Since its release in February 2024, The Fuji Documentary has screened at academic conferences, documentary film festivals, public spaces, and university campuses in Africa, Europe, and North America.

Praise for The Fuji Documentary

“The director and producer of the film, Professor Saheed Aderinto, is a leading cultural historian and authority on Nigerian popular music.  Though factually detailed and sophisticated in approach, the dominant note is one of respectful admiration for a unique cultural figure [Sikiru Ayinde Barrister]. The film is beautifully put together and entirely captivating -- a landmark in popular music documentation. Àjànàkú kọjá “Mo rí nǹkan fìrí”, bá a bá rérin, ká a sọ pé a rérin!"

—Professor Emeritus Karin Barber, DBE, FBA

University of Birmingham

Author of The Generation of Plays: Yoruba Popular Life in Theatre

Get the full review of The Fuji Documentary by Professor Karin Barber, HERE

Praise for The Fuji Documentary

“Professor Saheed Aderinto is a masterful storyteller who successfully brings his prodigious skills as a historian to documentary filmmaking.  This film brilliantly tells the story of Fuji music as it emerges in the cultural efflorescence of post-independence Nigeria and then goes global. This film is a must-see for music fans and anyone interested in understanding the creative spark currently igniting Nigerian music, film, and art.”

 

—Professor Jesse Weaver Shipley 

The John D. Willard Professor (Dartmouth College)

Author of Living the Hiplife: Celebrity and Entrepreneurship in Ghanaian Popular Music

Additional Praises for The Fuji Documentary, HERE

Get the Premiere Brochure, Here

Follow The Fuji Documentary

YouTube: http://bit.ly/FujiYoutube

Facebook: http://bit.ly/FujiFacebook

Instagram: http://bit.ly/FujiInstagram

Documentary Films as Social Activism Posted on Facebook on December 16, 2023 (December 16, 2023)

Filmic Agency: Promoting Local African Writers (Part 3) (Posted on Facebook on January 5, 2024)

Do You Want to Kill Me? (Posted on Facebook on December 29, 2023)

Filmic Agency: Promoting Local African Writers (Part 2) (Posted on Facebook on December 7, 2023)

California Runs! (Posted on Facebook on December 2, 2023)

What is Amala? Some Myths about an African Cuisine (Posted on Facebook on November 3, 2023)

Waka Waka! (Posted on Facebook on October 14, 2023)

After King, Na King! (Posted on Facebook on September 27, 2023)

“Shagari Won Again, We Don’t Want Baba”: The Most Controversial Beat in Yoruba Popular Music History Posted on Facebook on (September 3, 2023)

Filmic Agency: Promoting Local African Writers by (Posted on Facebook on November 18, 2023)

The Fuji Documentary to Premiere at Barryfest, February 2024 (Posted on Facebook on August 15, 2023)

Don’t Be a Stranger! (Posted on Facebook on October 28, 2023)

Fujicians and National Honors (Posted on Facebook on October 12, 2022)

My First Owambe (Posted on Facebook on November 14, 2022)

From Motorola to iPhone 13: Seventeen Years of My Cell Phone Ownership in Picture (Posted on Facebook on October 22, 2022)

Of “Ordinary Things" that Make Big Difference: Unveiling My New Home Office (Posted on Facebook on January 15, 2023)

Digital Media and the Commoditization of Knowledge in the 21st Century (Posted on Facebook on January 8, 2023)

 Fuji and Social Class: A Conversation with Otunba Adisa Osiefa (February 13, 2023)

Print Immortality: Fujicians and their Biographers (Posted on Facebook on February 14, 2023)

The Idea of a Total Artist: Shooting the Fuji Documentary with Adebayo Ishola Barryreborn (Posted on Facebook on September 24, 2022)

Amala happiness (Posted on Facebook on September 2, 2022)

Who is a Superstar? Digital Virality versus Street Credibility in Nigerian Popular Culture (Posted on Facebook on September 6, 2022)

What Amala Cannot Do, Does Not Exist! By Saheed Aderinto (Posted on Facebook on August 28, 2023)

Unequal Grace: Dissident Art, Poverty, and Religious Ideologies in Nigeria (Posted on January 5, 2023)

Dress the Way You Want to be Addressed (Posted on Facebook on May 27, 2023)

How Much is Enough? Monetary Issue in Fieldwork and Archival Research (Posted on Facebook on May 4, 2022) 
It is official! (Posted on Facebook on May 24, 2022)

More than Cash: The African Diaspora Intellectual Remittance (Posted on Facebook on May 2, 2023)

Stop Eating Our Beloved Friends—You Cannibals! By Saheed Aderinto (Posted on Facebook on June 3, 2023)

Who is Barry Wonder? How Not to Describe African Celebrities (Posted on Facebook on August 26, 2022)

“Thank You Lord for Not Shaming Me”: Worship, Testimony, and Performance of Prosperity in Fuji (Posted on Facebook on July 13)

We are Moving, Again…! (Posted on Facebook on December 23, 2022)

Please, Introduce Me Properly! By Saheed Aderinto (Posted on Facebook on April 13, 2023)

Unveiling Bob Fullilove, My Game Changer! (Posted on Facebook on April 23, 2023)

No Aso ebi, No Food: Music, Fashion, and Party Financing in Yoruba History (Posted on Facebook on January 3, 2022)

Writing Fuji, Narrating Self: A Conversation with Tunde Busari (Posted on Facebook on April 16, 2022)

Nothing is New under the Sky: The Fuji Origin of Zah Zhu—Zhe (Posted on Facebook on January 24, 2022)

Fuji in an American Classroom (Posted on Facebook on January 12, 2022)

Fuji Pedagogy: When a Fujician Became a Professor

Bob Golding (1937-2022): A Life Lived for Animals and Other Creatures (Posted on Facebook on March 4, 2022)

More than Lovers, Daughters, Patrons, Mothers: New Lights on the Women of Fuji (Posted on Facebook on February 12, 2022)

From an Undergraduate to a Professor: Twenty Years of Evolution of my Workspace in Pictures (Posted on Facebook on March 26)
Inside Nigeria’s Oldest Newspaper Library: Retracing Fuji History and Print Culture with Elder Dayo Odeyemi (Posted on Facebook on November 17, 2021)
We are in this Together: The Insider/Outsider Factors in Fuji Studies (Posted on Facebook on October 19, 2021)
Digital Fuji: The Musical Soundscape of Lagos in Historical Perspective (Posted on Facebook on November 27, 2021)
What is African in African Philosophy? An Encounter with a Fuji Philosopher (Posted on Facebook on January 5, 2022)
Soundtracking the Fuji Documentary: The Art of RemmyChanter (Posted on Facebook on November 6, 2021)

Between Grades and Grit (Posted on Facebook on November 14, 2021)

Muta Jero’s Name Has Entered Book: Turning a Fuji Artist into Knowledge (Posted on Facebook on November 21, 2021)

All Politics is Local: Gender, Social Media, and Political Fuji in Nigeria (Posted on Facebook on September 25, 2021)

Research and Scholarship in the Digital Age. Presented at Elizade University on August 4, 2021

There is Something inside Something that is called Something: Explaining Fuji Epistemology to the General Public (Posted on Facebook on September 19, 2021)
Queen Salawa Abeni: A Date with the Goddess of Sound(Posted on Facebook on November 11, 2021)
Malaria Blues 2021 (Posted on Facebook on October 22, 2021)
The Impersonator! (Posted on Facebook on September 27, 2021)
Call for Entries: The Nobel Prize for Streetology  (Posted on Facebook on December 4, 2021)
The Making of “Fuji: A Documentary.” (Taye Currency, Posted on Facebook on September 7, 2021)
A Dead Goat that Talks like a Human (Posted on Facebook on July 30, 2021)
Fuji: A Documentary (Posted on Facebook on April 25, 2021)
What is the Language of Fuji? Engaging Yoruba Ethnicity and Cultural Dominance with Sefiu Alao Adekunle (JJC) (Posted on Facebook on September 3, 2021)
Queen Salawa Abeni: Nigeria's Miriam Makeba @60 (Posted on Facebook on May 6, 2021)

Inside Fuji Chamber: Memory and Memorialization in African Musical Art (Posted on Facebook on August 19, 2021)
"I'm a Gentle Lady, not a Fighter": African Tina Turner, Gender, and the Politics of Genre-Making (Posted on Facebook on February 20, 2021)
Muta Jero of Bodija: Agbero in the Day, Fuji Prophet at Night (Posted on Facebook on August 27, 2021)

A Dead Goat that Talks like a Human (Posted on Facebook on July 30, 2021)
Before Cubana: Performative Elitism, Nightlife, and Popular Culture in Nigeria (Posted on Facebook on July 17, 2021)

The Making of "Fuji: A Documentary."

Location: The Tunde Odunlade Art Gallery, Ibadan.

Episode: The Pen and Stardom: Entertainment Journalists, Print Culture, and Fuji.

Interviewee: Otunba Wale Ademowo (Veteran journalist, editor of award-wining entertainment column of the Nigerian Tribune in the 1990s, biographer of Fuji star K1 De Ultimate, author of books on Fuji, Highlife, and Juju).

Decolonizing the Decolonizer: Epistemic Liberation in 21st Century Africanist Scholarship Plenary Lecture of the "Ife-Edinburgh Catalyst Workshop" on June 10, 2021

No Time to Waste Time: In Memory of Taofeeq Amoo Igisekele (Posted on Facebook on May 28, 2021)
Playing by the Rules: Copyright Matters in Documentary Filmmaking (Posted on Facebook on July 14)
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Before Soapy: Moral Politics and the Evolution of Fuji Dances (Posted on Facebook on January 21, 2021)
The Kingdom where Everyone is a King: Barrister Ten Years On (Posted on Facebook on 12/16/2020)
Of Sex and Vulgarity: The Original African Fuji Michael Jackson (Posted on Facebook on 11/1/2020)
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Napoli Like Lagos”: The African Puff Daddy @53 (Posted on Facebook on 11/27/2020) 
How to Catch a Cheating Husband: A Fuji Party Manual (Posted on Facebook on 11/13/2020)
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On the Current Crisis in Nigeria: An Open Letter to K1 De Ultimate (Posted on Facebook on 10/27/2020)

"Drop Gun, Come 1 on 1, If I no Commot Your Teeth Just Now!" (Posted on Facebook on 10/23/2020)
Introducing Animal Nigerians in Time and Space (Posted on Facebook on 10/28/2020)
Inside the Home of Sound: An Audio Entry into Nigeria’s Past (Posted on Facebook on 7/25/2020)
Gendering Fuji: Unmasking Pioneering Women Fuji Artists (Part I) (Posted on Facebook on 7/4/2020)
Remembering the Yuppie Generation: Fuji Travelogue, Genre Making, and the New African Diaspora (Posted on Facebook on 9/28/2020)
 
 
Of Treasure and Dirt: Excavating the Hidden Past of Fuji  (Posted on Facebook 05/27/2020)
Aki Gbe'Na Wo Oni Bembe Oru: Religion, Nightlife, and the Roots of Fuji (Posted on Facebook on 5/19/2020)
Digital Ethnography in Action: Engaging Sule Ayantade Adigun (Posted on Facebook on 9/20/2020)
It is official! (Posted on Facebook 5/14/2020)
From Music Promotion to Kingship: The Adetunji Brothers in Perspective (Posted on Facebook on 5/2/2020)
The Heroes Children Made: Childhood, Art, and Fuji Stardom (Posted on Facebook on 10/11/2020)
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Buying Stickers, Collecting Data! (Posted on Facebook on 05/7/2020)
Today, while waiting for my car to be fixed at a mechanic workshop, I acquired additional Fuji artist stickers. Before the coronavirus wahala in March, I spent some days at motor parks taking photos of Fuji star stickers on public buses and taxis, while also interviewing the drivers. Most of the drivers thought I was crazy because they can't understand my fascination with "ordinary" things about them and their favorite Fuji star!
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Ade Radio of Idi Arere: Re-introducing Nigeria’s Pioneering DJ (Posted on Facebook on 04/25/2020)
Creating Knowledge, Performing Patronage: Social Class and Power Relations in Fuji (Posted on Facebook on 03/17/2020)
Celebrating Obama, Performing Blackness: Fuji Artists and the Global American Fantasy of 2009 (Posted on Facebook on 1/4/2020)
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Resounding the Past with Easy Sawaba (Posted on Facebook on 04/1/2020)
Wasiu Ojola of Ede: A Local Artist Per Excellence (Posted on Facebook on 4/17/2020)
Hello 1 2 2, Hello 2 2 2: Sound, Technicians, and the Social History of Fuji Technology (Posted on Facebook on 04/8/2020)
Fuji Time is Now! (Posted on Facebook on 12/16/2019)

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Amala Orgasm! (Posted on Facebook on 9/14/2020)

There is no greater feeling than entering a buka as cassava flour received serious beating. The aroma and texture of a professionally made amala can reset a troubled mind. In vernacular medicine, you know you are healed of malaria if you ask for "swallow," preferably amala, after receiving injection or oral medication. The culinary geography of Nigeria credits Ibadan with the epicenter of amala. The city is the only place where people measure their knowledge of geography and spatiality by the name and number of amala joints they have eaten. The ultimate love for amala is knowing an obscure buka, even though you don't live or work in the area.

This photo was taken on June 23 with some touts, who call themselves my mentees, after they observed me do research at Radio Nigeria in Ibadan. To forestall an impending hunger revolt, I drove them to Alhaja Olaiya Food Canteen at Bodija market. Because we ate beef, instead of goat meat, I spent N1,500 feeding five humans, including myself! We took sachet, instead of bottled water. This buka only serves amala lafun, which is cheaper than amala gidi.

This brings me to the popular narrative about Africans living on less than a dollar per day and the corresponding "fetishization of poverty." One cannot understand subsistence living, which Western development experts and their African colleagues have labeled as "poverty" by reading books and by observation, but by a deep immersion in the everyday life of the people stereotyped as "poor." A person who eats twice a day, and refused to patronize a fancy restaurant, change wardrobe, or drive a car may not be poor--he or she may be saving up to complete a new home somewhere in the suburb of the city. The classic argument that we should "disaggregate," poverty and underdevelopment by paying attention to location, class, and indigenous conception of happiness and progress remains potent in 21st century study of people and culture. This does not mean there is no poverty, which has taken a new turn due to Buhari's failure.

As I argued in the lecture I gave at KU Leuven last year about African cities, Ibadan defies some of the core attributes of 21st century urban processes. The contrast between the city and other African urban locations in terms of cost and standard of living, and conception of progress underscores the value of comparative urbanization. Indeed, the common argument that population cluster would automatically lead to increase in cost of living, does not apply to Ibadan. In simple terms, it is cheaper to live in Ibadan, with an estimated population of 5 million, than smaller cities like Ado Ekiti of 100, 000 people or less.

Why is Ibadan more affordable than many African cities of its population and genealogy? Answer: the people refused to make life difficult for one another! Neoliberal poverty is location specific.
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Homebound: Appreciating my Community of Care (Posted on Facebook on 8/9/2020)

After 5 months in Nigeria, I am finally returning to the US through an evacuation flight, which my university paid for. What began as a short trip to jump-start a new book project on Fuji and attend a conference became my longest stay in Nigeria since moving to America 15 years ago. For a decade now, I have spent at least two months in Nigeria, every summer, conducting research. I have not had a sabbatical/research leave since earning my doctorate 10 years ago, but coronavirus pandemic gave me one!

The anxiety surrounding the lockdown and inability to return to the US increased my vulnerability. In the first instance, my US bank prevented me from transferring money because they feared my account was hacked in Nigeria. In less than 5 minutes of hearing the bad news, Seun Williams, a PhD student at the Graduate Institute in Geneva, who did not worth more than his brilliance, impeccable work ethic, and dogged dedication to selfless service before he started graduate school in Europe in September 2019, quickly gave me a cash loan. Walahi Mo fo!

Many friends, especially Carli Coetzee reached out via Whatsapp, virtually everyday, to ask about my wellness. My 81-year-old father (Haji Lati Baba onipako) and brother (Buoda Wasiu Baba Tunrayo) worried about my safety throughout my stay in Nigeria. My good friend Akeem Akinwale did three airport runs because of me and hosted me in his home in Lagos. My parents in-law (the Popoolas of Lagos) continued to sustain their 15 years of support. I am lucky to have in-laws who have never stressed me out. Adebamiji Oluniyi is more than a brother. I will write about this guy one day!

Feeding arrangement was complicated because Olamide my wife warned me to stop eating in buka. Some thugs who call themselves my mentees and claimed to be sad about my inability to return to America, became emergency cooks, feeding me with their own preference. If they had their way, Kabiru Amusa would wreck me with hot pepper sauce, rice, and egg, every morning; Gbenga Makinsun would kill me with beans and maize, cooked together; and Tolani Onike won't stop making a burnt offering, which he inappropriately called "fried plantain." It is only coronavirus problem that would compel a Katangite (Saheed Aderinto) to eat salt-less beans prepared by a Zookite (sorry Zikite), named Tolani Onike. Indeed, university hall of residence rivalry is trans-generational! Stephen Boluwaduro brought apples to the house, even though I would have preferred something hard. There was no dry day in Ibadan, thanks to Baba Ila, the local palmwine dealer. Victor Olaoye (aka Eru Iku) complemented natural drink with industrial alcohol.

To address a clear culinary inadequacy, I regularly disobeyed my wife's "don't eat outside" order by visiting bukas, too long to list here. Special appreciation goes to Iya Meta, Amala Skye (now Polaris), and Alhaja Olaiya--all at Bodija in Ibadan, for keeping the amala buka life support intact. Kehinde and Kolawole Adekola regularly invited me for dinner in their home, thus minimizing the culinary damage caused by Kabiru, Gbenga, and Tolani. Scared that I might marry a second wife for my brother (Kehinde Alfa Saburi), Eleha Idayat (Iya Muad) prepared soup, usually on short notice.

Domesticity took a new turn because of the uncertainly of my stay. When my gardener decided to exploit my fear of reptiles sneaking into the house to swallow me, Adebayo made a good replacement. Iya Bolu did a good weekly dirt roundup. I had electricity 24/7 because Bolarinwa expertly installed the solar panel inverters. He saved me from the predictable discomfort of generator noise and the epilepsy of "NEPA." For the first time in 15 years, my anti-mosquito immune system crashed, and I was hospitalized for malaria on May 29. The nurses at the Military Hospital (Odogbo Barack) restored my health after two painful paracetamol injections and oral medication. Frightened beyond description upon hearing about my sickness, Adeyemi Ademowo rushed to the house only to find me chilling-- in post-malaria style.

As one would expect, absence from home intensified my wife's burden. Itandola increased his indulgence, even in this coronavirus era. After mastering four musical instruments and reading dozens of books, he decided to formally play school football this summer. I have not been around to take him to football training, and help him make his transition to high school. Itandayo his brother is his mother's child--he did not miss me! Our neighbors in the US did the unbelievable, filling the vacuum of my absence from home. Ari Rocchio, my former graduate student who live close to the airport, allowed me to park my car at his apartment complex for 5 months. Babatunde Babalola reached out to my wife, even though he is jealous that I'm in Ibadan for reasons known to him!

This is the most expensive research trip I have taken to Nigeria. But the financial implication of the trip is not as important as the knowledge that will be created, the silenced stories that will be told, the marginalized narratives that will be centered, and the lives that will be inspired. I don’t do research and write a new book because I have unlimited resources to expend, but because I think that scholars have a moral obligation to tell some stories with rigor and "objectivity." For me, the ultimate satisfaction for writing a new book is not pay raise, invitation to give lectures across the world, academic rank promotion, book awards, and performance of knowledge and professorial power--even though I have achieved all these with my previous books. Rather, it is the realization that a new body of knowledge, which would further increase my ability to help individuals, academic communities and networks, and institutions achieve their goals, would exist. To all the people I interviewed, and the librarians and archivists who accommodated my wahala, I say Thank You!
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A Bird Nation: How the Eagle Became a National Symbol in Nigeria (Posted on Facebook on 03/16/2019)
Amotekun: Understanding Humans’ Experience through Animals (Posted on Facebook on 01/16/2020)
The Mona Monkeys of Akoka: In Search of Animals in African Urban Studies (Posted on Facebook on 09/02/2019)
 
 
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When History Roars Back: Remembering the Lioness of Lisabiland (04/16/2019)
Inside the Nigerian Political Zoo (Posted on Facebook 02/06/2020)
The Lions of Igbosere: Royalty, Political Power, and Self-fashioning in Nigeria (Posted on Facebook on 05/14/2019)
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Haruna and Imade of Ibadan: Love Made in Heaven, Enjoyed in Captivity, and immortalized in the Museum (Posted on Facebook on 08/13/2019)
Encountering the Animal Kingdom: The Origin of Modern Zoo in Nigeria  (Posted on Facebook on 04/14/2019)
The O’Horse of Lagos: Animal Transportation in Time Perspective (Posted on Facebook on 02/04/2020)
 
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Animality and Colonial Subjecthood (Posted on Facebook on 07/19/2019)

So yesterday at the University of Illinois at Urbana- Champaign, I attempted to compress the central ideas of an entire book manuscript into a 45-minute Plenary Lecture of the Human-Animal Studies Summer Institute. Talking about your own work is not as easy as one would think. The photo of the hanged dog in the PowerPoint is dated 1952 from Eastern Nigeria. Some people may be disturbed about the possibility of writing a history of humans from the prism of animals or the idea that we can improve our understanding of colonialism through the experience of animals. But the goal of research is to challenge preconceived notions about everything--it is not to make people feel comfortable all the time! Colonialism was not just about humans; animals were also colonial subjects. We may not fully understand the extent of imperial domination until we bring animals into the orbit of colonialism. Colonial animality went beyond being an animal under foreign domination; it encompasses unveiling human existence that manifested in animalistic tendencies.

Animal behavior was not always in opposition or inferior to human attitude--context, situation, and circumstances matter. Like humans, laws and institutions of power governed animals' everyday life. Animals were sorted, indexed, and prioritized to meet colonialists' construction of normality, orderliness, and modernity. A goat found “trespassing” around the government house garden, like a dog seen in the street during rabies outbreak, would be impounded. That a dog can be hanged, like humans, for contravening colonial regulations speaks volume of how imperialism conceived biological bodies and affinity between its human and nonhuman subjects.

The idea of dog and cattle tax was not just about materiality--it also entailed obligation and protection derived from performing civic duty of increasing colonial treasury with levies. Colonial animals, like humans, were in the service of the empire. The donkey, the number one transport animal of British Nigeria, helped the invaders to achieve their capitalist expropriation. The horse became the insignia of imperial spectacle on the turf, performing power that fractured the tenor of inter-human politics. Burtu, the bird and mascot of the colonial army joined the guard of honor that welcomed Queen Elizabeth II to Nigeria in 1956.

The idea of "animals and other Nigerians" simply suggests that Nigerianness (like ethnic categories) transcends the human factor. There were human as well as animal Nigerians!

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The Political Animal in Human History (Posted on Facebook on 02/13/2019)

People have noticed the increasing presence of animals, dressed in the motif of political parties, at rallies ahead of Nigeria's presidential election on Saturday. For many, this is a “new” trend. However, throughout history, animals have helped humans to set new standard of social and political relations and establish the authenticity of claims to superior power. The use of animal body, visual lexicon, and iconography in politics is sarcastic and satirical, no doubt. But it can also reveal a deep-rooted relationship that humans have established with the non-human creatures and the environment, for centuries.

For instance, a Daily Service newspaper reporter declared in a story published in the 1940s that “Strange things happen in Lagos day by day” after seeing a dog dressed in trouser and suit. The dog, whose suit and trouser was made from an expensive imported material, locally called Olowondabira (the rich is performing wonder), was paraded in Lagos Island on the eve and the day of the Muslim festival of Eld-il-Fitr. Why was the dog dressed in suit and trouser made from an imported textile, not in an African costume? Why use a dog, instead of a monkey or goat? And why did this happen during the Muslim festival in Muslim-dominated Lagos Island, not the mainland? Religion, class, and politics all combined to give this dog (like other animals) an ambivalent place in the struggle for power.

The good news is that this election period will soon end, and I will reclaim all my Atukulated and Buharists friends. I miss you guys! For supporters of Sowore, among other Boy Scouts and Girls Guides, continue to persevere, for your reward is in heaven. This my mouth will not kill me!

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Of Gender, Race, and Class: Two Women’s Fight to Decolonize the Horse in Southern Nigeria (Posted on Facebook on 03/02/2019)
Hakurin Kaya Sai Jaki: The Donkey in Nigerian History (Posted on Facebook on 12/22/2018)
Of Satire and Fact: The Politics of Animal Advocacy in Nigeria (Posted on Facebook on 12/16/2018)

If you need some good laugh today, try read this satire, which reminds one of a recent misinterpretation of a story about President Buhari by Bishop Oyedepo.

In 1947, some educated Nigerians led the establishment of the Nigerian branch of the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, a Britain-based animal advocacy group. Essentially, the group helped the police to prosecute offences such as beating a dog for stealing meat from egusi soup of its owner. However, many Nigerians viewed animal protection law as a modernist and Euro-centric idea, not in agreement with the intricate relationship between the human and non-human creatures of the country. They believed it extends the boundary of colonial violence.

Jubril Raji, the author of this satire definitely belonged to this group. Written during one of the slum clearance projects in 1950s Lagos, Raji’s satire (a form of resistance) is framed as fact. The RSPCA officer in question does not exist. And Raji is a pseudonym/fictitious name, I think. In colonial literary culture, a real petition would typically contain the physical address of the petitioner and some language of obedience to the British crown. Plausibly, Raji was punished for cruelty to an animal and sought to shame animal advocates with a biting humor. Or he felt that slum clearance violates the rights of the poor. These interpretations are not cast in stone—the satire can be read in other nuanced way.

A satire is not fact, but a sarcastic fact!