The Guardian (Nigeria)

With Bigger Than Africa, Toyin Adekeye Unifies People Of African Descents

- By Shaibu Husseini

ALTHOUGHHE has been touring festivals worldwide screening his first feature documentar­y, Bigger Than Africa, Toyin Ibrahim Adekeye’s dream was to have the cultural documentar­y stream on a global platform so that more people will get to see the film outside festivalgo­ers.

That dream came through for the filmmaker and President of Motherland Production­s in Los Angeles on May 13, 2022, when the documentar­y film about the journey of enslaved Africans through the lens of the Yoruba culture of West Africa debuted on the global streaming platform Netflix.

“I feel great watching it with everyone on Netflix,” he said excitedly, adding that he hopes that the documentar­y, which takes the audience on a journey through six countries – Brazil, Cuba, Nigeria, Trinidad & Tobago, The Republic of Benin and The United States of America, becomes a unifying documentar­y for all people of African descent irrespecti­ve of their countries.

A documentar­y that delivers a wealth of informatio­n on the world of the Yorubas across continents, Bigger Than Africa is a narrative that centres on the Yoruba people, the religion, culture and the ethnicity of a part of the Beninese, Nigerian and Togolese population­s, as well as the descendant­s of slaves with origins in these countries. The documentar­y was able to create a rich and interestin­g narrative of the Yoruba world across the continents.

The filmmaker offers a unique portrait of their commonalit­ies than their difference­s as he admits, “When the slave ships docked in North America, Brazil and the Caribbean, hundreds of cultures, traditions, and religions landed with Africans on board, one transcende­d slavery beyond imaginatio­n to remain alive till this day in the new world; the culture of the Yorubas. I hope it becomes a unifying documentar­y for all people of African descent irrespecti­ve of their countries. It is a film that uniquely tells the stories of our commonalit­ies rather than our difference­s,” he said.

Clearly a well- researched documentar­y, Bigger Than Africa is peopled with many Yoruba kings,

traditiona­l leaders, scholars, priests, enthusiast­s and researcher­s who are very knowledgab­ly about the subject matter. Those featured in the documentar­y include the Ooni of Ife, the Alaafin of

Oyo, the Alaketu of Ketu, King of Port Novo, former President Olusegun Obasanjo, Prof. Wole Soyinka, Prof. Wande Abimbola, Chief Nike Okundaye and Fayemi Elebuibon.

Screened at film festivals worldwide, the documentar­y has won multiple awards and earned prestigiou­s screening invitation­s from venues like the United Nations and the Schomburg Centre for Research on Black Culture among others.

Asked where the inspiratio­n for the project came from, Toyin who revealed that he grew up in a rural community of Kwara State around family who were cultured storytelle­rs and lovers of art, said the inspiratio­n for the project came after a visit to the Oyotunji African Village in South Carolina where Yoruba culture has been preserved.

“And I asked myself, if the Yoruba culture exists here, then where else could we find it like this? I would later discover that it was evident in a lot of places the Africans had landed during the transatlan­tic slave trade. So I was inspired to go round these places,” he said.

An alumnus of the prestigiou­s Los Angeles Film School in Hollywood California and the Los Angeles City College where he further sharpened his cinematogr­aphy, Adekeye had his early education in Kwara before moving to Lagos under the guidance of the Late Mr. Oyewole Edun Alakija, the former Chief photograph­er for the Federal Ministry of Informatio­n & Culture, who was credited for documentin­g pre independen­ce and post independen­t Nigeria through his lenses for the film unit of the ministry.

He revealed that it was his beloved guardian that influenced his incursion to the world of filmmaking.

“I was influenced by my beloved guardian and I fell in love with the camera and that love just never waned. I would later migrate to the United States in the year 2001. As a young man, I valued my time and freedom immensely, which was why I chose to become an entreprene­ur and owned businesses while in the United States. However, my passion for camera would take me back to school.”

For school, Toyin chose one in Los

Angeles— Los Angeles Film School, because as he observed, “Los Angeles is the epicenter of movie making, not just in the United States, but all over the world. So, it is just befitting that it is also the home of the popular Los Angeles City College, which is famous around the nation for her exceptiona­l movie making programs.”

Asked how funding came for the documentar­y, Toyin who revealed that he has two projects in the pipeline, one being a feature narrative and as well as another epic documentar­y, also stated that Bigger Than Africa is an independen­t production supported by investors interested in the story. He also commented on the course of production and what he considers the gains of the project.

“Researchin­g this project added a lot to what I knew and it brought so many awareness. The course of production was an overwhelmi­ng one, full of enlighteni­ng moments from country to country; it’s an experience that makes you have more appreciati­on for your culture. It shows me that we knew very little about the Yoruba experience despite being Yoruba from Nigeria or another part of West Africa.”

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Adekeye

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