and also demand to break away. Boko Haram might work harder to gain grounds in a convulsing Nigeria. 

Finally, the Nigeria military is currently not competent enough to tackle and control the widespread banditry and arm robbery all over the country. The number of guns held by rogue individuals in the country is high. The state does not have a monopoly of force in Nigeria. The military might not fully grasp the economic dimensions of national security and blunder as their civilian leaders had done.  Eleven years ago, the federal government asked me to look into the security situation and I clearly laid out a program for the economic dimensions of national security. (For anyone here wondering why the government would hire me as a consultant since you know me only as a philosopher, theologian, or ethicist, let me clarify things for you. For your information, my initial training was in economics and finance. I was an investment banker in Lagos and Wall Street. I also taught in a graduate business school. Before I took up the task of advising on the economic dimensions of national security, the top security brass in the country knew I was consulting for the Central Bank of Nigeria.)

Poverty, corruption, bad infrastructure, and poor economic conditions in the country are in my opinion the greatest challenges to Nigeria’s security condition. In my consultant report, I stated that the usual military approach to national security wherein the security apparatus buys more equipment and hires more personnel was not going to be effective. I advised them to take the economic dimensions of national security seriously. This is a multifaceted approach to managing the country’s security challenges. 

These are the six reasons I could generate in the heat of fleeting Q/A session, fielding questions from some of America’s most brilliant teachers. I gave my talk over Zoom. I am sure, others could come up with more factors. But when you responding to questions literally standing on one foot, there is a hard limit to your intelligence. 

Let me hasten to add that none of the six reasons I provided serves as an ultimate guarantee against a successful coup. Protecting the current democracy—the tattered, struggling, and fragile one that it is—depends on the eternal vigilance of Nigerians themselves. 

Sir Cornelius, you have provided a very pertinent prognosis of a possible coup in Nigeria. I hope Nigerians pay attention to your word of advice. 

Thanks and best wishes,

Nimi Wariboko 
Boston University. 

Cornelius Hamelberg

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Jan 13, 2022, 11:26:20 AM1/13/22
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Correction.

Should read : At least Ojogbon and some of the most eminent scholars in this forum recognise and identify you ( Toyin Adepoju) as one of them, swimming in the same ocean of inquiry.

Correction of bad nonsense.

If only we could unhang each and everyone of all those who been wrongfully hanged,

unlynch those who had been lynched, liberate all those who are currently enslaved

I meant to say that unfortunately, sometimes, what's done can't be undone. For instance should you be swayed by some conspiracy theory or other about not taking the vaccine and - too late - you have already taken the vaccine, you cannot then  un-take it, one cannot " un-vaccinate". Just like the most corrupt Oyibo, the Negro also wants to ascend to Heaven but doesn't want to die, even if he has a strong guarantee that's where he will actually be going - to heaven and not to Siberia or to jahannam. Should the worse come to the worst then we ( all of us ) can only hope on The Resurrection and life everlasting in God's most Holy Name, (someone please say Amen  

Harrow, Kenneth

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Jan 14, 2022, 3:44:31 PM1/14/22
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nimi
how powerful it would be to translate your prognostications to the u.s. where, each time you say less likely, for us it is more likely!
ken

kenneth harrow

professor emeritus

dept of english

michigan state university

517 803-8839

har...@msu.edu


From: usaafric...@googlegroups.com <usaafric...@googlegroups.com> on behalf of Nimi Wariboko <nimi...@msn.com>
Sent: Thursday, January 13, 2022 8:27 AM
To: usaafric...@googlegroups.com <usaafric...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Future Military Coups in Nigeria
 

Emmanuel Udogu

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Jan 14, 2022, 3:45:47 PM1/14/22
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                                                         FOOD FOR THOUGHT

 An Opinion from the Archives on the Matter of Professor Wariboko's Fascinating Post against the Backdrop of Nigerian History

E. Ike Udogu, “In Search of Political Stability and Survival: Toward Nigeria’s Third Republic,” Scandinavian Journal of Development Alternatives and Area Studies, Vol. XI, No. 2 & 3 (September-December 1992), pp. 5-28

                                             A PARAPHRASED EXCERPT

 In his New Year speech to the nation following the overthrow of the Second Republic [on December 31, 1983], General Buhari stated the reasons for the military coup as follows:

While corruption and indiscipline had been associated with our state of underdevelopment, these twin evils in our politics have attained unprecedented height over the past four years. The corrupt, inept and insensitive leadership in the last four years has been the source of immorality and impropriety in our society, since what happens in any society is largely a reflection of the leadership of that society (p. 12).

When Buhari's major assertions are juxtaposed against those of Major Chukwuma Nzeogwu, the leader of the January 1966 coup, one sees some parallels as to the causes of both coups. For instance, Nzeogwu said after the coup:

Our enemies are the political profiteers, swindlers, the men in high and low places who seek bribes and demand ten percent, those that seek to keep the country divided permanently so that they can remain in office as minister and VIPs of waste, the tribalists, the nepotists [et cetera] (p.12).

 What does this comparison suggest? It suggests that [poor leadership] and corruption have become endemic in society and politics.  

Having condemned the vices that have led to democratic setbacks in Nigeria as a General and Head of State, I hope that President Buhari will recall his January 1, 1984 address to the nation and tackle the issues he raised as the country marches gingerly toward 2023.

 Folks, to sustain the Fourth Republic considering the recent developments in the nation-state, it is my judgment that we MUST confront the contemporary political, economic, and social dilemmas!

 

Ike Udogu


Cornelius Hamelberg

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Jan 14, 2022, 3:46:39 PM1/14/22
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Dear Sir,

Tobrah ?

Me? Ibim!

This analysis of Nigeria's security situation is interesting

All that you say makes absolute sense to me, however, at the same time there are the powerful external and internal/ domestic actors who would like to see the disintegration of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. and the fulfilment of their own dire predictions. Some of the very premonitions that the late Obadiah Mailafia , the outspoken Bishop Matthew Hassan Kukah, and last but not least, the disintegration that John Campbell the USA's former Ambassador to Nigeria predicted. based on the presumption that one of the functions of any embassy in that country, is to collect , analyse , interpret and assess relevant information about that country, according to their own strategic interests

They - whoever they are, know that they can best foster and foment this disintegration/ implosion not so much by remote control but certainly, most successfully as they are doing right now through their agents already stationed on the ground - and therefore, not accidentally, on a daily basis, the last several years that's what we have been seeing unfolding right in front of our eyes: the destabilisation of Nigeria along its well known fault lines - the North -South, East-West, Islam vs Christianity axis , the evidence of all this in the ongoing Boko Haram terrorism ( who are they and where are the weapons coming from?), the daily murders, wanton ransom kidnappings, church arsons etc. etc. that is being reported by the Nigerian mass media and that is still being discussed ad nauseam in this forum since the good old days of Yaradua, Goodluck Jonathan, right up to the present dispensation of two termer Muhammadu Buhari.

I have seen and know about eight military coups in Africa.

It seems to me that a successful coup that would be capable of imposing law and order over the whole Federation would prevent the disintegration of the country into its constituent fragments, ethnic enclaves that are agitating for their freedom, separate from what is known today, as Nigeria.

This seems to mean that a coup does not have to be successful - on the contrary, the coup has to be unsuccessful in order to ignite the various separatist movements and their seemingly dormant ambitions which are being barley suppressed at the moment , because they fear what could be the outcome of a military confrontation with the Federal Military - but in the eventuality of an botched coup attempt, should the secessionists secede simultaneously, in the absence of a unified Federal military to curb that tendency, it would be a fait accompli. How long the ensuing chaos would last , until the dust of battle finally died down, is quite another matter. For the time being, at least right now, Nigeria's Federal Army doesn't seem to be so successful at quelling the ragtag terrorists known as Boko Haram; who knows, at a future date when the chips are down Boko Haram and some units of the Federal Army may well unite ( unity of purpose)

 Let us pray

Chidi Anthony Opara, FIIM

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Jan 16, 2022, 4:59:42 AM1/16/22
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"You and Chidi have been singing the praises of blogging, online self-publishing , that you are both plentifully available on the WWW., but I suspect that it should be a little more satisfying/ fulfilling to refer to your books"-Cornelius Hamelberg

Mazi Cornelius,
If I existed as a poet before the era of printing press and wrote on scrolls, would you have woken me up to write on books when the printing press was invented? 

Wouldn't it have been a case of someone or a group of people transferring my work to books and now to internet applications (Apps) and e-books?

The scrolls, the books and the internet applications (Apps) are publishing media, depending on the era.

Because I am writing in an internet era, I prefer to write on internet applications (Apps) and on e-books.

-CAO.


--
Chidi Anthony Opara is a Poet, IIM Professional Fellow, MIT Chief Data Officer Ambassador and Founder/Publisher of, www.publicinformationprojects.org)

Cornelius Hamelberg

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Jan 17, 2022, 4:40:48 PM1/17/22
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 Right now, things are happening in Sudan, Ethiopia, Guinea Conakry, Mali, and even over here in Sweden nobody wants to scare the general populace, but the military is on a high alert because of Russia’s potential future relations with Ukraine & NATO and just in case Sweden wants to butt in , maybe a new phase in Russia’s future relations with Sweden… there should be the possibility of more shalom in Russia-Sweden relations so that Baba Kadiri and I can continue to live in peace and harmony. instead of having to serve at the warfront 

When nothing had been posted on this forum for two whole days, I was apprehensive that something was terribly amiss and that perhaps egotism and ignoramus's little i was the main cause, possibly because i had averred , “who knows, at a future date when the chips are down Boko Haram and some units of the Federal Army may well unite ( unity of purpose)” and had thereby offended a some Nigerian nationalists. Well, it didn’t take long before I got this from a Caribbean Bro ( Barbados) : Dr. Obadiah Mailafia speaking here.

I sent him this in return : Dr. Obadiah Mailafia’s last article

Only a born and bred Nigerian could reserve the right to be that harsh in judgement...

Cornelius Hamelberg

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Jan 17, 2022, 4:42:40 PM1/17/22
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 There’s also the Oral Tradition

How do you intend to contribute to keeping it alive, in Africa?

I suppose you could explore Spoken Word possibilities - live performances supported by some jungle drums and the creative effects of some Shango thunder & lightning , lighting up Chidi on stage, performing wonders of the word….

Your Spoken Word recordings should give you and us more than just a little satisfaction.

Chidi Anthony Opara, FIIM

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Jan 18, 2022, 4:05:54 AM1/18/22
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"I suppose you could explore Spoken Word possibilities - live performances supported by some jungle drums and the creative effects of some Shango thunder & lightning , lighting up Chidi on stage, performing wonders of the word…."-Cornelius Hamelberg

Mazi Cornelius,
Yeah, I could, but my preference would be on the video blogging websites. 

-CAO
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