By Olumide T. Olumide| Nigerian Writer and Blogger
Follow @olumideblogzin|
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Nobel laureate, Prof. Wole
Soyinka, has denied there was a real conflict between himself and J.P. Clark,
Christopher Okigbo and Chinua Achebe, fueled by the desire to dominate the rest
in the writing art.
He
also gave a rare portrayal of his late friend and respected novelist, Chinua
Achebe, disputing an often referencing of Mr. Achebe as the’ Father of African
literature.’
Prof. Soyinka also picked holes in Mr. Achebe’s last work, There Was a
Country, which turned out the author’s most controversial.
In an extensive interview with news website, Sahara reporters, Mr.
Soyinka said while Mr. Achebe’s place in history as a celebrated storyteller
was “definitely assured”, referring to him as the father of African literature
was either “literary ignorance” or “momentary exuberance to which we are all
sometimes prone”.
“Those who seriously believe or promote this must be asked: have
you the sheerest acquaintance with the literatures of other African nations, in
both indigenous and adopted colonial languages?” he asked.
“What must the francophone, lusophone, Zulu, Xhosa, Ewe etc. etc.
literary scholars and consumers think of those who persist in such a historic
absurdity? It’s as ridiculous as calling WS father of contemporary African
drama! Or Mazisi Kunene father of African epic poetry. Or Kofi Awoonor father
of African poetry. Education is lacking in most of those who pontificate.”
Mr. Achebe’s funeral is scheduled for next week at his hometown in
Anambra state amid controversies between his family, and associates over the
involvement of the Nigerian government in the preparations for the event.
Mr. Soyinka said he had no opportunity to discuss Mr. Achebe’s
last work, There
Was a Country, with the author before he passed; but said he wished
the book, which sparked controversy, was never written.
“Unfortunately, that chance of a last encounter was missed so I
don’t really wish to comment on the work at this point,” Mr. Soyinka said of a
planned meeting with the late novelist after the book’s release. “It is however
a book I wish he had never written – that is, not in the way it was. There are
statements in that work that I wish he had never made.”
Since its release, the book has drawn a series of critical
reviews; and fueled an intense, mainly internet-centered row between the Igbo
and the Yoruba over Mr. Achebe’s characterization of the Yoruba leader, Obafemi
Awolowo, as amongst those who helped inflict mass deaths and suffering on the
Igbos during Nigeria’s bloody civil war.
Mr. Soyinka admitted the Igbos were victims of genocide prior to
the war; but said both sides committed atrocities during the war, in remarks
that seemed amongst his most frank public impression of a former friend and
colleague, and the war controversy.
He however said the Igbos must remember that they were not
militarily prepared for the war, a point, he said, he raised with late Biafran
leader, Odumegwu Ojukwu.
“The reading of most Igbo over what happened before the Civil War
was indeed accurate – yes, there was only one word for it – genocide,” he said.
“Once the war began however, atrocities were committed by both
sides, and the records are clear on that. The Igbo got the worst of it,
however. That fact is indisputable. The Asaba massacre is well documented, name
by victim name, and General Gowon visited personally to apologize to the
leaders.
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