Wednesday, November 28, 2012

I WALK AGAIN; A Survivor's Story

I Walk Again
23rd August. A day before this date, I posted about my dissatisfaction with the Power Company and the discomfort I feel whenever I haven’t written anything in a day. It’s funny how you hardly get power, yet you keep paying the light bills to prevent the power company from cutting you off. My light bills were due for payment; I left home that afternoon to pay the bills. After the payment I had little cash left, so I went to the bank to withdraw some money. I'd have used an ATM if I had my ATM card with me.

But fate had something in stock for me.

I still remember that day clearly. I flagged down an okada (motorbike used as a transport mean) when I left the bank, gave the rider my home address.

The crash happened one kilometer away from the bank.

We were riding past a parked car when the driver suddenly opened his door, and we crashed against the car. I saw myself tossed into the air like a ball. I got up immediately after I landed on the ground. Maybe it was the adrenaline in me at that moment. Maybe I didn’t want a vehicle from behind to run over me. Or maybe I didn’t want to become a victim of road accident. But whatever it was, I didn’t spend more than a second lying on that scorched, cracked narrow road.

I stood up immediately, but realized something was wrong when I wanted to walk to one side of the road.

Then I saw it; my leg, in an awkward twisted shape. Not knowing what to do or how to react, fear flooded my mind. The first thought that came to me then was that I was pretty screwed up. Then the devils came: ‘you’ll never walk properly again! Your leg is going to be cut off! Your life’s now a mess!’ At that moment, I thought about my life, my dreams, my family, and my friends. I realized I hadn’t achieved much. I was sad.

By then a little crowd was already gathering around the scene. I wiped blood, sand and sweat off my face while I leaned on the car that had caused the accident. Just then I realized the people didn’t think it was a serious stuff – maybe because I wasn’t screaming or maybe my face wasn’t twisted in pains – when a man told me to walk to one side of the road.

Ukwu m a gbajigo,’ I said to him in Igbo, my native language. It meant: 'My leg is broken.'

That sentence, like a magic spell began arguments between the driver of the car, the bike man, and the people gathered. They were arguing about who was or who wasn’t at fault. Only then did I learn that the driver of the car hadn’t checked well before he opened his door.

I didn’t care about their arguments. I was feeling the pain now and all I wanted at that moment was for the pain to go away. If it were possible, let me wake from the nightmare. I have witnessed many road accidents and I couldn’t believe that I was its victim today. After much argument, two men carried me into the car and drove me to Nnamdi Azikiwe University Teaching Hospital (NAUTH), just two hundred meters away from the accident scene. 

What baffles me until this day was a statement the driver made before I was taken to the hospital. When asked by the people around to carry me in the car to the hospital, he complained about my blood staining the interior of his car.

Somehow I felt worthless then. Here was I, in pains, bleeding, and someone’s priority at that moment was the car he drives. It reminded me I was still in Earth, and not in some utopia where everything was fine.

In the hospital, I was wheeled to the emergency ward. A doctor and two nurses attended to me immediately. They gave me some anesthetic – which really didn’t work – then proceeded to stitch the wound. Within minutes they wrapped a cast over my leg, then  wiped and put a plaster over the wound and bruises on my face. A friend of mine came over to the hospital to stay with me and in the evening, I went for an X-ray.

Going for X-ray. My friend took the picture.

That night was hell; I couldn’t sleep. I’m not the type who would feel comfortable around many people. And the ward was a big one with lots of sick people and fresh accident victims in it.

I would have given anything for sleep at that moment, but the pain in my leg overshadowed everything else, which made me beg for more anesthetic, or anything at all that could stop the pains. My friend was a good help that night and even the days beyond.

Night passed. But I was awake throughout.

Second day in the hospital, family and relatives started pouring in to commiserate with me. Some brought fruits and other goodies I didn’t care about at that moment. In fact, I began to wonder how they wanted me to consume those stuffs.

In this pain?

The next day, we left the teaching hospital for a traditional Orthopedic: Chukwujekwu Traditional Orthopedic Clinic aka Divine Yard, where I would spend close to two months. There, my bone was set back to its normal position; a painful experience that made me wonder what in this would could be more painful than a fracture. The doctor said, ‘a woman in labor.’

My X-ray; Broken bones.

Somehow I doubted.

Some of my friends and relatives came to visit me there, and it got to a point when I couldn’t just help but feel sorry for myself. Sometimes I tried to imagine myself from their eye-view. Adhesive plaster on my face, bandages and sticks tied against my right leg, I must have looked pathetic. But Despite I committed myself into God’s care as I started the slow journey of healing. There were times when the bad mood comes and I just get angry at everything and sometimes even question God why this would happen to me. I also learnt that a fracture takes time to heal, especially as affected by age or individual body system.

I met new friends and patients in my new ward. One of the patients was a remarkable young man, Mr. Charles Nwuju, a man whose experience I used to console myself whenever the bad mood or self-pity came.

Charles was riding a tricycle, three passengers seated at the back. Among his passengers was Augustina, his fiancĂ©e. They were on the highway when suddenly a pick-up truck overtaking a trailer collided head-on with them. Two persons died on the spot. The driver of the truck, waist fractured, died few days later. Charles, unconscious, was taken to the hospital. Augustina, flung into the nearby bush, wasn’t discovered until the next day.

As Charles would later say, their survival was a sign from God that they were meant to be together.

Charles spent five days in coma, oxygen, blood, and drip attached to him. He had four fractures; one in the right hand, his two femurs (thigh bones) and left fibula (lower leg bone). When he was still in that hospital, his brother got wind of an amputation to be carried out on his left leg. Knowing that Charles won’t be happy ever if he wakes and finds his leg amputated, he applied for a discharge and then brought Charles to Chukwujekwu Traditional Orthopedic Clinic. Today, Charles uses crutches and he’s improving faster than anybody thought he would.

I heard many accident stories during my stay in the clinic. I also learnt that the spot where I had the accident was a well-known accident spot in my hometown. Two months before my accident, a man and his pregnant wife had a crash there. A caterpillar working on the road ran over the woman. She was dead before they could rush her to the hospital. So were the twins in her womb.

I felt very bad when I heard the story, and when one day the husband of the woman, who was also treated at Chukwujekwu’s came to my ward to know how we’re faring, I didn’t feel bad about my condition anymore. I sympathized with him instead.

I had many outpatients who sympathized with and told me not to worry. Everybody came with his or her accident story. And they always ended up saying, ‘If I’m well, you’ll become well too.’

And well I was.

October 9th, after six weeks and five days of lying and sitting on one spot, the doctor gave me some crutches, and I began to walk again. I call that day Miracle Tuesday.

The doctor discharged me five days later. Now I go for weekly check-ups.

During my stay in the clinic, my normal life was disrupted. Apart from writing in my diary, I never wrote anything else. I could hardly read books because I couldn’t concentrate, especially due to pains. Music was a good help. Prayers too. I’ve learnt many things since then.

Three weeks before I posted this, I dropped one of my crutches. Soon I’d drop the second one, then begin to use a walking stick. With time, I’ll walk normal like before.

Thanks for reading this. Big thanks to God, my family, friends, and everybody who supported me through this experience. Love you all.

May we never stop walking…

Saturday, November 24, 2012

There Was a Country - A Review of Chinua Achebe's War Memoir


  • There Was a Country: A Personal History of Biafra by Chinua Achebe
    Allen Lane, 333 pp, £20.00, September, ISBN 978 1 84614 576 6

Writing my final year thesis on The Nigerian Civil War Literature, focusing on Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s Half of a Yellow Sun and Isidore Okpewho’s The Last Duty exposed me to some elements of the Biafran war I did not know. My father and my grandmother always told me stories about the conflict, which saw over 2,000,000 people dead. However, I was not fortunate to hear my grandfather’s side of the story – he was long dead before I was born.

Now Achebe is back with an extremely important document. I was captivated by the subtitle of the book; a personal history of Biafra. Fortunately, a good friend of mine sent me a copy and I read the book while I was convalescing after an accident.

Achebe starts the book with an introduction of a time before his time, because according to an Igbo proverb, “a man who does not know where the rain began to beat him cannot say where he dried his body.” He talks briefly about the discovery of Africa by Europe four to five hundred years ago, then the transatlantic slave trade, to the Berlin Conference of 1885, which began colonialism in Africa.

Achebe begins the story with his coming of age “in an earlier and, in some respects, a more innocent time.” He says; “I do this both to bring readers unfamiliar with this landscape into it at a human level and be open about some of the sources of my own perspective.”

The book is divided into four parts. Part One talks about Achebe’s birth and coming into a world at “cultural crossroads”, where the clash between African and Western civilization had generated deep struggles between languages, cultures and religion. He talks about his orphaned father, a clergyman, and his mother, whom he says is “the strong, silent type.” Brought up in an environment where Christianity was trying to get its foothold and African religion was striving to survive despite the new religion, Achebe becomes a little skeptic about his parents embracing customs and beliefs of strangers from thousands of miles away, the same strangers who “delivered us to the transatlantic slave trade and unleashed darkness in our world.” These struggles between the old and the new would come to be the themes inherent in some of his early novels. He goes on to talk about his school days and the publication of his first book, Things Fall Apart, a novel which has sold 12,000,000 copies worldwide and translated into more than 50 different languages. The call for independence began, and years later a new republic Nigeria is formed, run by Nigerians themselves. That independence was literally the beginning of troubles even though there was optimism in the air then in the new country. Within six years of independence, corruption and misrule was at its peak, as public servants and government officials helped themselves with money for the nation. In 1966, there was a coup, one that many labeled an Igbo coup. The coup resulted to an organized massacre of the Igbos, mainly in the Northern part of the country. The Nigerian Government did nothing about the massacres. Even in Lagos, the country’s capital, things were not different, as many Igbos were returning to the East. Achebe has this to say; “As many of us packed our belongings to return east, some of the people we had lived with for years, some for decades, jeered and said, ‘Let them go…’ I realized suddenly that I had not been living in my home; I had been living in a strange place.” July 29, 1966 came a counter coup, led by General Murtala Mohammed which ousted Major-General Aguiyi Ironsi from power and saw him killed. This coup had other Igbo officers and civilians killed in large numbers. By this time, there were calls for independence by the Igbos, and so the republic of Biafra was established, precipitating the start of the Nigeria/Biafra War.

Part Two and Three deals with the war. Achebe talks about the allies of both nations, the neutrals, the United Kingdom and the role they all played. He also talks about his travelling as an ambassador on behalf of Biafra, his nation. One particular account I found very interesting was his meeting and discussion with Senegalese President, Leopold Sedar Senghor, who was a poet too. His narrative about his family moving from place to place due to air raids and the invading Nigerian forces, though distant, is very touching. There were many instances of near-misses. He talks about starting the Citadel Press with his close friend, Christopher Okigbo. Later Okigbo disappears and joins the army. While driving from Enugu to Ogidi one afternoon, Achebe hears the death of his friend death on the radio. By this time, Biafra was suffering a setback because of the economic starvation and blockade. Here, the Nigerian government uses starvation as a weapon of war, going against the Geneva Convention of 1949. The blockade resulted in the death of over 2,000,000 people, especially women and children.

In the last part of the book, Achebe laments Nigeria’s present situation: corruption, indiscipline, greediness of leaders, debauchery, social injustice, etc. He also points that “Nigeria’s Federal Government’s has always tolerated terrorism. For over half a century the federal government has turned a blind eye to waves of ferocious and savage massacres of its citizens – mainly Christian Southerners; mostly Igbos or indigenes of the Middle Belt; and others – with impunity.’ In this last part, Achebe does not just lament his country’s predicaments but also provides a solution. In his own words;

First we have to nurture and strengthen our democratic institutions – and strive for the freest and fairest elections possible… Under the rubric of democracy, a free press can strive and a strong justice system can flourish… A new patriotic consciousness has to be developed, not one based simply on the well-worn notion of unity of Nigeria or faith in Nigeria often touted by our corrupt leaders, but one based on an awareness of the responsibility of the leaders to the led – on the sacredness of their anointment to lead – and disseminated by civil society, schools, and intellectuals.
Achebe also talks also about the artist as the eye through which the society sees. This reminds me of Wole Soyinka’s book, The Man Died, and the famous quotation; “the man dies in him who keeps silent in the face of tyranny.’ Growing up, I read many books by first and second generation Nigerian writers. Most of these books laments and talks about the Nigerian state, in good ways that do not bore in reader. Corruption, poverty, and social injustice are mostly the themes inherent in these books. In a country where businesspersons, politicians, generals, and other officials hoard the country's wealth and power at the expense of the working class, a country where free press doesn’t thrive, these writers can only protest by their books.  As Achebe already states, he is a protest writer. Festus Iyayi is another good protest writer. His three novels, Violence, The Contract, and Heroes, as well as his collection of short stories, Awaiting Court Martial, expose the abject penury and disenfranchisement that constitutes the social reality of most Nigerians. Achebe goes on to say that “...If the society is ill the writer has a responsibility to point it out. If the society is healthier, the writer’s job is different.”

Overall, the book was an interesting read. I enjoyed it, but I longed for more of Achebe experiences during the war. Most of the stories in Part 2 and 3 seemed like stories I have heard repeatedly. I wanted to hear more of Achebe’s story, and not the war story. Although a satisfactory narrative, I was hungry for more, which made me read the book in a slow pace as if I was eating a hot meal. Somehow, I did not want the book to finish.

The chapters are brilliantly written in Achebe’s conversational prose style, and interspersed with poems, which, although I have read before, provided much of the emotional connection that held me to the book. These poems, in my opinion were put in the right place or the right time, and if the narrative did not hook me well, the poems did.

I recommend this book to all, and anyone interested in the history of not only Biafra, but also Nigeria and Africa as a whole. Everybody who has read Professor Achebe’s other books ought to read this one too.

Kaykay Obi


Hi, guys. Been a long time. I was involved in an crash, fractured my right leg. I'm recuperating at the moment, but I believe I'm back to normal blogging. I miss blogging here; miss you guys most. Posting my accident story next.