I am not a celebrated pamphleteer/essayist like Kevin Mbayu who wrote a matchless-stellar tribute to Bernard Fonlon, the teacher and Mbayu's intellectual sparring partner. Arguably, the late Mbayu was the one and only Cameroonian who took Fonlon to task in a philosophical debate on morality and the Godhead. Did the revered Fonlon buckle? That is another matter for polemicists.
My focus here is on the death of an educationist and teacher of another cast: Femi Oyewole, a Nigerian. Perusing a copy of The Guardian Newspaper of November 9, 2006, I learnt of the death of the 'eminent teacher', Femi Oyewole.
Continue reading "When A Teacher Dies: Remembering Femi Oyewole" »

From such an illustrious past, the swath of land that lies between Yaoundé in Cameroon and Kampala in Uganda has degenerated into a rookery of some of history’s greediest and most notorious political scoundrels. From Bokassa, whose obsession with Napoleon led him to empty the treasury of his impoverished nation to crown himself emperor, to Macias Nguema, who initiated a reign of terror that almost left him with no subjects to govern; and from Mobutu, the very epitome of greed and recklessness in governance in contemporary Africa, to Alphonse Kayibanda, whose policies laid the groundwork for the Rwandan genocide.


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