Isaac Adaka Boro is not lying in
state. He is haunting a state of lies. When his folks in the Niger Delta
exhumed and re-interred him, they only performed a ritual that mocked reality.
Adaka Boro, a name that rhymes in poems, fulminates in books and essays, chimes
in songs and rollicks on dance floors, has never passed away.
Boro has burrowed
our lives and unearthed all our hypocrisies as a nation.
Nigeria’s best musician ever, Rex
Lawson, paid tributes to his vision and valour.
But the recent account of him
came from the masterpiece of that carnage, written by General Alabi Isama. He
told the story about how he was killed in the uniform, ironically not of Biafra
but of Nigeria. In the damp and ominous atmosphere of the Niger Delta, Boro was
searching a building for Biafran stragglers.
But he did not know that an Igbo
soldier stalked in the shadows, positioned himself and blasted the Ijaw hero to
death. No one has contradicted Isama’s account. In the book, The
Tragedy of Victory, Isama portrayed Boro as one of the valuable hands of
the Third Marine Commander, under the feisty zeal and predatory cunning of the
diminutive Adekunle. Isama was the chief of staff.
Boro represented a contradiction. He
fought to excise his people out of Nigeria. Eventually, he exerted his soldiery
in cementing the survival of that same entity he despised. A soldier from
Biafra that tried to fulfil his subversive fantasy gunned him down. He became
the distorted vision of sacrifice but not the sacrifice of his own vision.
The contradiction was typically
Nigerian. It is the soul of Nigeria, a rabid show of togetherness only
exhibited by a zest to undermine that togetherness. We call one Nigeria, but we
worship tribe and disdain Nigeria. The American poet of democracy wrote, “Do I
contradict myself? Yes I contradict myself. I am large. I contain multitudes.”
Walt Whitman was emphasising the American obsession with itself, its
self-renewing energy, its desire to melt together its various peoples and races
in spite of its yawning differences.
We can see the United States confront its
turbulent divergences, its compulsion to morph from a mosaic to a melting pot.
It is an imperfect attempt. It has shed blood, ruined families, but wrought a
Michael Jordan, a Tiger Woods, and hoisted a Barack Obama.
Boro died in flesh that day the
Biafran soldier extinguished him. But he regenerated powerfully. He abandoned
the dust of nothingness. He came alive, and he became Ojukwu and his generals
who gave the federal soldiers and Yakubu Gowon blood for every blood, flesh for
every flesh, bone for every bone. For 30 months, the spirit of Boro hewed down
the Nigerian tree.
When the war ended, we thought we
were done. The ghost gave a reprieve, but he walked the night of Nigeria and
allowed a honeymoon of illusion. We cannot, however, forget that Orkar and his
fellow coupist plotted with Boro when they wanted to slice off Arewa in a
fumbling fiasco. Boro also wanted it to fail, so the nation could look at
itself and ponder its tragic hypocrisies. We tagged along shamelessly.
So, today, we know he was not killed
that hapless noon of the civil war. He said to Nigeria, “I was he that was
alive, and was dead. Behold I am alive till the end of time. I hold the keys to
Nigeria’s hell and death.”
So we see it today. Why is it that
we did not see the Niger Delta folks perform a ceremony of reburial in the
past? Why today?
It is because it is now that he cannot be buried. Today he is
more alive. He is telling us he is alive and well and portentously so. He
is alive in the Enugu State House. He growled with the subversives of Biafran
dreams who attacked the government house. He chanted with them when they
disdained Nigeria and brandished Biafra. They want back not just Biafra, but
the shimmering beard of the Ikemba, his glistening pate and also the glittering
dame, the svelte Bianca.
He is with Boko Haram, the young and
virulent bigots who slit throats, burn down houses, waylay emirs, despise books
and western education, kidnap Chibok girls, and loft high a leader online who
celebrates his barbarities. He abides the contradiction of a body that despises
books but uses the same literacy to propagate its sovereignty.
He spoke inelegantly with the
Adamawa fellow in the sham of a national confab, who threatened to go away with
northern Nigeria to join his neighbours. Boro took him seriously
because he appeared to him in his dream.
Did we not see Boro when Yar’Adua
was sick? Boro thwacked and flared all over Abuja and ignited the nation to
give the top seat to an Ijaw son. Once he got there, he made sure the Ijaw son
would not be a tower of grace. Rather he planted a seed like Boko Haram to
germinate and sprout into a monstrous bower. Under the same son, we know that
it is not about differing tongues alone that we bicker but also over differing
gods. One God is better than the other, and it does not matter the humanity,
the wisdom of their worshippers.
But then, we have seen Boro in the
land of Oduduwa. They now call for regionalism. They want to be their own law
and their own grace. Boro is holding sway. His is arming Boko Haram as he armed
the militants of Niger Delta and the OPC and the MASSOB. No one should wonder
how the arms get into the country. They come in spirit.
Boro may be no one’s hero. He did
not walk his talk. But he is us, groveling in self-deceit today. We abide the
lies. That is why he is not lying in state. He is flying in our face and
instructing us. He is like the ghost in Shakespeare’s Hamlet, who
says, “I am thy father’s spirit, Doomed for a certain term to walk the night,
And for the day confined to fast in fires, Till the foul crimes done in my days
of nature, Are burnt and purged away.
But that I am forbid, To tell the secrets
of my prison house, I could a tale unfold whose lightest word, Would harrow up
thy soul, freeze thy young blood…”
Boro’s prison house is us, and we
must shed ourselves of the hypocrisy before we can fly out of the cage. Then he
can truly be buried and forgotten.
- In Touch, The Nation newspaper, 09/06/2014
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