Zaria, Kaduna State, Nigeria
In a grand ceremony, the Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, celebrated its maiden Black History Month 2017, organized by the university’s Department of English and Literary Studies, in collaboration with United States Embassy in Nigeria. Themed around "Crisis in Black Education," the event that lasted two days - between 20th and 21st February 2017 - began with movie show at the Centre of Excellence in Communication, after which followed a public lecture held at the University’s Assembly Hall, bringing together experts from across departments and the United States to discuss Black experience.
H.O.D English Department, Professor T. Y. Surakat, kicked
off the event with greetings in various native languages, in honor of International
Mother Tongue Day. In a sense of reunion, keynoter at the event, Dr. Barry Lee, a Morehouse College Professor, Atlanta, Georgia - the
alma mater of Martin Luther King Jr. - spoke in Ebonics to greet the audience - a distinct
dialect of the African Americans in the United States. He expressed happiness at his first visit to Nigeria.
Dr. Lee talked about the role of Historically
Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) to the Civil Rights Movement history
and the United States.
"As a Black, you realize that your life can be taken away from you unjustly. You don’t need to commit a crime. The importance of Historically Black Colleges and Universities is to train and inspire social justice fighters," he said. "In the past we were ashamed of our race. The importance of Black History Month celebration is that Black people are proud of their race."
"As a Black, you realize that your life can be taken away from you unjustly. You don’t need to commit a crime. The importance of Historically Black Colleges and Universities is to train and inspire social justice fighters," he said. "In the past we were ashamed of our race. The importance of Black History Month celebration is that Black people are proud of their race."
Professor Tanimu Abubakar, a senior staffer at the Department, and a discussant, said that the event came coincidentally when the world is full of chaos.
"To understand what constitutes blackness," he said, "we
must go back to the historicities that shaped our today’s discourses." Tanimu expressed
happiness, urged the university management and the US Embassy to work together
and make the occasion an annual event. On Black education, Tanimu said the system aims at satisfying market needs, not the
development of community.
Professor Raymond Bako, of the school of Educational
Psychology, and immediate past President Fulbright Alumni Nigeria, spoke about
opportunities open to students and staff available at the Embassy. The US Education
Exchange Program offers educational services to international students. "Feel
free and approach any of us, we will mentor you on how to benefit from these
opportunities."
Interlude of poetry recitations, work song performances
and speeches re-enactment interspersed the session, making the atmosphere
swinging, from heavy somberness at the performance of the work songs to
spirited cheerfulness at the re-enactment of two key Black activists’ sermons: Martin
Luther King Jr.’s "I have a Dream" and Malcolm X’ "The Ballot and the Bullet."
In what could be judged near perfect oration, David Ejeh’s
reenactment of Dr. King’s
historic "I have a Dream" speech broke the hall into standing
ovation.
As part of the remembrance for the Black History, a film
session was held, a night earlier, featuring Roots, Haley’s most famous movie that recounts the Black experience
of the Middle Passage and slavery. At the Centre, while the movie lasted, were joyful
shouts as well as emotional tears.
"It is a summary of their past," said Karen Awan, a
senior in Literature who went to watch the movie, "a kind of what happened in
history. The problem of what is happening today did not start today. It started
in history when the Whites came to America as masters, Blacks as slaves."
The event ignited interest among students. “It makes us
more conscious of Black History,” she said.
To understand Black condition, Ahmad Dahiru compares
his
experience as a small boy. "I simply
can’t imagine, I can’t understand," said Dahiru, a senior at the Department majoring in Language. "They are just treated like animals," he said
after a scene at slave market. The scene, he said, reminded him of his
experience as a young boy when his father took him to the market to buy ram
during Sallah period.
At the end of the morning session, the event moved to the
university’s Centre of Excellence in Communication where a discussion took
place between the university officials and students’ representatives. Students’
activism, said Dr. Lee, who was billed to talk to students about campus
activism, is an important part of the Civil Right Movements and social justice
in the United States.
The gathering at the Centre was a refreshing experience, hosting
several student bodies, religious representatives and campus activists from
diverse background. Ahmadu Bello University is adjudged to be the best
university to host such event, the breadth of its federal character admission
has touched every state, every local government, than any other university
in the county.
"Here is the right place," said the Deputy Vice Chancellor in charge of Administration, Professor Kabiru Bala, standing in for the Vice Chancellor. "The United States is the most
powerful country, Nigeria is the most populous black nation, our university is
the most diverse, most populous. The university is
the largest and most cosmopolitan University in Africa south of the Sahara," he
said, "it wouldn’t have been better anywhere than here. We are ready to work
with the Embassy to make the occasion an annual event."
As part of the celebration, the event tonight moved to
the university’s Drama Village, where packages of traditional performances,
dance, music and songs were dramatized by
Theatre and Performing Arts students.
Dr. Edward Abah, Chairman Local Organizing Committee (LOC), at the
end of the performances which officially marked the closing of the event, thanked
his colleagues, the school management, students and everyone who worked to make
the event a success.
Good reporting of the celebration of the 2017 Black History Month in ABU, Zaria.
ReplyDeleteI'm proudly proud of my Department. As I read the names of my Dons from here, I fell on top of the world: H.O.D. English Department, Professor T. Y. Surakat; Professor Tanimu Abubakar; Professor Raymond Bako; Chairman Local Organising Committee (LOC), Dr. Edward Abah. May God continue to strengthen you for the good jobs you are doing
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