President Goodluck Jonathan on Thursday said the Federal Government and
the Government of Ghana would collaborate to rebuild the St. Philip’s
Central School, Ogidi, Anambra State, where the late Prof. Chinua
Achebe had his primary education.
Jonathan made the promise at the church service held for Achebe at Ogidi.
However,
the promise fell short of expectations from Achebe’s admirers that
expected Jonathan to rename a public institution or a monument after
the renowned author.
The literary icon died in Boston, United States last March 21 at the age of 82.
Jonathan,
who recalled that Achebe’s first book, Things Fall Apart, written
before the country’s Independence in 1960 was prophetic, said his last
book, There was a Country was full of lamentations.
The
President promised to lead a political and social revolution that would
prompt Achebe’s grandson and namesake to write another book that would
be entitled, There is a Country.
Describing Achebe as a
philosopher, the President said, “He used literature, a subject he
loved and knew very well, to philosophise. All of us must work hard to
change this country so that Achebe’s grandson will write, There is a
Country.
Jonathan also did not make pronouncements as to special
projects in Achebe’s geo-political constituency as requested by the
Bishop on the Niger, Rt. Rev. Owen Nwokolo.
The church service had President John Mahama of Ghana, six governors, ministers and National Assembly members in attendance.
Various
speakers, including Mahama and the former Secretary General of the
Commonwealth, Chief Emeka Anyaoku, on the occasion eulogised Achebe and
his ingenuity as a literary legend and social crusader.
Mahama
said though Achebe was a writer, “he was much more than that”, noting
that the professor of Literature was active in social crusade,
education and other areas of life.
“It is my greatest regret
that I met Achebe at the sunset of his life,” Mahama said, and promised
to honour Achebe by delivering a lecture at Achebe’s last institution,
Brown’s University, Rhode Island in the US.
The Ghanaian president added that his admiration for Achebe was without comparison.
The
Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives, Mr. Emeka Ihedioha said
Achebe ranked only second to Nelson Mandela in Africa, while the
Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, Mrs. Viola Onwuliri, said the
author of Things Fall Apart boosted the image of Nigeria abroad despite
not being a professional diplomat.
The Anglican Archbishop of
Aba, Most Rev. Ikechi Nwosu, who stood in for the Primate of the Church
of Nigeria, said Achebe was a parable for Nigeria.
He said
Achebe’s decision to turn down national honours twice was not an
indication that he hated Nigeria, but rather a pointer to the fact that
he wanted things done properly in his country.
Nwokolo thanked
Jonathan for awarding contracts for the construction of the Second
Niger Bridge but called for the construction of a third bridge that
would link Enugu and the northern parts of the country
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