Tuesday 23 October 2012

WHAT THE AVERAGE NIGERIAN DOESN'T KNOW ABOUT LORD LUGARD


      
Ask the average Nigerian who Lord Lugard is, and (s)he is probably going to reply like this - Lord Lugard was the firstgovernor of Nigeria and he amalgamated the North and South! Elsewhere, the Historian Nigerian would reply in this way, or some variant of this – Lord Fredrick Lugard was the first Governor-General of Nigeria, after amalgamating the Northern and Southern Protectorate in 1914. Also, his wife; Flora Shaw or Lady Lugard, gave Nigeria its nameThat’s what most of our knowledge as Nigerians, of Lugard, is limited to.

During the last independence celebration, of course it was a public holiday, I was catching up on my reading, doing it the exact way I love – reading everything I could lay my hands on at that moment. The internet was awash with various diatribes about Nigeria. A few articles of encouragement here and there, critical analyses too, of the present state of Nigeria, with reference to the past. There were basically all sorts of pieces out there, still are. There were also quite a few that mentioned our past heroes, and some past leaders, Lugard made the cut.

Permit me to digress a bit, Lugard for many of us has ceased to be the admirable figure we learnt about in primary school social studies/high school government, especially with the advent of the internet and the attendant flow of information. “...he lacks the power of organization, and is conspicuously deficient in the management and control alike of men or business...” What you just read is a line from what Lugard thought of Africans, please go on Google for the full quote made in 1926, and othersI, personally, am indifferent but a little showing in a positive lighton the internet for Lugard is neededHence, it was a good thing to come across this article Behold, Lugard's foot-bridge.

The article makes for a good and educative read as it enlightens us about a pedestrian bridge tucked away in a corner of the popular Gamji Gate in Kaduna; a tourist site and relaxation park. The piece basically sums up one more good thing Lord Lugard gave us as a nation, other than literally uniting us. The piece showcases a landmark that has joined the ranks of various monuments such as Lugard House (official residence of the governor of Kogi State, Nigeria), Lugard Hall (Kaduna State House of Assembly) etc. Please comment and share, and also remember to mention the bridge when next you are asked who Lord Lugard was. Thank you.



  

SM4CC SERIES: 2012 NIGERIAN FLOOD


                      

Sometime last week, I was on my way from the Island heading to the Mainland, and due to the ongoing repairs of the Third Mainland Bridge, had to pass through an alternative route. The site that greeted me was scary to say the least. True, it had rained all day the day before, and hence, the water level of the Lagoon was unusually high. Still, the thought that if I could get down from the moving vehicle and lean over the edge of the Bridge with my hand stretched, I may have touched the water sent cold chills through my body – although I had the thought the whole time, I couldn't even take a picture.
Nigerians are regarded as happy people, perhaps, this is as a result of their unrivalled religiousness. I mean, when you think some supreme being is going to take care of all your troubles and worries, you focus on other issues such as being joyful and happy. Also, this religiousness has left us inactive, almost to a point of paralysis – something bad happens and instead of taking action, we only sympathize and silently pray away calamity from our doorsteps. Give it some time, and then the jokes/funny stories begin to make the rounds.
That’s the way we are, that’s how Nigerians roll. Hence, we have gone from the situation in the picture on the left to somewhere in the picture on the right (or even worse). Just last night, I was reading online of four farmers in Kogi State who committed suicide – the floods had washed away their crops; crops for which they had secured loans to buy seedlings from which they grew, hence, their debt had doubled, and our situation as a nation as gone critical, as we’ve lost all these food (rice self-sufficiency for next year is history) and now, we losing the farmers too. As if, rural urban migration isn’t doing enough.
The figures and stories are dire, littered all over the internet, our newspapers and televisions. The death toll is anywhere between 130 and 148, considering whose source you believe. Those displaced range between 60,000 to 120,000. I cannot begin to quantify rice, maize and other food crops that have follow water, literally, let’s just say a lot of people are going to be hungry next year. Also, it’ll be vain if we began to speak about houses, cars, furniture etc. that were lost. I mean, who needs all these so far you’ve got life? Neither do we expect to host the hippos (really?) and crocodiles I hear are now visitors.
So, the flood (worst in 50 years) has burst in our faces, what are we doing to mop it up.  Thankfully, the government and its agencies/bodies have begun to take serious action, a summary of which was in the President’s national broadcast of Tuesday, October 9. We’ll discuss this in detail in another post but let me just say this, I’d rather the government (us too) start taking preventive drugs than this curative ones.State governments have being working hard - Emmanuel Uduaghan of Delta State, Rabi’u Kwankwaso of Kano State and Adams Oshiomhole of Edo State are some ofthem. We, I expect more. 
Also, it gladdens my heart to see the help flowing in from other Nigerians towards those affected, maybe, my diagnosis of paralysis might be false after all. Aliko Dangote, TY Danjuma Foundation, Ashaka Cement, Mouka Foam, the Nigerian Red Cross, groups on Facebook, individuals on Twitter and all those who have offered help and are still doing in their own little ways and secret corners. We, I thank you. This is a call to others, nothing is too small, let’s help our brothers and sisters – go online and donate, send those old clothes, make that call to a friend or relative living in an affected area, do something!

Sunday 7 October 2012

THE SEX LIFE OF A LAGOS MAD WOMAN





This place is not my house, but I live here.
It is not the type of place you want to call your home. Sometimes, I wonder how I have managed to call it mine since my uncle died, that should be five years ago, or six or seven.
It is a very smelly place, that’s what people who pass make you believe, because they are always covering their noses.
 But me and the grown men who smoke Indian hemp every morning, every afternoon and every night in that corner, always wonder why they cover their noses.
This place is very cold, because there are no doors, no windows, nothing. But there is a roof. That’s where the cars pass; plenty during the day and very few at night. The other ones who don’t pass my roof usually pass my frontage and I love watching them, especially those ones that are as big as houses and you can’t see the people inside because the glass is always black like charcoal.
I see a lot of things every day. A lot of things. I will tell you some and then one that happened today. The one that made me swear that I was not mad and I can never be because I couldn’t have done what the woman did.
It is sad that only one man here knows that I’m not really mad. That shameless one with his beards and hair dread locked like my pubic hair. Rosco. He hisses and shakes his head at me during the day like all the others in his gang. But I and he know that I am not mad. Because at night, very late in the night, when others have gone, he will call me into his danfo bus, and I will do to him what that stupid igbo he smokes cannot do to him.
I do not let him know I look forward to it. How can I? Then he will stop squeezing that N100 note into my left hand every time he gets up after he has pounded me to his heart’s content. He must think he has just raped a helpless mad woman as he zips his pants. Fool. He does not have any idea how my legs shake uncontrollable and how my bowels tremble and how the hair on my body stand still when he is inside me. Only that he is always too quick. I don’t know why, but I can’t complain. I have to wait till the next day or the next.
I’ll continue to let him believe he is raping me but deep inside me I know I will die if he does not call me like that for three days. I don’t ever want to return to those days of touching myself. How can I even think about it? Evil thoughts go back to your sender, please.
Back to what I was saying…the things I see here every day.
In the morning, I wake up with noise. Loud noise.
“Ojuelegba – stadium – barracks!” repeated four times in a roll so quickly; if you don’t live here you will think it is a call to war. I wonder where that is; a place whose name sounds like sport and war. Other times it is, “Itire – Lawanson” that I can hear louder.
Where do I even know? I’ve not left my house for many happy-new-years now. This is where I shout it every time it is time to shout it.
Then Rosco will wake up and start the engine of his bus. He will switch it off again and then go across the road and come back with water in a bucket. My eyes always go with him because I don’t want any careless early morning driver to knock him down. When he gets back to the danfo, he will go close to one of the tyres and bring out that his big thing to urinate. That is when I always wish he would call me, but never, the fool will never even speak to me, he will just shake his head like the others when they look at me. I have to wait till it’s very dark.
Then he will remove his clothes and leave his shorts on, pouring water on himself with either a bowl or his hands.  When it is time to chafe just below his waist, he will keep his hands in there for too long. This is why I know Rosco is a fool. Can’t he just remove the shorts and wash properly? Who else is watching?
When he finally leaves with his noisy danfo, I’ll turn my attention to the road. If I feel hungry, I will get up, re-arrange my house and make sure no one stole anything while I was asleep and then walk across the road to buy what I’ll eat.
Oh how I miss the woman who sells that early morning akara. She doesn’t come again these days because of Fashola’s people. So now I go to the aboki who prepares tea and indomie noodles and egg. Only Rosco’s thing is sweeter than that Indomie and egg in this life, you have to believe me. But the fool will not use his plate to serve me like other people, so I have to always remember to bring my own plate. He says I’m mad, yet, he knows how to collect my money and give me change. He doesn’t toy with my change any more since the day he saw me bite someone with these my teeth for calling me “Reveren sistaa”.
I hate that name. I hear those are the people who never do the thing me and Rosco do. They must really think I am one. Fools.
It may be better to ask me what I have not seen here than to ask me to start telling you the things that I see every day. I have seen rich men carry prostitutes away at night; I have seen a corpse dropped from one of those charcoal cars one night long time ago. I have also witnessed many fights between different gangs like Rosco’s group where they use machetes on themselves and left blood everywhere. I have also seen many okada people die like chicken from too much speed, especially at that junction over there. Only last week, a speeding trailer climbed one okada rider’s head spilling its content to the ground. I couldn’t eat for days after that. Let us not talk about it, please.
Yes, I promised to tell you about the incident that made me know that I am not mad, right? Actually that day I was just sitting on my own and I noticed a woman selling Coke, Pepsi and LaCasera that all these people buy and drink and then shine their teeth gleefully after only a gulp.
Suddenly she brought down the big container of drinks from her head by herself as if to sell to someone. Then she began to go round the container. Then she began to dance. Then I stood up. I wanted to understand what was happening. Then she started singing, and clapping like the people in those churches where they wear only white.
Then she untied her wrapper and used it to cover her wares. That’s when other people began to notice what I had been watching since. Then she removed her buba, revealing rounded breasts that made me jealous, only protected by a very fine bra with some shine-shine on it.
O ti n ya were o!” a bus conductor yelled as his bus passed and people stretched their necks to catch a glimpse, saying the woman was experiencing the beginning of madness.
Then the men who were walking began to stop and look. I’m sure they were waiting for her to remove the bra. I took my eyes away.
I can’t worry about her too much, because I myself I have a problem growing in my stomach, I feel like vomiting, and I am very dizzy and I am very worried. 

I am very worried because I know what it is, this problem. Just like those films I used to watch in my uncle’s house. They would do the thing without rubber and next thing, the stupid girl is running outside and vomiting, and then the mumu man says it is not he who caused it. Fools! As if I was the one who did. And it is the same story in every film oh, yet, they never learn. After, they would say I’m mad.
I left the woman of the rounded breasts, with a dozen eyes glued to them, and went home – I thought I’d have plenty of time with her when she became my new housemate. But you know all these mad people and their waka waka, I’m still waiting for her. Like I was saying, I left because I had to sit down and think. Think very well because I cannot let something like what happened to the first thing happen to this one. God forbid. 
The first thing is why they are calling me a mad woman. My uncle gave it to me. By force. He used to do me any chance he got -maybe that is why I like Rosco doing it to me, I don’t know.  Then my aunty took it away. By force too. She made me drink two tablets like that and I slept off. When I woke up, I didn’t have a large tummy again, I cried and cried ehn. This thing that didn’t allow my uncle touch me again. This thing that allowed me breathe for two minutes without my aunty asking me to do unnecessary chores. This thing that I used to speak with every time, telling it all my plans and secrets. They took it away.
I still talk with it to this moment. People point and say I’m talking to myself. Fools, they don’t know I’m holding an intelligent and proper conversation. In fact, it was it who assured me nothing would happen if I put otapiapia in their meal that night and just walk away - you see, Uncle had started again and Aunty beat me thoroughly when I told her. I did.
After thinking and talking to it, I have decided to give my daughter, yes it’s a girl because this one dances and sings, unlike it who used to jump and kick, to the “Reveren Sistaa” that I see preaching at the junction. Next Sunday, I would go and wait for their white bus. She would be a “Sistaa” too and pray very well for me, then maybe God will manage to forgive me. She will also never do the thing Rosco and I do, very sweet but too much wahala - see me naw. I cannot even take care of her, talk less of feeding her. I would breastfeed her all the food she needs for life if I had the rounded breasts of that mad woman, where is she sef?
 So, I am not mad oh, I am not! Fools.


N.B
The story y'all just read was a competition organized by this phenomenal author, ‘Seun Salami (please Google him). The first part of the story; in bold format, was written by him, and the latter part; in normal font, by my humble self. i didn't get anywhere in the competition (see the grief, apparently i don't have up to eighty friends to vote online for me, to help in achieving my dreams, so sad, anyways..) the competition was to find a writer who completes the story best. Don’t you think i should have won? Please, join me by the "washing" machine; it’s necessary to do your laundry yourself a times, hehe... hope you enjoyed the story tho'? It was all for your reading pleasure. Peace and love.