Tuesday, 4 March 2014
WHY?- (my first attempt at short story.)
The afternoon sun was mercilessly extricating saline exudate out of everybody that
day, even the lecturer that had sworn to make life miserable for the students was
already finding it difficult to make do with his threat of a five-hour marathon class.
He was literally swimming in the pool of his own sweats as he struggled to explain
the concept of ‘post- colonial literature’ to the visibly dehydrated students. What
had angered Babs the most was that puritan – as the lecturer is popularly called
amongst students because of his ascetic and strict dispositions towards life, had
decided to hold the class outside the lecture rooms despite the fact that the class
rep had informed him that lecture theatres have been taken up by other lecturers.
Babs was fuming with anger as he tried to rub off the trickle of sweat that had
found its way to the tip of his nose when Azuka mistakenly hit his hand on Babs’s
face.
“I’m sorry”, muttered Azuka who was also visibly uninterested in the ranting of the
man in front of the class.
“No wahala, that one na small thing now” replied Babs whose response coincided
with Puritan’s declaration of defeat as he had decided to bring the class to an end
after two hours of struggle under the intense solar menace.
“Mttteeeeeew oloshi radarada, is he the only lecturer on campus?” muttered
Yetunde.
I wonder oo, im wahala too much jare, must he hold the class today despite the
obvious inconviniencies?interjected Azuka.
Yetunde seems to have noticed the obvious silence of Babs who had not contributed
all this while to the charade going on around him and decided to nudge him back to
planet earth. “A penny for your thought Mr critical thinker, u seem far removed
from the subject of discussion, what’s bugging you?
Nothing serious o, I just dey try understand whether na puritan get the blame for
wetin happen today or something dey wrong with our educational sector as a whole.
Imagine a school with insufficient lecture theatres and you expect the lecturers to
teach the students; then somehow someone will surely be at the receiving end of this
negligence and that eventually will be us! Sincerely, Puritan’s fault in what
happened today is minimal. I only blame him for keeping a rigid disposition
towards work.
Yea, you are right. The fault lies with those whom we’ve entrusted our vote but have
failed us.
**********************
Ebube was simply enjoying the head of his life as the Yoruba popular cliché directly
translates into English. He is in every way an embodiment of what one can call a
spoilt brat. Attending classes does not feature as part of his mission in the
university. As far as he is concerned, you only experience life as an undergraduate
once and such never-to-be-repeated occurrence should not be wasted on attending
classes in an irksome and innovation-sapping atmosphere, thus he spends most of
his time punching the game console connected to his apple MacBook air. He was in
this riveting condition when Babs entered the room looking worn out and
exasperated.
Don’t tell me you were in the room throughout the whole day, ehn?, Babs managed
to ask.
“Before nko, where you expect make I dey if not my haven on campus, Ebube
retorted. Wetin make you frown like say dem collect your bread like dis? Ebube
asked having noticed his puckered brow the moment he stepped into the room.
If you had been in class today, you wouldn’t have been asking me this question;
rather you would have been cursing the damned set of people in power. Could you
imagine Puritan treated us to a two-hour class in the sun today?
Impossible! What happened to all the lecture theatres on campus?
Apparently other lecturers were making use of them and instead of the workaholic
to postpone the class; he decided to hold the class under the unforgiving glare of
the sun. Well I don’t really blame him for fulfilling his obligation as a lecturer; I
place the blame at the doorstep of our insidious political leaders who have become
so unconcerned with our plights that our various epistemic bases can no longer
stand shoulder to shoulder with their counterparts around the world. What do you
make of a government solely concerned with squandering millions on the centenary
celebration of an apparently failed state while its educational sector wallows in
retrogression due to unavailable funds? I guess this is the price we have to pay for
tampering with God’s preordained settings.
God’s preordained settings? What do you mean?
Of course the demarcation of the northern and southern protectorate with river
Niger was a signpost from God that we were never meant to be together but then
Lugard and his wife thought it worthwhile to tamper with the divine plan for Africa
and here we are today squandering money on a failed state.
Ebube who had been listening aptly so much so that the game console had fallen
from his hand to the floor felt tongue tied and could only move his head like that of
the red headed lizard. He couldn’t understand why he felt drawn on the same plane
with Babs who seems to have reached an all-time high level of anger with the
lackadaisical temperament of public servants. He couldn’t understand how Babs a
known passivist would suddenly start questioning a government he had once
tolerated with an I-don’t-care attitude. Probably it was the two hours in the sun
that did it or a lot had already been going on his mind and this was just the catalyst
to the cataclysm. Whatever it is, he knew Babs would never sit in silence again and
accept the situation as it is. Something tells him this definitely is the beginning of a
long sojourn into unraveling why things never worked out in his country; a journey
of questioning into why his country remain a powerless giant.
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