Christopher Okigbo’s Poetics and the Politics of Canonization



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Introduction
Born into a Catholic family of the school headmaster Chief Ezeonyeligolu
James Okigbo and his wife, Anna Onugwualuobi, in Ojoto-uno, Anambra state,
Christopher Okigbo remains one of Africa’s most important poets. A teacher,
librarian, and former Biafran soldier who died in the Nigeria–Biafra war in he is today acknowledged as an outstanding postcolonial African poet and one of the major modernist writers of the twentieth century. After graduating from the University of Ibadan, he took and changed jobs in such quick succession that his contemporaries described him as prodigal, a term with which he categorized himself. Between 1956 and 1967, Okigbo worked as manager of the
Nigerian Tobacco Company and the United African Company as Assistant Secretary in the Federal Ministry of Research and Information as a Latin teacher and sports coach at Fiditi Grammar School as a librarian at the University of Nigeria Nsukka; as West African manager and Nigerian representative of
Cambridge University Press as the publisher, with Chinua Achebe, of Citadel
Publishing Company and as a major in the Biafran Army.
Many scholars have argued that Okigbo brought to his poetry a representation of the sense of personal anguish at death. Besides a few who have pointed to the sense of patriotism and disgust at the monstrosity of his benighted nation, many draw attention to what they call his fixation with the trope of death, arguing that he was not only obsessive in his deployment of metaphors that incarnated that experience, but was also an embodiment of the death- wish that eventually culminated in his death in the Nigeria–Biafra war For instance, Obi Nwakanma has argued that Okigbo transgressed the rules of war by showing total disregard for personal safety in the course of the war. For him,
although Okigbo was an adventurous and self-sacrificing soldier, he certainly brought death upon himself:
He was a bit reckless, because throughout the operations in the area of
Isienum and Eha-Alumona, he didn’t care whether he lived or died. […] he almost always sat on the bonnet of the jeep whilst an operation is on—he would sit therewith his rifle, his legs thrown wide apart. Although that was not military, it never bothered Christopher. When you reprimanded him, he would just burst out into his loud laughter 1 Dan Izevbaye, Living the Myth Revisiting Okigbo’s Art and Commitment Tydskrif vir Let-
terkunde 48.1 (2011): 22.
2 Fellow soldier, quoted in Obi Nwakanma, Christopher Okigbo: Thirsting for Sunlight (Ibadan:
James Currey, 2010): Downloaded from Brill.com06/12/2023 10:27:53AM
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Matatu 49 (2017) Retracing Nwakamma’s critical steps in a different idiom, Ali Mazrui condemns Okigbo for renouncing the universal in preference for the ethnic. For him, Okigbo is neither a hero nor a martyr, because the measure of a poet differs from the measure of ordinary humankind Mazrui holds both the suicide and the martyr guilty of their own death and argues that the martyr is probably more reprehensible because he revels in having another assume the guilt for what is in reality his/her will to self-destruction. He notes that in many claims to martyrdom, there is a disguised self-regard, a lust to attain the Godhead, which therefore interrogates the very pretension to self-sacrifice.4 But Mazrui seems to bespeaking from the other side of his mouth when he acknowledges that the predictability of a gallant soldier’s death at the moment of his acceptance of his ghastly mission enhances public adulation of him. Similarly, Olusegun
Obasanjo, the General Officer Commanding the rd Marine Commando Division of the Federal Army, sees no act of heroism in Okigbo’s actions during the war. In fact, he dismisses his actions as mere folly and unnecessary bravado.”5
However, the General Officer Commanding the Biafran Army, Major General
Alexander Madiebo, endorses Okigbo’s heroic impulse in his memoir on the war:
The greatest disaster of that [Nsukka] operation was the well-known poet,
Major Christopher Okigbo, one of the bravest fighters on that sector, who died trying to lob a grenade into a ferret armoured car.6
Similarly, in a note to Isidore Diala, Ben Obumselu observes that Okigbo was driven by a heroic spirit that was typical of him and recalls that Okigbo fought heroically in the war side by side with Major Chukwuma Nzeogwu, and certainly chose to fight to the death, as he had told Obumselu that he would not withdraw from Opi, where he was eventually killed. Obumselu points to a possible heroic tradition in Okigbo’s family by recalling that Pius Okigbo, Christopher Okigbo’s elder brother, had said that Christopher had been born with a mark on his neck, which was thought to be a relic of a bullet wound sustained Ali Mazrui, The Trial of Christopher Okigbo (London: Heinemann, 1980): 3.
4 Ali Mazrui, Sacred Suicide Atlas 11.3 (1966): 165.
5 Olusegun Obasanjo, My Command An Account of the Nigerian Civil War, 1967–1970 (London:
Heinemann, 1980): 18, quoted in Diala, “Okigbo’s Drum Elegies,”Research in African Literatures
46.3 (Fall 2015): 108.
6 Alexander Madiebo, The Nigerian Revolution and the Biafran War (Enugu: Fourth Dimension Downloaded from Brill.com06/12/2023 10:27:53AM
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christopher okigbo’s poetics and the politics of canonization
263
Matatu 49 (2017) by his ancestor He defied all our categories and rejected the postulate that life set limits beyond which he could not venture.”8
Isidore Diala, for whom Okigbo is undeniably a martyr, equally observes that
Okigbo could have been located in Mazrui’s typology but for Mazrui’s problematic definition of the universal and the tribal Okigbo, Diala argues, was capable of self-sacrificial commitments that typically extended to his adventurous career as a soldier. His temper was heroic and the trajectory of his poetry is a movement from the renunciation of Christian martyrdom to an affirmation of self-giving courageous action And if Nwakamma acquiesces in the fact that Okigbo “didn’t care whether he lived or died he ironically acknowledges
Okigbo’s total self-giving in the conduct of that war. The distinction between martyrdom and the death-wish shows that such intriguing self-sacrifice as martyrdom is a heroic action that invites public admiration:
While, then, thanatos or the death wish is a compulsion, rather than a choice, martyrdom, typically, is the acceptance, after due reflection, of the need to glorify an idea by dying for it. In its ideal Christian form,
martyrdom is complete self-abnegation, a total self-giving that especially prospers the Christian cause. The aureole of martyrdom is its reward without, however, being its remote motivation. But while blood necessarily seals the pact of martyrdom, not even in war is the loss of life indispensable to establish heroism. Martyrdom, therefore, is no mere analogue of heroic action as martyrs do not fight they accept and find fulfilment in suffering. Yet heroism is life affirming in its defiance of death but, unlike martyrdom, requires no religious idea as a basic motivation.10
In its contribution to the potent issue of canonization, this paper reappraises
Okigbo’s poetic engagement and his general conduct and death in the Nigerian Biafran war in order to critically consider, in particular, the relationship of his poetry to the circumstances leading to his death in a personal confrontation with an armoured tank. Immanuel Kant’s interpretation of suicide and martyrdom provides the framework for the analysis of some of the documented accounts of Okigbo’s life and a selection of his poetry. The analysis seeks to
7
Isidore Diala, “Okigbo’s Drum Elegies Ben Obumselu, Christopher Okigbo: A Poet’s Identity in The Responsible Critic Essays
on African Literature in Honour of Professor Ben Obumselu, ed. Isidore Diala (Trenton nj:
Africa World Press, 2006): 58.
9
Isidore Diala, “Okigbo’s Drum Elegies 88.
10
Diala, “Okigbo’s Drum Elegies Downloaded from Brill.com06/12/2023 10:27:53AM
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Matatu 49 (2017) identify him appropriately either as a genuine martyr or as a mere suicide who presides ritually over his own dismemberment, or both. Although some lines of his poetry have been misread as embodying his haunting death, some evidence of his self-giving impulse seems to position Okigbo as a tragic poet who transcends his destiny by submitting to it, thus becoming victor and victim in a single gesture. In its conclusion, the paper reconciles Okigbo’s will to heroic action with the symbolic meaning that is locked in his poetry in order to justify his ascension to the rank of martyr.

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