Chinua Achebe Returns With Long-Awaited Biafra Memoir

Date: 27-09-2012 11:29 pm (11 years ago) | Author: franel
- at 27-09-2012 11:29 PM (11 years ago)
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«§» 27 September 2012

Renowned Nigerian author Chinua Achebe often called the father of modern African literature, released his first major work in years Thursday with a long-awaited memoir centred on the war that nearly destroyed his nation.

For more than 40 years he has remained silent about his war experiences.

“There Was A Country: A Personal History of Biafra” chronicles Achebe’s experiences during Nigeria’s 1967-1970 civil war, which saw his native eastern region, dominated by the Igbo ethnic group, secede as the Republic of Biafra.

The split came largely in response to massacres of Igbos in Nigeria’s north and saw Achebe, author of the revered novel “Things Fall Apart,” speak out forcefully in support of the move.

His memoir was released in Britain on Thursday and will be available in Nigeria shortly after, said publishers Allen Lane, a division of Penguin. Its release in the United States is set for October 11.

The tensions that ignited the Biafran conflict, which left around one million people dead, including many from starvation, are largely settled. Today, sporadic calls for greater Igbo autonomy have limited impact in Nigerian politics.

Experts, however, say a Biafra memoir from the 81-year-old Achebe is urgently needed in a country that remains deeply fractured on other levels, despie the book’s focus on events that happened more than four decades ago.

“Achebe is sustaining the debate on integration, on unity and on oneness,” said Dapo Thomas, a history professor at Lagos State University.

“Until there is a sovereign agreement from the peasants to the elite that we want to remain as one, we must continue that debate. A nation cannot remain comatose while these issues are unresolved.”

Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country with 160 million people, groups around 250 ethnic groups and is roughly divided between a mainly Muslim north and predominately Christian south.

Though speculation persists over whether the country will eventually break up, many say such predictions are overblown.

Yet fault lines remain, notably between the north and south, a division that has had immeasurable impact on Nigeria since independence in 1960.

Religiously and ethnically divided communities in the so-called “Middle Belt” in the country’s centre have seen waves of clashes that have killed thousands in recent years.

– ‘Failure of leadership’ –

Beyond that, Islamist group Boko Haram is blamed for killing more than 1,400 people since 2010 in an insurgency which it says is aimed at restoring an Islamic state in the north and stripping power from the secular government.

During the Biafra war, “what we are finding is a new nation going through the pangs of nationhood,” said the writer and literature professor A. E. Eruvbetine.

“The truth is, in Nigeria here we are still going through the trauma of trying to forge a nation.”

Achebe strongly backed his native Biafra in the civil war and even toured to speak on its behalf. Echoes of the conflict emerge in his writing, including his collection “Christmas in Biafra and Other Poems.”

The octogenarian remains a towering figure in Nigerian and African literature, though he has been based in the United States in recent years where he has been a professor at Brown University in Rhode Island. He travels infrequently due to a 1990 car accident that left him in a wheelchair.

Achebe’s novel “Things Fall Apart”, about the collision between British colonial rule and Igbo society, remains a landmark work 54 years after its release.

“Just as we read Shakespeare, it’s not possible for any student in this department to graduate without reading the works of Chinua Achebe,” said the head of the English department at the University of Lagos, Adeyemi Daramola.

Earlier in his career, Achebe fiercely criticised Nigerian leaders, notably in his widely read 1983 essay “The Trouble With Nigeria”, whose first sentence is still often cited here.

“The trouble with Nigeria is simply and squarely a failure of leadership,” it reads.

Achebe has limited such commentary in recent years, unlike his great Nigerian literary rival Wole Soyinka, the first African to win the Nobel prize for literature, who has stayed on the political front line throughout his career.

However, during January protests over a fuel price hike, Achebe issued “A Statement of Solidarity with the Nigerian People” that gained attention back home.

His legacy is secure in Nigeria but his absence has been felt, said Daramola.

“For Achebe to have been away for so long, we have indeed missed him.”


Posted: at 27-09-2012 11:29 PM (11 years ago) | Hero
- franel at 27-09-2012 11:34 PM (11 years ago)
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NEWS In BRIEF

Renowned Nigerian author Chinua Achebe often called the father of modern African literature, released his first major work in years Thursday with a long-awaited memoir centred on the war that nearly destroyed his nation.  He acted as roving cultural ambassador for Biafra when the south-eastern area tried to split from Nigeria in 1967.


For more than 40 years he has remained silent about his war experiences.

One of Africa's best known authors,  Achebe's debut 1958 novel Things Fall Apart has sold more than 10 million copies.

It has been translated into more than 50 languages and focuses on the traditions of Igbo society and the clash between Western and traditional values.
'Birth pangs'

The prizing-winning 81-year-old author and academic has written more than 20 works - some fiercely critical of politicians and a failure of leadership in Nigeria.

Chinua Achebe in 2009, Chinua Achebe lives in the US following a car accident in 1990

Mr Achebe has lived in the US since he suffered a car accident in 1990, which left him paralysed and in a wheelchair.

The memoir is published in the UK on Thursday and is due to be released in Nigeria shortly and in the US on 11 October.


Posted: at 27-09-2012 11:34 PM (11 years ago) | Hero
Reply
- mallorca at 27-09-2012 11:39 PM (11 years ago)
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i nedd 10 copies from prof himsef, just for my family and friends

Posted: at 27-09-2012 11:39 PM (11 years ago) | Addicted Hero
Reply
- zeigbo at 28-09-2012 12:11 AM (11 years ago)
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Gud

Posted: at 28-09-2012 12:11 AM (11 years ago) | Addicted Hero
Reply
- arsenal123 at 28-09-2012 12:12 AM (11 years ago)
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Quote from: mallorca on 27-09-2012 11:39 PM
i nedd 10 copies from prof himsef, just for my family and friends


ME TOO I NEED SOME...
Posted: at 28-09-2012 12:12 AM (11 years ago) | Gistmaniac
Reply
- papadip at 28-09-2012 05:49 AM (11 years ago)
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Read  “Things Fall Apart” in high school from then on I have always been a fan of Chinua Achebe. It is incredible that he is still at the forefront of things given his age and condition. Let’s hope the book will be a good short in the arm to revitalise every Nigerian and serve as a guide in our quest to heal this nation.

The unfortunate thing that ever happened to Nigeria was the
civil war
. Did we learn any lessons? Those that witnessed the war did for sure. If anything and more importantly some of the current politicians need to be lectured about the war (1967 – 1970). Some were babies or were not even born 42 years ago.

I would expect the book to be an eye opener and the tool to unite us. Nigeria is just a name not a nation hopefully one day we’ll be what is called a nation. We should be the envy of the world but we are not. We need every help and we really do……..

…….In my opinion.

Chinua Achebe

Posted: at 28-09-2012 05:49 AM (11 years ago) | Gistmaniac
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- micc at 28-09-2012 03:09 PM (11 years ago)
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I will be waiting for it to reach nigeria
Posted: at 28-09-2012 03:09 PM (11 years ago) | Hero
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