LAGOS
By AFP
Posted Saturday, March 23 2013 at 01:03
Posted Saturday, March 23 2013 at 01:03
Africa's first Nobel literature laureate Wole
Soyinka and a renowned poet, John Pepper Clark, said Friday they have
lost "a brother, a colleague" with the death of Nigerian novelist Chinua Achebe.
"For us, the loss of Chinua Achebe is, above all
else, intensely personal. We have lost a brother, a colleague, a
trailblazer and a doughty fighter," they said in a joint statement, a
copy of which was sent to AFP.
Achebe, 82, died in a hospital in Boston after a brief illness, his family said Friday.
Widely known as the father of modern African
literature, Achebe had lived and worked as a professor in the United
States in recent years, most recently at Brown University in Rhode
Island.
He is best known internationally for his debut novel "Things Fall Apart", which depicts the collision between British rule and traditional Igbo culture in his native southeast Nigeria.
"Of the 'pioneer quartet' of contemporary Nigerian
literature, two voices have been silenced - one, of the poet
Christopher Okigbo, and now, the novelist Chinua Achebe," the statement
said.
Okigbo died during the "Biafra" civil war in 1967-70.
"...We confidently assert that Chinua lives. His
works provide their enduring testimony to the domination of the human
spirit over the forces of repression, bigotry, and retrogression," it
said.
Soyinka, Achebe, Okigbo and Clark were literary contemporaries.
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