Honoring Those to Whom Honors Are Due
Michael O. Afolayan
January 28, 2017
Exactly
one year, one month and six days ago today, I felt like a deified mortal chosen
to be a beneficiary of honor in Dr. Toyin Falola’s priesthood of generosity, a
ministry he has continued to expand on through his unstoppable superhuman
penmanship. It was a tribute I least expected, not even in the slightest of my
imaginations. In all honesty, this was the kind of honor meant for the men and
women of timber and caliber, the big trees in our vast wilderness of
intellectuals; certainly not for the lowly village boy whose passport to the
world outside the village of birth was divine providence; after all, kids who
lost their fathers in the village at an early age like mine were not expected
to make it beyond the horizon of the cocoa farmlands that surrounded the
village landscape. Yet,
out of uninhibited premonitions, Dr. Falola chose to celebrate me. I could
certainly understand why he chose a celebrated, truly great scholar, Dr. Julius
Adekunle, this past year but as for me, it baffled my inner being and tickled
my fancy. Like some deep hallucinogenic effect, I am still dazed and floating
in the clouds of the extraordinary proclamation. I can never thank him enough.
It’s no false humility, but I did not have the right emotion or even the
appropriate lexicon at that time, or even now, that would simultaneously
express my appreciation and project my undeservedness of such accolades, and do
so without projecting the image of the Yoruba proverbial highway robber that
snatches away the goods that belong to somebody else. Thank goodness, the akowekowura of our time, that is, the
man who writes with the golden pen (and golden ink), Professor Ayo Olukotun,
gave a well-deserved tribute to Professor Falola to cap off his extraordinary
year of an inexhaustible harvest.
Today,
however, I would love to pass this great honor to those who, in my mind, truly
deserve it more than I do, did, or will ever do; thereby relieving my soul of
the so great a burden I had carried upon myself in the last one year or so.
My Runners-up
These
last two years, there had been a thousand and one friends, colleagues and
relatives who touched my life, and to whom I could rightly sing endless
praises. For example, there were a bevy of individuals we’ve fraternalized
together on routine bases, be it on the social media or in real life. There
were the scores of schoolgirls - poor, shy, beautiful, innocent, scared, but
eager to learn, in the northeastern part of Nigeria and their teachers
(malimu/malima) or head teachers (shugaba magarata) whom, together with my
research associate and I had the rare privilege of meeting and working with
through the UNICEF’s GEP (Girls Education Project) in one of the modern world’s
most dangerous environments this past year. What about any and all of my
teachers from elementary to graduate schools? I could also have chosen my wife,
my late parents, or my children. Indeed, I could easily have chosen Professor
Falola himself, although it would have been tantamount to, or at least be
misconstrued as, a sweet “retaliation,” to use the Nigerian social speak. Yet,
thank goodness, none in all these categories met my criteria. Like me, many of
the people in the groups I just mentioned could feel embarrassed or unworthy of
the tribute. Therefore, I have taken a totally different route. I have decided
to pick four people. They are the only “folks” among us who would never be
embarrassed for such honor and who would know that indeed, it’s the least of
what they truly deserve. These individuals are Chief (Dr.) Chika Onyeani,
Engineer Tony Egbe, Dr. Valentine Ojo, and Professor Lavonda Staples, and what a better day to do
this than on the anniversary of the burial of our friend, Lavonda Staples. Please come with me
as I provide an abridged synopsis of each one of these heroes:
The Labor of Our Heroes Past
Dr.
Chika Onyeani
was the publisher of the African Sun Times a newspaper based in New
York. He was a businessman and an ultimate agent provocateur being the
author of the controversial book, The Capitalist Nigger, a book he said
he confessed to have been written purposely to generate controversies and
trigger good business. For him, and as he admitted later in an interview,
“controversies pay.” He was not afraid to face criticism. Dr. Onyeani was the
first person I had a protracted argument with at the outset of our USA-Africa
Dialogue discussion group. The argument was based on the spider doctrine, an
economic model that he claimed to have helped many nations economically and
which he recommended for the Black world. I ended up recommending his book to
my graduate students and we had a good time with it. Truth is bitter, as the
conventional wisdom has taught us. What he said was not palatable, but it was
the truth, and you guess, the business guru made money out of telling the
bitter truth. Dr. (Chief) Chika Onyeani passed away on my wife’s birthday,
December 7, 2016. He would be the latest addition to our song of sorrow, and
the oldest of them all. The ace businessman was 73.
Engineer
Tony Egbe: The indefatigable
character called Tony Egbe was a man with a prophetic tongue. I did not have
much familiarity with him other than to read some of his writings, especially
whenever he discussed technological processes and life philosophies. I recall - laughing out loud, when Tony hurriedly announced the passing of Nelson Mandela
while the latter was still hale and hearty. Many yelled at him and the
organization he represented. Tony did not hide under the blanket and shy away
from his usual productive contributions to the net chats. My favorite of all
his writings is this re-posting, an excerpt from his writing of Sunday June 6,
2010 (unedited), as he ruminates on the matter of death:
. . . Imagine the Logged Tree which dies from its existence in the forest to
become more useful as Paper or as Furniture in our homes. Also, imagine the
cotton wool in the farm which transists to become our bed sheets, and clothes,
still serving a better function on another plane of existence.....and so is every
other thing God created, and Definitely Human Beings are NOT an exception
to this Natural Law of transition and existence in other Better Planes of Life.
The above could be the reason for the Religious Teachings of life of existence
in Heaven, when we die. In conclusion, please, let us grieve less if possible,
at the death of our Loved Ones. It is not how long we lived on earth that
matters, rather it is the Positive Impacts we made while we lived on earth
that matter Most. It is with these that we will be
remembered for ever. May the Souls of all our departed Loved Ones rest in
Peace!! (Tony Otoiheoma Egbe - Sunday June 6, 2010).
Tony
passed away four years after the posting, in the last week of August, 2010,
telling us that he had not died, just recycling.
Dr.
Valentine Ojo: If
I call Dr. Onyeani an agent provocateur, what does that make Dr. Ojo? He
would be the superlative recipient of the same title. No one was immune to the
doctor’s fury. He provoked us, tamed us, yelled at us, and sometimes forced us
to think outside the box. He angered many, silenced some, and ended up winning
a few to his side. Yet, to his credit, he did so with the best of intents, and,
boy, did he make all his presentations with good grammar and logical arrangement
of facts. Our late friend, Dr. Ojo, was a polyglot to the core, speaking
Russian, German, Italian, French, English and Yoruba on a quick prompt.
Seriously kidding, to use the language of Ellen Degeneres, he dabbled into
virtual politics, even forming an “Ojo 2015” presidential campaign with a
simple but visually sophisticated and captivating insignia. As an enigma, he
left us asking questions about his seriousness, or a lack thereof, of his
intent on this political stint. Sadly, he never lived to see his target year. The year 2015 would elude
him merely by a space of five months. What a rude extermination of a promising
genius!
My
connection to Dr. Ojo was not initially pleasant. I read his postings quite
often and enjoyed his occasional showcasing of Nigerian folk music of the 1960s
and 1970s but I saw him as a bully who used his intellect, brilliance, age, and
life experience to intimidate others. He even went after Dr. Falola at one
point but quickly backed out in his characteristic way. In my mind, he seemed
impatient with anyone with a non-crispy thinking thread that aligned with his
views or anyone who made public expression of religiosity; yet he had no
problem identifying himself as agnostic or even atheist. At one of his usual
outbursts, I summoned the courage to e-mail him, calling for a truce between
him and a few of his opponents. He obliged, gave me a call and we became
instant friends. On talking to him, it became crystal clear that the man who
sounded like a bully on the social media was anything but that. His bark was worse than his bite.
In fact, I could say
his cyberspace persona was a complete opposite of his personal life. He was
funny, caring, and even seemingly timid. While he lambasted the Igbo community
so often, he was married to an Igbo woman whom he adored so much and called
“Mummy.” He claimed to be agnostic but no one talked more about God in
conversations than he was, volunteering at his wife's church and at his daughter's
religious school. I recall when he was sick, he constantly ended our lengthy
conversations with the statement, “Please keep praying for me.” He
stopped calling me and disappeared on the net. It was when I e-mailed him that
he confessed to me how what he thought to be a mere case of diabetes, following a massive
stroke had developed into a Stage Four cancer. I promised to keep him in my
prayers. I did not renege that promise, but the hand of nature is what no one
can hold; and so death, the necessary end, visited our friend. He graciously
bowed out of this world of miseries on August 23, 2014 – just a few days short
of that of Tony Egbe. Dr. Ojo was 66 years of age.
Professor
Lavonda Staples:
Lavonda was a social media guru. My attraction to her came towards the end of
her earthly sojourn, about the last one year. As someone who received (and
still receives) hundreds of unsolicited e-mails everyday, my selections of who
and what to read are always very limited. I read Lavonda’s postings
sporadically and enjoyed her postmodernist thinking and counter-arguments
against some proponents of critical discourse. I recall a time when (Chidi Opara,
I believe) wrote something about Professor Falola. Although the poet’s intent was
satiric, and actually lampooning the political apparatus that had failed to
give credence to Professor Falola’s mega-presence in the modern world of
intellect, Lavonda took the matter literally and personally, lashing out at the
writer. Some in the group tried to drown her voice; some ridiculed her; but she
did not budge. Her insistence, and the strength to stand and maintain loyalty
to a friend she called her mentor bought my heart. I sent private e-mail
messages to her to assure her she did the right thing. She knew she did. I
started reading all her postings from then on. Then, like that of Dr. Ojo, her
postings suddenly stopped. Then, out of the blues, a scary posting surfaced,
announcing Lavonda’s battle again with a Stage Four cancer. She had no problem
disclosing the extent of her terminal condition and relentlessly gave a
systematic reporting of her progress in her blog. She called for donations towards her burial and her daughter's college funds. It was a shame for me when I
realized that the only thing separating my home from Lavonda’s was the
Mississippi River! She lived less than twenty miles away from me, on the
Missouri State side, while I lived in Edwardsville/Collinsville, Illinois! I
contacted her to know if my wife and I could visit with her, and she yelled
with enthusiasm, “Please come now!”
We
drove to pay this lady a visit, and what a visit it was! A couple of family
members were there to say hello to her. No exaggeration, Lavonda was beautiful
– inside and out! She looked like a model. It was hard to see any resemblance
of death in this great woman’s demeanor, not even in her nightingale-like
voice. You would think we, the guests surrounding her, were the sick ones
because she was the only cheerful person in the room, chatting and encouraging
everyone. She said she would entertain my wife and I with some musical
selections as she played the piano for us and she played like crazy. Boy, was
she good at it! She played classical hymns and those she composed by herself.
We talked about Africa and she remembered the names of all those who had been
communicating with her on the networks. She said she would love to eat the
Yoruba akara, which my wife and I promised to bring her a few days after
our visit, which, alas, would never happen! Before we left, Lavonda handed us some
chocolate candies to give our teenage daughter, who could not make it because
of a school engagement. I still have those candies carefully wrapped in my
refrigerator today. Both her pictures as she played the piano for our pleasure
and that of her body, cold and peaceful in the casket, are permanently stored in my
laptop. Even though the former are not that sharp, I cherish them. I had never
met anyone who minimized the sting of death more than Lavonda. I still have not
met one since then. What a rare breed of humanity she was! She walked us out after
the visit and gave us the warmest of hugs, the last ever! We called the family
every so often to know when we could come back, but apparently the overwhelming
stress of the imminent truncated attention to telephone ringing and so we never
had the opportunity for future communications beyond the day after the visit.
Then, one day, Ikhide posted Lavonda’s last blog entry. It spoke volumes:
Dear
Family & Friends,
If
you are reading this, I have successfully made my transition to be with my
Heavenly Father. I have Lived, Laughed, and Loved. I have shared most of my
life experiences & lessons with everyone I know with the intention to help
those without a voice. I am overjoyed that I was able to touch as many lives as
I have. Believe me when I tell you that I suffer no more, and I am in a much
better place. My ancestors and I have a LOT of catching up to do...
Always
remember, life is what you make it. Make it your best...you only live once.
I
love you all forever,
La
Vonda R. Staples
Our friend was
gone before we knew it, literally. Lavonda passed to glory on January 24, 2014,
exactly 8 years from the day my immediate older brother passed away. She was
47. I attended Lavonda’s funeral on January 28. I was there in the procession
that accompanied her body to the cemetery; I still have inside my truck the
paper flag that hung on my Tundra on the way to the cemetery. I was at
the tomb where her body was laid to rest. No need to spew out my emotion of that
day; I wrote a report thereafter (please find it attached).
Gone
But Never Going: The Ever-Rolling Stream of Time
How
time flies! We will always miss these worthy comrades. By leaving us so soon, a
part of us seems to have been snatched away forcefully. For Lavonda, it’s
been three years; for Tony and Valentine, about two and a half years now; for
Chika, it has been about six weeks, and by the time we know it, another year
would have rolled by. Our four heroes lived lives that could not but remind
me of the penultimate stanza of the classical hymn of the great Isaac Watts, O
God Our help in Ages Past:
Time,
like an ever-rolling stream,
Bears
all its sons away;
They
fly, forgotten, as a dream
Dies
at the opening day.
To its own error
of judgment, death has unwittingly promoted our four folks and transported them
to the pantheon of the ancestors. Although we may not venerate them behind the
veil of the masquerade, they will forever be honored deep down in the bottom of
our hearts. And so, with humility and a heart so palpably heavy, I bid our four
friends, comrades, brothers, sister, and Internet masters, “So Long!” Our
heroes were relentless in pursuit of excellence and they carried us along on
their journeys. They made us, helped us or even forced us to harvest aspects of
the seeds of knowledge they planted on our vineyards of knowledge and they did so on
our electronic screens in the privacies of our homes and offices. They have joined the clouds of witnesses cheering us to
fight on, and serving us the angel’s cake with the urging to eat more and
warning that the journey may be longer than we had anticipated. They came to us
in a hurry and left us in a hurry but we honor them with the limited words from
our mortal tongues.
Here is the
layman’s poem I wrote to revisit my memories of these four great minds. The
words and lines may not be as deep as those of the Sage, Baba Michael Vickers;
the Humanist penman, Toyin Falola; the structuralist analyst, Ademola Dasylva;
the roaming Journalist, Chidi Opara; or the Philosopher king, Adeshina Afolayan.
Yet, they come straight from the depth of my heart and it’s no light talk when
I titled the poem, “A Song of Sorrow.”
Thanks for
reading . . .
A
SONG OF SORROW . . .
(A
Quiet Dirge for Lavonda Staples, Tony Egbe, Valentine Ojo and Chika Onyeani)
The
eyes of Mother Africa set aglow -
Beyond
the horizon their battles rage;
Her
generals are checking out of the battlefield
In
quick successions they ditch.
Then,
she covers her face in shame
Her
head bowed in grief!
The
Three Triumvirates have parted the fold,
And
the fourth in the rank has followed suit.
The
battle generals have left the field -
First
Lavonda, second Tony, then Valentine, and now Chika.
The
legend truly continues,
Mysteries
yet unfold,
Leaving
us to “wee” wonder - why, what, and wow!
The
smoke of silence engulfs their ranks -
The
cannon is quiet beneath the ruins!
Our
literary icon is gone
Our
techno giant is done
Our
legendary polyglot has run
And
the business tycoon, Sun of Africa, at last has waned
Twenty-one
gun salutes, then, to the generals
Blues
for NetAfrica’s four stooges!
Stories
yet untold . . .
Parables
yet unraveled.
Wasting
disease, who are you?
Spineless
paralysis, what are you?
Cold,
stinging hand of death, whereabouts did you come?
The
bell has announced the toll of a parting day
Heads
bowed, arms folded,
The
village bemoans its folks as they answer the final call of nature!
Beneath
the wreckage of dis, dat, and dose -
The
cannon remains silent
The
battle is o’er,
The
pain is lost!
Their
eyes are set upwards, way beyond the blue -
The
eagle has landed,
The
falcon is gone,
The
caged bird is let loose, her spirit soars.
No
more sorrow and no more pain,
On
the wing of the eagle
Mother
Africa has welcomed her own.
The
quintet safely arrived
And
the stage is set.
The
best of them all,
Fare
thee well.
The
eyes of Mother Africa set aglow!
Michael
O. Afolayan
(In
Sackcloth and Ashes – Far Away From the Land of Lincoln)