Eighteen years after Pac’s death and he’s still hip hop’s greatest ever. I watched a documentary about his life “Thug Angel” and was amazed by the depth of his artistry and what he read. He incorporated all he read into his lyrics which are explosive, ingenious, prophetic, compelling. Some of his lyrics are considered extremist poetry and studied in some universities like the University of Pennsylvania. Here are some books the hip hop genius read.
The Prince by Niccolo Machiavelli (it’s from this Italian statesman that he derived his nickname, Makavelli)
Ponder on this, from the writings of Alice A Bailey and the Tibetan master Djwal Khul,
The Tibetan Book of the Dead by WY Evans Wentz,
The Phenomenon of Man by Pierre Teilhard de Chardin
Mastering the Art of War by Zhuge Liang
Thought and Meditation by Khalil Gibran
Our State of Consciousness
Kabbalah by Gershom Scholem
Roots by Alex Haley
The Dictionary of Cultural Literacy
The Autobiography of Malcolm X
The Occult Teachings
The Ancient Mysteries
The Impact of Colour
The Buddha
Astrology
Alignment
Challenge
The moon. He read books by William Shakespeare, Donald Goines, Sun Tzu, Kurt Vonnegut, Mikhail Bakunin, J. D. Salinger, Hermann Hesse, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Henry Miller, Homer, Friedrich Nietzsche, Sigmund Freud, Carl Jung, Fox Butterfield, Robert M. Pirsig, Robin Morgan, George Orwell, Aldous Huxley, E. D. Hirsch, Herman Melville, Thomas Merton, Evelyn Underhill, Bhagavad Gita, W. L. Wilmshurst, John Steinbeck, Nikki Giovanni, Sonia Sanchez, Richard Wright, Jamaica Kincaid, W. E. B. Du Bois, Maya Angelou and Alice Walker
Tuesday, September 30, 2014
Friday, August 22, 2014
Douala Airport Ebola Phobia
Colleague X approaches another, let me say colleague Y, who’s
not looking great.
X: What’s wrong with you?
Y: I’m not feeling well (Colleague X instantly sprints away)
X: And you’re standing near people! You want to infect them
with ebola! You want to infect me with ebola!
Y: I went to the hospital yesterday. It’s malaria
X: Have you done Arik Air recently?
Y: Yes
X: Chei! Hei! Maybe you’ve been infected with ebola from
those Lagos passengers at the arrival hall. Don’t come near me. Why did you
even greet me?
(Trust Cameroonians to exaggerate things)
Y: It’s just fever from malaria. Ebola is not in Cameroon
yet.
X: Go, go, go, go away. Why did you even come to this
airport? Who told you its not here yet. Do Lagos passengers not land here? By the
way, a case was confirmed at Laquintinie!!!
Y: Na lie, that Laquintinie thing. Radio one battery. Lagos
passengers are tested for ebola at their airport before they board any
aircraft.
X: And so, they can still bring it here. Our government should
even ban all traffic to Nigeria -land, sea, air. Thank God there are no direct
Douala flights to Monrovia, Freetown and Conakry. If not we’re finished. Y, I’m
concerned about these Lagos flights oh!
Y: God is in control. (Smiling) if Ebola has to enter “pays”,
Ebola will surface in Ebolowa.
X: Why?
Y: (smiling) Can’t you see its two letters short, Ebol”ow” a
X: You’re very stupid, very dull.
Y: Masah, this fever is making me weak!
X: Go, with your ebola.
Monday 18th 2014, Cameroon suspends all flights
to Lagos, sea and land traffic, shuts down borders….Character X rejoices when
he hears about it. But then, are we still safe? What about passengers from West
African neighbours (Senegal, Togo, Congo) transiting via Douala???????
Sunday, July 20, 2014
2014 Caine Prize for African Writing
As I entered the zoo, “The Gorrilla’s
Apprentice” stared at me and told me I had “My Father’s Head.” Suddenly, a
“Chicken” fluttered past me into Graaf’s pool which exhibited
“Phosphorescence”. And only “The Intervention” of the zoo keeper saved the
chicken from a crocodile’s jaws
If Okwiri Oduor wins, all the Kenyan fathers will happily nod
their heads. If Billy Kahora wins (after being shortlisted 2.5 times), all the
gorillas in Kenya will beat their chests doop doop doop. If Efemia Chela wins,
all the chickens in Ghana/Zambia will flap their wings pap pap pap. If Diane Awerbuck
wins, all the pools in South Africa will brighten up in phosphorescence. And if
Tendai Huchu wins, all the Zimbabweans will happily follow it up on BBC without
intervention
***
Kenya’s
Okwiri Oduor has won the 2014 Caine Prize for African Writing, described as
Africa’s leading literary award, for her short story entitled ‘My
Father's Head’ from Feast, Famine and Potluck (Short Story Day Africa, South
Africa, 2013).
The Chair of Judges, Jackie May MBE, announced Okwiri Oduor as
the winner of the £10,000 prize at a dinner held this evening (Monday, 14 July)
at the Bodleian Library in Oxford.
‘My Father’s Head’ explores the narrator’s difficulty in dealing
with the loss of her father and looks at the themes of memory, loss and
loneliness. The narrator works in an old people’s home and comes into contact
with a priest, giving her the courage to recall her buried memories of her
father.
Jackie Kay praised the story, saying, “Okwiri Oduor is a writer
we are all really excited to have discovered. ‘My Father’s Head’ is an
uplifting story about mourning – Joycean in its reach. She exercises an
extraordinary amount of control and yet the story is subtle, tender and moving.
It is a story you want to return to the minute you finish it.”
Okwiri Oduor directed the inaugural Writivism Literary Festival
in Kampala, Uganda in August 2013. Her novella, The Dream Chasers was
highly commended in the Commonwealth Book Prize, 2012. She is a 2014 MacDowell
Colony fellow and is currently at work on her debut novel.
Also shortlisted were Billy Kahora, Efemia Chela, Diane Aerbuck
and Tendai Huchu.
Saturday, June 21, 2014
Ethiopian Airlines flies into Cameroon's blog-o-sphere
Last Saturday, June 14th 2014, more than a dozen Cameroonian
bloggers and business executives met at White House Restaurant at Bonapriso
Douala marshaled together by the inspirational Adeline Sede founder and CEO
of Fabafriq magazine and under the sponsorship of Ethiopian Airlines Cameroon for
a very first symbiotic relationship. I arrived there at 5:00 PM when the
occasion had just kicked off and was surprised by the number of people present.
Bloggers busy on their laptops, camera lights flashing and people socializing quietly
with the intention of getting to know each other better. The goal of the
occasion was to encourage Cameroonian Entrepreneurs to use digital technology,
social media; blogs, twitter and Facebook to advertise their services and
products since the world is fluxing rapidly to an online one right now. In the
words of Monique kwachou, founder of the Moniquemusings blog, “today’s
advertising should not be limited to billboards enticing us to crane our necks,
or the flyers which I'm sure gets on the nerves of our Green Advocates, we have
the social media, we have the bloggers. Let’s meet them locally and use them.”
More and more people devote a lot of time to screen time so why can’t advertisers hit them with their stuff right there? They’ll read them. It’s a point well understood by business exec Adeline Sede, CEO of FabAfriq magazine who made sure that Ethiopian Airlines Cameroon organized a Kamer bloggers hangout to meet the local bloggers and most importantly use them in advertising. And who was there to throw in support for the event? Country manager of Ethiopian Airlines Cameroon, Madame Jaego and members of her staff. There was also an aesthetics expert Irene Azong-Wara of Ferb-Mart who is so passionate about hair and female beauty whom I had an interesting conversation with. I recommended a reading of Chimamanda Ngozie Adichie’s most recent work, “Americanah” a thickish 477 page novel about love, hair and African Immigrant experience which I’d read in January and she went “Ooooh I’ll read it” being a big Chimzi fan herself.
The blogosphere consisted of Cirrus clouds like Elodie of lesmarchesdelodie.blogspot.com, stratus clouds
like Monique kwachou of moniquemusings.blogspot.com, Cumulus clouds like Clifford
Ako of Wasamundi www.wasamundi.com, Tchassa
kamga of huguesleandre.wordpress.com, the founder of Tiptopstars whose name I
missed www.tiptopstars.com, myself (Writerphilic)
and a few others whose blog names I couldn’t catch. The blog sharing experiences
began with presentations from a couple of bloggers in the blogosphere. Monique talked
about the origins of blogging and about discipline. She disciplines herself by setting
a target of one blog post per month. Another presenter started by applauding
the efforts of all bloggers because it’s such a selfless thing which we don’t
get paid for and coupled with our nyamangoro
congo meat snail slow internet speed
in Cameroon, bloggers are really doing incredible things. He stated that social
media has super power and cited a perfect example. Stanley Enow’s win at the
MTV Africa music awards was one born purely out of social media super power.
Stanley faced tough competition from four other nominees especially Nigerian
artistes Phyno and Burna boy. Most of the award was decided by public voting. Now
we all know how Nigerians rally behind their own. So how does Stanley rally his
base of 20 million Cameroonians to vote for him and beat Phyno and Burna boy’s
bases of 160 million Nigerians each to the prize? Mission impossible? However, Stanley
and his team went on a rigorous daily voting campaign on social media and even
got himself signed to a company to promote his online digital presence. And
before we knew it, we had put aside the “Jovi vs Stanley Enow who is better
argument” and voted for Mr. Hein Pere. Add that to his fan base from West
Francophone Africa and France and baaam he won.
Cameroonian entrepreneurs could do same to promote their businesses beginning with the bloggers and “twitterers” and facebookers. (Young Cameroonians with wrting skills and passion in chaumencam, this is for you.) Elodie talked about her blog which is done generally from the tourism angle and how to build an audience. She said the blogger has to be passionate about what they do and blog constantly with interesting material. If it’s good, readers will always come back to it. Tchassa talked about sharing the blog to different blogger circles and network with others to grow the audience. Some endorsed Kongossa, gossip. (You’ll want to read who 2face is having baby number eight with from a blog rather than reading that he won an award. The latter is easily on popular news.) What I personally use on my blog to make people come back is a lot of humour, creativity and a little madness. And your grammar has to be cool (don’t bazor. Don’t say “Christ has rise”, na yeast?) and good editing before posting. The brain behind Wasamundi, Mr. Clifford Ako also threw more light on his work and how they add up all local businesses on Wasamundi such that, if you are anywhere in the country and need to find any popular spot you don’t know; restaurant, popular hair saloon, hotel etc just hit up Wasamundi, search what you want and baaam there you have it.
More and more people devote a lot of time to screen time so why can’t advertisers hit them with their stuff right there? They’ll read them. It’s a point well understood by business exec Adeline Sede, CEO of FabAfriq magazine who made sure that Ethiopian Airlines Cameroon organized a Kamer bloggers hangout to meet the local bloggers and most importantly use them in advertising. And who was there to throw in support for the event? Country manager of Ethiopian Airlines Cameroon, Madame Jaego and members of her staff. There was also an aesthetics expert Irene Azong-Wara of Ferb-Mart who is so passionate about hair and female beauty whom I had an interesting conversation with. I recommended a reading of Chimamanda Ngozie Adichie’s most recent work, “Americanah” a thickish 477 page novel about love, hair and African Immigrant experience which I’d read in January and she went “Ooooh I’ll read it” being a big Chimzi fan herself.
![]() |
| Kmer bloggers in their blogosphere blogging it out |
Cameroonian entrepreneurs could do same to promote their businesses beginning with the bloggers and “twitterers” and facebookers. (Young Cameroonians with wrting skills and passion in chaumencam, this is for you.) Elodie talked about her blog which is done generally from the tourism angle and how to build an audience. She said the blogger has to be passionate about what they do and blog constantly with interesting material. If it’s good, readers will always come back to it. Tchassa talked about sharing the blog to different blogger circles and network with others to grow the audience. Some endorsed Kongossa, gossip. (You’ll want to read who 2face is having baby number eight with from a blog rather than reading that he won an award. The latter is easily on popular news.) What I personally use on my blog to make people come back is a lot of humour, creativity and a little madness. And your grammar has to be cool (don’t bazor. Don’t say “Christ has rise”, na yeast?) and good editing before posting. The brain behind Wasamundi, Mr. Clifford Ako also threw more light on his work and how they add up all local businesses on Wasamundi such that, if you are anywhere in the country and need to find any popular spot you don’t know; restaurant, popular hair saloon, hotel etc just hit up Wasamundi, search what you want and baaam there you have it.
Ethiopian
Airlines Package: While we dined, the Ethiopian Airlines staff including
the Country Manager Madame Jaego stole the show with presentations of their
mouth watering offers with “Singapore all expenses paid holiday trip to the
best blogger about Ethiopian Airlines” being the climax.
Right, I don’t like Singapore. Hehe, na lie oh! Okay, being the airport guy who works with different airlines including Ethiopian Airlines itself, I can say without any propaganda that they’re on top of the game (no Singapore flattery).
Here’s a little insight about Ethiopia and ET. Ethiopia’s language is Amharic but the people also speak English. Ethiopian Airlines is the oldest airline in Africa having started in 1945. After operating in Cameroon in the seventies, they left in 1985 and returned in 2003 to resume operations and in just eleven years have turned things around to become the biggest air carrier here and in Africa. That is well summarized in their slogan, “The New Spirit of Flying in Africa.” Ethiopian Airlines flies to over eighty destinations worldwide and boast of the biggest Boeing airplane in the world, the Boeing 787 Dreamliner. ET has three African hubs; Addis Ababa, Lome and Lilongwe. Their airport hotels in Addis and the other hubs enable their passengers to spend the night comfortably while in transit and not a hard airport bench. But to visit the city for a few hours while waiting for a connecting flight, you’ll need an Ethiopian transit visa.
Ethiopian offers a medical package which slashes off 25% from your medical expenses. And if you feel you need some VIP treatment, their Sheba Miles Package offers that. You can travel in Business Class, Gold and Silver Premium with access to the VIP lounges, no queuing on those long annoying check-in lines etc. What’s more? The more miles you earn on each Economy class trip on your Ethiopian flights, the more they will be summed up and you could still benefit from the Gold and Silver packages depending on how far you have travelled. Ethiopia is one of the easiest places to travel to in Africa. The Ethiopian Airlines Town office in Bonanjo, Douala can follow up your Ethiopian Visa application and book for your ticket or e-ticket if you like (20% discount here) and even check you in online. And what’s the tourist Visa fee to Ethiopia? A jaw dropping twenty five US dollars only! Only twelve Nkolo. Compare that to the 50 US dollars or more required by other African countries. And north of 100 US dollars for Asian countries.
![]() |
| Adeline Sede (left) founder of Fabafriq magazine. Madame Jaego (right) Country Manager of Ethiopian Airlines Cameroon |
Right, I don’t like Singapore. Hehe, na lie oh! Okay, being the airport guy who works with different airlines including Ethiopian Airlines itself, I can say without any propaganda that they’re on top of the game (no Singapore flattery).
| Blogger Nkiacha Atemnkeng working on an Ethiopian Airlines flight (ET 905)to Malabo and Addis Ababa |
Here’s a little insight about Ethiopia and ET. Ethiopia’s language is Amharic but the people also speak English. Ethiopian Airlines is the oldest airline in Africa having started in 1945. After operating in Cameroon in the seventies, they left in 1985 and returned in 2003 to resume operations and in just eleven years have turned things around to become the biggest air carrier here and in Africa. That is well summarized in their slogan, “The New Spirit of Flying in Africa.” Ethiopian Airlines flies to over eighty destinations worldwide and boast of the biggest Boeing airplane in the world, the Boeing 787 Dreamliner. ET has three African hubs; Addis Ababa, Lome and Lilongwe. Their airport hotels in Addis and the other hubs enable their passengers to spend the night comfortably while in transit and not a hard airport bench. But to visit the city for a few hours while waiting for a connecting flight, you’ll need an Ethiopian transit visa.
Ethiopian offers a medical package which slashes off 25% from your medical expenses. And if you feel you need some VIP treatment, their Sheba Miles Package offers that. You can travel in Business Class, Gold and Silver Premium with access to the VIP lounges, no queuing on those long annoying check-in lines etc. What’s more? The more miles you earn on each Economy class trip on your Ethiopian flights, the more they will be summed up and you could still benefit from the Gold and Silver packages depending on how far you have travelled. Ethiopia is one of the easiest places to travel to in Africa. The Ethiopian Airlines Town office in Bonanjo, Douala can follow up your Ethiopian Visa application and book for your ticket or e-ticket if you like (20% discount here) and even check you in online. And what’s the tourist Visa fee to Ethiopia? A jaw dropping twenty five US dollars only! Only twelve Nkolo. Compare that to the 50 US dollars or more required by other African countries. And north of 100 US dollars for Asian countries.
| ET 905: Boarding |
Tourist Attraction: All the
amazing offers are in an effort to market Ethiopia as a tourist destination in
its Ethiopian Holidays campaign. Everyone knows that the sprawling Addis Ababa
is the capital city of the African Union right? And it is one of the fastest
developing African cities. But ever heard of Kuriftu Resort and Spa? You can
check it out at www.kurifturesortspa.com.
Wallop me on the head if you don’t find it impressive. Want to hit them up? Direct
contacts to the Ethiopian staff right here DesireeN@ethiopianairlines.com
o Tel +237 73350059
Jorgod@ethiopianairlines.com Tel +237 77937929
The award winning airline has partnered with
some hotels, resorts and tourist attractions in Kuriftu termed “Ethiopia’s
little gem” to offer amazing holiday discounts to attract tourists from all
over the world. In the ancient town of Sheba, you’ll find small size Gaza like
pyramids and exquisite age old stone work. And did you know? The Queen in the
bible who visited King Solomon with difficult questions was the queen of Sheba.
She was so impressed by King Solomon’s wisdom and by his fine boy looks and
charms that King Solomon got her pregnant. She returned to Sheba and gave birth
to a son, Ibn-al-malik. Through him a bloodline of half Jews was brought forth
in Ethiopia called the Ethiopian jews from the Ethiopian Solomonic dynasty.
Ethiopia is also where one of the world’s
oldest hominid skeletons, Lucy was found. It helped to trace the evolution of
man from its early ape like forms thus cementing Ethiopia’s status as the
cradle of humankind. Lucy is estimated to be 3.2 million years old. (Abeg bible scholars don't wallop me on the head.) I know the world is 4000 years old sha! Na science talk that other one nobi me. Furthermore,
the Rastafarians worship deceased Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie 1 as Jah, god.
And Ethiopian marathon athletes like Haile Gebreselassie (no confusion with the emperor) and Tirunesh Dibaba are superstar gold winning Olympians on the global athletics stage. Multiple Olympic gold medalist Haile Gebreselassie is the symbol of Ethiopian Airlines. And you would not want to forget the amazing story of Ethiopia’s first super star Olympic gold medalist, Abebe Bikila. During the 1960 Olympic games final in Rome, he wasn’t running to full capacity because his shoes didn’t fit him well, so he took off the damn white people’s thing on his feet called “shoes” and ran like a cheetah to victory. So wouldn’t you like to visit that beautiful country for just…Oh my God! Twenty five US dollars? But some advice, abeg, wear your shoes oh! Before you go to Kufitu. But, even if you don't wear shoes, the place is so cool you wouldn't even notice it. Want me to leave you with some breathtaking shots of Kuriftu? Right here, below y'all
And Ethiopian marathon athletes like Haile Gebreselassie (no confusion with the emperor) and Tirunesh Dibaba are superstar gold winning Olympians on the global athletics stage. Multiple Olympic gold medalist Haile Gebreselassie is the symbol of Ethiopian Airlines. And you would not want to forget the amazing story of Ethiopia’s first super star Olympic gold medalist, Abebe Bikila. During the 1960 Olympic games final in Rome, he wasn’t running to full capacity because his shoes didn’t fit him well, so he took off the damn white people’s thing on his feet called “shoes” and ran like a cheetah to victory. So wouldn’t you like to visit that beautiful country for just…Oh my God! Twenty five US dollars? But some advice, abeg, wear your shoes oh! Before you go to Kufitu. But, even if you don't wear shoes, the place is so cool you wouldn't even notice it. Want me to leave you with some breathtaking shots of Kuriftu? Right here, below y'all
Wednesday, May 14, 2014
Solange Knowles attacks Jay-Z
My humorous imagination about what went down in that elevator.
Solange: This elevator ain’t goin nowhere
Jay-Z: Like ur career?
Solange: Fuck u Sean Carter, who do you think u are? Because u call yourself God MC you think you run the music world? Eminem is sicker than you.
Jay-Z: And Beyonce is a lot cooler than u but she married me. Booooooo!
Solange advances, slaps, insults, kicks, kicks, kicks, pulled back by body guard, breaks free, kicks n screams “who run the world? Girls” kicks “who run the world? Girls” kicks.
Beyonce: (thinkin) Oh my God! Is this my sister? Solange Knowles!!! Nah, this ain’t. it’s an alter ego called Solange Know-less. Oh my God she’s kicking kicking n “Jumping Jumping”
Guard: “Halo” Queen Bey “Check on it” before I separate the attack. You got her back or his back?
Beyonce: Don’t “Say my name”
Guard: Uh?
Beyonce: I said don’t “Say my name”(Bey thinkin) If I jump in on Jay’s back its gon be like I don’t love ma sister, and all da “Single ladies” n even Chimamanda Ngozie Adichie gon think I’m not a feminist anymore. If I jump in on Solange’s back, they gon think I don’t love ma husband n I’m not “Drunk in love”.U know wat? I ain’t got nobody’s back, I’mma stay mute cos I’m an “Independent Woman”.
Jay-Z: (avoiding kicks n pleadin) Yoh, Solange stop, this is ‘Hard knock life” you’re raining on me. I was just “Frontin”, no Pharell, we’re “Happyyyyyyyy” right? I’ll do “Anythin” for u, H to the Izzo, S to the Soso, Solange stop, tu fait “Encore” ca? we’ll go 2 da 40/40 sports bar and do some “Big Pimpin” aight? Stop.
Guard pulls away Solange n out of the elevator
Jay-Z: I used to have 99 problems but a b… ain’t one. Now I got 99 problems and Solange ain’t one. I’ma just go ahead and “Change Clothes” Beyonce nods.
Guard: “Hey Papi” that girl can kick man! Like Jean Claude Vandamme, like Jet Li or somethin.
Jay-Z: She should be in dem movies or dem fight cartoons “Naruto” and “Dragon Ball” the female Sango Koo or somethin
Guard: And it’s the only hit she’s had in years! And I’m just thinkin, if it was Pac, he would have given her some “Thug life” and her face would have had some “Changes” if it was DMX, then we’d hear the revenge kicks along with angry big voice chants ‘what these bitches want from a nigga” if it was Bobby Brown or Chris Brown, hmmmmm, then a guy like Brizzy would have made sure her face had some of that "I can transform ya” But it’s you, Jay, cultured nigga, not laying hands on a woman even when attacked.
Jay-Z: smiles. “Dirt off ma shoulder…”
Beyonce: He’s a “Survivor”
Jay-Z: Thanks Bey. Hey big dude, get me 2 “New York” got a concert to catch with Alicia Keys in New Yooooooooork.......
Solange: This elevator ain’t goin nowhere
Jay-Z: Like ur career?
Solange: Fuck u Sean Carter, who do you think u are? Because u call yourself God MC you think you run the music world? Eminem is sicker than you.
Jay-Z: And Beyonce is a lot cooler than u but she married me. Booooooo!
Solange advances, slaps, insults, kicks, kicks, kicks, pulled back by body guard, breaks free, kicks n screams “who run the world? Girls” kicks “who run the world? Girls” kicks.
Beyonce: (thinkin) Oh my God! Is this my sister? Solange Knowles!!! Nah, this ain’t. it’s an alter ego called Solange Know-less. Oh my God she’s kicking kicking n “Jumping Jumping”
Guard: “Halo” Queen Bey “Check on it” before I separate the attack. You got her back or his back?
Beyonce: Don’t “Say my name”
Guard: Uh?
Beyonce: I said don’t “Say my name”(Bey thinkin) If I jump in on Jay’s back its gon be like I don’t love ma sister, and all da “Single ladies” n even Chimamanda Ngozie Adichie gon think I’m not a feminist anymore. If I jump in on Solange’s back, they gon think I don’t love ma husband n I’m not “Drunk in love”.U know wat? I ain’t got nobody’s back, I’mma stay mute cos I’m an “Independent Woman”.
Jay-Z: (avoiding kicks n pleadin) Yoh, Solange stop, this is ‘Hard knock life” you’re raining on me. I was just “Frontin”, no Pharell, we’re “Happyyyyyyyy” right? I’ll do “Anythin” for u, H to the Izzo, S to the Soso, Solange stop, tu fait “Encore” ca? we’ll go 2 da 40/40 sports bar and do some “Big Pimpin” aight? Stop.
Guard pulls away Solange n out of the elevator
Jay-Z: I used to have 99 problems but a b… ain’t one. Now I got 99 problems and Solange ain’t one. I’ma just go ahead and “Change Clothes” Beyonce nods.
Guard: “Hey Papi” that girl can kick man! Like Jean Claude Vandamme, like Jet Li or somethin.
Jay-Z: She should be in dem movies or dem fight cartoons “Naruto” and “Dragon Ball” the female Sango Koo or somethin
Guard: And it’s the only hit she’s had in years! And I’m just thinkin, if it was Pac, he would have given her some “Thug life” and her face would have had some “Changes” if it was DMX, then we’d hear the revenge kicks along with angry big voice chants ‘what these bitches want from a nigga” if it was Bobby Brown or Chris Brown, hmmmmm, then a guy like Brizzy would have made sure her face had some of that "I can transform ya” But it’s you, Jay, cultured nigga, not laying hands on a woman even when attacked.
Jay-Z: smiles. “Dirt off ma shoulder…”
Beyonce: He’s a “Survivor”
Jay-Z: Thanks Bey. Hey big dude, get me 2 “New York” got a concert to catch with Alicia Keys in New Yooooooooork.......
Friday, May 9, 2014
Review of the Writivism Anthology Picture Frames and Other Stories by Nkiacha Atemnkeng
The inaugural Writivism anthology was some
activism by a panel consisting of Hilda Twongyeirwe, Beatrice Lamwaka, Harriet
Anena, Ernest Bazanye, Novuyo Rosa Tshuma and Ceris Dien. It sparked some literary
spasm across Uganda’s young writing prism from 15-25 years of ageism under the
mentorship of some fine African writers on a ship. They were expected to write
on the themes Identity, Diversity and Equality but they somehow managed to get
homosexuality and Lesbianism Writivism in a majority. Without any euphemism, it
means a man fucking a man and a woman fucking a woman activism. Below is some
literary reviewism and criticism intended for some colloquium with the hope that
it will be followed like plant tropism. The winning short fiction for 2013’s
Writivism is “Picture Frames” by Anthea Paelo together with four other flash
fiction pieces on the Shortlistism coupled with eight other prose pieces on the
Longlistism.
Picture
Frames by Anthea Paelo: The writer uses the flashback technique a lot in this brilliant winning
flash fiction which gives it suspense. It’s about a woman called Rose who is
having reveries of her husband and deceased son who was gay. The gay issue
creates conflict between Rose and her husband Daudi, an aloof, insatiable man
who wants to erase every memory of his son because he was a homosexual. She
hopes he would change but he doesn’t and the realization by Rose that he will
never change is the central epiphany of this story.
The Sidewalk
by Nassanga Rashidah: A story about orphaned disheveled kids on the streets begging
for money. Kima an albino child evokes sympathy from the alms givers and it
stirs jealousy in another begger, Mamadou who plans to get rid of her.
Appollo’s ensnaring act on Kima springs a pleasant surprise at the end. There
is stigmatization, begging, jealousy and blackmail up in this one.
Together by
Kathryn Kazibwe: A flash fiction piece about family neglect, about two sisters
who were once close but had suddenly grown estranged and arguing with each
other. In a slow deliberate release of the plot elements, the writer hatches
the story’s egg which unveils their past differences. When the protagonist
reveals that her actions were largely caused by the fact that her baby died,
her sister’s sympathy and love brings them back “together”.
The Shadow
by Emmeline Bisiikwa: It is about a man in an affair with another woman to the point that
his wife becomes a shadow. There’s parental pressure from the man’s mother for
him to get a son bringing to mind many African mothers. And as Jessica the wife
leaves with her daughters for good, she commits a desperate act that gives the
story an unexpected turn. It’s my favourite among the five stories.
Emotional
Rollercoaster by Paul Kisakye: David who is gay consoles his best friend,
a girl called Sanyu who has been cheated on so she’s hurt and in tears. Sanyu
then seduces David and he also cheats on his gay partner Joel by sleeping with
Sanyu. I call it the double infidelity story. But where these two really best
friends? Or had an unsung love for each other? Sanyu just got him quickly baam
like manna in the desert. What I also like about the piece is that, it firmly
places itself in modern day digital Uganda, facebooking and texting.
There were eight longlisted stories and I
didn’t quite get the first one, “Butterflies come at dawn” by Solomon Manzi so
I’ll keep mute about it. In “The New Politician”, Angella Namwase beautifully
delves into a tale of politicking, a political process and election results for
a post of women affairs. “Choices in danger” by Emmanuel Ssebaggala introduces
to us a bright student who was born different -to think like girls. In Europe,
he falls in love with a boy and the relationship triggers his wife’s death.
There’s letter writing in this one. Muhwezi Simpson penned “Grandpa’s story”
which is inspired by the oral storytelling tradition by the fireside of many
societies in Africa. The poignant story is narrated by Grandpa and it is about
forced marriages. “A chance encounter with Jack Bormont” by Robert Ssempande
pricked me nicely. It’s partly written in the American Ebonics dialect and the
protagonist is a famous American who encourages a Ugandan wanna-be Americanah
to be patriotic about his country. “Stolen Innocence” by Faith Nadweny is about
a girl who is being maltreated by a wicked stepmother and attacked by a man who
claims to have been sent by the wicked woman. “True to nothing” by Mildred
Apenyo is about Atim getting out on the road, frustrated by motorbikes and
traffic and goes after love making pleasure. Nora Kirabo’s “Of love and
Sisphean tasks” is an infidelity story where the main character’s lover has an
affair with another woman. She gets emotionally distraught and considers a
break up and concludes she’s going to do it. And that also concludes the 2013 Writivism
anthology.
On a criticism note, I think a brief
biography of the various writers would have been included. We don’t know anything
them. The editing was good, almost all the words are in place. But the book’s
compilation and printing feels rushed. The page structuring was not well done.
Some pages appear which have been printed twice and others are blank except for
a few words. Anyway, judging that it was a first, I have no doubt the anthology
will be done better this year from last year’s experience. The Ugandan writers
are young and their works show potential and I was impressed. However, they can
and should raise the bar with better prose from flash fiction to short stories
and why not novels? Writivism 2013 was Ugandan breakfast. But I definitely know
Writivism 2014 is going to be amazing lunch, different palatable meals from all
over Africa on our lunch menu for the written word hungry. Yes, for after
Writivism comes Readivism. Good Reading y’all! And good job Centre for African
Cultural Excellence for this great initiative including the Co-founder, the man
with “new names” (all about letter e), Bwa Bwesigye Mwesigire de l’Université
de Makerere et de Cace parce que vous avez travaillé.
Short Bio: Nkiacha Atemnkeng is a Cameroonian writer and blogger. He was shortlisted for the 2013 Mardibooks short story competition and was a finalist for the month of October 2013 at the Africa Book Club. He was invited to the 2014 Caine Prize Writers Workshop in Zimbabwe but couldn’t attend because the plane he boarded went missing in the Sahara desert.
Thursday, April 10, 2014
Monument de la Liberté a Rond Point Deido Doula
There is a lot of madness in this blog post so be
warned. At this particular moment I just missed out on attending the most
prestigious creative writing workshop in Africa despite being invited, the
Caine Prize Writers Workshop in Zimbabwe. I even have a Zimbabwean Visa but the
workshop is already over. So the big question is WHY? It’s a long story. Like
JRR Tolkien’s “Lord of the Rings.” But the short of the long story is that,
there’s no Zimbabwean embassy in Yaounde, so I mailed my passport to London so that
a Zimbabwean Visa could be obtained for me there and a little kid tore off a
blank page from the passport. So even though the visa came out and found itself
sticking to my passport like a slug, at the Douala airport, I was denied access
to board my Ethiopian Airlines flight to Mutare by immigration because my
passport is invalid (because of that torn page.) Very annoying. For days, I could not eat,
could not sleep and was in so much pain that I’m now suffering from small
mental dysfunction. Uh huh, yi mean say I di craze small. Say I dong kolo mental
small. Like this stature below. Look am, look am,
Ei, na which kind thing this? It’s
called “Le Monument de la Liberté”, the monument of Liberty. That is,
Cameroon’s own version of the stature of Liberty. It towers twelve meters high,
has a diameter of five meters and weighs twelve tons. It is located in the
roundabout Deido Douala and commissioned and produced by Doual’art in 1996. Seriously,
if you’ve been to Douala and haven’t seen the damn thing, then go and medically
check your eye sight. Unlike the one in America which was sculpted out of
copper by the French, (uh huh I just said that. You, you in America who is
saying “Nkiacha na lie” go and do some research, it was a gift by the French to
the Americans crafted by French sculptor Frederic Auguste Bartholdi.) Unlike
the one in America, our own was erupted out of old tyres, old car parts, old metal
scraps, old umbrellas, old iron rods, old zinc roofing sheets, old tin
containers (ngon-ngong), old, old, old recycled things! And assembled in the middle
of the economic capital!!! Yeh-gaay, Hahaha, Journal du Bien, “Voici pour vous du
bien…Bieeeen!!!”
Okay, Le monument de la liberté a ete
fabriqué par un Bamileké qui a travaillé sur ça, dans un endroit bloqué et seulemant
dans la nuit (like say na witch, Lol). His name is Joseph-Francis Sumégné (even if wunna ask governor for Douala, man way
yi make am yi no go fit tell you, so clap for me first. You nodi clap? I say
clap. Good. Sumegne is a dreadlocked sculptor of Bamileke extraction who has lived
in Douala for many years. I guess the man smoked some kai kai before having the unique inspiration
for such a strange piece of art. Hey i'm just guessing. Ladies and gents I present to you Monsieur
Joseph Francis Sumegne. (the other one na colleague no bother)
He looks like Bob Marley right? (No cayé,
no stature). When asked why he decided to fashion such strange work of art from
recycled materials, Joseph Francis said, his idea is to show the state of
Douala in the early and mid nineties. During that era, Douala was a notoriously
dirty town. But the city is much cleaner now oh. HYSACAM di wipe all dust put’am
for motor poom poooom. Ever since it was erected, it has become a tourist
attraction. Its queer nature has been attracting millions of white tourists who
fly in to marvel at its beauty. Its popularity is now so huge it has even surpassed
that of the real stature of liberty in America and the Eiffel Tower in France.
Such that, the last time I passed near the White House, I eavesdropped on a
conversation in which Barack Obama was ordering General David Pitraeus to launch
a very accurate US drone which will bomb the damn thing. But he also warned
Pitraeus that there’s so much corruption in Cameroon, before he’ll complete his
assignment, Cameroonian government officials will bribe the unmanned drone in
mid air such that, it may turn back and rebomb them in America instead. That’s
why he’s including a bribe-proof on the drone and choosing his best general who
served so well in Iraq and who bombed so well and stole oil so well.
One amazing thing about this our monument is that, it is also animate. Sometimes it behaves like a human being. Every time I pass around, I always hear it slapping off the myriad of Douala mosquitoes from its body which bite it daily. Have you seen its right arm? It was actually killing a mosquito the moment all these shots were taken twai, twai. See...
The monument also helps the traffic
police to control traffic especially during rush hour in the mornings. But one
day, in an effort of pretence that it was killing a mosquito, it quickly sent
its hands into a taxi stuck in traffic jam and stole a sleeping woman’s purse
with lots of money. Nobody saw the theft incident since everybody was sleeping
as they’d spent the whole night in the traffic jam. The stature left, went to
Akwa, got a couple of ashawos, took them to Goodies restaurant in Bonapriso and
bought all kinds of goodies. Then he took them to Marché Centrale and lavished
money on designer shoes and clothes. It
went clubbing at Olympia night club Bonanjo with them later at night. Some
police officers had gone looking for it on a wild rampage. When they caught it,
the ashawos fled. They lay ambush on the stature, got it well thrashed and
imprisoned it at the New Bell Prison. It was only released a month later. When I saw it back in place at Rond
Point, it immediately said “Oh boy, ngata na die, I no go ever tif again.” It
also told me it had met Lapiro de Ngata at New Bell (God rest his soul) and
Lapiro had taught him how to sing and it was planning to release a new powerful
album titled “Douala na suffer”. That it
was also hoping to become more popular than Petit Pays. But it was going to
name his own music band “On a Les Visas” instead of Rabbi’s “Sans Visa”. I was very
impressed.
The stature also knows how to play
football, having played for one season at Astres de Douala and was top scorer
the year they won the Cameroon league. The other players drove it away because
of jealousy. The real reason was that it stole their girlfriends. During the
2004/2005 football season in Spain when Samuel Eto’o was fighting for the
Pitchitchi title with Diego Forlan, the stature headed the ball which is
currently on its head and it bounced and bounced and then bounced off a ship at
the Port of Douala and went over the ocean straight into the opponents pole
during the last day of play. The Spaniards were so impressed with the feat that
they flew to the Douala International Airport, drove straight to Rond Point and
handed the stature the Pitchitchi trophy instead, forgetting about Forlan and
Eto’o. But on their way back, they were frustrated at the airport and did not
board their flight because they did not have any money to pay 10.000 francs
each as airport tax. They were shocked that it’s the only airport in the world
where passengers pay the nonsense fee yet the airport never ever changes. Eto’o
also flew back to Cameroon in rage, laughed at the Spaniards at the airport, that
the system had caught and taught them a lesson, went to Rond Point Deido and
seriously threatened the stature with death. So the next season, the stature
restrained itself from scoring again and Eto’o succeded to grab the Pitchtchi
title, this time beating David Villa on the last day of play. Wait. Why are you
laughing? Do you doubt all these things I’m saying? It’s as true as the
gospels. Ehn, I swear to God (touches index finger on the ground, licks and
raises to the sky.) Na whetti? Okay, if you doubt me, google up.
Short Bio: Nkiacha Atemnkeng is a
Cameroonian writer who doesn’t know when he was born but it is generally
believed to be around 1859. He won the Nobel Prize for mental dysfunction
Literature in 1939 during the Second World War. Adolf Hitler got jealous and
seized the award because it had been given to a black man. Just like in the
movie “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button”, it seems he was born when he was
already old and is growing younger instead. It is estimated that in 2099 he
will be an old baby moving towards death into the womb. Hollywood legend James
Cameron is currently directing a movie based on his life titled, “The Curious
ill luck case of Nkiacha Atemnkeng”, which is estimated to beat every Box Office record and even that of "Avatar". He currently lives in Douala but plans to
move and permanently live on the planet Mars hanging onto the neck of his beloved Le Monument de la Liberte because he has found life on earth
to be very boring especially at this very unhappy moment of his life.
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