Title: Emilokon or The Fable of the Termites
Author: Joe Barnabas
Genre: Political Satire / Literary Allegory
In his latest work, Joe Barnabas delivers a biting, visceral
exploration of a society in the throes of transformation, and perhaps,
disintegration. Emilokon or The Fable of the Termites is not merely a
story; it is a mirror held up to the face of modern leadership and the systemic
"termites" that hollow out the foundations of our shared home.
The Heart of the Fable
The title itself, Emilokon, carries the weight of
entitlement and historical destiny, while the subtitle provides the darker
metaphor. Barnabas masterfully utilizes the image of the termite: a creature
that consumes from the inside out, often unnoticed until the structure collapses.
This serves as a hauntingly familiar representation of the creeping greed and
administrative decay currently plaguing our world.
Structure and Pace
Spanning 36 meticulously crafted chapters, the book feels
like an architectural blueprint of a revolution. Barnabas doesn't rush the
descent into chaos. Instead, he allows the reader to feel the wood grain of the
society before the first bite is even taken. By the time we reach the final
chapters, the sense of "dry rot" is palpable.
The Anatomy of the Kingdom of Pretence
In the opening act, we are introduced to a kingdom built on
the shifting sands of vanity. Barnabas uses the royal household to mirror the
different faces of a failing state:
- Kabiyesi: The "Unshakable" who
sits on a Throne of Silence. He is the symbol of a leadership that
watches the foundations crumble but refuses to speak, even as the cracks
reach his own crown.
- The
Queen: Manager
of the Theatre of Deception, she uses "endless gifts" and
public donations to mask a systemic lack of genuine care.
- The
Prince and Princess: Representing the hollowing out of the future, their "Shining
Cities" and "Market Empires" are revealed to be facades for
collapse, already infested with the termites of greed.
The Plague of Insecurity
In Chapter 6, the fable takes its most sobering turn,
tackling the crisis of land-based conflict. Unlike the termites who eat from
within, the Grasshoppers and Locusts represent externalized violence.
They do not just consume crops; they destroy the very "Mounds" where
the people live, forcing them into flight. This is a direct, haunting allegory
for the real-world clashes, terrorism, and insecurity that have turned parts of
the land into a landscape of survival rather than growth.
The Anthem of the Infestation
The constant chant of the termites is a haunting, rhythmic centrepiece
of the fable, an anthem of blind persistence:
“We dig; we rise,
We starve; we rise,
We fall; we rise,
We rise again.”
This is the heartbeat of the old order. It is a monolithic
hum representing the stubbornness of old habits and the "Emilokon"
mentality of entitlement. It is a Litany of the Hollow, expressing the
"Scavenger’s Hope": the belief that there will always be something
left to eat. The tunnels do not echo with silence; they hum with this perpetual
war cry, reminding the kingdom that the termites do seek to build; they seek to
persist.
The Path to Rebirth: The Unified Pulse
The remainder of the book is a masterclass in the painful
process of systemic rebirth. In Chapter 13, the discovery of the Hidden
Scrolls of Betrayal acts as a catalyst. The "termite-awareness"
begins to beat in the tunnels, leading to the iconic March of the Hungry
Mounds (Chapter 16). When the palace finally trembles, it is because the
"wood" of the nation has decided to stop being a meal.
The Earth Assembly (Chapters 17–24)
This section is the philosophical bedrock of the book,
introducing the Earth Assembly: a direct manifestation of the Unified
Pulse. Barnabas is a realist; he shows that the Old Order does not go
quietly. Through the "Night of Misinformation" and the "Truth
Tribunal," he demonstrates that restoration cannot happen without an
honest accounting of the rot.
The New Mound (Chapters 25–36)
Avoiding a fairy-tale ending, Barnabas explores the heavy,
quiet burden of rebuilding. The climax centres on the Council of the Three
Paths, where the earth itself chooses sides. The book concludes not with a
return to the old "Emilokon," but with its Rebirth: a new
definition where the "turn" belongs to the New Mound.
The New Mound isn't a place where the termites are gone
forever; it is a place where the Unified Pulse is so strong that the
scavengers can no longer find a place to hide.
Final Verdict
Joe Barnabas has written a mandatory text for anyone
interested in the intersection of power and morality. It is uncomfortable,
necessary, and brilliantly executed. Emilokon reminds us that the
greatest threat to a house isn't the storm outside, but the hunger within the
walls.
View or read via Amazon: Emilokon or The Fable of the Termites

Comments
A Metaphorical Page Summary
At the heart of the book lies the central metaphor: “Emilokan” — “it is my turn”, a phrase that has evolved in Nigerian political consciousness from mere rhetoric into a governing philosophy of entitlement �.
Modern Ghana +1
1. The Throne as Inheritance, Not Responsibility
The book paints governance as a rotational throne, where leadership is no longer a sacred duty but a reward system for political loyalty and past investments. In this allegory, the state becomes a family estate, and power is transferred not by merit, but by claims of turn-taking.
This reflects a deeper critique: leadership becomes transactional—“I have paid my dues, now I must eat.”
2. The Banquet of the Few
Another striking allegory is that of a banquet table, where the political elite feast while the masses watch from a distance.
“Emilokan” here symbolizes access to the table, not service to the people. Those who finally “arrive” govern with urgency—not to build—but to consume before their time expires.
This mirrors critiques that the ideology often leads to appropriation of state resources for personal or sectional gain �.
Legit.ng - Nigeria news.
3. The Marketplace of Power (State Capture)
The system is further likened to a marketplace, where governance is auctioned to the highest bidder or most connected actor.
Policies, appointments, and national assets become commodities, traded among elites. The book’s allegory here aligns with the idea of state capture, where power structures are manipulated to serve private interests rather than public good �.
icirnigeria.org
4. The Cycle of the Waiting Room
Citizens are portrayed as trapped in a perpetual waiting room, each group believing “our turn will come.”
This illusion sustains the system. Instead of demanding systemic reform, people hope for inclusion in the next cycle of entitlement.
Thus, “Emilokan” becomes not just a political slogan, but a psychological trap—a cycle that reproduces itself across generations.
5. The Collapse of Collective Identity
The book contrasts “Emilokan” with a lost ideal of collective nationhood.
Instead of “we the people”, governance becomes “me and my people.”
Public goods—roads, schools, security—are distributed not as rights, but as patronage tools, deepening division and underdevelopment �.
Opinion Nigeria
6. The Illusion of Destiny
Finally, the ideology is framed as a myth of inevitability—leaders present their rise as destiny fulfilled.
But the book dismantles this illusion, arguing that such thinking erodes democracy by replacing choice with entitlement.
Closing Thought (Cubicles Den Tone)
“Emilokan is not just a word—it is a mirror. A mirror reflecting a nation where power is pursued as inheritance, consumed as privilege, and defended as destiny. Until the language of ‘my turn’ gives way to ‘our future,’ governance will remain a feast without a nation.”