Saturday, December 14, 2013
Sunday, May 19, 2013
Twilight Trek(Sefi Atta-Nigeria):Perception of Religion in the Context of a People’s Struggle for a Way Out of Hardship
Sefi Atta’s short story “The Twilight Trek” explores one of the biggest challenge that affects people living in African states which continue to be affected by many problems-social, political and economical-the problem of illegal emigration to western countries in pursuit of better life and better opportunities. As in the story, the problem is not limited to a few selected states but it is an African problem as emigrants make exodus all over from Rwanda to Nigeria,Mali,Sierra Leone and Senegal. These states are characterized by hardship which pushes people to the brink of survival.Poverty and despondency is common, poor infrastructure, war and insecurity and lack of employment opportunities alongside proper structures for individuals to reap from their God-given talents. Characters such as Patience and the narrator’s mother resort to prostitution as a way of surviving and the narrator has to go to Spain where he intends to make it in football and raises money to make this exodus by selling Marijuana for a street-drug-peddling group from which he steals the proceeds of the sales just to raise the much dollars he requires to make the illegal exodus to spain since Africans are never granted visas by the embassies of the western nations.
The writer puts lots of question marks on the value of the African emigration: if it is really worth the pain, suffering, anxiety and sometimes the lingering death that people face in the name of running away from their countries in search of a better life. She seems to conclude that the coveted ‘better life’ is an elusive venture and it ends up being an illusion since many fail to get to Europe and those who get there end up being more miserable as they fall into the arms of neo-slavery.
More interesting though is the question of religion in the context of hardship in Africa and the illegal emigration people attempt to make to places they believe they will get a better life and opportunities especially Europe. Is religion and lessons from religion relevant to the people’s quest for practical solutions to the problems they face?
The writer seems to be cynical of religion as a pillar people can lean on. Religion is beset with hypocrisy that is not helpful to lifting hardship off the back of the suffering people. That is why the narrator would rather fall asleep on a Moslem prayer mat than use it to pray.While briefly taking asylum in Gao waiting to be ferried across the Sahara desert by the Tuareg guides that evening, he wallows in acute hunger yet the Malian Moslem women shrouded in robes who appear to be good moslems cannot bring themselves to sharing their meals with him. Patience who constantly reads the Bible in the narrator’s presence appears to be a reformed prostitute yet she too is simply using religion as a facade to shroud her real self. She uses the Bible to elicit trust in the narrator who gives her all his money to secure she and him the means to get to Spain across the water.He is left stranded in North Africa with no financial means to get to Spain nor to get back home and is thrown into a limbo of his unknown fate. This blatant hypocrisy with which Africans themselves treat others who are hard-pressed by hardship in life becomes one of the major hindrances that threaten to grind Africa to a stand-still in terms of getting a way out of the many problems that face the people.
The Bible story of the Israelites tumultuous exodus from Egypt to their promised land, Canaan that flows with honey and milk is akin to modern African exodus to the ‘promised land’ in Europe where they intend to find lands flowing with honey and milk’ from the face. But the narrator’s sceptism about their resemblance and the Bible’s practical lessons in the current situation is so obvious. The story doesn’t mean much to him if not passing for a good story that puts him to sleep. In his dream about his mother, the mother wonders why Africans too won’t put down the African stories in a holy book about their past from which they would learn about the African migration to other nations in search of better opportunities other than reading about the Israelites of the past. To the writer, Africans can only learn and in so doing get valuable lessons to address African issues if they would use African approach got from lessons from Africans’ own experiences.
However, she stills expresses disdain at the value of the African stories which are incomparable to the Bible’s experiences which bear great lessons that can be of value to posterity. Africans seem not learn from the experiences of those who earlier on have attempted the same journey to Europe as illegal emigrants. Modern stories of African exodus are stories of despair and disillusionment that bear little encouragement and hope for them that want to go away. They are rather more of a myopic people’s act which are rather irrational than sensible and which end up wasting the precious lives of those who attempt the exodus and therefore a shame that posterity needs not to be proud of and neither to be fed on.
By elevating the Bible and the relevance of its stories in comparison to African stories, the writer expresses her recognition of the vital role religion can play: the lesson being that we need to look for practical solutions that bear hope; solutions which we shall be proud of tomorrow rather than those we will be ashamed of passing to the forthcoming generations. Not to be forgotten as fore-stated is the fact that religion in itself can be a hindrance to the quest for a way out of hardship facing many people in Africa.
Tuesday, January 29, 2013
Stephanie Okereke Twangs.Phenomenal!
Africa is just a phenomenon.Today we have made miles away from our “primitive” way of luring the world onto our shores,jungles and deserts by our
amazing wildlife and beautiful sceneries and begging the rest out there
to come and see these.We don’t have to live in caves anymore in the 21st
century in the name of preserving our noble savagery for the west to
come and case study us.No.Africa has come of age and the world has to
pay attention.What with our sporting talents that have dominated the
world’s sports arena?What about our amazing musicians,fashion designers,academic dons,name them?
However,bigger but not better than the fore-mentioned,the
African movie industry has budded and it has bloomed.It is bigger.It is
sumptuous.South Africa is a little older in the game but Nollywood has done me proud.Since I first watched a Nigerian movie in 2000 till today,I have witnessed
tremendous growth.The talent will always surprise you,the script
writers are rising to the sky and directors and producers like Tchidi
Chikere,Andy Chuks amongst others leaves more to be desired.I had a few
glances at Jacob’s Cross and the first thing that came into my
mind was that there must have been some American or British hand in the
-casting,directing and producing the series-don’t blame me-that gave us such a supberly matured watching piece.But is a purely continental thing!Amazing!Other countries' movie industries are coming up and let’s applaud them for their shortcomings and the strides they have made.
Read this.If you want to know that Africa is a land of plenty including geniuses then don’t go far.Africa magic in conjunction with MultiChoice that revolutioned your boring sitting room by bringing you Dstv have brought in 2013 for the first time:Africa Magic Viewers Choice Awards meant
to award and recognize our movie stars,directors,producers-every one who
"meddle" in telling the African story through our buzzing and growing
movie industry.Isn't such a brilliant idea?Round of applause everyone!
But wait!Even bigger.Than these,is the phenomenon of the enigmatic African woman.They are smart,classy,trendy,sassy and sexy,assertive,enterprising,creative and intelligent.And they are also very.Very.Very beautiful-don't disagree.Ahem.However,of
all the complicated poetry I have attempted to crack up is the African
woman.Does any one understand the woman seated next to him?
Our women are complicated in a variety of ways.Like most don’t like their hair and would rather die with these long European or Chinese made synthetic hair.Others don’t prefer there African names and those with one Christian name add another from probably their favourite character in a foreign novel or movie or from a music superstar from the famous USA.So
you are called Anne Oke?Too bad.Drop Oke and add Alicia after the
famous Alicia Keys,dismantle the arrangement and come up with Alicia
Annes- "s" is just a bonus.Doesn't it sound better and exotic?
A doubting Thomas still doesn’t believe me.You have probably watched the enchanting,glamorous,beautiful and talented Stephanie
Okereke’s movies.She’s just good.She fits into her characters but
something is sometimes a little odd with her persona.She struggles with
the American accent which frequently in her movies like in her movie the Pretender 1&2 wears off into her pidgin influenced
accent.The clash is corrosive but she doesn’t wear down.A number of
times in other movies Steph seems to be forcing or really grappling with
the American accent which is always slipping from her mouth.Why should
that be the case when she is really doing fine in the movies in terms of
acting?
The
big question:what is it with our women and the American English
accent?Some try.They really do try and they don’t get it and I end up
feeling guilty or ashamed on their behalf.I
don’t know why I do feel that way.Back in the days,the 98.4 Capital fm
female presenters used to make me think they were all American.But their
names were so African like Laura Walubengo and Yunia Amunga amongst
those my stars and till today I wonder where they acquired the American accent from?I spent two hours in a language lab in my four year course in English at college but my accent and my uncle's who left school in class 8 have no regrettable differences!
And
still thinking:Why is I don’t hear ladies struggling with the British
accent?And why are men always so dumb to try and catch up with our
ladies?If Stephanie Okereke is hot and talented a million times more that we beast-like men are and she twangs,why cant we men try?That is why to me,an African woman is still enigmatically phenomenal!
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