Nobel laureate, Wole Soyinka and former President, Olusegun Obasanjo Punch
Former media aide to ex-President Goodluck Jonathan, Reuben Abati has criticized Nobel Laureate, Wole Soyinka over his latest book.
Soyinka had earlier said that the book is the nastiest he has ever written and it is meant to draw blood.
Abati,
via an article titled “Soyinka: a sojourner among liars”, however
questioned some of the playwright’s comments and insults against various
persons including former President, Olusegun Obasanjo.
Abati’s article, published today, November 6, 2015, on The Guardian's website, reads:
Professor Wole Soyinka was quoted saying his latest book is the “nastiest” that he has written so far.
InterInventions:
Between Defective Memory and the Public Lie- A Personal Odyssey in The
Republic of Liars (Ibadan: Bookcraft, 2015, 136pp) is quite close to
being just that. But who knows if an even nastier book may follow as
Soyinka embarks on the task of exposing lies in our Republic as he has
promised that InterInventions, a follow up to Interventions series
(I-IV) will be dedicated solely to the dismantling of lies in the public
space: malicious and non-malicious lies, lies told, lies magnified,
lies fraudulent, murderous lies, accidental lies, uttered from depraved
minds whose sole intention is to create burdens for their victims;
malign, impugn and lower the other so they can be raised or their
stomachs can be nourished at other’s expense.
This
is nevertheless, a publication in which Professor Soyinka settles
strictly personal scores, but this is no pamphleteering that he modestly
alludes to, but a fine, extended essay in the distinguished tradition
of that form. He is polemical, punchy and critical – without mercy or
measure!
There is no deceit, no pulling of
punches, not much of deliberate concealment; it is Soyinka wielding a
Bazooka in one hand, and a gilt-edged knife in the other, shooting down
the hypocrisy and pretensions of representative figures in a Republic of
Liars, where defective memory, an affliction worse than amnesia, but
much closer to dementia, and psychosis, is standard fare.
He
deploys language dramatically and draws blood even if his mood remains
charismatic and entertaining as he laughs at human folly, and the
verminous antics of his named and shamed traducers.
The
writer focuses on his personal experiences as a victim of the burden of
being lied to, being lied against and being pushed to defend his right
not to be lied against, but his theme is probably far more important
than his content and mood.
He ends up inviting us
to think further about a social malaise, a missing, distorted,
disjointed ethical link, and so his subjects – including Obasanjo,
Chinweizu, Adewale Maja-Pearce, Peter Enahoro, Major Salawu, Gbenga
Daniel, Abiola Ogundokun, Olagunsoye Oyinlola – rise off the pages, as
illustrative archetypes of a hydra-headed crisis at the heart of
society, namely how self-delusion, ego, power and an obsessive,
compulsive, alimentary propensity turns adults into liars.
Other
associated themes along this line of moral exhortation will include the
sheer uncertainty of life, the unpredictability of human character, and
the near-helplessness of victims in a nation of fabulists.
Thus,
the entire narrative is organic, with the humanistic import of the
content, imbued with a personal orientation as it were, taking us closer
to larger questions of ethics, humanity, the inviolability of truth.
Man
and his foibles is the central subject of inquiry invariably; there is a
certain universality in the tendency of man, including those who quote
the Bible with practised ease, to be nasty and brutish. I recommend this
book for everyone’s reading pleasure and instruction.
It
is quite affordable, only N1, 000 per copy, and certainly, a temptingly
quotable book – more so as the reader is reassured by the author’s
statement of indemnity.
Here goes: “My publishers
are hereby fully indemnified by me against court processes, as well as
the consequences of any libel suits that may arise from this maiden
number of the InterInventions series” (p.93). The stoutly flagellated
figures in the book, who are described as “the greatest public liars I
have ever known”, thus ridiculed have every reason to be angry but
obviously, Soyinka in taking his pound of flesh cannot be bothered.
There
can be no greater denigration to be sought beyond his depiction of
former President Olusegun Obasanjo, as the philosopher-king who is “an
overgrown child of circumstance;” “Double-O-Seven”, “an infliction”, “a
hypocrite”, and “irredeemable egomaniac” or Chinweizu as “Chichidodo”, a
bird that feeds on shit, or Adewale Maja-Peace as “the area-boy of
letters”; or Peter Pan as “lying, opportunistic, contemptible”;
Olagunsoye Oyinlola as “the Prince of Darkness”; Gbenga Daniel as
“DaaniElebo”. Professor, ki lo de? Or when of Maja-Pearce, whom he calls
“Ade-Boy!”, the writer says: “It is a time to remind him that the stern
rod of Ogun awaits all lying tongues.” (p.38). Professor, ewo ni t’epe!
Of
Abiola Ogundokun, Soyinka thunders: “Of all the loathsome lumps of
slime that ever oozed from the sump of human depravity to aspire to
human form, none comes close to the two-legged parasite that goes by the
name of Abiola Ogundokun”.
Whaa-a-t? And in
taking on Major Rasaki Salawu, he says “Howu Salawu” – a vocalic
alliteration which cryptically summarises the subject-matter; a
considerable part of the book is devoted to a profiling of the self-same
Salawu in a manner that evokes shame or the equivalent of a mortal
decapitation. Soyinka’s anti-heroes owe themselves a duty to say
something in self-defence, for the naming and shaming tends to stick,
with all the stamp and authoritativeness of the inimitable WS. Audi
alteram partem.
Which is why I was surprised that President Olusegun Obasanjo in a reported interview with The Punch, made light of it:
Reporter:
While you were away from the country, your friend Prof. Wole Soyinka
inaugurated (sic) a book in which he called you a child of circumstance.
OBJ: (Talking in Yoruba: Se o so be?) Meaning: Did he say so?
Reporter: He even said he won’t eat any food you give him without you eating from the food first.
OBJ: (Continues in Yoruba: Mi o mo o) Ehnhenhn? I don’t know.
Obasanjo
irritated by the Soyinka questions, gets up and walks out of his study
during the interview… but the reporter keeps throwing questions at him.
Reporter: Why are the two of you always quarrelling?
OBJ: Kini wahala yin? (What is your problem?)
Indeed,
what is our problem? But just in case President Obasanjo has not read
the book, I recommend that he should especially as Soyinka has promised a
follow-up shake down edition: “a collective effort, a corroborative-or
self-cancelling-anthology by many long-suffering victims…dedicated
solely to the Otta phenomenon.” (p. 53). Our Republic of Liars is a
temporary space for Soyinka; his reputation in the world of letters
places him historically, in the long run, beyond local dog-fights; but
as for this book, emotional responses to the vengeful biographical
dimensions cannot be unexpected.
Take-away,
though: our problem – we do have a problem as a collective – is the
sobering realization that Nigerians enjoy telling lies, much more than
any other community that we know, and that we are indeed, a Republic of
Liars.
We are a nation of fabulists, richly
imaginative, when that asset is well-conditioned, it produces
excellence, but misapplied, the tale bearer becomes a professional
aproko, as they say, a self-made radio station, transmitter, booster,
conditioned to promote untruths, and as the tale travels from one mouth
to another, new layers are invented and added, often so viciously that
the original source often finds it unrecognizable. But much damage is
done, and it is this wickedness of man to man – as theme and principle-
that Soyinka deplores.
The rise of the internet
has even made lying so easy and convenient; the anonymity that the
social media offers allows a lie to grow until its continued affirmation
imposes it on public memory as received wisdom. Lies pollute the public
mind; they damage relationships and destroy a sense of community.
Soyinka
insists on the inviolability of the truth and decent conduct, but the
rot is widespread, the phenomenon is a new normal reality. Politicians
lie to the electorate, win the votes and turn around shamefacedly to say
they never said whatever even in the face of concrete evidence made
possible by electronic reproduce-ability.
This
culture of deception remains unchecked because the institutions for
seeking redress remain inchoate: libel cases can go on forever, or they
may run into a technical hitch concocted by lawyers, requiring that they
be started de novo.
And to worsen it all, the
followership enjoys the lies and the lying, compelling an assessment of
our Republic in real and fictive representations as the biggest lie in
search of truth.
Soyinka does not recommend a
resort to self-help; but he inflicts punishment with his pen, and
laments in a memorable instance: “Chei! There is Death o!” Let’s add:
“Chei! There is God o!” – the ultimate judge.
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