Art: Sunkanmi Akinboye & Colors: Harriet Ekwueme/Okiojo's Chronicles)
Comic books and graphic novels may play a key role in Nigeria, a country torn by sectarian violence and a commodity-reliant economy damaged by the dropping price of oil. Recent changes in the national curriculum
mean many schools no longer offer history class. And while Nigerian
authors churn out memoirs and novels that line bookshelves in the
country and around the world, Nigeria boasts only a handful of
historians who write for the average reader.
Oriteme
Banigo, the creator of "Okiojo's Chronicles," says he fears for the
future of the country if its young people don't learn about Nigeria's
past.
"If
you just look at the past, if you look at when we started democracy, we
seem to be making the same mistakes over and over again," says Banigo.
"In our stories we emphasize ... why this has happened, why we should
remember it, and how we could stop ourselves from going through the same
issues moving forward."
Of the three comics released so far, two have delved into the origins of the Yoruba and Hausa peoples, both major ethnic groups.
A
third depicted the subjugation of the Benin Empire in present-day
southern Nigeria by British colonists, which is still controversial
because the colonizers took hundreds of bronze plaque artworks back to
Europe, where many remain to this day.
Tunji
Anjorin, editor-in-chief of the series, says the goal is to chronicle
the histories of every single ethnic group in Nigeria.
"A
10-year-old who grows up reading 'Okiojo's Chronicles' for 10 years
would have read 40 different ethnic groups comics and he would have a
better understanding of the people who are left and right to him and
[of] Nigeria as a whole," says Anjorin.
The
country today is facing major upheavals in its political and economic
landscape, but many of these challenges are familiar to Nigerians. The
president, Muhammadu Buhari, is a retired general who older Nigerians
remember for his brief rule as a military dictator in the 1980s.
The
economic health of Nigeria, Africa's top producer of crude, has long
been tied to the price of oil. With prices in a slump, Buhari's new
government is facing a drying-up of government revenues along with
pressure to devalue the currency, all challenges faced by prior
administrations.
Demonstrators
have taken to the streets in the country's southeast with calls for the
return of Biafra, a separatist republic that has not existed since it
was defeated and reabsorbed back into Nigeria at the end of the
country's civil war in 1970.
To
historian Max Siollun, events like the Biafra protests are evidence of
why Nigeria should place more value on the study of its past.
"There
tends to be a lack of sophistication and political debate, a lack of
empathy for the other side in Nigeria, born out of not knowing the
history, not knowing the historical grievances that drive the other
side," says Siollun.
But Nigeria's officialdom gives history short shrift.
While
researching the two books he has authored on Nigeria's oil trade and
military leaders, Siollun says many former government officials and
political elites were reluctant to talk, perhaps out of fear of
offending the powerful.
He often relied on newspaper archives and government files that were in the archives of foreign countries.
Nigerian
students gain little knowledge of history from school, says Bayo
Olupohunda, a secondary school teacher and newspaper columnist. Just two
years ago, a new curriculum came into effect that merged history
education with civics classes.
"They just teach it in passing. It's not something that is taught holistically, as a subject," Olupohunda says.
At
his school, Olupohunda says students forsake liberal arts for subjects
that are seen to lead to a lucrative career. "We live in a seriously
capitalist system where people tend to have preference for financial
course, commercial courses."
With
history education in classrooms scarce and few popular history books on
the shelves of bookstores, Siollun says most young people learn about
the country's past from their parents or family – which he says can lead
to a skewed perspective on events that remain controversial in Nigeria
today.
The creators of "Okiojo's Chronicles" aren't alone in seeing comics as a way to spur Nigerians' interest in their own history.
Writer and illustrator Abraham Oshoko has released two installments of his five-part "June 12" graphic novel series, which dramatizes the events surrounding a cancelled election and military coup of the 1990s.
"All
over the world the reading culture has died down," Oshoko says. "Using
illustrations to tell stories becomes more appealing."
But
writing about the annulled election, which was held on the date in 1993
that serves at the series' title, hasn't been easy. The election
remains such a controversial topic that a shipment of the most recent
installment of Oshoko's series was briefly seized by Nigeria's secret
police when it was published in 2013.
Despite
the seizure, and problems getting bookstores to pay for copies they
sold, Oshoko says he's committed to finishing the series.
"I
believe that when Nigerians understand [their] own history, we're going
to begin to regain that nationalistic spirit that we no longer have
now," says Oshoko.
"Okiojo's Chronicles" has set a comparatively brisk pace for itself.
Anjorin says their goal is to produce one comic book each quarter for each of Nigeria's ethnic groups, estimated to be more than 250. It should only take about 62 years to chronicle them all.
Source: www.usnews.com
10 comments:
Seen
D goal is learning
...merited happiness
Nice
Seen
Dats way better. Nice concept! Linda take note!
That's very creative and innovative.. Kids will learn more about the country this way
Way to go
Seen
Okk
Noted
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