For the art and culture sector, the past
few weeks have brought a lot of gloom. From the literary to the film
and broadcasting arenas, four people have died in their prime.
The first to submit to the pang of death was Nike Adesuyi-Ojeikere, a Lagos-based writer said to have battled cancer.
Apart from the fact that she was a very
inspiring poet, down-to-earth and painstaking with her craft,
Adesuyi-Ojeikere was instrumental to the development of the Association
of Nigerian Authors, especially the Lagos chapter.
No wonder, tears for the amiable woman,
who passed on at the age of 48, have been multiple and sustained. Only
on Saturday, her former colleagues, including Odia Ofeimun and Jumoke
Verissimo, gathered at the Centre for Contemporary Arts in the Yaba area
of Lagos, where they held a memorial conversation and reading for her.
The tears were still very fresh when a
seasoned broadcaster, Taiwo Oladokun, died in a road accident along
Abuja-Lokoja Road. This again stung many members of the arts community
more than a deadly bee. From the Arts Writers Organisation of Nigeria,
to the National Association of Theatre Arts Practitioners, shock and
grief ruled the waves. Here was a man who, apart from having been a
media adviser to former culture ministers – Adetokunbo Kayode and Edem
Duke – disclosed plans to deepen his stakes in the film sector a few
days before his demise.
Unlike Adesuyi-Ojeikere whose remains
were interred in Lagos about two weeks ago, the broadcaster , who also
died at age 48, has yet to be laid to rest.
According to a senior member of AWON and
a lecturer at the Federal University, Oye-Ekiti, Mr. Sola Balogun, the
writers’ body is planning to hold a programme in honour of the man who
bagged a PhD from the University of Ibadan, worked with NTA and was a an
official of the Centre for Black and African Civilisation.
On November 5, 2016, the writers
community and their environmental counterpart are supposed to be
celebrating the 21st anniversary of the demise – via judicial murder –
of writer and Ogoni freedom fighter, Ken Saro-Wiwa. It is a date that
many people look forward to. But the story took a new twist last week
when a son of the deceased, Ken Saro-Wiwa jnr., also passed on.
He was not a firebrand warrior like his
father. But Ken Saro-Wiwa jnr. also made an impact in the creative and
environmental worlds. It was such impact that made former presidents
Olusegun Obasanjo and Goodluck Jonathan to engage him in an adviser’s
capacity on matters relevant to the emancipation of the Niger Delta.
Perhaps, the most dramatic of the losses
is that of Prince Afam Chiazor, an actor and filmmaker. He was said to
be on the set of a movie in Abeokuta, Ogun State, when he had a cough.
That was on Saturday, October 22. Some complications were said to have
followed, which forced his colleagues to rush him to a hospital.
Chiazor, who was the president of the Cinematographers Association of
Nigeria, was said to have been declared dead on arrival at the hospital.
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