Archive for entertainment

Winner emerges in ‘Preemptive’ essay writing competition

Winner emerges in ‘Preemptive’ essay writing competition

A
winner has emerged in the ‘Preemptive’ essay writing competition.
Gbenga Adeniji won the pseudo reality show held on June 16 at The Place
Hotels, Ajao Estate, Lagos, which concluded the competition announced
last month.

Adeniji piped four
other finalists – Lawrence Wakdet, Emmanuel Ugokwe, John Okunola and
Natasha Bassey – to the N100, 000 prize money.

The essay
competition is part of the larger ‘Preemptive’ project involving the
staging of the play written by US-based Niyi Coker and directed by
Segun Ojewuyi on three continents. The play, about the role of dialogue
in conflict resolution, is on in Barbados till June 29. It will be at
the Shaw Theatre, UK, on July 1 and 2. The production, comprising a
cast of eight, will be staged at the MUSON Centre from July 12 to 15;
Cultural Centre, Calabar, on July 20 and 21 and the NUC Hall, Abuja on
July 24.

Actress Lillian
Amah Tina-Aluko produced the pseudo reality show for Teju Kareem’s
Zmirage Multimedia Limited. Actor Ropo Ewenla, actress and essayist,
Pamela Braide and scholar Sylvester Odion Akhaine, were the judges
while Tina Mba was narrator.

The show

The first session
of the show started around 1.00pm with an introduction of the five
contestants by the narrator. Contestants were each given an hour to
write their essays. The second session featured interviews with the
contestants before the announcement of the results. The essays were
assessed on structure, style and content.

Adeniji, a Lagosian
whose hobbies include writing, travelling and writing critiques,
emerged winner at the end of proceedings. Lawrence Wakdet, who came
second, got a cash prize of N75, 000 while third-placed Emmanuel Ugokwe
got N50, 000. John Okunola and the only female contestant, Natasha
Bassey, who were fourth and fifth respectively, got consolation prizes
of N25, 000 each. All five will see the play in Nigeria when it opens
in July.

Adeniji, who had
earlier said, “Well, I must confess to everyone that in a competition
like this there are two sides to a coin, the losing side and the
winning side. So, I just have the feeling that I should do my best,
then if my best is good enough then…,” will also go to London to see
the play, entry visa allowing.

The judges

Editor, Guardian on
Sunday, Jahman Anikulapo, who coordinated the selection of the jury
disclosed that the three judges were selected based on their
experiences in theatre, popular culture and peace and conflict
resolution. Ewenla, he stated, holds a Masters degree in popular
culture and he is working on a PhD on the same subject; Braide has
written extensively on children and women in conflict situations while
Sylvester Odion Akhaine runs the Centre for Conflict Resolution and
Demilitarisation (CENCORD).

The play and the
essay competition, Anikulapo added, are not the end of ‘Preemptive’
whose ultimate aim is to draw attention to the conflicts within Nigeria
specifically and the world in general.

“In fact, it is
just the first step, it ought to stimulate further debate,” he said
while adding that both Nigerian leaders and the followers “have to
redefine their psychological make-up. Why do you read the Bible and the
Quran when you know you will still go out and kill somebody? Why do you
bother to wake-up in the morning and say ‘good morning’? Why do you
smile to someone you will kill tomorrow? That is the kind of question
‘Preemptive’ is asking us.”

250 entries were initially received for the competition. The five finalists emerged out of a shortlist of 11 entrants.

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The Women of Peter Hugo’s Nollywood

The Women of Peter Hugo’s Nollywood

Many Nigerians tend to have a close
special bond with their mothers. The bonds are perhaps forged from the intimacy
of shared suffering, and in some instances, abuse of mothers and children by
the perversion that Nigerian patriarchy has become. Sadly, it would appear that
in Nigeria, male children survive their abuse only to occupy a place in the
pantheon of perversion where instead of ending the abuse, they dutifully
perpetrate it in the name of African tradition and culture. I pine for real and
enforceable laws and men and women of character to protect the truly vulnerable
from what is happening in Nigeria today. Do not look to our churches and
mosques for relief; they wittingly and unwittingly preach that women and
children should blindly subjugate themselves to the authority of men because,
of course, the holy books decree it. Suffering is overrated and Nigerian women
and children know it from bitter experience. Nollywood offers clarity on one
issue: For many of our women, Nigeria is the patriarchy from hell.

My
mother, Izuma-of-the-stout-bush-that-cannot-be-felled, is on my mind. My mother
has lived all her life in survival mode. She has not rested one day. Growing up
with her was a spiritual undertaking. Like a fierce hawk, my mother would stop
at nothing to protect her offspring. There were malevolent spirits everywhere.
They had to be threatened, cajoled, bribed to both protect and help us, or to
leave us alone. Their couriers were imams, pastors, diviners and assorted master
(MBAs) bullshit artists willing to help my mother for a modest fee. These MBAs
may now be found thriving it appears in Pieter Hugo’s awful coffee table book
and on the squalid sets of Nollywood.

Nigeria’s
intellectuals ought to reflect on what Nollywood means for us as a people and
what it says about how our society treats women and children. I have been
concerned about this for a long time and in my spare time have actually been
trawling the Internet searching for books and essays on the subject. I was therefore
thrilled to spy a coffee table book on the subject.

The
first time I picked up Peiter Hugo’s coffee table book, Nollywood, I was angry.
I railed at what I saw as racism and condescension of its pictures in the dark.
In despair, I yelled at the Nigerian writers Chris Abani and Zina Saro-Wiwa for
contributing essays to a dung-heap of poorly taken pictures of their own people
posing in various stages of parody. In anger, I flung the book into the darkest
recesses of my room and swore never to open its racist pages again, ever. The
other day, I calmed down enough to revisit the book. It is still an awful book,
housing prejudices and plain awful photography. The only good thing about the
pictures is that they remind me that the artist Victor Ehikhamenor, one of our
own, is a better photographer than Victor Hugo.

Nollywood
is a bad coffee table book that does not belong on your coffee table, but I
would recommend the brilliant essays of the writers Abani and Saro-Wiwa. They
are brainy, eclectic, and charming commentaries on the enigma that has become
Nollywood, with a good piece of the history of Nigerian cinematography thrown
in. What is remarkable however, is how these two writers of Nigerian extraction
are virtually silent on how Nollywood views Nigerian women. Except for a throw
away sentence by Saro-Wiwa, you would think that Nigeria is inhabited only by
narcissistic men. I would ignore Stacy Hardy’s essay titled Nollywood
Confidential, a thoroughly mystifying stream-of-consciousness babble about not
much that is related to Nigeria and Nollywood. I guess Hugo was trying to fill
up the pages of his awful book.

There are over
forty gory and freak pictures all sorts, shot in Asaba and Enugu – macabre
magic realism and women mercifully feature only eight times. These pictures
presumably depict Nollywood actors and actresses in costume. Let’s see, there
are men wearing horns and sheep’s fur, a man dressed in a suit, leaning on a
dead cow, carrying its heart dripping blood, there is a nude woman miraculously
alive with a knife through her heart, and not to be outdone, there is a
puzzling shot of Peiter Hugo himself dressed in his underwear, wearing a mask
and brandishing an axe. Ye gods, give Nigeria a break! In Hugo’s Nollywood,
Nigeria is one huge freak show and women should neither be heard nor seen.
Nevertheless, I don’t blame Hugo much, in his world, the characters in his
pictures exist only in freak shows and circuses traveling the seamy side of
America. Many seasons ago in the depths of my despair, I dreamt of a giant
searchlight that would beam to a shocked world in real time the black on black
crime that Nigeria has become in the hands of democracy. Today, that dream
lumbers slowly to reality with colourful dispatch riders called Google Earth
and Skype. Slowly by slowly, we are being liberated from ourselves by external
agents. Is this the second coming of colonialism?

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Women and the dynamics of movie representation

Women and the dynamics of movie representation

Lufodo Academy of
Performing Arts (LAPA), partnered by African Women Development Forum
(AWDF), held an interactive two-day forum addressing the representation
of Women in Nollywood. Tagged ‘Women and the Dynamics of
Representation’, the forum looked at the issue of female stereotypes in
Nigerian movies as well as the image of the African woman fostered
internationally through Nollywood; and suggest ways to improve both.

The event had in
attendance Abimbola Fashola, wife of the Governor of Lagos State as
special guest; and experts from various filmmaking fields such as
actors, directors, producers, marketers and talent managers. It was not
exclusive to Nollywood though, as television presenters such as Funmi
Iyanda and Agatha Amata; academics, Abena Busia and Okome Onookome; and
human rights activists such as Josephine Chukwuma and Mary Hilda Tadria
lent their presence and voices to address the theme.

The audience and
participants included: Iretiola Doyle, Dakore Egbuson, Monalisa Chinda,
Chioma Chukwuka, Lala Akindoju, Uche Mac-Auley, Doris Simeon; and
producers: Emem Isong, Amaka Igwe and Ego Boyo

It was not a women
only conference, however, as masculine presence was recorded in the
persons of Reuben Abati, Mahmoud Ali-Balogun, Akin Omotoso, Tunde
Kelani, Daniel Ademinokan, Paul Obazele, Bimbo Manuel and Saheed
Balogun amongst others. They came to show their support for the women’s
quest for better representation; while a number of others like
marketer, Emeka Isikaku, came to defend their practices in the movie
trade.

Telling women’s stories

The event opened
with a brief speech by Mrs. Fashola, who commended Nollywood for its
efforts at bringing entertainment to Nigeria and the world. She however
discouraged the need for movie makers producing movies with several
unnecessary parts just to make money when one would have sufficed. She
also spoke against nudity and the prevalence of occultic practices in
film portrayals.

Abena Busia,
Director for the Study of the Worldwide African Diaspora, and professor
of English and Women’s Studies at Rutgers University, New Jersey, in
her paper, titled, ‘Of Cooking, Cars and Gendered Culture,’ proposed
that Nollywood, as the third largest film making industry in the world,
can no longer be ‘treated as a child’. Addressing the issue of women
representation, she posited that, “We all become concerned about how we
are seen, especially by others who do not count themselves as one of
our number. And when we do not see ourselves reflected, or reflected as
we would like, there is the need for redress, to challenge the
discrepancies between how we see ourselves and how you know ourselves
to be seen”

Busia praised the
fact that Nollywood has depicted urban Africa, thus serving to erase
the misconception of Africa as a ‘Tarzan jungle’, however, according to
the professor, the success of Nollywood means that its negative
representations of Africa such as female circumcision, abuse,
witchcraft and gender subjugation are well received by negative
propagators. The academic also asked pertinent questions: What is the
interface between artistic freedom and social responsibility? Are
artists creators or reflectors of society? Where is the line between
truth and propaganda?; and advised that we respect the integrity of
every individual story, but must also be concerned with the multiplier
effect of a number of individual stories conveying similar things which
then multiply to become a collective story, while also seeking to
preserve the things that give us an identity.

Responding to
Busia’s paper, publisher and gender scholar Bibi Bakare Yusuf, said
colonialism has forged an image of women as housewives, a discrepancy
from what it traditionally was: a hard worker who contributed
financially and took up leadership roles. She also suggested that
Nollywood has shown ambivalence in portraying femininity, religion and
culture, not quite deciding what the notion of the ‘ideal woman’ should
be. She urged feminists to educate filmmakers along the desired lines
of representation.

Mahmoud Ali-Balogun
cited a similarity, “What the western media is doing to Africa is what
Nollywood is doing to women. Women exploitation sells in movies but is
that what we should keep portraying?” He charged that films be used to
correct aspects that are negative in our culture rather than emphasise
such aspects.

According to Bunmi
Oyinsan, “every movie is ideological, whether or not the producer knows
it.” She cited a few movies and their characterisation to show their
representation of women. Amaka Igwe however subscribed to another
school of thought, emphasising the primary purpose of films as
entertainment. As she said, movies are meant to “entertain and perhaps
educate”. Referring to herself as an “unrepentant commercial producer
and marketer,” she added that “most movies are not intended to teach
but to communicate with the audience and make money.”

Saints and Witches

It was an intense
session on day two of the event when Funmi Iyanda moderated a session
titled ‘Saints, Whores, Nags and Witches’. Emem Isong, while presenting
the paper for discussion held the masculine gender as culpable in the
stereotyping of women and identified the four major stereotypes of
female roles in many Nollywood movies. In her words, “Men are the ones
who say they don’t understand women, so if we leave them to tell our
stories, they will put us in boxes labelled ‘Saint’, ‘Whore’, ‘Nag’,
and ‘Witch’. The way out is to take our destinies in our own hands and
to tell our stories”, said the producer who was acknowledged in the
event for giving many Nigerian actresses their big breaks.

Presenter, Agatha
Amata seconded Isong’s opinion, as she said, “No one can tell your
story better than you”, she also cited America as an example, revealing
that the Cable News Network (CNN) shown in America is different from
that which is shown to the rest of the world. According to her, America
has used the media to create a ‘hype that is not true’, so Nollywood
needs to realise the power of the media and ensure that it is used
appropriately. She also put the blame of women’s negative
responsibility on, surprisingly, her own gender, stating unequivocally,
“Women are women’s own worst enemies.” An opinion which was supported
by Dakore Egbuson and Omoni Oboli; although Bakare-Yusuf disagreed
strongly.

Funmi Iyanda’s
passionate opinion was that “Nigerian women are last on the pecking
order in Africa. They think that we are vain, vacuous and stupid; and
that we should be raped and abused.” According to Iyanda, the blonde,
blue-eyed female will never be raped or abused in movies unless there
is a strong message to be passed from it. “The American Marines
perpetrate such acts as rapes, but will never be depicted as anything
less than the hero in the American media,” she said, underscoring the
need for the media to broadcast more socially responsible content.
However, she insisted not on an insipid, if positive image of women in
Nollywood but on a more rounded and complex depiction.

Oyinsan in support
of this statement encouraged what she terms ‘jamming’. According to
her, if the reputations of witch or nag are foisted on us (women), then
let’s jam it, let’s own it. Let’s say to them, yes, I am a witch, but
this is why I have become so.” She cited ‘Jesus and the Giant’, a short
movie by Omotoso, which was produced using a series of still pictures,
as a movie which took violence as a theme and jammed to viewers’
consciousness, the message that it is wrong.

Rounding off

The event was not all serious talk though as it culminated with a poolside cocktail.

Film veteran, Olu
Jacob commended the initiative of his wife, Joke Silva, Director of
LAPA and Bisi Adeleye-Fayemi, Executive Director of AWDF for their
initiative in organising the forum. “I see women as equals and will
treat them no different from men,” said Jacob. Adeleye-Fayemi affirmed
a commitment to support LAPA’s efforts in convening such forums
annually or bi-annually.

Joke Silva expressed thanks to the participants, and surprise at the
large presence of Nollywood practitioners, the media and other
organisations, as she concluded that, “In the multitude of counsel,
there is safety.”

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This reading and writing life

This reading and writing life

I am not a writer,
certainly not in the traditional sense. I endure a professional life
that is far removed from the burden of thinking up something creative
to write every week. My colleagues at work would be shocked to find
that on the Internet and elsewhere I am regarded as a writer. Most of
my days at work are spent making sure that official memos are stripped
of the indiscipline of creative flourishes. I do write nonstop, it is a
disability. I have to write, whether it makes sense or not. It is a
good thing because I am required by some contract to come up with a
certain number of words each week. To date, I have not had a problem
with meeting that quota. I have had the opposite problem; staying
within the allotted number of words. I am quite garrulous, I must admit.

Where and how do I
write? Many times, I actually write longhand on notepads. Lately most
of my work is done on Amebo, my blackberry. I type as fast as the ideas
come, any and everywhere. Ideas choose inappropriate times to birth and
so my blackberry helps since she is always with me. Sometimes when
Amebo is not feeling too well, my iPhone Kokolette does the job just
fine. My laptop Cecelia helps me to polish the final draft. Cecelia
goes with me most places but she can be spotted at her favourite spot
at my bedside, or somewhere on the bathroom floor.

I write
everywhere: in bed, in the bathroom, on the dining table, at events,
chaperoning our kids, anywhere I have a few minutes. I tend to write
about any and everything. I live vicariously through our children and
there does not seem to be a shortage of inspiration when I am around
them. Life in America offers creative opportunities also. Fading
memories of a life in Nigeria are also still rich in inspiration. I
also read nonstop and offer my strong views in the form of book
reviews. Folks tend to think of me as a book critic. I don’t like that
label much because I also write creative non-fiction, poetry and
freewheeling essays.

Yes, I read
nonstop, a habit I acquired from my dad. Catholic boarding school was
hell for little boys but I have fond memories of our library at
Annunciation Catholic College, Irrua. I grew up reading books because
at the time, reading was actually a form of entertainment. I travelled
the world in books and I exaggerate slightly if I tell you that I have
probably read most of what was offered by Heinemann’s African Writer’s
Series. My favorite author of all times is Chinua Achebe. I am
unashamedly an Achebe groupie. I half joke to young aspiring writers
that they need to change their names to Chinua Achebe if they want me
to read their stuff. I read blogs nonstop. I dream of that day when an
enterprising publisher would convince Achebe to start a daily blog,
featuring random musings on anything. Every morning, he would look out
a window and start pecking away at his iPad. That would be something. I
would give my paycheck for that. Every paycheck.

My views tend to
be strong, some say sometimes too strong. These views come out mostly
in my book reviews. I also tend to buy my own books because I actually
am eager to patronise our African writers. It is an expensive habit but
I am addicted to our stories. The reviews come as a side product of my
obsessive need to read. I simply compile the notes on the pages,
package them and send them out to my editor. She patiently puts the ‘u’
back in ‘color’ and publishes it. If I like a book, I gush over it, if
I hate it, I get really irritated and I let the author know it. My time
is over-priced and I don’t take kindly to wasting it reading a book
that is well, a waste of my time. Especially since I pay for most of
the books I review. A bad book is usually the price of a good bottle of
Chilean Malbec. Lost opportunities to meet a good bottle of red agitate
me.

I have a cult following of critics. I know now why offering
criticism is hard. Because taking it hurts, I must say that on balance,
I have been treated well. I get a walloping whenever I write
unfavourable reviews of books written by popular authors. They tend to
be young, extremely popular young writers with a hugely devoted
following, blessed with a circle of fiercely devoted friends. I envy
them, really. I probably won’t stop offering my personal opinions, as
long as I read. I actually love hearing from folks, regardless of the
tone. I occasionally get some pretty abusive pieces sent to me
privately, someone actually called me a conceited ignoramus the other
day, but I try hard to figure out what someone is trying to communicate
to me. I am not a conceited ignoramus.

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Pirates attack Tunde Kelani’s ‘Arugba’

Pirates attack Tunde Kelani’s ‘Arugba’

Filmmaker Tunde
Kelani’s worst fears have come true. “We are going to be pirated,” he
had predicted before his film, ‘Arugba’, was released on June 13. “It’s
a risk because we are already boxed in. We don’t have an income. We
have a project we invested 15, 20 million naira in; everybody’s been
waiting”, he had continued on why the film would be released in spite
of knowing that pirates were waiting in the wings.

With alarming
speed, the movie has become prey to pirates like the producer
envisaged. “It is with the greatest and darkest feeling of despair that
I have to announce the massive piracy attack of our new film, ‘Arugba’,
released on home video barely a week ago,” Kelani said in a statement.
Two pirated versions of the much anticipated film have flooded the
market.

He noted that
despite complying with all the guidelines stipulated by government
agencies and paying all necessary dues before releasing the movie, he
“got no protection from the criminal activities of the pirates who are
bent on pulling down our industry.”

The producer added
that the continued piracy of his works, especially ‘Arugba’, is making
it difficult for him to continue as a filmmaker in Nigeria because, “it
is no longer possible to recoup our investment or get the opportunity
to exploit economically our copyright and repay our creditors.”

He warned that
unless the Federal government rescues filmmakers from the stranglehold
of piracy, Nollywood, which has become renowned globally, stands the
risk of dying. “The popular Nollywood industry is under great threat
and may already be experiencing its death throes,” Kelani warned.

Kelani disclosed that though he intends to write protest letters to
the President, Goodluck Jonathan, the Attorney General, Minister of
Information and Communication, the Inspector General of Police and
other relevant government agencies to arrest the high incidence of
piracy, he is also counting on the understanding of the film buying
public. “We can only appeal to the general public to ignore the pirated
ones and buy our genuine movies.”

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Pirates attack Tunde Kelani’s ‘Arugba’

Pirates attack Tunde Kelani’s ‘Arugba’

Filmmaker Tunde
Kelani’s worst fears have come true. “We are going to be pirated,” he
had predicted before his film, ‘Arugba’, was released on June 13. “It’s
a risk because we are already boxed in. We don’t have an income. We
have a project we invested 15, 20 million naira in; everybody’s been
waiting”, he had continued on why the film would be released in spite
of knowing that pirates were waiting in the wings.

With alarming
speed, the movie has become prey to pirates like the producer
envisaged. “It is with the greatest and darkest feeling of despair that
I have to announce the massive piracy attack of our new film, ‘Arugba’,
released on home video barely a week ago,” Kelani said in a statement.
Two pirated versions of the much anticipated film have flooded the
market.

He noted that
despite complying with all the guidelines stipulated by government
agencies and paying all necessary dues before releasing the movie, he
“got no protection from the criminal activities of the pirates who are
bent on pulling down our industry.”

The producer added
that the continued piracy of his works, especially ‘Arugba’, is making
it difficult for him to continue as a filmmaker in Nigeria because, “it
is no longer possible to recoup our investment or get the opportunity
to exploit economically our copyright and repay our creditors.”

He warned that
unless the Federal government rescues filmmakers from the stranglehold
of piracy, Nollywood, which has become renowned globally, stands the
risk of dying. “The popular Nollywood industry is under great threat
and may already be experiencing its death throes,” Kelani warned.

Kelani disclosed that though he intends to write protest letters to
the President, Goodluck Jonathan, the Attorney General, Minister of
Information and Communication, the Inspector General of Police and
other relevant government agencies to arrest the high incidence of
piracy, he is also counting on the understanding of the film buying
public. “We can only appeal to the general public to ignore the pirated
ones and buy our genuine movies.”

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Strengthening Nigeria-Brazil cultural relationships

Strengthening Nigeria-Brazil cultural relationships

Steps towards
executing the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between Nigeria and
Brazil on cooperation in the area of cultural rights, combating
discrimination, promotion of racial equality and related activities
were taken at a meeting on Thursday, June 3, in Abuja. The former
Minister of Tourism, Culture and National Orientation, Jibrin Bello
Gada and Minister, Special Secretariat for the Promotion of Racial
Equality (SEPPIR), The Presidency, Brazil, Edson Santos, had on March
15, 2010 signed the document on behalf of both governments.

The MoU arose from
consolidating the gains of two international conferences on improving
relationships between Africans in the continent and those in the
Diaspora held in Brazil in 2008 and 2009. The first conference, themed
‘Teaching and Propagating African Culture to the Diaspora and Teaching
Diaspora History and Culture to Africa’ held in Rio de Janeiro in 2008
while the second, ‘Teaching and Propagating African and Diaspora
History and Culture’ held in Brasilia the following year.

The June 3 meeting
in Abuja was convened at the instance of the Centre for Black African
Arts and Civilization (CBAAC), a parastatal of the Ministry of Tourism,
Culture and National Orientation responsible for the implementation of
the programmes and projects of the agreement. Present at the event were
representatives of culture parastatals, educational and cultural
institutions.

Technical meeting

Director General of
CBAAC, Tunde Babawale, explained in his opening remarks that the
meeting was a technical one to draw a roadmap for the MoU. He noted
that it was “unique because it demonstrates the resolve of Brazil and
Nigeria to put into operation things put on paper.” Both countries, he
reiterated, are prepared to hit the ground running because they want to
ensure the agreement “stands out from others that have been signed and
because the Ministry is determined to make the MOU an exemplary one.”
Babawale added that diplomacy is too serious to be left for diplomats
alone. “Diplomacy is best when it involves people to people contact,”
he reiterated.

The CBAAC DG also
explained what was expected of participants. He noted that since the
MoU gives wide latitude to different agencies to make inputs and also
includes public and private organisations, each is to state its
programmes and the timeframe for its implementation. CBAAC and SEPPIR,
Babawale stated, will meet later to harmonise the programmes before
their execution commences.

Brazil’s Ambassador
to Nigeria, Ana Candida Perez; vice chair, Senate Committee on Tourism,
Culture and National Orientation and his counterpart in the House of
Representatives, Yisa Braimoh and Kingsley Oguakwa; and Director of
Culture, Ministry of Tourism, Culture and National Orientation, George
Ufot, all commented on the significance of the MoU. They also noted the
uniqueness of the meeting which they said was the first time a roadmap
for the implementation of an agreement between Nigeria and another
country would be held.

Linkages, trainings and exchanges

The meeting got to
brass tacks with Executive Secretary of the Pan African Strategic and
Policy Research Group (PANAFSTRAG), Isola Williams, echoing Babawale on
citizen diplomacy. He noted Nigeria’s historical attachment to Brazil
and the country’s rising profile in international relations. The
retired Army General identified science, economy and politics as areas
of interest to PANAFSTRAG. What pleases Isola most, however, is the
Redemption University to promote African Relations under construction
in Brazil.

Representative of
the Nigerian Institute of Social and Economic Research (NISER), Femi
Olokesusi, disclosed that the agency is interested in transportation
system, the Millennium Development Goals and globalisation.

Former Vice
Chancellor, University of Lagos and Interim Director, Institute for
African Culture and International Understanding (IACIU), Olusegun
Obasanjo Presidential Library, Abeokuta, Oye Ibidapo-Obe stated that
the institute is interested in human security and culture.

The Institute of
African Studies, University of Ibadan, will focus on culture. Its
Director, Dele Layiwola, noted that “ancient societies had cultural
liberation before economic liberation. We will hope that in further
exploring the relationship between Nigeria and Brazil, we will be able
to reach our goals of development. We will be able to turn the
negatives of slavery into positives through culture.”

Akin Alao,
Director, Institute of Cultural Studies, Obafemi Awolowo University
(OAU), Ile Ife, wants a Brazil-Nigeria Centre for Cultural Studies to
be established in the institution. He gave reasons including an
existing Directorate of Linkages, supportive university administrators,
a course on African and Diaspora histories and a house the university
owns in Bahia, Brazil, to justify why OAU should host the centre.

Representatives of
other institutions including Usmanu Dan Fodiyyo University, Sokoto;
University of Nigeria, Nsukka; University of Benin, Federal University
of Technology, Minna and the University of Maiduguri, said their
institutions would focus on linkages, trainings, exchanges and
collaborations with universities in Brazil.

Crafts and performance arts

Like the
universities, the National Council for Arts and Culture, (NCAC), will
concentrate on training, research and exchange. The agency’s
representative, Hilary Ogbechie said it has done a lot in the area of
indigenous knowledge and traditional medicine which Brazil can benefit
from. He added that Brazil can also learn from Nigeria’s craft while
Nigeria will learn from Brazil’s fashion industry and salsa among
others. Ambassador Perez however expressed reservation about salsa,
noting that, “It is samba. Salsa is foreign to Brazil.”

The National Troupe
of Nigeria would explore “capacity building in the performative arts,
exchange of playwrights, directors and designers.” Mike Anyanwu of the
Troupe’s corporate affairs department added, “We will seek to deepen
the relationship through periodic residencies and workshops. We will
also embark on joint projects on Nigeria’s music and dances in the
Diaspora.”

Resolutions

Some resolutions
including the establishment of a Brazilian Cultural House in Nigeria in
reciprocity for the one Nigeria has in Bahia, commissioning of a
comparative study of Brazilian architecture in Nigeria and Brazil, and
re-introducing History back into the Nigerian school curriculum as
obtains in Brazil were adopted at the end of the meeting. Other
resolutions adopted at the meeting include, intensifying exchange of
researchers, students, musicians and dancers between the two countries;
giving Nigeria a prominent role in the proposed Redemption University
in Brazil and emphasising indigenous cultures in both countries amongst
others.

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Korean Cultural Centre opens in Abuja

Korean Cultural Centre opens in Abuja

High above the
bustling heat that characterises Nigeria’s capital city, Abuja, a quiet
phenomenon is taking place. On May 24, 2010, the Korean Cultural Centre
celebrated its official opening.

According to its
director, Jeong Sun Suh, the centre is the first of its kind in Africa
and marks 30 years of diplomatic ties between the Nigerian and South
Korean governments.

“Our country
decided to establish this centre in Nigeria because it is a very
important country in West Africa,” said Mr. Suh. “The Korean government
wants to promote sports, culture, and tourism exchanges.”

The centre is
located on the second floor of the Rivers State Building in Abuja’s
Central Area, just across the street from the Ministry of Finance. It
is a vast labyrinth that occupies both wings of the floor with a
computer lab, a library, classrooms, a martial studio, and art and
photo galleries. Everywhere, there are flatscreen television sets (20
of them donated by the Korean electronics giant, Samsung) showing
Korean music videos, movies, and documentaries. In one wing, the centre
plays host to a collection of modern and ancient artwork, that is the
year long Korean Contemporary Pottery exhibition.

Anyone can sign up
for the centre’s language classes, take Taekwondo lessons, or stop by
the lending library for books in Korean and English. Twice a month, the
centre holds movie screenings of the latest Korean hits.

The initiative is
funded entirely by the South Korean government, which sees Nigeria as
an important ally. In his published remarks at the recent Korean
Culture Festival, Young-Kuk Park, Korean ambassador to Nigeria,
described the country as a “leading West African powerhouse with the
largest population in Africa.”

The complex is the
result of years of hard work in difficult circumstances, says Mr. Suh,
who arrived in Nigeria in September 2008. Though Korea has 15 cultural
centres around the world, the idea of opening one in Africa was so
unique that when the country’s Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism
needed someone to head the centre, Mr. Suh was the only applicant for
the job.

“It was very
difficult; I had malaria three times,” he said, laughing. “And when I
was shipping materials [from Korea] it took five months just to pass
customs in Lagos. It was very expensive.”

However, the work
has paid off. At the centre’s opening ceremony, Nigeria’s Minister for
Culture and Tourism, Abubakar Sadiq A. Mohammed, made a special effort
to attend.

“The establishment
of cultural centres at home and abroad remains an effective means of
propagating and promoting the culture and image of a country outside
its shores,” said Sadiq in his remarks at the event. “I have no doubt
that the establishment of a Korean Cultural Centre in Nigeria would be
mutually beneficial to both countries.”

Expanding ties

Right now, most of
the contact between the two nations is on the football pitch. In
November, 2009, South Koreans turned out to watch their team compete in
the Federation of International Football Association’s (FIFA) Under-17
tournament, which was held in Nigeria. Later this month, Nigerians and
South Koreans are set to face off at the World Cup tournament in South
Africa. However, there are growing cultural ties between the two
nations and the centre is helping nurture them.

In July, 2009, the
Capital Voices of Abuja, a choral music group put together by the
Federal Capital Territory’s (FCT) Council for Arts and Culture, went to
Korea to compete in the World Choir Championship. In December last
year, the continent saw its first West African Taekwondo Championships
with six countries competing. The centre hopes to make this an annual
event. It has also pledged training and equipment support for the
Nigeria Taekwondo Federation as it prepares for the London 2012
Olympics.

1,200 people
attended the centre’s first Korean Culture Festival, held at the
Sheraton in Abuja on May 26. The colourful event featured performances
by Korean and Nigerian traditional dancers, musicians, and a Taekwondo
troupe. For its part, the National Art Gallery in Abuja is mounting a
month-long showcase of art and cultural artefacts in Seoul until June
30.

This is only the
beginning, says the centre’s director, Mr. Suh. In time, he sees
cultural centres such as his own in countries across the continent.

“We will expand into South Africa and Eygpt,” he said. “So that we
can have a centre in the north, the centre, and the south [of the
continent]. This is the starting point.”

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Uwem Akpan reads in Abuja

Uwem Akpan reads in Abuja

It’s not every day
a man goes from being a Jesuit priest and struggling student to
overnight literary sensation, but that is what happened to Uwem Akpan.
The Akwa Ibom native published his first collection of short stories in
2007 and last September, it was endorsed by media powerhouse Oprah
Winfrey on the Book Club segment of her show.

So when Akpan came
to Abuja on Friday, June 4 to read from his acclaimed book, the city’s
literati turned up, eager to hear his voice.

The event was
organised by the Abuja Literary Society (ALS), one of three major
literary groups in the city; it was held at the Transcorp Hilton Hotel.
Over 150 people attended including poet, Lola Shoneyin, Ayo Olukanni
(spokesperson for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs); and there was an
unexpected drop-in by Archbishop of the Abuja diocese, John Olorunfemi
Onaiyekan.

Author and former
television personality, Eugenia Abu, opened with an introduction. Mr
Akpan, wearing his clergy collar, read from two of his stories:
‘Luxurious Hearses’ and the Caine shortlisted ‘My Parent’s Bedroom.’
Between readings, he took time to answer audience questions and tell
stories about his time as a Masters of Fine Arts student in the
University of Michigan, in the United States.

Both of his
readings focused on ordinary people who find themselves caught up in
religious and ethnic conflicts. Akpan soon found himself defending
accusations that he was portraying the African continent in a negative
light – a criticism that has been levelled against him before.

“I set out to
write a book of tragedy, so I make no apology about writing about
Africa in stark terms,” said the author. “You have to develop a thick
skin [about criticism]. You have to say, I’ve done my best.”

A few audience
members were curious about the author’s unusual position as both a
writer and a priest, wondering how he was able to balance both.

He assured that he
did not use parishioners’ confessions in his stories. “If the
confessional was useful to writing, many priests would be writers,” he
joked. Instead, he compared his calling with how Jesus used parables to
spread his message to his disciples.

“Christ’s use of words was very poetic and he had a way of pushing those words to those who were excluded.”

Advocacy on behalf of the disenfranchised was the main impulse behind his work, Akpan explained.

“We want to help
the poor, but from a distance,” he said. “I’m not just glorifying
poverty or human pain; I want to tell the story of street kids and say
they are human beings.”

The evening ended
with glowing speeches from Archbishop Onaiyekan and ALS chairperson,
Ferdinand Agu. However, the highlight of the event was when one young
writer, 12-year-old Habib Saleh, was given an opportunity to meet
Father Akpan, his literary idol.

Agu observed that
it was an example of the nation’s growing literary presence on an
international stage that is more familiar with the country’s bad
reputation than its positive contributions.

“When people tell the story of Nigeria, it sounds like a book of
endless stories of corruption; it sounds like good things don’t happen
here anymore,” said Agu. “But there are points of light shining in this
country and I believe this event is one of those points of light.”

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On writing for women and children

On writing for women and children

Though not much has
been heard from Bunmi Oyinsan since her last novel, ‘Three Women’ was
published in 2006, the writer, who now lives in Canada, has not exactly
abandoned creative writing.

“I’ve been caught
up with working on my doctorate. I’m actually currently working on my
dissertation and so I haven’t had time for any extended creative work.
I’ve been mostly engaged in flash fiction (short-short stories),” she
explains. ‘Moonlit Dreams’, ‘Touching Home’ and ‘No Thoroughfare’ –
Oyinsan’s short stories, were published in the Maple Tree Literary
Supplement in 2009.

Writing for women

‘Three Women’,
Oyinsan’s last novel focuses on three generations of women of the same
family. There is a multiplicity of women’s voices in the story and they
also vocalise issues differently. Why are men not portrayed in a good
light in the novel while the women, Aduke, Ibidun and Oyinkan are?

“Honestly, I don’t
think that’s a fair assessment because the women are not angels either.
At least, that’s one thing I was determined not to do. First, it was
written in various forms of first person narratives. As much as
possible, I wanted to have the voices of women of different generations
alive on the pages of this novel and in doing that, I wanted to
actually get into the heads of people of the particular era in which I
have placed those women.

“The kind of men
that each of them encountered, I would think — at least based on my
research, were what I think came out in the characterisation of the men
in the book. Just like the women, they were people who have their weak
points mostly because they were socialised a certain way just as the
women themselves were socialised in a certain way and that’s what
reflected in the book.

“At least I know
the third generation male character in the novel, Moyo, Oyinkan’s son,
comes out with positive character mostly because of the benefit of the
strong women in his family but also because he had a very good father.
A good father in Kole, not necessarily a good husband but a good
father. I think the characters are nuanced enough for people not to
make that kind of judgement.”

Will she write about women who oppress men too?

“If I’m inspired by
such stories I don’t see why not. I’m a feminist but at the same time
I’m a wife, a sister, a daughter, a mother of sons and I think I know
men well enough not to be blind sighted about them. Before I started
serious work on my dissertation, I had actually started work on another
novel, ‘Ladders of Home’ which I hope to get to when my dissertation is
finished.”

Writing for children

The winner of the
ANA/Matatu Prize for Children’s Literature with her ‘Fabulous Four’ in
2000 hasn’t done much writing for the young since then probably because
of circumstances surrounding the writing of the book.

“I went into
writing for children for very selfish reasons, I guess. My children
were avid readers when they were very young. The greatest punishment
you could give my daughter, Tobi, when she was growing up was to say
you are not going to the library on Saturday. She would be begging you,
she would be so repentant and all of that. But I found that they had a
bias for foreign writers Enid Blyton and the Nancy Drew series and I
got worried that they were not reading us. I kept trying to get them to
read African authors but their first impression was they are boring. So
I felt challenged. I started writing stories for them and one of the
stories grew and grew into Fabulous Four.”

Literature and filmmaking

Bunmi’s filmmaker
husband, Soji, played a role in her becoming one too. “I honestly
cannot deny that. My passion was for writing and literature but I had
friends who were in the film school and sometimes I participated in
their projects. Of course as a film student, you couldn’t afford to pay
actors so I went and acted for them and they paid me by taking me out
for a meal. That was as far as it went until I met Soji who was already
working in film. I am a TV addict. One of the reasons I also became
interested in TV was because as soon as I started publishing, I was
upset by the lack of reach that our literary writings have.”

Bunmi Oyinsan is expected in Lagos for the African Women in Film
Forum, holding at the Colonade Hotel, Ikoyi, Lagos, on June 16 and 17.

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