They Say I Come From a Free Country
Night of the unspoken word
Narrator: Dike Chukwumerije
Title: They say I come from a free country
Narration:
Every time I ask, people tell me, Nigeria became independent in 1960
And furthermore, to show, she was truly free, she became a republic in 1963
Meaning, the queen was no longer head of state
Meaning that we were now masters of our fate.
Meaning that power over Nigerians could now only be held by a Nigerian
It was why we sang and danced in the night
Why we lit fires that burned through the night
Why we chose a flag colored in Freedom for now we would be kings in this our kingdom
But our first head of state was Igbo
And the next, though a Soldier also Igbo
Then Angas ruled followed by Hausa and then came, the turn of Yoruba
Credit: Dike Chukwumerije on Twitter
Then Hausa came back for a term cut shot when power was taken by an hausa gunshot
Then Buhari claimed his turn to rule but a mandate stolen was his downfall
Then Kanuri came, and it’s quite probable that he’ll still be ruling if not for that Apple.
Then Yoruba returned not once but twice then Hausa returned but died in peace
And they left us a while to worry and wonder when it was over.
Ijaw had power and after him came that Titanic shift, and now we can see that Hausa is back.
Leaving me with this troublesome thought, “where in all this is my own president?”
For where I was born is not where I’m from, and where I’m from is not my home.
So when the tribes gather, I often wonder, “who will I fight when you’re both my brothers?”
Nobody asked when we were children “before we play, are you a Muslim?”
We share this space that nobody claim but now you ask me to choose a side
When we were students, nobody asked if North and South could share a desk, if East and West could study together but now, you tell me that I’m a stranger.
Stranger
Yes, to these ways of thinking, thinking that tribe is everything.
The Niger and Benue they meet in my hand.
I’m not an indigene but this is my land.
And this is my language, I speak nothing else.
My home is here, I know nothing else
My tribe is my nation. I am nothing else
And this is my country, I have nowhere else.
And so though people are quick to assure me, to tell me this country I live in is free
Deep in my heart, I know that freedom, my freedom is yet to come,
When no one will question my origin
When no one will call me a non-indigene
When no one would kill me because of my faith.
When no one will cheat me because of my State,
When my state will be wherever I live and will change whenever I choose to move
the day I find not a Nigerian president but that a Nigerian is finally president
And so, while the flag of ethnicity still flutters over this land of two shining rivers, and the tribes take their turn to miss-govern, my country
I look to the future for I’m not yet free.