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An Article On Abeokuta by Gazzy88(m): 8:30am On Aug 31, 2015 |
In his essay, ‘Ways of Seeing’, English art critic and
writer, John Berger argues that “the past is not for
living in; it is a well of conclusions from which we
draw in order to act.” Existing without that “well”,
Nigeria has become a land of people collectively
exhibiting the delirium and irritability seen in human
bodies suffering from chronic dehydration.
Consider the national museum in Lagos; the ultimate
definition of “disgrace”. You stroll through it, and
emerge wondering whether what you just saw was a
teaser, an introduction; expecting someone to show
up and take you into the museum proper. Go to
Abuja and an even more depressing fate awaits:
nothingness! Abuja must be the only national capital
in the world that hasn’t got a national museum. In the
city’s master plan, there is a space allocated for the
museum. That it remains un-built, while we focus on
Ecumenical Centers and Centenary Cities, tells you a
lot about our priorities.
Against this tragic backdrop, it is easy to see why
every attempt at revisiting our rich and manifold
history ought to be eagerly welcomed. ‘Abeokuta –
Beyond the Rocks’ is one such attempt. Published in
2014 by Hakeem Adenekan, a marketing
communications professional, it is a photographic
catalogue of Abeokuta, heartland of the Egba people
(a subdivision of the Yoruba), starting from the city’s
founding in 1830.
I find Abeokuta a fascinating place: the only two
persons of Yoruba origin to have ever ruled Nigeria –
Olusegun Obasanjo and Ernest Shonekan – are from
the city. The man who would have become the third –
Moshood Abiola, winner of the annulled 1993
presidential election – was also from Abeokuta. Even
more interesting; some of their most formidable
nemeses – the cousins Wole Soyinka (who, as
recently as last week, was still engaged in a war of
words with Obasanjo) and Fela Anikulapo-Kuti (who
composed famous songs that severely upbraided
Obasanjo and Abiola) – have also turned out to be
Abeokuta people.
One wonders if the political savvy one associates with
Abeokuta has anything to do with its history: the fact
that it remained a somewhat independent political
unit well after the rest of Nigeria had been
completely taken over by the British. In 1893, almost
a decade after the Berlin Conference, at which the
colonial powers shared out the continent among
themselves, the Egba signed a Treaty of
Independence with the colonial administration,
resulting in the formation of the semi-autonomous
Egba United Government, under the leadership of the
‘Alake’, the paramount ruler of Egbaland. The Egba
United Government collected its own taxes and rolled
out its own development programmes, like a steel
and concrete bridge over the River Ogun in 1911, the
same year it “introduced motor lorries into
Egbaland.”
Early on in the book we are presented with the text of
a document, dated 1st of February, 1898, and co-
signed by the colonial administrator and the Alake. In
the “Proclamation”, the Alake informs his subjects
that, acting on the advice of the Governor of Lagos,
he was creating new administrative departments
(Justice, Communications and Works, Finance, Public
Order, Trade and Agriculture, Sanitation and Public
Health, and the office of the Secretary to the
Government).
You can’t read this book and not be struck by just
how much of a pioneering tradition the city
embodies. Abeokuta saw European contact before
any other place in Western Nigeria (outside of Lagos).
It is home to the first church in Nigeria, St. Peters
Cathedral, Ake, built by the British in 1844. And then
in 1859 the first newspaper in Nigeria, Iwe Irohin,
was published in Abeokuta by the British missionary
Henry Townsend (according to the book, Ijemo Road
in the old quarter of Abeokuta is the equivalent of
London’s newspaper hub, Fleet Street). Abeokuta is
also home to “the first social and recreation club” in
Nigeria, established by the British in 1904, and today
known as the Abeokuta Sports Club.
It was one of the first cities in Nigeria to host a
railway line; in 1900 the line from Lagos berthed in
Abeokuta, en route to Ibadan. (Queen Elizabeth used
it when she visited in 1956). In 2005, Crescent
University, the first privately-owned Islamic
University in Nigeria, was founded in Abeokuta. A few
years later, the Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential
Library, the first in Africa.
Abeokuta is also a center of craftsmanship: ‘tie-and-
dye’ and pottery being the main products. It is home
to a thriving Sawmill, and is “the second largest
quarry market in Nigeria”, after Ibadan in Oyo State.
Like all Yoruba towns and cities its markets are an
important part of the landscape. All of these aspects
are documented in ‘Abeokuta: Beyond the Rocks.’
There’s a photograph of an old two-storey building,
its stone walls browned with age. The caption tells us
it was the first high-rise hotel in the city, owned by
Oba Ladapo Ademola, Alake between 1920 and 1962,
and “a notable meeting point for the Egba elite many
years ago.” I have driven past that building many
times, but I had no idea what it was. There’s as far as
I see, no signage alluding to its luxurious history. We
are left to imagine what it looked like in its heyday;
the personages and glamorous parties that it must
have hosted. A good number of the city’s historical
landmarks are similarly rundown, like the original
building of St. Peter’s Primary School, Ake (attended
by Wole Soyinka). One of the most depressing images
in the book is the derelict site of Top Brewery, owned
by the now defunct West African Breweries Limited,
founded by Chief Adeyemi Lawson in 1964 as the first
indigenous brewery in Nigeria.
There are also photographs from today’s Abeokuta,
suggesting a city racing to shed its rustic past and
embrace a long overdue modernity. The penultimate
section is a catalogue of recent developments: the
city’s first high-rise; the 12-storey OPIC Plaza (2011),
first flyover (2012); and a slew of dual-carriageways
and housing estates.
The book’s cover image is one that anyone who has
ever climbed the 137m Olumo Rock will instantly
recognise; the view of the city looking leftwards from
the direction of the rock: the sprawl of rusted tin
roofs that appear to be no different today than they
were a century ago, punctuated by the twin-towers
highlighting the façade of the Central Mosque,
opened in 1933. Olumo Rock is the city’s most
important landmark; giving the city its name
(Abeokuta means ‘Beneath the Rocks’).
We come to coffee-table books more for the images,
than the text, because we are convinced that a
picture is worth a thousand words. But this is not to
say words are not as important; no, they bring much-
needed context and meaning to the images that we
view. I would have loved to see more explicatory text
in the book, as well as a stronger focus on laying out
an exhaustive chronology of the city’s history, from
founding till date. As it is it feels rather light on the
historical elements; a puzzle with important bits left
out.
For example I wish the book shed light on how
certain members of the Alake’s Council of State – the
Osile (Justice Minister), the Agura (Communications
and Works) and the Olowu (Finance) later went on to
become major kings in their own right. I have always
found that somewhat odd about Abeokuta – where
other Yoruba towns and cities have only one king,
Abeokuta has five; four of whom insist that the one
generally adjudged to be the paramount ruler is
merely a first among equals.
Page-numbers and a table of contents would have
made the book much more navigable. The book ends
with a hall of fame of Abeokuta’s most distinguished
sons and daughters: Bola Ajibola, Ebenezer Obey,
Shina Peters, Bukola Elemide (Asa), the Lijadu Sisters,
Segun Osoba, Segun Odegbami, Mudashiru Lawal,
Simeon Adebo, Adeoye Lambo, Fela Sowande, Bola
Kuforiji-Olubi, Saburi Biobaku, Reuben Abati; Amos
Tutuola, JF Odunjo, Bola Ajibola, Fola Adeola, Tayo
Aderinokun, to name a few.
Efforts like these are for me a reminder that we can
never have too many books exploring our recent and
distant history. Especially in a country like ours
where the collective memory is startlingly short, and
historical revisionism is a seemingly automated and
rarely challenged tendency. It is therefore gladdening
to hear that publisher Adenekan has got plans to
replicate this for other cities across Nigeria, and
Africa.
Source: www.punchng.com/opinion/ways-of-seeing-abeokuta/ |
Re: An Article On Abeokuta by sigmundfreud(m): 8:47am On Aug 31, 2015 |
(1) (Reply)
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