This has come up a lot in the last 24 hours, but it is being misapplied and misinterpreted:
The analysis, for or against Abba Kyari, is not covered by this long-held adage.
TF
Toyin Falola
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Great friend:
This is not the time to enjoy a good debate. This season shall pass.
Yes, there was a Umma, a community, when the Prophet Muahmmad (peace and blessings upon him) spoke. A community will not work well without this injunction and you can see that by the time of the 4th Caliph this was not holding.
Once you occupy a political office—which is the crucial distinction--, the “public” is not a Umma, unfortunately. It is like saying the Igbo who lived during the Civil War should not rejoice at the death of Chief Obafemi Awolowo. It won’t work, unfortunately. That “public” has been divided in a dhimi contract:
أهل الذمة ahl ul-ḏimmah/dhimmah
Thus, while I never abuse or insult people, I can understand why the Igbo speak ill of Awolowo the very moment he died!
If Trump were to die today, even with the Coronavirus, not only will millions of people speak ill of the dead, many will open bottles of wine and do pleasant funeral ceremonies!
Stay well, and be assured that the injunction applies to all my friends.
TF
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On 19 Apr 2020, at 11:56, Toyin Falola <toyin...@austin.utexas.edu> wrote:
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The hammer falls on the moderator.Why single out the Igbo as a group that celebrated the death of Awo and where is the evidence of the owambe? There may have been individuals, even among Yoruba supporters of Akintola and Omoboriowo, who jubilated but it is on record that Igbo leaders who lived through Biafra were full of praise for Awo. Zik called him his good friend. Ojukwu called him the best president that Nigeria never had. S.G. Ikoku was always an Awoist in opposition to Zik. And Achebe was full of praise for Awo in the Troubles with Nigeria and in There Was A Country where he portrayed him as a better leader than Azikiwe. So, by the Igbo speaking evil of Awo, do you mean those, including the Yoruba, who are critical of the indefensible and unrepentant assertions of Awo and Enahoro that starvation is a legitimate weapon of war and that all if fair in warfare?The moderator has goofed on this blanket assertion of Igbophobia. I suggest that he should withdraw the statement or we we will vote him out as a moderator.Biko
Thanks chief. I had posted before suddenly realizing Obododinma could cite the case of Abacha whose demise was celebrated to contradict me.
Prima facie my response would have been that, thats why I concentrated my arsenals on his boss Ibrahim Babangida who is still alive and whose agents could contradict whatever I said about him if they felt it was unfair or false.
In the case of a tyrannical military dictator like Abacha with proven misrule, for example whose loot has been categorical traced, who converted his residence to an extension of the Central Bank, who set up his own refinery while rendering Nigerian official golden geese refineries comatose and who murdered in cold blood at will of course his demise can be celebrated and judgemental comments can be made about him.
OAA
Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.
-------- Original message --------From: 'Malami Buba' via USA Africa Dialogue Series <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com>Date: 19/04/2020 15:37 (GMT+00:00)Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Don't Speak Ill of the Dead!
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Okey:
Biko is angry at me because I used Trump as one example, and he prefers Igbophobia to Afrophobia.
TF
From: dialogue <usaafric...@googlegroups.com> on behalf of Okechukwu Ukaga <ukag...@umn.edu>
Reply-To: dialogue <usaafric...@googlegroups.com>
Date: Sunday, April 19, 2020 at 2:12 PM
To: dialogue <usaafric...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Don't Speak Ill of the Dead!
Dear Biko,
The moderator did not say Igbos as a group celebrated the death of Owo. That is your misinterpratation of what he wrote:
"It is like saying the Igbo who lived during the Civil War should not rejoice at the death of Chief Obafemi Awolowo. It won’t work."
And your agreement that there may have been individuals (including but not limited to Igbos) who jubiliated in response to Awo's death illustrates the moderator's point. Notably, he did not imply that Igbos as a group or their leaders rejoiced at Awo's death. Rather he implied that, if asked not to rejoice over Awo's death, is unlikely to get full compliance from those suffered from what you have described here as indefensible policy of starvation as a weapon of war. A fraction might rejoice; others won't for a variety of reasons.
This reminds me of the frustration - aggression theory that frustration inevitable results in aggression or Newton's third law of motion that for every action there us equal and opposite reaction. So it is unrealistic to spank a child and also ask the the child not cry.
Regards,
Okey
On Apr 19, 2020 12:30 PM, "'Biko Agozino' via USA Africa Dialogue Series" <usaafric...@googlegroups.com> wrote:
The hammer falls on the moderator.
Why single out the Igbo as a group that celebrated the death of Awo and where is the evidence of the owambe? There may have been individuals, even among Yoruba supporters of Akintola and Omoboriowo, who jubilated but it is on record that Igbo leaders who lived through Biafra were full of praise for Awo. Zik called him his good friend. Ojukwu called him the best president that Nigeria never had. S.G. Ikoku was always an Awoist in opposition to Zik. And Achebe was full of praise for Awo in the Troubles with Nigeria and in There Was A Country where he portrayed him as a better leader than Azikiwe. So, by the Igbo speaking evil of Awo, do you mean those, including the Yoruba, who are critical of the indefensible and unrepentant assertions of Awo and Enahoro that starvation is a legitimate weapon of war and that all if fair in warfare?
The moderator has goofed on this blanket assertion of Igbophobia. I suggest that he should withdraw the statement or we we will vote him out as a moderator.
Biko
Thanks chief. I had posted before suddenly realizing Obododinma could cite the case of Abacha whose demise was celebrated to contradict me.
Prima facie my response would have been that, thats why I concentrated my arsenals on his boss Ibrahim Babangida who is still alive and whose agents could contradict whatever I said about him if they felt it was unfair or false.
In the case of a tyrannical military dictator like Abacha with proven misrule, for example whose loot has been categorical traced, who converted his residence to an extension of the Central Bank, who set up his own refinery while rendering Nigerian official golden geese refineries comatose and who murdered in cold blood at will of course his demise can be celebrated and judgemental comments can be made about him.
OAA
Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.
-------- Original message --------
From: 'Malami Buba' via USA Africa Dialogue Series <usaafric...@googlegroups.com>
Date: 19/04/2020 15:37 (GMT+00:00)
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Don't Speak Ill of the Dead!
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Re: more ethics: about the permissibility of celebrating the death of someone perceived to be an enemy.
Since Nigeria is a predominantly Muslim country, there are norms to be followed in Islamic circles. Which doesn’t mean that each and every Muslim has taken Rasulullah – Sallallahu alaihi wa salaam’s Last Sermon to heart. The last sermon in which he said, ““Learn that every Muslim is a brother to every Muslim and that the Muslims constitute one brotherhood.” Which of course doesn’t mean that Muslims are not fighting fellow Muslims in Yemen, Syria, Libya, and Iraq…
On the afternoon of 17 August 1988, I was walking peacefully along Edgware Road when some Pakistani women in hijab rushed out of their shop and started handing out candy to passers-by. They were very happy and dancing, creating quite an unusual public spectacle. I was accosted by one of them. The news had just come in, they explained, and the good news was that the plane carrying their enemy Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq had just crashed, killing everybody on board, so they were very happy indeed, please here’s some free candy, share our joy, they sang and danced around…
I don’t know how the Halabja Kurds and the Shia worldwide felt on that festive Eid al-Adha day that Saddam was hanged, since he it was that invaded Iran, destroyed their oil facilities in Abadan, until Iran kicked them out after some heavy fighting – and even after that, the war continued for another seven years, assisted and bankrolled by the Sunni powers that be along with their best friends in the West, with the exception of Colonel Ghaddafi’s Libya – and during which time ( so I’m told) Saddam would get some of the Iraqi Shia to drink gasoline and then light them up. Needless to say, he is accused of killing Muhammad Baqir al-Sadr …
You can well imagine the feeling when Adolf Eichmann was hanged in Jerusalem
I assume that Biko the genius is only being as sarcastic as he possibly can when he suggests that “Achebe was full of praise for Awo in the Troubles with Nigeria and in There Was A Country where he portrayed him as a better leader than Azikiwe.” Really?
Biko has to be careful; posterity could read and understand what he says here, differently. He should know that there could be some among us who don’t read critically and take words at their face value. On such people some figures of speech, innuendo, puns, understatements, even lowly sarcasm and irony is lost on them. How could Achebe have been “full of praise for Awo”, if Awo is widely seen as the architect of a genocidal war policy of starvation as a weapon of war that crippled the Biafra war efforts, by causing the mass starvation of Biafra’s Civilian population?
Achebe, after all, was one of the most vociferous voices against Awo being honoured with a national funeral on the grounds that, “Awolowo was not an Igbo God!”
I’m still thinking of those Pakistani women in hijab, singing and dancing and making merry in London.
One of Pakistan’s greatest popular vocalists ( also immensely popular in India) : Rahat Fateh Ali Khan here singing Afreen Afreen
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Biko,
Ai beg.
So, you now want to teach me how to read? That ain’t so very funny, honey. I don’t have either the time of the money, but you could start your new pedagogy of the oppressed with Professor Griff or Humpty Hump or even the blues brother known as Sleepy Joe Biden. I would advise that when you start your remedial course for slow readers you kick off with hieroglyphics, Hebrew and Arabic on how to review/deconstruct/decode the rap that’s being recycled in your neck of the jungle. OK?
I haven’t had time to “ read what Achebe wrote” or to read everything that he has written, but I do know what he said as was reported in that premier magazine, West Africa : Chinua Achebe was totally against AWO being honoured with a State Funeral on the grounds that – and I quote him exactly, on the grounds that, according to him and I suppose, according to you too, “Chief Obafemi Awolowo was not an Igbo God!”
Don’t forget that I spent four years in Nigeria, living with Igbos. Where did I “start lumping him (Achebe ) together with a Pakistani woman distributing candies in London in celebration of the death of Zia”? Ai beg. Next you’ll say that I started lumping Musa al Sadr together with the missing Chibok Girls…
Anyway, many sincere thanks for your subsequent elucidations. I have just got an education about these matters. Perhaps, so has The Mighty Falola. I am looking forward with some curiosity which choice piece of Dr Sir Warrior he is going to serve us.
I have based my deductive reasoning on the facticity of that statement made by Chinua Achebe and also because of the passion with which Obi Nwakanma has adumbrated the starvation of Biafra in this forum especially in his altercations with Baba Kadiri who has consistently given plausible explanations to the other side of the story and what actually happened - how the Biafran elite was feasting fat and carousing whilst the Osu class of Igbos was starving, although that does not explain the mass starvation, and suffering and destruction of a whole generation of Biafran children. These discussions are lodged in the archives so many written words to wade through , so many words to eat with palm-oil and digest or suffer from the consequences of indigestion.
If as you who have read the relevant books inform us that “ Achebe said that Awo was a better leader for the Yoruba than Zik was for the Igbo” it figures that that must have been some added reason why the bitter old Negro must have been extra pissed with AWO, to the point of saying that from the Igbo / Biafran point of view, AWO was clearly not God Almighty of the Igbo nation. But you too must admit the fire in that statement which I would restate thus: that Achebe was actually saying that AWO - as the genocidal leader of the Yoruba against the Igbo, was certainly a better leader of the Yoruba. The post war Igbo are still sage in everywhere in Yoruba-land, although five years ago there was some funny talk about the Oba of Lagos threatening to drown Igbos in the Lagos Lagoon , if they did not support his favoured candidate.
Of course, the Igbos do not have happy memories about that war.
My best friend now late (an elderly Lithuanian – Israeli Jewish guy) brought this kind of reality to my attention. We ( he and me and two Swedish Ladies) were at a Klezmer festival at Kungsträdgården when it started raining so we moved to the Victoria Restaurant which was close by ; as soon as we were seated he made the announcement: “ All Germans are Nazis” he said.
Thank God that Igbos are not Nazis and neither are The Yoruba people., so we have King Sunny Ade happily married to an Igbo lady.
And as Bolaji Aluko usually signs off,
And there you have it.
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Dear sir:
Let us suspend this conversation to be part of the global network on sympathy and empathy regarding Coronavirus.
I don’t know that Biko can call someone X-phobia because he disagrees with a small matter. How is Biko now different from Trump?
TF
Toyin Falola
Department of History
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Austin, TX 78712-0220
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Dear Biko,
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Dear sir:
Do please suspend this debate. It can wait.
I know a member on this list who lost his wife to Coronavirus on Saturday.
Let us pursue subjects that show empathy and sympathy.
Toyin Falola
Department of History
The University of Texas at Austin
104 Inner Campus Drive
Austin, TX 78712-0220
USA
512 475 7222 (fax)
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From: dialogue <usaafric...@googlegroups.com> on behalf of agbetuyi <yagb...@hotmail.com>
Reply-To: dialogue <usaafric...@googlegroups.com>
Date: Monday, April 20, 2020 at 8:41 AM
To: dialogue <usaafric...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Don't Speak Ill of the Dead!
Biko.
I have read your initial response to the moderator. You said Achebe portrayed Awo as a better leader than Zik. So you are now qualifying that with 'to the Yoruba'
You have now inserted your usual Awo 'starvation policy' quotation out of context again like a lion waiting to pounce and went out full throttle. Wetin?
OAA
Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.
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From: 'Biko Agozino' via USA Africa Dialogue Series <usaafric...@googlegroups.com>
Date: 20/04/2020 02:36 (GMT+00:00)
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Don't Speak Ill of the Dead!
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Cornel you wrote:
"I assume that Biko the genius is only being as sarcastic as he possibly can when he suggests that “Achebe was full of praise for Awo in the Troubles with Nigeria and in There Was A Country where he portrayed him as a better leader than Azikiwe.” Really?
"Biko has to be careful; posterity could read and understand what he says here, differently. He should know that there could be some among us who don’t read critically and take words at their face value. On such people some figures of speech, innuendo, puns, understatements, even lowly sarcasm and irony is lost on them. How could Achebe have been “full of praise for Awo”, if Awo is widely seen as the architect of a genocidal war policy of starvation as a weapon of war that crippled the Biafra war efforts, by causing the mass starvation of Biafra’s Civilian population?"
Rabbi, since you can read and understand innuendos, why don't you go and read what Achebe wrote before you start lumping him together with a Pakistani woman distributing candies in London in celebration of the death of Zia? If you no sabi read, make I teacher you now. Achebe said that Awo was a better leader for the Yoruba than Zik was for the Igbo. But no, Awo was no God of the Igbo.
Zik actually addressed the critique of Achebe by laying out the records of his 'stewardship'. He quoted Awo himself as saying that the reason why he launched the free education program was to catch up with the Eastern region which had built more schools and registered more students than the Western region. That legacy still stands with the East still leading the country in academic achievements. Perhaps, without Awo's intervention, the West may be struggling like the North today the way Oyo and Osun states continue to struggle in the bottom 10 states in the league of WAEC results while all the five Eastern states are in the top 10. Falola should be addressing this unexpected trend in his home state rather than attempt to demonize the Igbo as haters that they are not.
Under Zik, there was no politics of bitterness of the sort that led to operation wetie and operation Owoboriomo in the West under Awo even when Zik's party lost some elections such as when he lost the Mayorship of Enugu City to a Fulani man from Kano and when he lost Anambra governorship to the NPN. Okpara sent the Eastern Nigeria Broadcasting Corporation to announce correct election results in the West when Akintola was announcing the rigged results on radio Nigeria, according to Soyinka in the Ibadan: The Penkelmese Years (Soyinka reported that he sat in Awo's ransacked library and begged the radio journalists from the East to go back before the thugs looking for them found them while he alone wanted to wait for the thugs to return and face his wrath).
Zik wrote poems mourning the assassination of his political friends during the first coup. Among Igbo writers and artists, there is no genre of triumphalism of the sort that Ali Mazrui displayed in condemning Chris Okigbo, his fellow intellectual, in the court of the land of ancestors, for the alleged crime of abandoning poetry to defend his people against genocide, without knowing that Okigbo also saw his participation in the resistance as a participant observation research methodology in search of new materials for his poetry, according to Obumselu. When Murtala Muhamad was assassinated, the Oriental Brothers released a popular song mourning him for creating two new states in the South East that was lumped together into one state until then and condemning the Dimka bloody coup despite the fact that Murtala was known to have committed massacres against Igbo men in Asaba during the war.
So, where did Falola get this incendiary idea that the Igbo talked ill of Awo the moment he died when the Igbo and those with conscience around the world disapproved of the cruel claim that starvation was a legitimate weapon of war while Awo was alive and had all the opportunity to withdraw the claim but chose to double down. Why was Falola making such a false claim while sharing the testimony of an Igbo diplomat in defense of a Kanuri bureaucrat whose death was allegedly celebrated by a Hausa commissioner in Kano state government who got sacked for such indiscretion?
Why single out the collectively hated Igbo as celebrators of the death of enemies when there is no evidence of that among the Igbo who are known more for traveling outside their region to make legitimate living and make friends more than any other group and despite persistent hostility to their presence in other parts of Nigeria even though they have never retaliated with hostility to other Nigerians who have settled in the South East? The traveller has no enemies, say the Igbo.
Help me tell the moderator to take am easy o. Diye diye o. Withdraw that statement quick quick.
Biko
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R
Dear Biko,
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Sir Anthony,
I admire you for admiring Chinua Achebe the so-called “father of African Literature” ( which leaves this question open: So, who is the mother? )
The fact is that Achebe cannot have his cake and eat it too, not even posthumously. His most ardent disciples cannot deny that he denied AWO a state funeral, according to him, on the grounds that AWO “was not an Igbo god” by which statement he probably meant to imply that all men being mortal, only an Igbo god merits a state funeral and that Igbo gods don’t die.
What Achebe could have written later - that which Biko quotes does not obfuscate Achebe’s original reaction. Biko’s attempt to sanitise Achebe’s reaction by quoting what he could have written at a later date, belongs to the category known as revisionism. True too, even an Igbo saint and fellow mortal like Achebe, had cause/ reasons and certainly the freedom to not love AWO and not just because according to Biko’s Achebe, “Awo was a better leader for the Yoruba than Zik was for the Igbo.”
“And the soldiers who are dead and gone
If only we could bring back one.” ( We got to have Peace)
Even if there are some people among us who don’t want to examine the can of worms that has just been opened up again, there are others who believe in the free word and the right of reply and therefore, whilst it may be diplomatic, admirable, perhaps decent and elegant, at the same time, it’s unfair and some would even say anti-intellectual of the moderator who by his executive power (privileged) and some would say despotic that by decree he should want to impose his own lockdown on any further discussion of this matter in his kingdom, on the grounds ( a strong case of argumentum ad misericordiam) on the grounds that we had all better “be part of the global network on sympathy and empathy regarding Coronavirus.”
When I discussed adjacent matters with Baba Kadiri earlier in the day he pointed out this truism , that clearing the air is in the interests of the living – and I concurred with him saying that “ Dead men can’t pray” – we have to pray for them and give in charity on their behalf - and indeed in the gospel according to S.E, Rogers, “ Dead Men don’t smoke Marijuana”. I’m sure that Biko would agree with a such a genial understatement
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Dear sir:
Do please suspend this debate. It can wait.
I know a member on this list who lost his wife to Coronavirus on Saturday.
Let us pursue subjects that show empathy and sympathy.
Toyin Falola
Department of History
The University of Texas at Austin
104 Inner Campus Drive
Austin, TX 78712-0220
USA
512 475 7222 (fax)
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From: dialogue <usaafric...@googlegroups.com> on behalf of agbetuyi <yagb...@hotmail.com>
Reply-To: dialogue <usaafric...@googlegroups.com>
Date: Monday, April 20, 2020 at 8:41 AM
To: dialogue <usaafric...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Don't Speak Ill of the Dead!
Biko.
I have read your initial response to the moderator. You said Achebe portrayed Awo as a better leader than Zik. So you are now qualifying that with 'to the Yoruba'
You have now inserted your usual Awo 'starvation policy' quotation out of context again like a lion waiting to pounce and went out full throttle. Wetin?
OAA
Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.
-------- Original message --------
From: 'Biko Agozino' via USA Africa Dialogue Series <usaafric...@googlegroups.com>
Date: 20/04/2020 02:36 (GMT+00:00)
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Don't Speak Ill of the Dead!
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Cornel you wrote:
"I assume that Biko the genius is only being as sarcastic as he possibly can when he suggests that “Achebe was full of praise for Awo in the Troubles with Nigeria and in There Was A Country where he portrayed him as a better leader than Azikiwe.” Really?
"Biko has to be careful; posterity could read and understand what he says here, differently. He should know that there could be some among us who don’t read critically and take words at their face value. On such people some figures of speech, innuendo, puns, understatements, even lowly sarcasm and irony is lost on them. How could Achebe have been “full of praise for Awo”, if Awo is widely seen as the architect of a genocidal war policy of starvation as a weapon of war that crippled the Biafra war efforts, by causing the mass starvation of Biafra’s Civilian population?"
Rabbi, since you can read and understand innuendos, why don't you go and read what Achebe wrote before you start lumping him together with a Pakistani woman distributing candies in London in celebration of the death of Zia? If you no sabi read, make I teacher you now. Achebe said that Awo was a better leader for the Yoruba than Zik was for the Igbo. But no, Awo was no God of the Igbo.
Zik actually addressed the critique of Achebe by laying out the records of his 'stewardship'. He quoted Awo himself as saying that the reason why he launched the free education program was to catch up with the Eastern region which had built more schools and registered more students than the Western region. That legacy still stands with the East still leading the country in academic achievements. Perhaps, without Awo's intervention, the West may be struggling like the North today the way Oyo and Osun states continue to struggle in the bottom 10 states in the league of WAEC results while all the five Eastern states are in the top 10. Falola should be addressing this unexpected trend in his home state rather than attempt to demonize the Igbo as haters that they are not.
Under Zik, there was no politics of bitterness of the sort that led to operation wetie and operation Owoboriomo in the West under Awo even when Zik's party lost some elections such as when he lost the Mayorship of Enugu City to a Fulani man from Kano and when he lost Anambra governorship to the NPN. Okpara sent the Eastern Nigeria Broadcasting Corporation to announce correct election results in the West when Akintola was announcing the rigged results on radio Nigeria, according to Soyinka in the Ibadan: The Penkelmese Years (Soyinka reported that he sat in Awo's ransacked library and begged the radio journalists from the East to go back before the thugs looking for them found them while he alone wanted to wait for the thugs to return and face his wrath).
Zik wrote poems mourning the assassination of his political friends during the first coup. Among Igbo writers and artists, there is no genre of triumphalism of the sort that Ali Mazrui displayed in condemning Chris Okigbo, his fellow intellectual, in the court of the land of ancestors, for the alleged crime of abandoning poetry to defend his people against genocide, without knowing that Okigbo also saw his participation in the resistance as a participant observation research methodology in search of new materials for his poetry, according to Obumselu. When Murtala Muhamad was assassinated, the Oriental Brothers released a popular song mourning him for creating two new states in the South East that was lumped together into one state until then and condemning the Dimka bloody coup despite the fact that Murtala was known to have committed massacres against Igbo men in Asaba during the war.
So, where did Falola get this incendiary idea that the Igbo talked ill of Awo the moment he died when the Igbo and those with conscience around the world disapproved of the cruel claim that starvation was a legitimate weapon of war while Awo was alive and had all the opportunity to withdraw the claim but chose to double down. Why was Falola making such a false claim while sharing the testimony of an Igbo diplomat in defense of a Kanuri bureaucrat whose death was allegedly celebrated by a Hausa commissioner in Kano state government who got sacked for such indiscretion?
Why single out the collectively hated Igbo as celebrators of the death of enemies when there is no evidence of that among the Igbo who are known more for traveling outside their region to make legitimate living and make friends more than any other group and despite persistent hostility to their presence in other parts of Nigeria even though they have never retaliated with hostility to other Nigerians who have settled in the South East? The traveller has no enemies, say the Igbo.
Help me tell the moderator to take am easy o. Diye diye o. Withdraw that statement quick quick.
Biko
|
R
Dear Biko,
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Preliminaries.
I’m thinking of Israel’s Post Mortem Award to the Late Chief Obafemi Awolowo for which he deserves a big Mazel Tov!
Israel: Post Mortem Award to Late Chief Obafemi Awolowo
Is there anyone who can vouch for the accuracy of the noteworthy distinctions that Biko has made between Yoruba and the Igbo attitudes to respect, religion, the status of Elders, and God?
For instance, if, as Biko says the Igbo or the traditional Igbo do not believe that a man can be “God” or “a god” – that, (his words), “To the Igbo, nobody is God”. If that is true then how were Christian missionaries able to succeed so easily when it came to selling Igbos the idea that God ( Chukwu?) incarnated in the person of Jesus, that he was born of the virgin Mary, that he was crucified, resurrected, ascended to heaven and currently, sits at the right-hand side of his Father Almighty?
The litmus test of the Aboriginal Australians was very simple, albeit nauseous and disrespectful. They asked the missionary, “Does he (your god) shit? Does he or did he go to the toilet?” The missionaries answered “Yes”. The tribesmen retorted, “Then he can't be GOD!” Their definition of God is “the One without an anus - the One without any flaw” i.e. Atnatu, the Unique God of Aboriginal Australians.
Years ago, I read the Rev Canon Harry Sawyer’s: God, ancestor or creator? – which raises exactly that question, in the light of what Biko says here in this thread. Are we to assume that had AWO been raised three days later, etc, he could have thereby qualified to at least be canonised as a Christian Saint? (Oddly enough, one is ironically reminded of the dilemma of Bishop Dom Helder Camara of Brazil who said, “When I give food to the poor, they call me a saint. When I ask why the poor have no food, they call me a communist.”
We have the ( albeit annoying) instance of Jacob bowing down to Esau
About not bowing down to anybody, my Ashkenazi friend used to boast about that, however, there is an instance during the Yom Kippur Service when the name of the Almighty requires prostration.
In Rabbi Moshe Chaim Luzzatto’s seminal Mesilat Yesharim ( The Path of the Just) in which the 26 chapters outline the steps to attaining holiness, ” The trait of humility” occurs as late as chapter 22 which begins with these words. “We already spoke earlier on the disgrace of arrogance, and by inference, we learned on the praiseworthiness of Humility. Let us now explain Humility in a more fundamental manner and arrogance will become clarified by itself. The general matter of Humility is for a person not to attribute importance to himself for any reason whatsoever. This is the exact opposite of arrogance and the effects that result from this are the opposite of those that result from arrogance.”
“The means of acquiring humility” is reserved at chapter 23….
Later, I should like to take up this thing about somebody being” merely” a “tribal leader”, I have heard that being said about the Prophet Moses, and “tribal religion “that’s how some people characterise Judaism.
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Biko,
Big deal: - re- “The surprise for me was that Odia Ofeimun came to present a seminar at the Center for African Studies in Cambridge University in 1990 and stated that he believed that it was true that Awo appeared on the face of the moon as a God.” Didn’t you cross-examine him about his vision?
As Chidi Anthony Opara just told us, “The beauty of poetry lies in the fact that 95% of humanity have no idea of what the poet is talking about, so the mystique rubs off on the poet.”
Now be honest, it’s possible that the hyperbolic Chidi is not being statistically accurate here, but considering the long poetic traditions about the moon, love and the moon, faces of the moon, faces on the moon, phases of the moon ( Rosh Chodesh / Exodus 12: 2 is the first law given to the Jewish nation) and all you ( Biko & Co) have to do is to give poets the necessary poetic license and concessions to fantasy and imagination and then tell us what percentage of humanity you think that you belong to if you can’t even imagine what Odia Ofeimun the poet meant if he did indeed say that he saw AWO’s face on the moon?
From poetry and the sublime to the mundane: When Eldridge Cleaver said that he saw the face of Jesus on the full moon, what do you want to accuse him of? Idolatry? Heresy? Hallucination? People do have visions you know. He became a born-again Christian shortly thereafter. Fact is that a few weeks earlier some CIA agents had picked him up in Paris, several times, and shown him the sharp edge of a knife, near his throat, so the story goes. As the Chinese say, those were interesting days, I have heard some first-hand witness testimonies from those heady days.
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Please be cautious: **External Email**
Gloria In Excelsis Omega-wali (that’s Greek + Arabic (wali) friend of the eternal (the alpha & omega),
It’s Irie (touch wood) Johnny Walker is still going strong! You too, stay safe.
N.B. It is forbidden to humiliate anyone.
In the 1976 final debate/ duel between Olof Palme (the incumbent Prime Minister) and Thorbjörn Fälldin, Mr. Palme beat Mr Fälldin the farmer so badly, gave him such an intellectual thrashing that he (Palme) lost that election. The Swedish electorate felt a swell of sympathy for Mr. Fälldin, the underdog and punished Mr. Palme at the polls.
So, reserve your strength, fool around, even hide it, but if push comes to shove, then and only then – well you would have no choice but to…
Can you imagine an all-out war between Trump (USA) and Biko (the Nigerian military aided by Boko Haram)?
The Quran throws down the same gauntlet and a very similar challenge that Biko will never take up no matter how long he sits in consultations with his buddies, he can even sit with them until the cows come home or “till the conversion of the Jews”, but he can never do it – and strangely enough, to date, no one has yet taken up the challenge:
23. “And if ye are in doubt concerning that which We reveal unto Our slave (Muhammad), then produce a surah of the like thereof, and call your witness beside Allah if ye are truthful.
24. And if ye do it not - and ye can never do it - then guard yourselves against the Fire prepared for disbelievers, whose fuel is of men and stones.” (al-Baqarah 23-24)
The Igbo teaching, understanding and practice of the chi - is very similar to the basic instruction accompanying the Om Namah Shivaya mantra which is a heart mantra of Siddha Yoga, namely, see God in each other, God lives inside of you, as you…
That way, of course, you don’t go around insulting other people and looking down on them because you come from this or that tribe that rules the universe controls the movements of the stars, changes the directions the wind and is going to be the first to discover the cure for all the mutations and permutations of the coronavirus.
Jeru The Damaja crows and Baba Kadiri readily agrees
“Melodies, that flow like the breeze
Through the trees, like my forefathers, command the wind and seas
With my jungle music”
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