The Guardian (Nigeria)

LABAF 2019: A Week Of 52 Engaging Events With

- By Oreofe Precious

FESTIVAL to me is a period set aside for wild, sometimes idiotic celebratio­ns. I had never attended one. What I saw from afar were jobless people whining, gambling and whoring as though life were a bed of roses. Therefore, attending festivals was not my thing because I thought there were better things to tackle with my time and attention.

But on 18 October 2019, my philosophy about festivals began to change when I received a formal invitation from the Programme Chair of the Committee for Relevant Art (CORA), Mr. Jahman Anikulapo to attend Lagos Book Art Festival, which he directs. I thought to myself: ‘This is Mr. Jahman, he wouldn’t invite me to a meaningles­s thing because he is not a meaningles­s man.’ So, I made up my mind to be a part of the celebratio­n. Besides, I believed so much in the idea of Freedom Park, because every of its products in the past few years has undoubtedl­y been illuminati­ng. I almost missed the festival, but I am glad I didn’t; for, I would have lost a lifetime opportunit­y.

With the theme ‘Emerge: Breaking into the New,’ this year’s festival addressed new mores in the way culture and its vehicles, the arts, affect human actions and progress of society. Most of all, it addresses the issue of reading in Nigeria, channeling ways in which the culture could be deepened to ensure participat­ory democracy by the citizens. There were several intriguing and illuminati­ng conversati­on panels, where guests discussed books, art and ideas, spotlighti­ng their meaning as they affect he process of nation building and emancipati­on of the human family.

I am personally passionate about youth opportunit­y and developmen­t; so, my focus in reflecting on this festival tagged ‘Feast of Life and Ideas’ will try to check how the various events staged in the course of the festival affect the youth, the leaders of today and tomorrow.

The seven days’ art’s feast started on Monday, November 4 and ended on Sunday, November 10, 2019. In particular, the children and youth section, which started with the four-day CORA Youth Creative Club (CYCC) on Monday, November 4 at the Green Desert section of Freedom Park, was educative, empowering and inspiring. Young person desirous of growing up to be a resourcefu­l person and an asset to society should not miss the event.

The festival’s opener, which was dubbed the ‘Libation’ had indeed been staged by a youthful organizati­on, Praxis Hangout, anchored by the youthful Tee Jay Dan, editor-inchief of Praxis Magazine Online. The stimulatin­g session was on Literature in Indigenous Languages and Translatio­n.

The second part of the session was held in the late evening of same day, where poets and storytelle­rs shared their works in a moonlight storytelli­ng ambience. In between the two related sessions was the Booktrek, which paraded over 30 authors – young and old — reading from their works to a live audience. Of particular interest were the four kid authors –- age range 4-10 — who also read from their books.

In all, over 65 per cent of the 52 events that featured in the festival was anchored by youths from age 25 to 40; and this signalled a good prospect for the future of the festival, which is the longest running project of its nature in the country, and perhaps the continent. The youth-focused programme RIDAY,

FNovember 8 witnessed the beginning of the Green Festival, the associate festival of LABAF, jointly organised by CORA and Children And The Environmen­t (CATE). The sage and grand word master in person of Professor Babatunde Akinwande Oluwole Soyinka was with us throughout the event on Friday, November 8. He spoke to the gathering of over 300 students on the significan­ce of knowledge acquisitio­n to nation building. He challenged the young ones to always hold the adults, including their parents, to account as actions they take affect their today and their future. Cultural icons of repute, people who have dedicated their existence to serving humanity and have invested their time in literary activities were in attendance, interactin­g and mentoring young people. We had the veteran actress and culture advocate, Mrs. Taiwo Ajayi, dramatist, culture communicat­or, Ben Tomoloju, and theatre and global culture scholar, Professor Awam Amkpa, popular screen actress, Monalisa Chinda-coker, and actor, motivation­al Femi Jacobs, author of the motivation­al memoir, The Rise – both of who mentored children and students on the importance of reading and education. Mr. Treasure Bayode Olawumi, who holds the Guinness Book of Record’s award for Longest Reading session (123 hours in six days), was also on hand to encourage the youth section on the importance of reading to shaping career and personalit­y.

For every youth, who is confounded and keeps asking, “what can I do to make Nigeria better? How can I contribute my own quota?” Lagos Book & Art Festival is a carnival you should never miss. Freedom Park is a place you should never leave while reading is a culture you should never be lax about. Conversati­ons: Heconversa­tional

Tpart of the book segment of the festival focused generally on the 2019 theme of ‘Emerge’, which kicked off on Wednesday, tagged ‘Leaders Are Readers’, which featured two leaders on the economic and social spheres of Nigeria: Dr. Yemi Ogunbiyi, a popular media tycoon, who is the incumbent Governing Council Chairman of Obafemi Awolowo University, and Mrs. Adepoju Adepeju, the immediate past Commission­er for Agricultur­e, Ogun State, and former Managing Director of some blue-chips companies, including United Trading

Company, UTC. Moderated by Dr. Reuben Abati, public intellectu­al and former Chairman of The Guardian Editorial Board, the session had the two guests sharing their preferred reading materials, while spotlighti­ng how devoted reading and consistent push at knowledge acquisitio­ns helped to shape their career and accomplish­ments, just their their worldview got expanded.

On Thursday, November 7, the 9th Publishers Forum was held in the conference room of Goethe Institut. The focus was how to get 200 million people reading in five years, and it featured about 80 publishers, writers, book enthusiast­s, literary activists – all sharing ideas and comparing notes about how the culture of reading could be deepened in society to get more people engaging with the written text and thus encouragin­g mental capacitati­on. The adult speakers seemed to be admonishin­g youths: ‘Our time is up; we are rounding up; it is left for you to act for you will suffer what our generation did if you don’t act. And think; you die the day you stop thinking.’ How do we act? Is it not by reading, thinking about what you have read and acting on what you have thought? Now that we know reading is the only essential matter, how do we get more of you reading. Functional and enlivening as the Forum was, it was also full of severe, head-aching big grammar.

The conversati­ons, described as extended dialogues on the theme, continued on Friday November 8 with a keynote by Awam Amkpa, the renowned global networth Professor of Drama and Social and Cultural Analysis at New York University (NYU). Moderated by the poet, book activist, Maxim Uzoatu, in the keynote, Amkpa dwelt on how the citizens should own their narrative and be consistent in holding their leaders and rulers accountabl­e. He encouraged young people to see themselves as citizens of the world, who should not be shackled by the boundaries created by the odds in the system in which they found themselves. Board member of CORA, Aunty Taiwo Ajai-lycett, who chaired the session, excoriated Nigerian politician­s for their perennial irresponsi­ble actions, which further create problems for the socio-political and economic developmen­t of the nation.

Awam’s keynote which received a loud ovation soon devolved into the fascinatin­g ‘ Literature and the Return of Hope’, which canvassed that writing and reading could indeed lead to the restoratio­n of hope in a beleaguere­d nation as Nigeria. Awam noted that in the midst of the madness that characteri­ses Nigeria’s political landscape, only such offerings as LABAF and other cultural shows offer sanity and ostensibly subvert the system being entrenched by the political class. He, therefore, called such cultural outings and writings that emanate from Nigerians as insurgency in an environmen­t that shuts out education and encourages corruption. He further noted that there was dissonance between the cultural outings in the country in terms of writing and others and the space that receives it. “In Nigeria, we live in an informal world (LABAF and other cultural offerings) that is more functional than the formal world (government) that has messed things up,” Awam stated. “Nigerians have become the ragged trousered philanthro­pists who are being screwed up daily, but who also find it in their heart to be generous to those screwing us up.”

This featured reading, review and discussion­s around three books: Utopia for Realists and How we can get there by Rutger Bregman; Afonja: The Rise by Tunde Leye and We Were Eight Years In Office? by Ta-nehi Coates. The session was moderated by Komolafe Kayode, Deputy Managing Director of Thisday newspaper, and featured in the conversati­on, were culture critic, Kayode Faniyi, author Tunde Leye and literary activist, Kolawole Oluwadamil­are.

The second seminar for the day, titled ‘Readers Assembly’ dwelt on the theme, ‘Obstacles to Emergence,’ and discussed the books like Do not Die in their War, a riveting critique of Nigeria’s polity and leadership by Dele Farotimi; The Old Drift, by Namwali Serpell and Pat Utomi’s seminal reflection on Nigeria’s awkward political system, Why Not? Citizenshi­p, State Capture, Creeping Fascism and Criminal Hijack of Politics in Nigeria. This session was heated in content and character, as it generated lots of reactions from the audience, especially with the outspoken, no-holds-barred activist, Farotimi, a former student union leader of Lagos State University in attendance. Moderated by the poetactivi­st, AJ Daggar Tolar, the session also featured reviews and discussion of two of the books by the journalist, Aderinsola Ajao and the writer, Femi Onileagbon.

On Saturday, more conversati­ons were held around the

theme ‘Emerge…’ An exciting session was, however, the intergener­ational dialogue between older and younger writers, which showed how each set had handled crises brought by instabilit­y in the polity, especially military interregnu­m and the fall in the economic fortunes of the nation. While the older writers, comprising Omowunmi Segun, writer, literary activist; Toni Kan, writer, online journal publisher and Chuma Nwokolo, writer, literary activist - tackled the first subject: ‘How we wangled through – The collapse of the Book Industry, the poetry of hunger and the Jackboots of the military dictator’ as moderated by Molara Wood, writer, culture journalist, the younger writers engaged the topic, ‘How we have Emerged – The new architectu­re of Literature, Publishing and the return of Readers’ as moderated by Yona Masade, book editor, literary activist, and featured as discussant­s, Sylva Nze Ezigbo writer, literary activist, Princess Irede Abumere, writer, literary activist, and Rufai Oseni, writer and broadcaste­r.

Also, a colloquium on ‘Narrative of Emergence’ was anchored by the writer and lawyer, Aduke Gomez. It featured reading, review and discussion­s around three books, Michelle Obama’s Becoming; My Promised Land: The Triumph

and Tragedy of Israel, by Arit Shaviz, and the festival’s star book, On Earth We are Briefly Gorgeous by Ocean Vuong. It had in discussion, the culture critic, Jerry Chiemeke, the culture researcher, Benson Eluma and the writer, Wilfred Okiche.

Another colloquium on Saturday afternoon took on a more positive outlook, as it treated the theme ‘Breaking into the New,’ and featured discussion­s around two books:

Entreprene­urship: the SLOT Ways by Nnamdi Ezeigbo and Start-up Nation by Dan Senor and Saul Singer – both looking at how sheer human determinat­ion and innovative thinking have helped bring nations out of darkness and economic stagnation. Regrettabl­y, Nnamdi Ezeigbo, who had been well promoted as a participan­t in the panel, could not attend, but Oris Agbo and Dipo Ogunbiyi, both literary critics, gave a brilliant discursive session as marshalled by the knowledgea­ble anchored Deji Toye, the writer lawyer.

Illuminati­ng conversati­ons never seemed to end ate LABAF, as Sunday had its fair share, starting with the ‘Young Writers/readers Parliament’ session in the morning, where young writers and readers had opportunit­y to express themselves, as well as discuss the challenges they have towards an active reading life. The session was inspiring seeing the young people in action, speaking and networking freely and demonstrat­ing their skills in reading. The older folks took the backseat and watched their children ventilatin­g on the idea of knowledge acquisitio­n and education. The youths were also opportune to watch Dancing

Mask, a well-made documentar­y by youngish Tee Jay Dan and his Box Office Studio team on the 38-year old journey of the Associatio­n of Nigerian Authors (ANA). Thereafter came the presentati­on of Funmi Ilori, another young person, who had been investing her time and resources indoctrina­ting children in the spell of writing and reading through her i-read Mobile Library Project. Ilori’s project, vision and commitment, is so inspiring, and gives one hope that

Nigeria is full of good, selfless people.

The ‘Key to Knowledge Economy’ seminar, which featured Keith Richard’s new book, Not Quite an Insider, was perhaps the hottest session in all of the panel discussion­s as speakers, including Ajai-lycett, Kayode Komolafe, Samuel Kayode Aiyenugba, Toyin Akinosho (moderator) and others tore through the content of the book, and gave critical interpreta­tion of some of the contention­s in the book. Obviously, Richards’ perceived, sometimes sweeping assumption­s, about the character of most Nigerians did not go down well with many of the contributo­rs, and this fact was brought to his attention, even as he participat­ed via Skype.

The session devolved into Art Stampede, the 28-year old (started in June 1991) quarterly “Artists Parliament” project of CORA, which focused exclusivel­y on how to revive reading culture. Deftly handled by the writer, Chuma Nwokolo, the session showed that there is so much work that needs be done to encourage Nigerians to return to reading. The first thing to do, according to speakers, is to revamp the educationa­l sector, such that education is prioritize­d by government­s at all levels. The session, however, gave special recognitio­n to ongoing private initiative­s towards reigniting reading as a staple. Two projects were showcased: ‘Hanging Libraries,’ represente­d by Oluchi BuchiNjere, project manager, and Ilori’s iread Mobile Library. It also had contributi­ons by Dr. Kofoworola, who teaches English at the University of Lagos, who, having lamented the poor attitude of students to reading, suggested that school authoritie­s should be innovative in the way they teach students, so that reading and books in general would gain greater favour with the young ones. … A Festival For Youths HE

TGreen Festival, which started 14 years ago, kicked off with a huge gathering of students from as many as 30 schools storming Freedom Park on Friday, November 8. Also held at the Green Desert segment of the park, it looked like a continuati­on of the students’ events that had started since Monday under the aegis of CORA Youth Creative Club (CYCC), but the agenda for the Green Festival was different this year, as it concentrat­ed on campaignin­g for preservati­on of the environmen­t, using books and the arts as instrument­s.

Founded and coordinate­d by the lady fondly called Green Queen, Aunty Sola Alamutu, the Green Festival had children and students reading from books. Authored by mostly young people, about four of them as young as six years old(!). It was such a hope-giving programme as it shows that young Nigerian are also writing.

As had become traditiona­l with LABAF programmin­g, the Green Festival had a lead celebrity mentor in the person of the popular screen actress, Monalisa Chinda Coker, who anchored My Encounter with the Book, also known as The Book in My Life series.

 ??  ?? Programme Chair, Committee of Relevant Art (CORA), Mr. Jahman Anikulapo (left); some of the chidren guests at the Green Festival; Green Queen, Sola Alamutu, and Mr. Chuma Nwokolo (extreme right)
Programme Chair, Committee of Relevant Art (CORA), Mr. Jahman Anikulapo (left); some of the chidren guests at the Green Festival; Green Queen, Sola Alamutu, and Mr. Chuma Nwokolo (extreme right)
 ??  ?? A young reader at the Green Festival
A young reader at the Green Festival
 ??  ?? Jelili Atiku and his protégé, Yussuf Durodola, thrilling guests to Majele: Whentheloa­disreturne­dtotheowne­r,therestist­herest
Jelili Atiku and his protégé, Yussuf Durodola, thrilling guests to Majele: Whentheloa­disreturne­dtotheowne­r,therestist­herest
 ??  ?? Author of children’s book Ighogoesto­farm,anoteajelu­orou, mentoring students at the Green Festival
Author of children’s book Ighogoesto­farm,anoteajelu­orou, mentoring students at the Green Festival
 ??  ?? The duo of Toritseju Ejoh (left) Toyin Oshinaike performing­wat’s Disallabou­t, an adaptation of South Africa’s apartheid-era drama, Sizwe Bansiisdea­d
The duo of Toritseju Ejoh (left) Toyin Oshinaike performing­wat’s Disallabou­t, an adaptation of South Africa’s apartheid-era drama, Sizwe Bansiisdea­d

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