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The
voice of conscience
Maya
Jaggi, Mail & Guardian (SA)
May 31, 2007
http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=310064&area=/insight/insight__africa/#
When Nobel laureate Wole
Soyinka visited the Hay Cartagena festival in Colombia earlier this
year, in a walled Spanish colonial town on the Caribbean coast,
children in the streets instantly thought they recognised the black
man with leonine grey hair. But they couldn't decide whether
he was Kofi Annan or Don King. They might not have identified the
great Nigerian writer, but they were certainly on to something:
Soyinka is surely both pugilist and peacemaker.
Soyinka, who is 72 and
won the Nobel literature prize in 1986 -- the first African so honoured
-- has, for several decades, been an abrasive conscience for his
country of Nigeria, and for a continent. Obsessed with the "oppressive
boot and the irrelevance of the colour of the foot that wears it",
he has charted the lethal gulf between legitimate authority and
the "power that any goon can seize". A scourge of successive
Nigerian despots and kleptocrats, he was jailed without trial for
28 months in 1967, most of it spent alone in a tomb-like cell, for
trying to head off civil war with breakaway Biafra. The ordeal gave
rise to his classic prison memoir written on toilet paper, The Man
Died (1972), and drove him to self-imposed exile. Thirty years on,
he was sentenced to death in absentia for treason under the even
more brutal military rule of General Sani Abacha, whose crimes included
the hanging of the writer Ken Saro-Wiwa.
We meet in a London pub
on his way to give a lecture at the Guardian Hay festival at the
weekend; and his subject is international culpability over what's
happening in Darfur. Soyinka presided as chief judge at a mock trial
last November when Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir was found
guilty in absentia of crimes against humanity in Darfur. For the
playwright, poet and novelist, who is also an actor-director, the
symbolic court was "play-acting, but of a very serious kind".
During the tribunal set up by Genocide Watch, Soyinka heard searing
testimony, he says, from "witnesses flown out from southern
Sudan, people whose families had been killed, or who had been raped
or seen relatives raped or maimed -- some broke down. They testified
to the war crimes of the Janjaweed [the government's proxy
militia], saying they raided villages and killed Nuba at any time."
Tracing the abuses to
a vestigial legacy of the Arab slave trade that pre-dated transatlantic
slavery, and likening the Darfur cause to anti-apartheid, when "non-Africans
felt aggrieved by the assault heaped on humanity", Soyinka
says: "This can't go on. Over two million refugees,
and still raids by Janjaweed, backed by the Sudanese government
military, with the war spilling into neighbouring countries."
Instead of public indictments and sanctions with teeth, "people
make token resolutions. It's yet another failure. I don't
understand how this can be happening in the 21st century."
He says that all "hidden
atrocities" are revealed eventually, even if many years later.
"It all comes to light in the end. So why don't these
would-be Stalins and Hitlers take a leaf from history instead of
burdening us with exposing their crimes? Why does it have to happen
again and again?"
The repetitions of history,
whether as tragedy or farce, have haunted Soyinka's life and
work. I first met him in 1994, when he warned despairingly of impending
civil war in Nigeria, after the 1993 elections were annulled, the
victorious Moshood Abiola jailed, and power seized by Abacha, the
"butcher of Abuja". In his third volume of memoirs,
Ibadan: The Penkelemes Years (1994), Soyinka reminded fellow citizens
of an earlier "electoral robbery", in 1965, when he
was arrested for holding up a radio station at gunpoint and broadcasting
a pirate protest -- but acquitted on a technicality. Within months
of our meeting, Soyinka's passport was seized by Abacha's
regime, and he made a perilous escape on a 12-hour motorbike ride
across the Benin border.
Punctuated by Nigeria's
political upheavals, our talks have resumed in varied locations,
from his literary compatriot Chinua Achebe's 70th birthday
celebrations by New York's Hudson river, to a couscous joint
in Paris, where he ironically toasted an end to exile after Abacha's
unexpected death in 1998. Abiola died mysteriously in prison a month
later.
While the actor's
resonant voice now seems fainter, his convictions remain just as
firm.
After Nigeria's
interim leader returned his passport "on a gold platter"
Soyinka found his welcome "overwhelming. There was amazement
at what it meant to others, although, within me, I'd never
left Nigeria."
Unlike his first exile,
which entailed "an act of internal severance", he threw
himself into opposition to Abacha's rule, in which his sons
Olaokun and Ilemakin were also active. In You Must Set Forth at
Dawn, a volume of memoirs published this month, Soyinka puts his
lifelong belief that "justice is the first condition of humanity"
down to an "over-acute, remedial sense of right and wrong".
He has a home in California,
and affiliations at Harvard and Nevada universities. There is now
a Wole Soyinka chair of drama at Leeds University, where he studied
in the 1950s. Yet Soyinka has restored the house in his birthplace
of Abeokuta, outside Lagos, built with the Nobel "windfall"
only to be colonised by bats in his absence. It is the place, he
says, "where I recover myself; it's me in every way".
His sometimes melancholy new memoir pays tribute to the dead, from
Soyinka's parents to his cousin, Afrobeat star Femi Kuti,
and he says he intends to be buried in a cactus patch in the grounds
of his house. He still yearns for the freedom to pursue savoured
pastimes, from collecting African art and book browsing, to solitary
hunting in the forests. ("I ‘take my gun for a walk'
for whatever can be eaten, not for trophies.")
"Each time I think
I've created time for myself," Soyinka says, "along
comes a throwback to disrupt my private space."
This week's inauguration
of Nigeria's new president, Umaru Yar'Adua, is, for
Soyinka, such a throwback. Along with international observers, he
deems the recent presidential elections "no elections at all",
so baldly were they rigged. "In some states there were no
votes," he says. "We have videos of police commissioners
carting off ballot boxes, and police looking on as thugs carted
them off." Though the outgoing president, Olusegun Obasanjo,
ended military rule in 1999, Soyinka sees his rule as "civilian
dictatorship". He has now "made himself life chairman
of the ruling party to dictate policies", he says.
In his memoir he blames
Obasanjo -- also from Abeokuta -- for betraying him in the run-up
to the civil war, landing him in jail. Yet far from holding a grudge,
Soyinka now wonders if he bent too far backwards not to criticise
Obasanjo, "for fear that it might be thought I was still angry.
I'm friends with [Yakubu] Gowon [the former military ruler
who jailed him]. I suspect there's a missionary streak in
me as the inheritor of my parents." His schoolteacher father,
"Essay", and the mother he called "Wild Christian"
are depicted in his early memoirs, Ake (1981) and Isara (1989).
He initially saw Obasanjo
as a "practical stopgap -- a soldier who had been ‘civilianised'
by prison and given a death sentence against which the nation rose
on his behalf." Yet once in power, "he built a one-party
dictatorship by force majeure". In his second term, after
disputed elections in 2003, "he installed a reign of thugs;
political assassinations reached a peak never witnessed before.
There were crimes and killings. When they realised they had a monster
on their hands, he tried to manipulate the Constitution to give
himself a third term. The money to bribe legislators amounted to
billions of naira." Yet for Soyinka it was a defining moment
when "the legislature refused to buckle. It provided a modicum
of hope."
Any dictator, secular
or theocratic, "merely implants the seeds of eventual rebellion,"
he believes. Soyinka belongs to Nigeria United For Democracy, a
"temporary coalition". As recently as 2004 he was teargassed
and arrested while on a protest march against arbitrary police powers,
though he was released within hours. "The police insist they
have the authority to decide who walks the streets," he says.
"How can they decide whether I can protest against government
policy or not? It's unacceptable. If they say I need a police
permit I'll tear it up."
In his 2004 Reith lectures,
published as Climate of Fear, Soyinka quoted a Yoruba saying, "Sooner
death than indignity", and he sees dignity as simply "another
face of freedom". Probing the "psychopathology of the
zealot" ("I am right, you are dead"), he says
the "lunatic fringe", in both state power and resistance
to it, must be watched. In his view, Bush, like Obasanjo, believes
in a direct hotline to God. "He says, ‘We don't
care about recognition from the world if God approves.' It's
an extreme fundamentalism of the most dangerous kind -- and it has
led to Iraq." As for Tony Blair: "It was Blair who spearheaded
Nato's involvement in Kosovo on behalf of Muslims battered
by the Serb government. Blair acted as a man of principle -- to
give credit where it's due. Unfortunately, he got carried
away by the moral authority he had acquired, failing to recognise
George Bush as a fundamentalist of a different kind."
Soyinka sees Zimbabwe's
President Robert Mugabe as "the latest King Baabu of the African
continent" -- an allusion to his 2002 play, a satire about
a fictional but recognisable tyrannical general called Basha Bash.
On Darfur, he hopes that not only will Arab and African countries
alike pull their weight, but China will reverse its support for
Sudan's government as the Beijing Olympics approach.
"One's own
self-worth is tied to the worth of the community to which one belongs,
which is intimately connected to humanity in general," he
says.
"What happens in
Darfur becomes an assault on my own community, and on me as an individual.
That's what the human family is all about". -- ©
Guardian News & Media Ltd 2007
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