Nobel laureate, Prof. Wole Soyinka, has said that the late
Ghanaian diplomat and poet, Kofi Awoonor and himself could have been
together at the Storymoja/Hay Literature Festival held in Nairobi,
Kenya.
He said he was invited to the same festival but could not attend.
Awoonor was killed by terrorists last Saturday at the Westgate
Shopping Mall shooting in Nairobi. Soyinka said two commitments: a
public conversation with a very brave individual, Karima Bennoune, an
Algerian national, whose trenchant publication – Your Fatwa Does Not
Apply Here, and the annual conference of international investigators in
Tunis, were responsible for his inability to attend the festival. He
said: “My absence was particularly regrettable, because I had planned to
make up for my failure to turn up for the immediate prior edition.
Participant or absentee however, this is one edition we shall not
soon forget. It was at least two days after the listing of Kofi Awoonor
among the victims that I even recollected the fact that the Festival was
ongoing at that very time.
“With that realisation came another: that Kofi and I could have been
splitting a bottle at that same watering hole in between events and at
the end of each day. My feelings, I wish to state clearly, did not
undergo any changes.
The emotions of rage, hate and contempt remained on the same
qualitative and quantitative levels,” he added. Soyinka spoke in Lagos
yesterday during a memorial reading session tagged Humanity and Against
and held in honour of the late Ghanaian poet.
He described the late Awoonor as a passionate African who gave
primacy of place to values derived from his Ewe heritage. “That, in
turn, means that he was thoroughly imbued with the spirit of ecumenism
towards other systems of belief and cultural usages – this being the
scriptural ethos that permeates belief practices of most of this
continent.
We mourn our colleague and brother, but first, we denounce his
killers, the virulent sub-species of humanity who bathe their hands in
innocent blood,” he added.
Renowned poet, Prof JP Clark explained why Soyinka and himself were
not at the funeral of the late Chinua Achebe at Ogidi, Anambra State,
blaming it on politicians that hijacked the funeral. He noted that Prof
Soyinka and himself did not sit and plot action on whether or not to
attend Achebe’s funeral in Ogidi. “Politicians hijacked the Achebe’s
funeral.
I said to myself, if there is life after death, Achebe would be
laughing at the politicians.
So, writers could not have found a space in
Achebe’s funeral. From the President to the Governors, they hijacked
it,” he noted. Clark said critics might be wondering why a memorial is
being held in honour of Awoonor in Lagos unlike when Chinua Achebe died.
President of the Association of Nigerian Authors (ANA), Prof Remi
Raji, who read from his collection of poems, The Fire Next Time, said of
the late Ghanaian poet: “African literature has indeed lost an
influential voice. The name, Kofi Awoonor, was very present in our minds
as young students.
Though I never met him in person, his writings have been influential.
The ANA has sent a condolence letter to the Ghana authority.
Today’s memorial is very instructive. His death is a reflection of
the urban barbarisms in the globe today.” Other scholars who read
excerpts at the memorial were Prof Kole Omotoso, Prof Femi Osofisan, Dr.
Wale Okediran and Lola Shoneyin.
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