There’s
a proverb my mother used to quieten us when starvation stretched,
stabbed, twisted and knotted our intestines into misery. “The
monkey is no stranger to heights,” she would say to inspire us
in our prickly reality.
Our
unfostering environment didn’t allow us the luxury of being
strangers to hunger, which, after singeing us witless, forced us to
voraciously wolf native clay or dust scraped off mud walls.
Countless disfavored kids became anemic and died from malnutrition.
We
did not know hunger merely as a word in the dictionary. In our
maligned universe, we were so chiseled by it that we wondered which
was closer to us — our taut skin or the churning and unyielding
pangs of hunger. Our misery-scoured neighborhood routinely sounded
with the howling of hungry children. Their anguished cries, groans
and moans reverberated desolately like tolling bells. The memories
cruelly stalk my peace even now. This ingrained nervousness is the
psychological residue of a grinding insecurity.
Being
the son of an automobile mechanic father and a manual laborer mother
was tough luck. Mechanics were always grimy and greasy because
without jacks, they crawled under the vehicles to fix them. Thus
father always returned home dirt-smirched and grease-soiled.
Since
the mad roamed our streets eating from and sleeping on trash dumps,
they, like mechanics, were covered in dirt. In appearance these two
looked so alike that mischievous folks said they had difficulty
telling them apart. Father ignored the vexing social taunts and
focused on his trade.
His
meager earnings fed and supported us through school. From his job, we
got cosmetics of sorts. Sometimes he brought home engine oil and
brake fluid and mixed these for use as body cream. The lubricant
protected us from the mercilessly harsh harmattan (a seasonal hot, dry wind from the Sahara.)
I
have no clue of the mixture’s properties, but it was effective
against skin infections such as eczema and rashes. I can’t say if
the improvised cream had any harmful effects on our bodies, though it
made us stink to the point that we were targets for derision and
sneers by those who pretended be less indigent.
Life
in our disturbed environment was angst-ridden and humiliating, so
minor irritations quickly incited major and minor skirmishes between
us and those around us. But we had more pressing issues to worry
about than how we smelled. We couldn’t afford to care that
others masked their hardship and transferred their frustration to us
by scoffing at us over who we were and the way we lived our lives.
Like
us, they were in the seething sewer. If denial was their way of
dealing with inverted and gritty humanity, we simply refused to be
aggravated. Guilt, shame and fury over their threadbare existence
maddened them and naturally turned them on easy targets. It is much
easier to take aggression out on powerless people around you than it
is to rail against the state.
The
dilapidated roof through which we effortlessly saw the stars and
cloud formations at night was a trial to us. When it rained, the
chilly elements passed through as easily as water through fishing
net. In reality there was not much difference between a net and the
roof of our hovel.
Driving
rainstorms and dire thunder and lightning at night forced us to
constantly scamper under our bamboo beds and sleeping mats in a
futile attempt to twist some respite out of our cramped and dank
hovel. To keep our floors from becoming distressingly waterlogged we
deployed pans, pots, basins and buckets to catch the spattering
raindrops before they spread and soaked the floors. Hitting these
containers, the raindrops rattled with a din that made sleep
impossible.
Those
drops that splashed on the floor coalesced into meandering puddles
that choreographed how gut-wrenching squalor deflates our spirits.
Thinking retroactively, I sense the meaning of George Muller’s
remark that, “The only way to learn strong faith is to endure
great trials.” Our political culture is one such trial, and to
stay sane, one requires faith.
It
was one of the absurd contradictions and bitter ironies of life that
we had to endure such deplorable neglect. The searing affront to our
dignity was doubly painful because our misery was unwarranted. This
was at a time when a ruthless dictator sitting tight astride our
backs saw nothing wrong in declaring to the world that money was not
the problem, but how to spend it!
Indeed,
money never should have been an issue in the country. Every pore of
our polluted land and oil-soaked waterways seemingly gushes with
petroleum resources. So in fairness to our supreme leader, money was
not our problem, but how to waste it.
So
our apathetic leaders whitewashed our implacable poverty but went
ballistic squandering on irrelevancies. Money was wasted with the
same monstrous abandon as other resources and opportunities. To prove
we were not poverty-stricken, they contentedly mounted boisterous,
garish jamborees.
We
had just emerged from a reeling war with more than two million lives lost.
Roads, schools, hospitals, power grids, homes, and prisons had been
gutted, leaving behind gory devastation everywhere. We hadn’t
even cleared the debris or managed to stitch together our shattered
lives when suddenly our gleeful leaders decided to replicate the way
that imperial and colonial forces had denigrated our culture and
degraded our history centuries back.
To
put a party face on the despair of our lives, government swiftly
hosted the World Festival of Black Arts and Culture. Scantily-dressed
and bare-breasted women paraded through the streets, reigniting the
lechery and vanity of our lost glory. Contrary voices were viciously
choked out.
To
keep the hungry quiet, the state cynically muzzled them with gutsy
slogans and delirious spectacle of a lost cultural past. It rolled
out talking drums and put indolent ancient praise singers and
horn-blowers back to work. The government demanded the return of
artifacts looted by colonial powers although it could neither curate
nor preserve them.
Our
leaders cared nothing that millions of citizens were internally
displaced and their living conditions simply despicable. The
government had something to prove and set about it with hilarious
verve and reckless lavishness. Even though we have clear, sparkling
tropical springs and fountains, we imported water for the delicate
taste of those invited to see our prodigal shame. Meanwhile, dismal
sanitation and dysentery made bitter mockery of lives discreetly kept
out of view of the invitees.
Without
plans for their maintenance after the show, we massively ordered
gleaming luxury cars to drive our guests around in grandiose style on
our narrow and congested roads. We had to make an impression, and
nothing was spared in organizing the spectacle of extravagance.
Speedily
we rigged up a national theater that went to seed soon after we had
hosted the event. Million-dollar mansions to accommodate the
numberless invitees were constructed, although millions like my
family slept in infested, roofless rat-traps.
After
the circus, the state found it couldn’t outstrip its huge and
biting hollowness. Going broke, it begged for foreign loans and aid,
which it promptly sank into white elephant sinkholes. Brutal is the
pathos when a corrupt government glosses over disfiguring reality,
stokes its people’s hunger for change, but continually defers
their hope for authentic leadership.
Imo Ben Eshiet was born in Port Harcourt, Nigeria. Raised in his village, Uruk Enung, and at
several cities in his country including Nsukka, Enugu, Umuahia, Eket and Calabar, Eshiet is a
detribalized Nigerian. Although he was extensively exposed to Western education right from
childhood in his country where he obtained a PhD in English and Literary Studies from the
University of Calabar, he is well nurtured in African history, politics, culture and traditions.
Imo is currently a teacher in the high priests group in the Summit Ward of the Greensboro North
Carolina Stake.