This month I've decided to read two books. I'm
doing this to honour a man I've seen for over two decades on Nigerian
television without any scandal (I guess our today's stars must learn a
lesson from this great man). Ambassador Chief Segun Olushola, mni,OFR, was
a man of many parts, he was a teacher, an actor, a director, an ambassador and a humanitarian. He meant
different things to so many people.
For my parents' contemporaries who watched him
emerge as an actor, director and producer of class, they have a lot to say
about his artistic panache and the roles he played in the rested popular soap
opera The Village Headmaster aired n NTA in the 80’s. For me and some of my
contemporaries, we can confidently say that he was an advocate of African
refugees.
He was the founder of African Refugees Foundation- AREF.
The book titled “Segun Olushola The Real Village
Headmaster” was given to me by the author -Mr Akin Iroko who I worked with
briefly, he was a consultant on a DFID program of which my organization was a
benefactor. Ambassador Olusegun on the other hand was the honourary president
of my organization. Mr. Iroko gladly gave me a complimentary copy of the book
for my library.
The book has 10 chapters and 131pages. It touched
on the following areas, his early beginning, his career, the zenith of his life,
his ambassadorial sojourn to Ethiopia, his achievements as a diplomat, his
philanthropic service to African Refugees which led to the establishment of AREF.
The book also touched on his family life, his
marriage to Elsie Olusola (Sisi Clara) the screen goddess of The Village Headmaster,
their children, her death, his remarriage to his first girlfriend after the
demise of Elsie and his adopted children. The history of television in
Nigeria’s post-independent era was also not left out.
“In order to confront the problems of the year
2000 – Nigerians must construct a culture of social, culture science and
material technology based on the tradition of the past…..
It is doing so very well for Britain
It cannot do as well for Nigeria
It is capable of harming Nigeria
It possesses an inherent bias against the Nigerian people
It is a burden which must be tolerated, not accepted
Wherever goes the wig and gown-
There goes the coat and tie
-and the only way is out.
For none of these are simply functional –
And all of them are symbols-
Communication and culture reminders of
Nigeria’s painful past.
In the tradition of one of Nigeria’s illustrious ancestors, they are boycottable and should be boycotted….
So Nigeria is not an island.
It is as well that Nigeria is not a refuse dump.
On this note, I join many of his numerous fans
across the world to say that he will be truly missed and the thought of finding
another Olusola brought William Shakesphere to my mind “ All the world is a
stage and all men are merely players…”
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