#BringBackOurGirls

May 5, 2014 1 Comment

“Some of my relatives lived for decades in the North, in Kano and Bornu. They spoke fluent Hausa. (One relative taught me, at the age of eight, to count in Hausa.) They made planned visits to Anambra only a few times a year, at Christmas and to attend weddings and funerals. But sometimes, in the wake of violence, they made unplanned visits. I remember the word ‘Maitatsine’ – to my young ears, it had a striking lyricism – and I remember the influx of relatives who had packed a few bags and fled the killings. What struck me about those hasty returns to the East was that my relatives always went back to the North. Until two years ago when my uncle packed up his life of thirty years in Maiduguri and moved to Awka. He was not going back. This time, he felt, was different.” – Chimamanda Adichie

Read the Entire Article on The Scoop


1 Comment

  • Cynthia Silva Parker says:

    The full article by Chimamanda Adichie is well worth the read. He is calling for clear-eyed, other-centered leadership that meets the urgency of this season of crisis in Nigeria.

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