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I wanted to give this site a theme but couldn't find
something that quite captures its eclectism. And then it struck me. It's a
story-telling site. And what better name to give it than Tales by
Moonlight . There's a story behind this. And as
you'll soon find out, there's always a story!
I grew up in a small pastoral community in Nigeria. In those days, the coming of the
full moon was the event of the month for children and the young at heart.
For about three days, kids would gather in a part of the community,
usually where the "in-crowd" kids lived, and sing, dance and tell stories,
mainly folk tales. The story teller would begin the tales, nké,
with Ekong nkéééé! (equivalent to "once upon a time") and
everyone would respond Nkè!!!. Then the nké would begin.
In places where the people in the story were singing, the storyteller
would give the chorus for the audience to sing. Whatever actions the
people in the story did, such as dancing and clapping, the audience would
simulate. An nké was therefore a total package
consisting of the various aspects of the performing arts. The interesting
thing was that rarely were the nkés new stories. But every teller
personalized the stories (either by introducing more songs or adding new
strands) in such a way that a tale heard a 100 times before always sounded
new. If an older person was the storyteller, he or she would end with a
moral lesson from the story, or ask the audience to discuss the moral in
the story. Of course, the younger people in the audience were impatient
for another story. There would be shouts of Ekong nkéééé! to
signal that somebody was ready with another story. There was an intense
competition for whose story should be heard first.
I recall many nights hearing the sounds of this joy and
celebration of childhood and youth. Only the sounds reached me as I lay in
bed pretending to be asleep. You see, I couldn't attend. I doubt that I
was in any of the moonlight gatherings for more than twice in my life,
including one night when, for whatever reason, the group gathered outside
our house. I wanted to belong, to be part of the group of kids whose
parents allowed them to do things, to go out at night to play in the glow
of the moonlight. I couldn't: my parents wouldn't let me, or any of my
siblings. It was not safe, they would say, but that was one logic that I
could never understand. If it was that dangerous, how come other parents
allowed their kids to go? Mind you, I didn't whine too much about those
missed nights. But for years, I would battle with the sense of not
belonging, of not being part of the "happening crowd."
That sense of being on the sidelines of life became a
career. As a journalist, I was the silent observer, the one who heard, saw
and noticed what went on in other people's lives but was never part of the
group. I had to be objective, you know, and keep myself out of it all. In
my childhood however, my parents, especially my father, made up for
whatever sense of completion I needed from belonging to a group. They made
us kids the centre of their lives. In my family, we were never in doubt
that we belonged, were special and the most important people in the world.
Apart from making us the centre of our world, my parents also brought the
world to us through the many nights we sat in the living room listening to
stories. My father regaled us with tales and tales and tales. I could
never tire of hearing his stories about his life, childhood and his
experiences during the Civil War in my country. Stories from Shakespeare
and the Bible would also enrich the content of his nkés. He has a
good singing song, so he would sing, mostly church songs. He and my mom
sang in the church choir, and many nights, they would do duets from the
hymn book. I never could sing. But I did inherit something from my dad --
his gift for story telling.
As I thought of what this website will do, I
realized that whatever it eventually becomes, it will be one certain
thing. It will be a place where I tell stories, mostly stories about
my life and my experiences as a Christian, wife, mother, journalist,
daughter, sister, friend, student, political scientist, university instructor, "gipsy scholar"
and an undeterred seeker for that dream job. I know that I will move from the
serious to the unserious, and from the "deep" to the frivolous. Like
the nkés of my childhood, this site will be a mix of
everything. In my culture, at least when I was growing up, the
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The professional in me
...
My tales by moonlight
...
... And poems by
candlelight!
Once upon a moonlit
night: A Father's Day story
Curriculum
Vitae
Personal
Interests
Biographical
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important stories (and gossips) were told in the glow of
the moonlight. In this space, I will finally get to play, dance, sing and
laugh in the moonlight, and still get to control the rhythm. So join me in
these moonlight tales. Of course, it will be a two-way process, won't it?
You'll tell me stories, even as I regale you with mine. And together, we
will learn from each other. |