ABUSE
The voices came from upstairs. It was one of those fights
again and Papa always had the upper hand, the only hand. He would put her down;
sit on her belly and rain blows on her soft frame. Sometimes, he would pull her
hair along with her whole body down the stairs, his eyes red with fury the
whole time as though two of the most deadly demons from the realm of the dead were
dancing atilogwu within and mama would stagger along like one possessed by the
spirits. She tried wearily to block the heavy handed slaps to no avail. They
hit her in quick succession so that she could do nothing but whimper and moan.
After the hits were over, she would lie down there for what
seemed like eternity, the whole house silent and hollow. Then Mama would pick
herself up with all the strength she could muster, occasionally, she would lean
on the wall for support till she got to the kitchen, lock the door, then the
loud throaty sobs would release themselves into the kitchen bowls, pots,
spoons, knives and what have you. When she came out of the kitchen, she came
out with face disfigured and her heart broken, carrying a tray of delicious
food that mocked the smell of death lurking around the house and the sizzling
aroma from the food would send Papa scurrying downstairs like a cat who could
sense the smell of fish around the corner.
We would all seat and eat in silence. Mama said little. She
was a strong woman, an expert at bottling up her emotions. She never told
anyone about her pain or sufferings. To her, one should never tell strangers
about family secrets. After we had finished eating, she would kneel down beside
his chair at the head of the table and say, “Dim oma, I am only a child,
forgive me”. He would nod at her, pleased.
The bastard. I hated him. Words cannot express the rage that
surged within me whenever my eyes met his. I pitied Mama on the other hand. I
tried to be there for her all the time, running errands and doing anything to
make her smile. Whenever I saw her black eye or a deep wound on her neck or
hands, I swore NEVER to raise a finger against my wife in the future. I would
NOT hurt her.
I was really close to Mama, but we never talked about it. I
guess it was too painful a topic to discuss and we could not find the words to
express our thoughts. I wanted to comfort her, shield her from the monster that
was my father and the opportunity presented itself one day.
That fateful day, mama was helping me with my homework and I
guess doing that gave her so much joy she had forgotten the pot of bitter leaf
soup cooking in the kitchen.
“Woman”, Papa yelled from behind us, “You have planned with
your association of witches to burn down my house, but you will not succeed.”
Mama shuddered. She tried to run into the kitchen in order
to turn off the cooking stove, but Papa dragged her from behind, so that she
fell on the chair that we had been sitting on and he started to hit her, sowing
fist after fist of pain all over the molded soil that was Mama’s fragile frame.
I stood there with muscles twitching in
anger, mind roving like a madman, chest heaving like the ebb and tide of the
ocean, eyes burning with tears.
Mama, the only sane person in the house, called out to me,
asking me to put off the stove. I ran into the kitchen, my heart beating at its
highest pace and by now clouds of smoke had filled the kitchen. The whole
atmosphere was charged by the terrible smell of burning food, my loud coughing
and Mama’s high pitched screaming as Papa continued to do abominable things to
her.
I wanted to put off the stove, but the smoke had slowly
seeped into my mind making it a haze. I
couldn’t think. I just grabbed the kitchen knife and the next thing I knew, I
was standing in front of my father with a blood-stained knife.
Many years later, when I met Stella and fell in love with
her, I treated her like a queen, gave her anything she wanted, practically
worshipping the sand she walked on. I was too afraid to become like Papa, so I
loved her fiercely, she loved me back and we got married.
Five years down the lane, she begins to spend more time in
front of the mirror. She applies so much
make-up; tones and tones of foundation and concealer, a hundred layers of red
on her lips, heavy dosages of mascara to hide the emptiness in her eyes,
several shades of eye shadow to shadow the pain within and lines upon lines of
eye liner in a poor attempt to line out the sorrow that flowed forcefully in
her soul.
Every day, Stella wears a mask all in the name of make-up
and I know it. She doesn’t feel beautiful or worthy anymore. My beautiful wife
is now reduced to a shadow of her old self and every time I see her, I see the
reflection of Papa that I have become. I hate the monster that I am now and
although I want to protect her like I did Mama, I am too afraid to be left
alone with the demons inside of me. I fear that they would destroy me, so
instead of protecting her, I put her in a prison of rules. No calls from men,
no friends are allowed to see her, family members are barred from visiting, I
make sure she never dresses seductively or go to parties and I rant and rave at
the slightest offence just to keep her in prison with me, bound together with
the chains of low self esteem, guilt and fears of what people will say.
Did I mention that I
hate myself? I can’t say it enough times. I hate me and I think I deserve the same
judgment I passed out on Papa several years ago, but Stella had a better idea; A
drive to the psychologist’s. Of course she did not tell me about it, she
tricked me with the help of Mama. Apparently, hurting people know how to
connect in amazing ways and Mama was the best accomplice, an expert in these
matters.
Well, I got help, I’m willing to take responsibility for my
weaknesses and I’m determined to break this cycle of wife battering. I do not
wish to bring a generation of women beaters into the world and this change
starts with me.
XENOPHOBIA
XENOPHOBIA: South
Africa Forgets So Soon
We cannot bring ourselves to believe it possible that a
foreigner should in any respect be wiser than ourselves.
Anthony Trollope (1815 - 1882)
Xenophobia is not a new
occurrence in the world; it cannot be since it already existed long before the
South African xenophobic crisis. Nations like Germany have constantly exhibited
both traits and acts of xenophobia. World War II is a classic example of that.
The hateful act of treating Jews like dirt is not only racist but xenophobic.
It may be surprising to note that even the nation flowing with milk and honey;
our beloved Nigeria, exhibited South African behavioural traits of, although
not fully blown, with all the Ghanaians sent packing during the Ghana must go
era.
However, for thousands of Africans, if not millions, the
word xenophobia started to exist when some unruly South Africans decided to
take hatred a step further by killing other Africans, destroying their
properties and leaving thousands running around like headless chickens in fear
of losing their lives. One then wonders if, peradventure, these Africans who
live in the southern most part of the black continent have forgotten their
origin.
Is it not a fact that one should not bite the hands that fed
them? When they were being brutally murdered and subjected to gross debasement
by cruel ‘pink’
hands, who considered them as brothers and offered them assistance? Who spent
large sums of money trying and succeeding to free them from their slave drivers?
How they have the effrontery to even lay a hand on those whom they should be
eternally grateful to is both baffling and disturbing. Was so much time and
money spent fighting for children who do not recognize their mother? Is this
what Nelson Mandela fought for?
They accuse Nigerians of defrauding them and taking their
jobs, leaving them unemployed and hungry. Who does not know that unemployment
is a major problem of the African continent? Who does not know that people who
know their onions cannot be idle for long, come what may? Could it be that
these ‘brothers’
of ours are not as intellectual as Mandela and the rest of Africa had thought?
Definitely, intellectuals would not deal to others the same cruel hand they
were dealt.
Nevertheless, it could be said that Nigeria actually had it
coming. In gratitude to Nigeria, South Africa allowed Nigerian professionals to
come and work in their country from as far back as 1994. While it is not being
that South Africa has any justification for their brutal acts, the fact is that
Nigerians are guilty of many of the acts they are accused of. Defrauding and
drug trafficking are things that Nigerians are known for even here in the
country. But then, this is no justification for South Africa’s
exhibition of cowardice by blaming other Africans for their economic woes and
failures. Able bodied men should find something lucrative to do instead of
expending their energy to chase, maim and kill innocent people.
South Africans have no justification for their inhumane
acts. Brothers do not kill brothers, rather they stand with each other to the
end. They help each other up when in trouble. Nigeria and other African
countries do not deserve to be sacrificed on the altar of some people’s
ignorance and cluelessness. The only Giant of Africa refuses to be treated
unfairly by South Africa.
-NUT
There Is A Right Occasion For Everything After All . . .
I think by now, the ‘there is time for everything’ line must
be such a cliché, for African peeps especially, that we may not even consider
the moral lesson behind it when it comes to mind. Of course we know there is
the time to wake up, go to school, have a boyfriend or girlfriend (well that
may be an exception though) and do all sorts of stuff. So I’m so used to this
line that it has become one with no magical strings attached . . . well until
my younger sister took it to another dimension.
Now she is one girl who can talk. I mean talk the hell out
(yeah the typical younger sister won’t shut up kind of talk), and what is more
annoying is that telling her to shut up is like inviting her to say more. So
this is how it goes; I’m up in the room doing stuff. She comes in and asks if
I’d like some mint candy. She gives me a wrap and tells me she’s had it since
the previous year (and that’s how many months now?) . . . ‘No way, thanks’. She
says there is nothing wrong with it ‘it’s okay jor . . . I don’t know why I’m
keeping it sef . . . I just haven’t found the right occasion for it’
Now that’s new, I never could have thought there was a right
time for ‘sweet’. As much as it was just another of her kind of talk, it did
get my thoughts. Of course, a moral lesson came out of it; we just cannot go
wrong with time.
I think of some mistakes I may have made at some point or
even stories told by others and it boils down to the fact that we did not get
our timing right. So you think you’re 16 and out of secondary school, just
about the time to have a boyfriend . . . err, I don’t know much about the
boyfriend/girlfriend school of thought, but don’t you have JAMB to prepare
for?. . . or some dreams to build up? Is there a cash prize for whoever dates
him first?
Or your friends are all heading up to the studio to drop a
‘bomb’ ( which is often what you get these days) and just because two ‘wow’
lines slipped out of your mouth by accident, you assume that you are the next rated
star (of course that’s the point where unrecorded memories of you singing right
from the womb come up) and you think it’s just fine enough to quit school and
run after a career of which you do not even have a future outline for? Now
that’s the point where I like to say SMH (shaking my head!)
I have nothing against having a boyfriend at sweet 16 or
racing after your talents, those are just two out of other tales. The deal is
that time is just one stakeholder we always have to answer to. It may look so simple
coming up with some decisions without even thinking twice especially when
you’re young, but like Lionel Richie says ‘when you're young, all you know how
to do is wrong. Life can play tricks on you at times . . . you think you’ve got
everything when you’ve got nothing’ (okay that last line is me singing. I so
love that song). The deal though is, however way we view it, life does play
tricks. So maybe that ‘there is time for everything’ line should click in our
heads as more than jrust a cliché. (You really don't have to wait till 25 to
get your first kiss though)
derinsola
