My grandfather, Akparika, has fifty-two children. As is the case with nearly every family, one of his children stood out above the rest. In ours, it was Uncle Naitura; Uncle Naitu for short.
Uncle Naitu used to be very handsome. Tall, dark with beards that actually connect...
from ear to ear, unlike that of Uncle Ruwan who lives in the East.
As a child, the first thing I noticed about him was that Uncle Naitu was always well-dressed. Agbada on point, tuxedo on fleek; whether his feet were shod in sandals or dress shoes, the man was set up to be...
...the Life President of Sweet Boys Association.
If uncle Naitu speaks English for you, you’ll melt like coagulated palm oil melts in harmattan, when placed near the cooking fire. Words leave his mouth like sprrr…sprrrr…you know, like the sound of the ATM when rich people...
...are withdrawing money.
Because of that his sprrr…sprrr…grammar, though he’s the second born, the family chose him to be their spokesperson.
Let me not lie; Uncle Naitu did well in the beginning. He went into business; exported groundnuts by the tonnes, owned coal mines,
jewel mining companies, and other thriving business concerns. His trains ran nonstop, from one end of the country to another, trips on his airline were affordable and because of his top-notch telecoms company, you could call someone in any corner of the world.
Then oil was dis-
covered in Uncle Naitu’s backyard.
This was akin to stumbling on a never-ending well of liquid gold in your living room. The oil brought in plenty of money. I mean, Uncle went from rich to laulau-spender. In those days, if uncle sent you money, you did not get a bank alert—
you got a bank alarm.
Uncle Naitu established and built his own currency—called it the naira—until its value rivalled that of his former squatter-turned-landlord, Mr Brit. You know how it is with our people; once you’re the family member with the most money, no matter the....
position of your birth, you automatically become the oldest child and take on the responsibilities that come with that position. That’s how Uncle Naitu took over Uncle Gana’s position. He was called in to settle disputes between his squabbling siblings, even quarrels within...
their own nuclear families. They began to call him the Giant of Akparika.
Maybe, like Grandpa used to say, the spirit of the money was stronger than Uncle’s spirit. So, it began to control him, made him change. Or, you know how they say that money reveals a person’s real self?
It's possible that that's what happened. Maybe the money got to his head, because not long after that oil came, everything began to go haywire.
The money from the oil was so much, Uncle Naitu began to neglect his other businesses. His farms lay fallow. The groundnut pyramids...
dwindled until there was no more. The textile, mineral, and telecoms companies soon followed. The schools and transportation companies went belly up too. Do you know that he even built a steel company but it has never produced any steel to this day?
In all that time, the more...
things went bad for Uncle Naitu, the better things became for his siblings.
Uncle Gana, the eldest, sat up; today, his own currency has surpassed that of Uncle Naitu. I heard that he doesn’t even own a generator because there’s light, 24/7 in his house. Even Uncle Ruwa whose...
children killed each other bitter internal feud, fixed up his family. Auntie Ethopi, who has always been strong and proud, is also doing exceptionally well. You need to see her fleet of airplanes. Very impressive. Their sisters Nami and Zulu, who are the lastborns, are excelling.
You see where I’m going with this, right?
My Uncle Naitu is still the best-dressed in the family. Some of his many children are excelling in many places around the world. Some have robbed him blind but Uncle is an old man now. You don’t expect him to discipline them, do you?
The few businesses left have now died.
He doesn’t have as much money as he used to but that doesn’t mean he’s broke o.
He still has a fleet of private jets and his Chief Manager uses them to fly abroad for medical check-up for his ear infection and other undisclosed ailments.
His sons and daughters who sit on the boards of his various companies pay themselves billions of naira in bonuses every year.
The shareholders aren’t getting so much in dividends but that’s okay. It’s not easy to do the kind of hard work those board members do every day.
People still call him the Giant of Akparika; in fact, he insists on it. But because of his declining performance, that title has lost much of its power.
Would you believe that the other day at the annual family meeting, when Uncle Naitu got up to speak his sprrr-sprrr English,
Uncle Kenny told him to sit down. This had never happened before! It was inconceivable!
Uncle Kenny said, “Giant of Akparika, Giant of Akparika but you have nothing to show for it.
Look at Brother Gana. Have you seen the state-of-the-art airport he just built? Your own, you...
spent how many billions refurbishing that old thing and yet it still leaks like a sieve during the rainy season.”
“Shut up, Kenny! How dare you speak to me in that manner? Notwithstanding my present condition, I am still the biggest and most famous of all in this family.
Just look at you. You who live in the mountains, whose lands have been ravaged by bombs and terrorists?” Uncle Naitu had roared his reply.
“Hehehehehe…,” Uncle Kenny cackled. “Look at pot calling the kettle names. Yes, some miscreants are destroying my lands. But at least...
they’re not killing my children in thousands while I lounge and my manager gaklivants about treating ear infections. At least I am not the one whom they said is the poorest of us all.”
“Don’t mind him,” Auntie Zulu cut in. “Empty cans make the most noise. Stand there and be...
...claiming a title when your children are running away with foreign lovers. Many of them are even causing katakata in their lovers’ homes.”
“Enh? Sister Zulu, you’re joining them?" Uncle Naitu asked, hand clutched to his chest.
"You, whom I singlehandedly rescued from white...
...land grabbers who raped and enslaved you and your children?”
“Abeggi! Forget that thing, jare!” Uncle Gana finally weighed in. “Do some real work, you won’t do. But if it’s to borrow money up and down to oil your wastefulness, you know how to do that one. The way you’re...
...going, you’ll soon sell some of your starving children to pay off your debts. Or the debtors will move into your home, and take over everything. But stay here and drag title, if it makes you happy.”
Ah! The elah was too much! Uncle Naitu and his children were very angry!
But they had no grounds for retaliation.
The only thing they could do was get on Twitter and drag Uncle Kenny’s children for being blacker than that night in December, when witches and wizards hold their bi-annual Olympics.
They also threw a few jabs at Uncle Gana, mentioning..
that time he was so broke, his currency was no better than the dried plantain leaves our ancestors used to wipe their behinds after pooping.
They also said Auntie Zulu and her children couldn’t speak a full sentence in English without inserting, “Eish, wena!”
All these talk…last last, my Uncle Naitu is still President of Sweet Boys Association, Member of Corner to Corner Beard Gang, Chief World Traveller and is the first person to have held the title of Giant of Akparika Family.
Who cares if he’s more broken than the chicken who dared to cross the road and got crushed by a passing car on the express?
His industries are not working, his children are dying, his managers are corrupt and many are complaining. So what?
Who cares if Uncle is like those #hasbeens who went to America for a two-week summer holiday fifteen years ago, returned with an accent and won’t let it go?
Like, seriously, in the face of all his former achievements, what does it matter?
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School of Health Technology, somewhere in Sokoto State.
The Lecturer 1 hands over a list to the new Lecturer 2 who will be teaching Global Health and Health Promotion to the school's 300 Level students. The list has the names the 409 students she'll be teaching.
She walks into the class, greets and introduces herself. Then she writes UNICEF and WHO on the board and asks for the meanings of these acronyms. Her question is met with blank stares and head shakes. She repeats the question. The reactions are the same as before. She's stunned.
One of the students raises his hand.
"Malama," he says, "I will interpret. They don't hear you. Ba turenci."
He become her de facto interpreter and course rep, translating her English to Hausa. But his English leaves much to be desired. There are many words he can't interpret.
People would be angry/bitter at uncles & aunties for not taking care of them but not with the parents who had them with no future plans. Your parents have 8 kids but your uncle with 4 kids is wicked because his children travel for summer when you haven't paid school fees. How???
"A friend's elder sister was married off at a young age so he could go to Uni. He's working now & is burdened with raising his sister's children & the other kids his parents kept having while he was at Uni (the youngest is barely 6).
It's a very long, lonely road ahead for him."
That said, Black Tax is EVIL!
It's not older/richer child responsibility. It's not love or duty. It's not parental enjoyment of the fruits of labour. It's EVIL.
This thing, where parents heap their heavy burden of other children on the first child or the child who earns more.
Single Man: "A woman whose bride price I paid can't control me."
Married Man: *reads post and shakes his head. He's running late but can't leave because Madam is wearing a new dress. He must zip it, patiently take 100 pictures of her from different angles and all must be fine*
Single Man: "My mother gave birth to nine of us. She didn't stress my dad. No pregnant wife can stress me."
Married Man: *goes out at 1:03am to buy party Jollof 'cos pregnant wife has been crying for it, while saying that he doesn't love her, their baby & she wants to die*
Single Man: "I'm self-sufficient and quite domestic. I don't need any woman's help."
Married Man:
"Honey, have you seen my brown socks?"
"Baby do you know where I kept my blue tie"
"Where are my car keys?"
"Sweetheart, when is the conference ending? I miss you so much 😭"
Uforo, Kagiso and Zawadi invade the UK from three different sides.
Zawadi, an accomplished General, arrives at London first. She sticks the Kenyan flag at the top of Buckingham Palace and claims it for Kenya.
On behalf of Nigeria and South Africa, Uforo and Kagiso claim Wales and Scotland respectively and share Northern Ireland.
English is declared too local a language; Ibibio, Xhosa and Swahili are now taught in schools. Pudding is abolished, replaced by Afang, nyama choma and phutu
African archeologists storm England on an expedition. They locate the tomb of Queen Elizabeth I at Westminster and hire white locals to raid it. They cart away her remains, back to Africa and stick them in a museum. British folk now travel to go see it.
This isn't his first time. He's not the first man to do this. Many women in Nigeria have terrible hotel stay experiences.
Male receptionists do proposition female guests and give out their room keys/numbers without permission to male guests who like them.
"So, there is this young man I buy materials from in the market. I met him after my last customer showed me shege (I bought materials in a particular colour. The client wanted another colour and he refused to change it, even though I was a loyal and regular client).
Anyway, this new customer is very honest and has no wahala. Even as prices of fabrics have gone up, he tells me which oned are his old stock at old prices and the new ones with new prices.
I was surprised to find that he's a Hausa boy in a predominantly Igbo business.
When I asked, he told me that he came to Wuse Market as an Almajiri years ago and was doing wheel barrow work. He often carried load for one Igbo man. The man started relying on him to run errands and then asked him to do Nwa Boy under him.