A review by Bayo Ogunmupe
The Gathering of the tribes is the first full length novel by the
attorney at law Evans Ufeli of the Lagos Bar Association, Nigeria. It is
published in 2018 by Winepress Publishing, an imprint of Noirledge
Limited, Ibadan, Nigeria. It has eleven chapters, 142 pages, with
praises from various critics including a winner of the Nigeria Prize for
Literature. The lead character and protagonist of the book is Ike Ibe
who leads his group of progressive patriots sworn to bringing reforms to
their town, Anieze. Their focus is that the public good and prosperity
of the town shall be the purpose of governance in the community.
But this noble ideal of living is vehemently opposed by the diehard
political establishment whose stocking trade is embezzlement and
contract selling. In the ensuing battle of supremacy, violence and
bloodshed erupt. In the narrative, Ufeli ensures Anieze's cultural
heritage is venerated. Carnivals of dance entertainment featuring nubile
damsels swinging to intoxicating beats of Antilogwu drum at the Ukwata
festival become the toast of the people. The Gathering of the tribes is
a provocative metaphor showcasing how the Nigerian people are swindled
of the proceeds of their oil wealth by Nigeria's rapacious political
elite.
The author ensnares the reader with warmth, intrigue and applause.
Indeed, it is the customary football children play around the house that
woke Ike out of his slumbers. A clasp of the ball that landed on his
face snapped him back to reality. He had stayed depressed all day owing
to the detestable political condition in his community. Anieze, a
sprawling town of about 100,000 people is the centre of gravity of the
game of cheat the prophet straddling the West coast of Africa. Ike who
had grown up abroad in Western Europe and North America, cannot overlook
the pervasive injustice going on in Anieze.
Structured in the manner of our colonial past, Ike organized the
people, convened an assembly where the people can add their input in the
administration of the town. This time the assembly convened for a
meeting to discuss matters of urgent pubic importance. The community
needs basic amenities: good roads, portable water and regular
electricity supply. Since Ike chairs one of the committees, the
development committee, he is neck deep in the politics of the town. He
was chosen to chair the development committee because he is one of best
educated and cosmopolitan in the community.
The novel is set in an oil producing community in Nigeria's Niger Delta
region where oil spillage is rampart. Due to oil exploration by foreign
oil companies, the Niger Delta has been bedeviled by oil spill which
render the countryside uninhabitable because oil spillage has destroyed
portable water, fishing and cash crop cultivation. So, these people rely
heavily on imports of food and manufactures to thrive. This volume's
theme is a replication of real life scenes common in the south east and
southern Nigeria. It is common knowledge that oil spillage has ruined
human habitat, farmlands and the well-being of the people.
Therefore, Barrister Ufeli has brought into focus, the agonies of the
oil producing areas of Nigeria. To everyone's dismay neither the
government nor oil companies is doing anything to alleviate the travails
of the people of Anieze; in as much as they need relief from from
poverty, land degradation, neglect and man's inhumanity to man.
Corruption is so widespread that the one billion dollar oil spillage
compensation given to Anieze could not be accounted for. It had been
embezzled by hungry elite.
Anieze leaders travel abroad every now and then, buy houses every where
particularly in Dubai and London. They transfer huge sums of money into
their foreign accounts. Their children barely know Anieze, while the
town's youth struggle to attend school in abject poverty at home.
Onyeonu Madu, the traditional ruler of Anieze would constantly assemble
the townsmen promising them heaven and earth; cajoling them to be
patient with his administration, as a way of hiding his culpability.
Not long after Ike returned to Anieze, he was saddled with community
projects as a way of keeping him from suspecting the village leaders'
corrupt enrichment. Which is why they got him involved in the town's
cultural revival. At such times the people display their harvest. There
are big tubers of yam, cassava and other cash crops. The festival is
observed by everyone. During this time the town's people travel to their
ancestral homes where they perform traditional rites. At such times,
people rejoice with their friends and relatives. Moreover, there is
something alluring about the festivals which keep bringing tourists from
far and near.
All in all, The gathering of the tribes is an enthralling satire, but
without the reprieve of humor to shield the reader from the pangs of
scrutiny and reflection. The story nudges you into the embrace of an
inexorable narrative which enthralls you with a familiarity of a
comforting experience. It depicts the Nigerian reality where the leaders
have betrayed the trust reposed in them through the looting of our
common patrimony. Ufeli is seeking a paradigm shift in Nigerian politics
to ensure the fulfillment of communal expectations as against the
current greedy accumulation of wealth as the focal point of public
service.
A native of Etua, Delta State, Evans Ufeli was raised among the naval
communities: the Air Force Base in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, the
military bases in Kaduna and Lagos. He studied at the University of Jos,
the Lagos State University and the Nigerian Law School. He also studied
creative writing at the Writers' Bureau, Manchester, united Kingdom. He
is now practising law in Lagos and he is a member of the Nigerian Bar
Association, Lagos Branch.
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