Wednesday, March 26, 2025

Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Re: Why are they Destroying My United States of America? : Nation as Imaginative Space

That was magnificent writing Cornelius.

Great thanks


On Wed, Mar 26, 2025, 9:10 AM Oluwatoyin Adepoju <ovdepoju@gmail.com> wrote:

Great thanks Cornelius but is DOGE a wholesome example for human management?


On Wed, Mar 26, 2025, 9:07 AM Cornelius Hamelberg <corneliushamelberg@gmail.com> wrote:

Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju.


May the Almighty fully assist you in accomplishing your mission.


And many thanks for your heart-rending clarifications, on the whole a testimony to the crying need for our authorities to invest in education, the way that AWO and Governor Ambrose Alli did, but on a national scale. 


I daresay your exposition and your personal experience elicit a lot of sympathy and parallel the experience of many other people in Africa South of the Sahara who have a genuine inner calling to seek knowledge and to pursue it, the main problem being the interminable frustrations presented by the backwardness and lack of foresight of our sometimes despotic, utterly insipid & uninspired leaders (and here we ought not to exclude the possibility or probability that some of them are inspired alright, inspired by the chief of the miscreants, Satan, the god of this world, Satan and his cabinet of demons, implementing their agenda, structural adjustment programs that take away subsidies for education, at this rate and at this stage resulting in their producing darkness only instead of illumination, light, effulgence, and an enabling environment in which those who hunger and thirst after righteousness can assuage their thirst "where books fall like rain" etc, and realise their dreams.


Most disheartening : "I am now back, to find that some of the most significant conditions for the development of knowledge have constricted even more than when I left …"


What Ojogbon has said about Ibadan ( Ile-Ife) now Obafemi Awolowo University in the past,  such institutions must surely be moving from strength to strength and God forbid, far from it, not failing and falling into academic decrepitude?


Fela : Army Arrangement ( part 2) 


This Ramadan season, that's a very striking, evocative comparison you make, that you "had been living in the equivalent of a village compared to the metropolitan centers, or a village mosque compared to the central mosque at Mecca" - the Masjid al-Haram… 


On a humbler plane ( I almost wrote "planet"),  waxing poetic Jesus made this other comparison: 


"Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow; they toil not, neither do they spin: And yet I say unto you, that even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these."


About the main mosque in that location in the cosmos known as Mecca, perhaps you could make that voyage of discovery yourself and serve us another autobiography like what Leopold Weiss who became Muhammad Asad penned : "The Road to Mecca" - a good read… 


If only what you have said here could be brought to the attention of the relevant, hopefully benevolent, not malevolent Nigerian authorities, Elon Musk, President Trump, and his genocidal Secretary of Education Linda McMahon  and the devil DEI ,  according to these guys currently fully engaged in overhauling, slaughtering, downsizing and outlawing all that has been taken for granted as sine qua non for a United States educational milieu that you have described as "a global melting pot where people go for the opportunity to reach the stars."( Which reminds me that Amadou Diallo is one of many African students that have met an untimely death in the in that global melting pot of yours, that one such student was allegedly mistaken for a burglar  - and in the jargon of the cowboy movies was told to "reach for the sky !" a command that he probably didn't understand meant "put your hands up !" and at the trial in his own defence, that's what the gringo who shot the African explained to the judge: "I told him to reach for the stars, but he kept on coming so I had no choice but to shoot him!"


Stellar : 


#"the value of the cultural resources here and how to project them"


#"diaspora reverse migration in developing Nigerian higher education"


I'd just like to add that if effectively run a Nigerian equivalent of DOGE ( Department of Government Efficiency would go a long way in eliminating waste and corruption whereby we would have half of the battle won…. 





On Tuesday, 25 March 2025 at 08:06:35 UTC+1 Oluwatoyin Adepoju wrote:

Great thanks Cornelius.

When I completed my BA in Nigeria, I vowed never to study in the West, thereby contributing, in my own way to subverting the culture of extraversion of knowledge that defined scholarship in Africa, even about Africa, at the time, as I understood it.

I would achieve global resonance through working as an academic in Nigeria, I resolved.

My eventual migration to England to study after suffering frustrations in my Nigerian university opened my eyes to the fact that I had been living in the equivalent of a village compared to the metropolitan centers, or a village mosque compared to the central mosque at Mecca, great though some of my teachers had been.

Beyond issues of infrastructure within and beyond the academic system, it was clear even while I was in the system that the system suffered significant dilution from being compromised by approaches inimical to its existence, " her pot bellied watchers despoil her" in Okigbo's words from another context.

I am now back, to find that some of the most significant conditions for the development of knowledge have constricted even more than when I left even though people are working determinedly to succeed, such as the valiant new booksellers and publishers and the Internet has opened a new universe.

If not for some challenges I faced, I wonder if I would have returned.

Why would I want to leave an environment where books fall like rain and where academics are immersed in scholarship and the environment is fully enabling of a stress free life?

My English experience could not take me as far as I wanted, though , being unable to accommodate my own individualistic vision, but without that experience I wonder what my fate would have been.

It was the significantly expansive opportunities there that fully unleashed my multi-disciplinary explorations.

On returning I better understand the value of the cultural resources here and how to project them, appreciating what I could have done to help protect and project cultural treasures which have become challenging to find or have disappeared.

The Americans imported the sophistication of the then German university education to the US, adapting it to their own systems and the various influences of World War II, such as the flight of scholars from Germany, contributed to that to create the US higher education juggernaut.

So there is a place for diaspora reverse migration in developing Nigerian higher education and scholarship outside the academy but the academic systems have to be conducive.

I have resolved, however, that I do better outside academia, both from my  Nigerian experience and my experience in the West, the freedom from institutional frames being vital to my creativity.

Living in Nigeria can be quite challenging on account of cost of living and infrastructural inadequacies..

My work here is assisted by privileges I enjoy, such as almost 24 hour power enabled by an expensive diesel generator, for when there is no central power, low living costs, a lifestyle of few needs and a means of earning a living that enables significant flexibility of time.

I have been offered the opportunity to  study more in the West, but my current interest is in  fieldwork in Nigeria, reinforced by an expansive book acquisition drive in Nigeria and beyond, fieldwork such as living for two months in the semi rural environment of Agbarha-Otor in the Niger Delta, studying Bruce Onobrakpeya's art and that of the surrounding traditional spiritual artists, and do something similar in Benin and the Southwest, later residing for a time in Cambridge to use the university's resources.

The core image there is that of a scholar without geographical boundaries rather than one fixed in a place to the exclusion of other places.

I would like to make my library a public library as I did before my educational migration but I'll need the right kind of space and security is particularly sensitive in today's Nigeria.

I shall be publishing Rowland Abiodun's Yoruba Art and Language after four years of work since he got the rights back from Cambridge UP, delighted the book would be re- published in Nigeria where the research for it was done.

I look forward eagerly to the marketing and distribution opportunities and challenges that will involve, within and beyond Nigeria and Africa.

I am also gradually cultivating a publishing vision suggesting developing a global reach from within Nigeria.

My open access writings though represent significant sharing with the world.

Thanks

Toyin


On Mon, Mar 24, 2025, 8:37 PM Cornelius Hamelberg <cornelius...@gmail.com> wrote:

Oluwatoyin,


What you have said here is very moving.


In this you are closer to the super-idealist dreamer John Lennon's Imagine  


Ah, but a man's reach should exceed his grasp, Or what's a heaven for?


You invite the obvious corollary to your dream;

 in the spirit of Satyagraha Mahatma Gandhi's 

"Be the change you wish to see in the world

( be the change you want to see in others) : 


follow this progression:

according to the compass

charity begins at home

so here's the trajectory 

of self-wishing fulfilment  

to make Nigeria that dream

to make Nigeria greater than

ever before, by individual freedom

of choice and by not shirking the duty

of collective responsibility

to leave the option open to

reverse the brain-drain in 

the service of which quest 

you may even imitate your idol

Immanuel Kant who never left

 Königsberg and just as Jesus 

whose body walked on water

actually never left the Holy Land

(apart from a brief sojourn in Egypt) 

before he returned to his father 

in the heaven where he came from

hopefully so too you exploring every

corner of the cosmos in search of 

the holy grail, more like Kant and less

like Chistopher Columbus you wont have

that wanderlust urge to travel all the way

to over there where they hope to find

the super real greener pastures in America 

currently at position 24 in the world Happiness

index, although by the time Trump is through with

making his America great again (perhaps by 

incorporating or annexing Gaza, Canada, Greenland,

the Panama Canal and the Federal Republic of Nigeria) 

like Kant you will feel less of a need to travel anywhere.


At this point I wonder how that famous 

Owerri motor park poet is feeling about Jesus

and Ojukwu, how he's feeling, and if he's capable

of expressing any poetic feelings  about my late 

Nigerian friends Sam Mbakwe and Mathias Offoboche

and when it comes to his visions in the field of comparative

demonology, if he is capable or incapable of entertaining 

any revisionist ideas about Mr Hitler

Pope Pius and the Holocaust

Joseph Stalin

Robert Mugabe

the former president 

of Bob Marley's Zimbabwe 

who in his judgement, fell from grace 

and thereby became a fallen hero  - ah - 


"and the soldiers who are dead and gone 

if only we could bring back one"


But that's how it is,

through the mouth of Mark Antony

Mugabe's brother, William Shakespeare said


"The evil that men do lives after them:

 the good is oft interred with their bones; 

So let it be with Caesar "


Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju :


Not to worry too much about America 

if you look at the Islamic Calendar for Ramadan 

you'll see some joy and also much sadness too:

the history books' Iraq - where Imam Ali was assassinated

(the faithful prefer to say where Imam Ali was martyred )

that Iraq has suffered through many cycles of violence 

to be where we are today… 



On Sunday, 23 March 2025 at 07:52:46 UTC+1 Oluwatoyin Adepoju wrote:
have never been there but I see the US as mine in terms of a vision of creative possibility.

Elon Musk was one of my embodiments of such possibilities.

Why are these people destroying my dreams?

They are making nonsense of legendary institutions and values.

The right to hold and pursue views different from that of the government.

Some of the world's greatest institutions, such as elite US universities, are being recurrently humiliated and gutted of their inspirational essence.

Freedom of universities from ideologically driven government interference.

The presence of robustly funded academic systems, free from systemic shocks.

The US Presidency as a bastion of a degree of mature statesmanship even in the midst of evil US foreign policies.

The US as a global melting pot where people go for the opportunity to reach the stars.

All these are being destroyed.

These people are destroying my dreams.

It is not fair.

Every country is a geographical construct, an economic and cultural system, an interpersonal network and an idea or network of ideas.

The sense of identification with a nation enables those identifiers to"own the nation" in an imaginative sense, a metaphorical ownership not confined to citizens of that nation or even those who live there.

It is such a sense of "ownership" that has  motivated migration to the US as a place where practically anyone may more readily maximize their potential in a liberal social environment than in other places, including the cultural ancestor of the US, Western Europe.

Trump's strategies imply the destruction of this image of the US



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