Cyprian Odiatu Duaka (COD) Ekwensi (September 26 1921 to November 4 2007)
Between
stints as a teacher, forester, pharmacist, broadcaster and film-maker,
the west African novelist Cyprian Ekwensi published more than 40 books
as well as radio and television scripts. His first novel, "People of the
City" (1954), appearing four years before Chinua Achebe's "Things Fall
Apart", was the second Nigerian novel to be published in Britain to
international acclaim following Amos Tutuola's "Pamwine Drinkard".
"Jagua Nana" (1961) won Ekwensi the 1968 Dag Hammarskjöld prize in
literature.
"People of the City" tells the story of a young crime
reporter who doubles as a bandleader in a large west African city. As
one British critic wrote, the novel said more about west Africa than 50
government reports. However, Ireland banned the novel on the grounds of
indecency. Controversy was to dog Ekwensi's literary career.
Of
Igbo extraction, Ekwensi was born in Minna, in Northern Nigeria. His
father, David Anadumaka, a famed storyteller and elephant hunter,
inspired him towards creative writing. Ekwensi was a brilliant,
gregarious pupil at boarding school - Government college, Ibadan
(1936-41) - and became engrossed in Yoruba culture. His school life and
multi-ethnic upbringing were to be reflected in his work. After stints
at various Nigerian and Ghanaian colleges, he worked as a forestry
officer (1945-47).
In that wild and lonely environment, he began
writing short adventure stories, some of which were published in 1947 as
"Ikolo the Wrestler and Other Ibo Tales". The same year, five of his
works were published in England by Lutterworth Press as part of its
African new writing series. Another collection of light romance stories
came out in 1948 from an Onitsha publisher in Nigeria. In 1949, Ekwensi
began to read his stories on the Nigerian Broadcasting Corporation while
also writing for several Lagos newspapers.
Two years later, he
won a scholarship to study pharmacy at London University. He said that
it was while he was on the ship to England that he began to assemble
"People of the City". Working as a pharmacy assistant at Oldchurch
hospital, Romford, Essex, he wrote plays that were broadcast by the BBC.
He also recorded a voiceover for "Man of Africa" (1953), which featured
at the 1954 Venice film festival. Ekwensi's film scripts included
"Nigeria Greets the Queen", marking her first visit to Nigeria in 1956.
On
his return to Nigeria that year, he worked for the broadcasting
corporation, becoming director of information in 1961. Two children's
novellas, "The Drummer Boy" and "The Passport of Mallam Illia", were
published in 1960 and the novel "Jagua Nana" and the equally successful
collection of vignettes, "Burning Grass", in 1961. From 1961 to 1966,
Ekwensi published at least one major work each year. "Jagua Nana", the
story of a high-class Lagos prostitute, was vehemently attacked by the
Catholic and Anglican churches for its sexually explicit language and
was banned in several schools. An application to film the book was
rejected by the Nigerian parliament - but then came the Dag Hammarskjöld
prize.
When the Nigerian civil war broke out in 1966, Ekwensi
became an adviser to secessionist leader Odumegwu Ojukwu, chairing
Biafra's external publicity bureau. After the war, he resumed his
literary and pharmaceutical career. He helped form the Association of
Nigerian Authors in 1981, and in 2001, was made a member of the Order of
the Federal Republic. Four years later, he was inducted into the
Nigerian Academy of Arts.
"Five decades or more of writing have
brought me world fame but not fortune," he said. "If I were an American
living in America or Europe, I would be floating in a foam bath in my
own private yacht off the coast of Florida." He was working on his
(still unpublished) biography in 2007 when he passed at the age of 86.
He is survived by Chinwe, his wife, and their nine children.
(Adapted from the Guardian (UK) Tuesday February 5 2008)
Friday, 31 October 2014
Cyprian Odiatu Duaka (COD) Ekwensi (September 26 1921 to November 4 2007)
08:33
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