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Soyinka |
(Being Speech By Professor Wole Soyinka At The “Freedom Park
Lagos Nigeria In Honour Of Late Ghanaian Poet, Kofi Awoonor)
I am certain there are others who, like me, received invitations
to the recent edition of the Storymoja/Hay Literature Festival in Nairobi, but
could not attend. 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 realization 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. Those are the feelings I have retained
since the Boko Haram onslaught overtook the northern part of our nation. I
expect them to remain at the same level until I draw my last breath, hopefully
in peaceful circumstances like Chinua Achebe, or else violently like Kofi. As
becomes daily clarified in contemporary existence, none of us has much control
over these matters.
Two earlier commitments were responsible for my inability to
attend the Festival. One was a public conversation with a very brave
individual, Karima Bennoune, an Algerian national, whose trenchant publication;
Your Fatwa Does Not Apply Here, is of harrowing pertinence to the events of
Nairobi, a pertinence that continues to ravage our, and other nations. The
other preventive factor was the annual conference of International
Investigators in Tunis, doing battle with the monster of Corruption. The link
of the former event is obvious enough, but if you think the latter has no
relevance to what has happened in Nairobi, or is taking place in the northern
part of this nation, permit me to correct you.
Yes, we all know of material corruption, we confront it all the
time. Tragically neglected however is what we should learn to designate as
spiritual corruption. Those who organized and carried out the outrage on
innocent lives in Nairobi are carriers of the most lethal virus of corruption
imaginable – corruption of the soul, corruption of the spirit, corruption of that
animating humanistic essence that separates us from predatory beasts. I am no
theologian of any religion, but I aver that these assailants delude themselves
with vistas of paradise after life, that their delusion is born of the
perverted reading of salvation and redemption. Those who attempt to divide the
world into two irreconciliable parts – believers against the rest – are human
aberrations. As for their claims to faith, they invoke divine authority solely
as a hypocritical cover for innate psychopathic tendencies. Their deeds and
utterances profane the very name of God or Allah.
Let us however abandon theology and simply designate them
enemies of humanity, leaving a very real question that the rest of us must
resolve – whether this breed even belongs to the human race, or should be seen
as a mutant sub-species that require both moral and scientific definitions. We
cannot continue to pretend that those who have set their sight against that
enabling spark that we call creativity, those who arrogate to themselves the
right to dispose of innocent lives at will, belong within the same moral
universe to which you and I belong. Without a moral universe, humanity exists
in limbo.
Not since Apartheid has our humanity been so intensely and
persistently challenged and stressed on this continent. History repeats, or
more accurately re-asserts itself, as a murdering minority pronounce themselves
a superior class of beings to all others, assume powers to decide the mode of
existence of others, of association, decide who shall live and who shall die,
who shall shake hands with whom even as daily colleagues, who shall dictate and
who shall submit. The cloak of Religion is a tattered alibi, the real issue –
as always – being Power and Submission, with the instrumentality of Terror. Let
us objectively assess the true nature of the dominion that they seek to
establish in place of the present ‘dens of sin and damnation, of impurity and
decadence’ in which the rest of us supposedly live. We do not need to seek far,
the models are close by – they will be found in contested Somalia. In now
liberated Mali.
Fitfully in Mauritania. In those turbid years of enchained
Algeria, and her yet unconsolidated business of secularism. Theirs is the
dominion of exclusion. Of irrationality and restraints on daily existence. A
loathing of creativity and plurality. It is the dominion of Apartheid by
gender. Of the demonization of difference. It is the dominion of Fear. Let us
determine that, on this continent, we shall not accept that, after victory over
race as card of citizen validation, Religion is entered and established as
substitute on the passport, not only for citizen recognition, but even to
entitlement to residence on earth.
After the deadly calling card of these primitives, the rest of the
Nairobi Festival was cancelled. Understandably, but sadly. I have however
written to the organizers not to even bother to renew my invitation for next
year’s edition – life permitting, I shall be there. We must all be there. And
we must learn to smother loss in advance, not just for that Festival but for
all Festivals of Life and Creativity wherever in the world. Resolve that,
no matter the tragic intervention, such events must run their course. Let us
accept, quite simply, that a force of violent degeneracy has declared war on
humanity. Thus, we are fated to be ever present on the battlefield until that
war is over.
I submit that we were all present at that concourse of humanity
in Nairobi. We were present by the side of every maimed and fallen victim,
among who was a distinguished one of us, one of the very best that have defined
us to the world. We were present in Mali even before this nation, to her
credit, joined in stemming the tide of religious atavism and human
retrogression. We were beside the students of Kaduna, Plateau, Borno, the
school children of Yobe, the mangled okada riders and petty traders of Kano,
beside all those who have been routinely slaughtered for so many years past in
this very nation. In Nairobi’s hub of commerce we were present, confronted yet
again with that same diabolical test that was applied to school pupils in Kano
many years ago, where those who failed to recite the indicated verse of the
koran were classified as infidels, and led away to have their throats serially
slit. We have been present at the travails of Algeria, recorded for posterity
by that lady Karima Bennoune in YOUR FATWA DOES NOT APPLY HERE. We were
beside Tahar Djaout, author of THE LAST SEASON OF UNREASON, cut down also by
religious fanatics. We are the mere survivors who continually ask, when will
this stop? Where will this end? The ones who echo Karima and that miraculous
survivor Malala in declaiming – No indeed, your fatwa can never apply here. We
have been beside the children of Cherchyna in the Soviet Union, innocents who,
taken hostage, were reduced to drinking their own urine, then deliberately
gunned down as they made their way out of a school gymnasium that had turned
into an inferno. We continue to remain beside all who have fallen to the blight
of bigotry, religious solipsism and spiritual toxicity. We shall continue to
stand beside them, denouncing, condemning, but most critically, urging on all
who can to anticipate, stem, and ultimately eliminate the tide of religious
tyranny. We have taken the side of Humanity against those who are against.
At this very time of the latest outrage, the world body, known
as the United Nations Organization was actually convened in General Assembly.
We must instigate that body to evolve, through just, principled, but
severe and uncompromising action, into a United Humanity Organisation, that is,
thinking not simply ‘nation’, but acting ‘humanity’. It means going beyond
pietisms such as – this or that is a religion of peace, but obliging its
members to act aggressively in neutralizing those whose acts pronounce the
contrary, so that Humanity is placed as the first and last principle of nation
existence and global cohabitation. The true divide is not between believers and
unbelievers, but between those who violate the right of others to believe, or
not believe.
Memories that span fifty or more years are difficult to distill
into a few words. Suffice it to stress for now that Kofi Awoonor was a
passionate African, that is, he 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. Only cowards turn deadly weapons against the unarmed, only the depraved
glorify in, or justify the act. True warriors do not wage wars against the
innocent. Profanity is the name given to the defilement of the sanctity of
human life. We call on those who claim to exercise the authority of a fatwa to
pronounce that very doom, with all its moral weight, upon those who engage in
this serial violation of the right to life, life as a god-given possession that
only the blasphemous dare contradict, and the godless wantonly curtail. This
scalp that they have added to their collection was roof to a unique brain that
a million of their kind can never replace.
A few months ago, in New York, on a joint platform of the United
Nations and UNESCO, I entered an urgent plea into the proceedings of that
International Conference on the Culture of Peace: Take Back Mali!, I
urged. At home, I impressed that urgent necessity on our own government.
I know that Kofi Awoonor, poet, diplomat and democrat, would approve my
commendation – in this specific respect at least – of the action of our and
other ECOWAS governments – albeit after France had taken the critical lead – in
taking back Mali. I especially applaud the outgoing Foreign Affairs Ambassador
Gbenga Ashiru, who hearkened to that imperative of speedy intervention and
urged it with vigour and urgency on the African Union. We salute the courage
and sacrifices of the soldiers who reversed the agenda of the interlopers – al
Queda and company – with their arrogant designs on those freedoms that
define who we are in this region, and on the continent itself. Safeguarding
freedoms, alas, goes beyond even the most intense passion and will of the
poetic Muse, and we must never shy away from acknowledging this cruel reality.
Those who believe that a tepid, accomodative approach to fundamentalist rampage
can generate peace and human dignity should study – as I have often urged – the
experience of Algeria, captured with such chilling diligence in Karima
Bennoune’s work. The cost of ‘taking back Algeria’ is one that will be reckoned
in human deficit – and unbelievable courage – for generations to come. Today, I
urge all forces of progress to – Take Back Africa! Rescue her from the forces
of darkness that seek to inaugurate a new regimen of religious despotism,
ruthless beyond what our people have known even under the imperial will of
Europe.
These butchers continue to evoke the mandate of Islam, thus, we
exhort our moslem brother and sister colleagues: Take back Islam. Take
back that Islam which, even where it poses contradictions, declares itself one
with the Culture of Learning, one that honours its followers as People of the
Book, historic proponents of the virtues of intellect and its products. There
is no religion without contradictions – it is the primacy of human dignity and
solidarity that serves as arbiter. We call upon the fastidious warrior
class of the intellect, steeped in a creative contempt and defiance of enemies
of the humanistic pursuit. We speak here of that Islam that inspires solidarity
with the Naguib Mafouzes of our trade, with the Tahar Djaouts, with the Karimas
and the Mariama Bas, not the diabolism of al Shabbab, Boko Haram and their
degenerate ilk. Let us join hands with the former, and enshrine their mission
as the history prescribed destination of our creative urge. What Nairobi
teaches – and not just this recently – is that there is no place called
Elsewhere. Elsewhere has always been right here with us, and in the present. I
urge upon you this mandate: seize back your Islam and thus, take back our
continent and, in that restorative undertaking – take back our humanity.
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