The Analogy Imagine a massive vessel adrift in the middle of the Pacific Ocean: no land in sight, no horizon promising rescue. On this vessel are more than 200 million souls: men and women, children and elders, believers of every faith, speakers of every tongue, carriers of every culture. The ship glides with the confidence of human brilliance, its steel ribs humming with the pride of a nation that once dreamed boldly. Then, without warning, a rupture tears open at the keel. Water begins to seep in, quietly at first, then insistently. The alarm is raised. The passengers are told the truth: the vessel will sink in twelve hours, but land is twenty-four hours away . A cold fear grips every heart. Panic spreads like wildfire. The air thickens with dread. Yet in this moment of crisis, something remarkable happens. The Many Hands on Deck Every profession, every tribe, every creed springs into action. Engineers rush to the belly of the ship, tools in hand, wrestling with...
Introduction The story of Otondo in Jerry Chika Okeke’s Mmadu Ka a na-ria is not just a literary portrait of a mischievous schoolboy. It is an allegory; one that mirrors the cycles of pretence, opportunism, and selective morality that shape Nigeria’s political and social landscape. Otondo is the child who never passed an exam yet kept getting promoted. He is the bully who suddenly becomes a saint when a position is at stake. He is the student who transforms overnight, not because he has changed, but because he wants something. And when he does not get what he wants, he returns to his old ways. This is the Otondo Effect : the performance of goodness without the substance of transformation; the appearance of reform without the discipline of character; the sudden morality that evaporates once power is secured or denied. Nigeria knows this effect too well. How Otondo Mirrors Nigeria’s Power Culture The story of Otondo is our story: your story and my story. We can visualize it in m...