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Ram Syndrome (the victims of naked power)

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By Akachi Adimora Ezeigbo

 

from the Ancients

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wise words

he who consumes

the testicles of a ram

owes ibi a debt –

scrotum disease :

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penis pilfering

prohibited:

penalty?

ram albatross

early symptom:

loss of favour

and patronage

the risk is all yours

to your peril

a scourge.

 

The rhythm of

Igba dance

once tasted

disqualifies

a performer from

digging Odogwu dance

 

dance of the basket

separates chaff from grain

one does not face two directions simultaneously

you cannot be

tortoise as well as

turtle:

ask former Russian muscle man

Alexander Litvinenko

bold defection

bought him

one way ticket

to the land of no return

 

fly does not

play near spider’s web:

ask Russian gadfly

Anna Politkovskaya

grasshopper keeps

some distance

when it hears

the raucous music

of okpoko bird:

ask Dele Giwa

ask also race victim

Ahmadou Diallo

 

antelope does not leap

into lion’s den:

ask Ken Saro-Wiwa

lizard does not

visit a hedge

where cat

takes a nap:

ask Bola Ige

Who does not know

that jackal does not

forgive an affront?

ask freedom choirmaster

Moshood Abiola

and his faithful consort to

martyrdom: Kudirat;

as also that colourful

politician, Chuba Okadigbo

 

it has not always been

like this

the end is different

from the beginning

the end justifies the    outcome

the means

justifies the beginning

 

when an ally acts

as acuser

when adviser becomes

critic

murky murder

mounts by the minute

clouds each concern

promotes unaccountable uncontrollable

police state

in the guise of

democracy-

demon-crazy-

spearheading

relentless attacks

on individual liberty

on genuine freedom

 

 

 

 

 

About the Poem

 

Ram syndrome echoes Psalm 15- “Lord, who shall abide in thy tabernacle? Who shall dwell on thy holy hill?” You must have clean hands to. It echoes Psalm  97:10 – “Ye that love the Lord hate evil” …./one does not face two directions simultaneously /

 

Ram Syndrome is very apt for the time we’re in – the pre-election year checkered with carpet crossing, breaking of alliances/allegiances and making new ones and in the new place, you begin to attack your former colleagues! Ezeigbo cries out in this poem that such behaviours, such actions, they come with penalties. You cannot be engaged in eating the secrets of another being and expect your own secrets to go untouched – you enjoy eating the testicles of a ram, don’t worry, it won’t be long before you start grappling with an enlarged scrotum -/fly does not play near spider’s web/ Ezeigbo writes, /ask Anna Politkovskaya/

 

There are many possible things in this world, Ezeigbo points out in this poem  some of the things that are not  – /you cannot  be tortoise as well as turtle/; You cannot be an adviser and a critic – /when an ally acts as accuser/ when adviser becomes critic/ murky murder mounts by the minute/ clouds each concern/promotes unaccountable uncontrollable police state in the guise of democracy – demon-crazy /; /spearheading relentless attacks on individual liberty/on genuine freedom/ this is because /antelope does not leap into lion’s den/

 

The poet tells us that it’s not possible to straddle a fence. If you enjoy eating ram’s testicles, be sure to be afflicted with ‘ibi’ an igbo word for enlarged scrotum,  medically known as, ‘hydrocoelle.’

 

An activist must have clean hands. If you love God, hate evil. He who can ascend God’s holy hill, must have no skeleton in his cupboard.

 

‘He who eats ram’s testicles owes ibi a debt’ is an Igbo adage that Ezeigbo uses  the thread to spin a web, like a skilled spider.

 

She brings assassinated victims from home and abroad to drive home her argument that it’s foolhardy to play double games. People don’t get assassinated for nothing.

 

They were not the only ones plying their trade. Why should they be the only ones killed, assassinated?

 

There must be something there. If you dig deeper, you might find something of interest, a reason, an explanation. Ordinary people don’t get assassinated. Could it be that they danced the ‘igba’  dance and threw caution to the wind and attempted to dance the ‘odogwu’  dance as well?

 

The poem while not denying the evil of bloodshed, the cold bloodedness of taking another’s life, it’s more interested in what can bring an end to the sourge by pointing out that there’s a cause, thus sending out warning to the living not to fall into the same mistakes these assassinated ones fell.

 

To  understand the poem fully, take out time to examine the backgrounds of those mentioned.

 

 

About the Poet

 

It was sometime in early 2015 (I cannot recall the month)  that I attended a  festschrift in honour of Prof. Mrs Theodora Akachi Adimora Ezeigbo in the Akoka campus of the University of Lagos.

(festschrift is a German word which combines two words:fest – celebration and schrift – writing meaning celebration of literary work. Now, its meaning includes a collection of the literary work of an individual writer and a collection of the works of different writers)

I sat in awe of her (Ezeigbo’s) achievements and literary work as her colleagues reeled them off.

 

Ezeigbo taught in the Department of English, University of Lagos from 1981-2015. A three time HOD of the department, she became a professor in 1991.

 

The woman of Letters studied  English and Literary Studies up to Master’s degree in the University of Lagos, but earned her PhD from the University of Ibadan in the same discipline.

 

Ezeigbo is a long and short story teller in prose and verse. She’s a novelist, a poet, dramatist, essayist and even a journalist!

 

A fellow female dramatist making waves now, Dr Bose Afolayan (Once upon an Elephant ) calls Ezeigbo, A new Voice in the Theatre, I call her, A Social Crusader.

 

In her work, Ezeigbo goes beyond criticism to proffering solutions. She’s deeply involved in the emancipation of the woman and helping the woman find her identity, which I am for because marriage can swallow up a woman’s identity. A woman has to work extra hard to find her place, her identity.

 

Ezeigbo has written widely and has won numerous awards. In fact, a table in her office, in Unilag in those days, looked like a market stall for awards and medals – there were so many.

 

Although retired from Unilag, after over 30 years of teaching, the educational world has refused to let her go. They released her from the front door and grabbed her back from the back door, into the Federal University Ndufu-Alike, Ikwo, Ebonyi state. Here, she both tutors students and mentors new lecturers. She’s also involved in Ebonyi State University, Abakiliki.

 

Mrs Ezeigbo is married to Chris Ezeigbo, a professor of Engineering and they are blessed with three children.

 

I didn’t interact much with Mrs Ezeigbo when I was a student in Unilag, but years later when I got close to her, I wrote something concerning her: she’s an angel, humble, gentle and Nice with capital N!

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