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Chimamanda Adichie. |
I have read a series of responses to Chimamanda's odious epistle to her master, President Joe Biden, the President of the United States. Given her professional orientation, she has now tried to make fiction of the 2023 Nigerian election with a view to making some cool wads to support her lifestyle. Typical of writers of fiction, she used third person narration to rake together her jaundiced and very subjective fiction, and tried to dress it as though it was fact.
She
was jumping from one subject-matter to another, trying to elucidate an election
she didn’t participate in. She relied on her cousins and uncles narration of
what happened in one or two polling units in Lagos, to draw her conclusion
about the conduct of the election in Lagos, which has 13,500 polling units.
She
made her falsehoods sound empirical and unflappable. She is a bad ambassador of
the Igbo race nay Nigeria. The Igbo mind is one that is presently troubled by
the realities that stare it in the face at present.
The
activities of the outlawed IPOB, such a dangerous secessionist organisation
that has been sucking blood from her own people, and has left the entire
South-East prostrate and economically wounded, have become a sore thumb in the
East. The poverty level in that region, is alarming. The education of the
people is heavily impaired. The businesses of the people are in dire straits.
It is a theme of idiocy that pervades the land.
In
the fullness of such odious and self-inflicted maladies of a geopolitical zone,
a pro-Igbo mindset like Chimamanda's sort, ought to provide the ultimate elixir
for addressing the debilitating issues that have factorised its commonality.
Mere pointing attention to the halitosis of her region in her global conclave,
would attract attention to the very issues that have crippled the psyche of her
people. A writer need not exploit the negatives for commercial purpose at all
times, but must be involved in problem solving also. Adichie's preferences are
very discernible; they are not in doubt.
She
wants her uncle, Peter Obi, to be president of Nigeria. But Peter Obi must meet
all the criteria; Including scoring majority votes in at least 25% of the
states of the Federation and the FCT. The reason for this is to engender
cohesion and national acceptance across the entire country. To achieve this
feat, Obi would have needed Chimamanda’s clout locally but she preferred to
remain in the diaspora throwing stones and shaking tables and then follow with
writing letters.
That
Obi failed woefully is instructive. Those who could have helped his aspiration
were social media warlords who were busy throwing vitriolic attacks against
those who didn't support Peter Obi. They were armed with data to become social
media warriors. Chimamanda falls into this category; and has no voter's card
and is unaware of her polling unit. She did not vote during the election; she
did not visit her uncle during the election; she didn't campaign; she was never
an item on the menu tick list. She was mute when her uncle needed her most.
As
soon as her Uncle shouted blue murder over the election, without interrogation,
she concurred, displaying some kind of amateurish sleuth. Yes, Uncle, it is
blue murder!. Ask her how come her Uncle scored 97% of the votes in Anambra
leaving others with miserable 3%, she will rationalise it. In the entire
South-East geopolitical zone, Chimamanda's Uncle, Peter Obi, scored an average
of 90% in the presidential election. The remaining 10% was left for the other
17 political parties to share. I trust that Chimamanda's binoculars didn't
capture that. She's quick to arrive at her preferred destination about the
outcome of the elections. Fiction writers are always in a world of fantasy,
trying, as it were, to reduce every human endeavour to a nice story.
They
choose their characters, ascribe roles to them, and set a thematic
pre-occupation that would determine the flow of their fictive discourse.
Chimamanda often finds it difficult to divorce herself from her world of
fiction. It is the reason she wrote an epistle of fiction loaded with
subjective footnotes to President Joe Biden. Reading Chimamanda's fiction, I
can easily interrogate her thematic focus.
She failed in many respects in empirical
realness. She relied essentially on the tales-by-moonlight of her cousins and
uncles. She wasn't a participant. She was an onlooker nestled in her
"Igbotic" duvet, from where she was dishing out her ethnic sentiments
for the sake of her Uncle.
She
was far-flong from the furnace. She sat idly in her cocoon, glued to her
television, taking breaks to surf the social media to get the gist of what was
happening back home. Were she to be that patriotic to the Igbo cause, and
genuine in her interests, she would have been in Anambra to partake in the
electoral exercise.
Chimamanda
belongs in the bracket of those authors who write art for art sake. They just
pour impotent venom. They pour out their innate feelings and ascribe them to a
humanity cause. They never really offer solutions.
Never! They write for the sake of writing;
story telling. The society is usually in a state of permanent flux, so piecing
together a few biased thoughts and emotions is all that interests them; story
telling I call it. Rather than offer a therapeutic tonic in their pieces of
fiction, telling us what society ought to be, they just document their
whimsical and capricious position and pour out their anger and discontent,
without offering even useless solutions. Useful writing has its own temperament
and healing properties.
A
piece of fiction drawn from experiences of the writer, using her
socio-political milieux is usually embellished along the lines of the author's
worldview. It doesn't necessarily represent the general reality. Chimamanda has
failed on several levels to address the key ingredients that should enrich our
democracy. Describing our democracy as hollow, on the basis of her Uncle's
failure at the polls is the hauteur of an intellectual snob. Even in the world's
advanced democracies, of which Chimamanda is presently a habitué as I'm told,
have their own kettle of democratic "issues" and shortfalls.
Did
she notice when Trump's supporters invaded the Capitol? During the Bush era,
outcome of election in Florida fell short of credible rating, yet, it wasn't
enough for her to embark on letter writing to the Pope. Ditto for Hilary
Clinton's experience with majority votes that couldn't fetch her the White
House; did she notice? Nations will usually have their own peculiar
shortcomings in their human endeavours but their citizens never call for the
cessation of their own countries.
Nations
get solutions to their problems by improving on shared experiences and the
antecedents of their historical trajectories. Subjecting Nigeria's democracy
and sovereignty to the magisterial intuition of America is the height of
inferiority complex and slavish mentality that has remained in us after the end
of slave trade.
I
am proud to be a Nigerian with my green passport. I love the culture and
tradition of our people. I love our sense of communalism and congenial
relationship of the African mind. Those who tell one side of the story are
often imprisoned by their jaded perspectives and pigeon-hole parochialism.
Chimamanda falls into this category.
Describing
Nigeria's democracy as “hollow” is an unfortunate profiling in view of our
improved electoral engagements and
election conduct. Nigeria's democracy is just twenty four years old, and we
have begun to see a marked improvement in our democracy: seven serving
Governors lost their Senatorial bid, an Okada rider defeated a serving Reps
member, a personal assistant emerged as elected Senator, and the list goes on.
There were several "upsets" in the last election which were indications of a deepening democracy in Nigeria. For writing to President Joe Biden, it does appear that Chimamanda wanted him to flog us on our bum with a stroke of the cane as in a master-servant kind of relationship How ridiculous!.
Chimamanda
has a lot of themes begging for her attention. She should devote her time to
them: The theme of poverty in her Igbo land and Nigeria is eternally
discomforting. The theme of growing educational backwardness walks the street
of Igbo land with perfunctory ease. The theme of terrorism and a seeming
guerilla warfare in Igbo land has continued to put the country in bad light
across the world, ditto for armed banditry in the North.
As
a social commentator and author that she is, she ought to have carried out
deliberate and conscious campaigns to end insurgency in her native Igbo land by
drawing global attention to the ills and biles of the zone. All these subject
matters, which are a metaphor for our collective sufferance, are tenuous enough
for Chimamanda to focus on, and proffer solutions.
She
chooses rather, to lie routinely as an addiction, to sail through life's
struggle in our bramble forest. Chimamanda should be reminded that her fellow
"Igbotic" Uncle lost the 2023 presidential election woefully on
account of his jejune strategies that put religion and ethnicity on the front
burner; telling his followers that the Christians should take back their
country was the height of infantile approach to rein in the votes in a plural
and secular country like Nigeria. Obi and Chimamanda may cry from now till
tomorrow, it won't change the fact that this last election has been won and
lost. Obi lost.
A
thousand letters to President Joe Biden and Vladamir Putin, cannot take away
our sovereignty. Democracy has come to stay in Nigeria, and the earlier
Chimamanda realised this, the better for her so short,
yet long letter.
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