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Monday, July 14, 2014

MAKING MUSIC WITH OBEY AT AGO IWOYE - TONY OKOROJI




This past Monday was a very eventful day. About 10 am, I set out with my colleagues, Chinedu and Mary on what turned out to be an expedition. I thought I knew Ogun State reasonably well. I was wrong. Chinedu was certain that Olabisi Onabanjo University was right on the very busy Shagamu-Benin highway. He was wrong.

It became clear that we did not know where we were going to. Is our country a nation that is running without first walking? In an age when almost every new car that arrives Nigeria is fitted with the global positioning satellite or GPS, there are practically no road signs directing you to wherever you are going to. I do not even know what my zip code is. Do you know yours? So, we move around like the blind and things that are so simple elsewhere are so difficult here.

Chinedu, Mary and I had no choice but to ask everyone we saw how to get to Olabisi Onababjo University. Nigerians are very nice people. They do not ever want to let you down so no one will tell you that he does not know what you are talking about. Every one we asked knew the way to the university, smiled and pointed in a direction. Half of them were wrong.

Ago Iwoye is not on the Shagamu–Benin Expressway. It is several miles into the hinterland.  By the time we came back to Lagos about five hours later, the black coloured car that took us to Ago Iwoye had a new colour between red and brown. Whoever was given the job to tar the dual carriage way between Shagamu and the university town in the heart of Ogun State has found reason to keep the project permanently as ‘work in progress’.

As we drove on and on, Chinedu kept asking whether we were on the right road. Apart from one or two other cars, ours was the only thing moving. The University is an island in the middle of nowhere. If you were looking for a quiet place to do research or scholarly work, you may never find a better place than Ago Iwoye. While bits and pieces of the road to the university town consist of red soil, the roads within the university itself are very well laid out with trees lining the roads.

On Monday, July 7, 2014, the OGD Hall at Olabisi Onababjo University, Ago Iwoye was rocking. People had come from far and near to share a historic moment with a music maestro who has in many ways created a unique personality and left his imprint in the sands of time. The university had decided to tap into the extraordinary creative genius of Ebenezer Obey and to use the experience of the miliki superstar to enrich its students in its Department of English & Performing Arts. At the investiture of Dr Ebenezer Obey as Visiting Artiste/Emeritus Professor, the custodians of Yoruba culture came out in their numbers to say yes to a man who for many years has symbolized the very best of Nigerian creative enterprise. Among the many frontline Obas present were the Alake of Egbaland, Oba Adedotun Gbadebo; the Osile of Oke Ona, Egba, Oba Dapo Tejuosho and Oba Abdulrazaq Adenuga, the Ebumawe of Ago Iwoye.

I was very happy to witness the very impressive event. Chief Commander Ebenezer Obey was already on his way to becoming an icon while I was growing up in Enugu where I went to high school after the Nigerian civil war.His songs were already trending. ‘Board Members’ was blaring everywhere and the sonorous voice behind the miliki sound had easily begun to endear itself to one and all across the nation regardless of tribe or creed. I never thought I would have the good fortune of ever meeting the Chief Commander.

Fate sometimes gives you big surprises. In the last 27 years,‘Commander’ has been my elder brother, an incredible source of inspiration and an adviser like no other. I cannot think of anything of substance I have done within the period without his input. His god given intelligence and limitless wisdom have been mine to tap into whenever I wanted. His humble yet dignified carriage is a lesson I have kept trying to learn. The door to his home has been wide open to me for many years. I was away from the country when I learnt of the investiture.There is no way I would have allowed such an event to take place in my absence so I had to find my way back home.

On Monday, there was sweet music all the way at OGD Hall of Olabisi Onabanjo University. The students of the Creative Arts Department o fthe university first took the stage to give an enchanting performance of their interpretation of the miliki sound.Then the master took the stage and you understand how much good music can be a leveller. From the royal fathers to the security men in the hall, everyone was digging it. When the Chief Commander announced a gift to the students of some of the best musical instruments money can buy, there was commotion in the hall.  

As Nigeria grapples with the challenges of developing an educational system that is relevant to the needs of a thirsty developing nation, the leadership of Olabisi Onabanjo University may have lit a fire that others will follow. Many have for long complained that the recent products of our universities come into the labour market full of theories and no skills that make them useful to any employer. It is therefore revolutionary to foster a proper partnership between the academia and the private sector in which persons with practical experience and a record of success can take out time to go and impart practical knowledge on the young people our nation badly needs for its tomorrow.   

I hope that I can contribute something to this new way of thinking. See you next week.  

This article was first published in  Locomotion, Tony Okoroji’s weekly column in Nigeria’s Saturday Independent.


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