• Hausa Edition
  • Podcast
  • Conferences
  • LeVogue Magazine
  • Business News
  • Print Advert Rates
  • Online Advert Rates
  • Contact Us
Thursday, July 16, 2026
Leadership Newspapers
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sport
    • Football
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Education
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
    • Columns
  • Others
    • LeVogue Magazine
    • Conferences
    • National Economy
  • Contact Us
Hausa Edition
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sport
    • Football
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Education
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
    • Columns
  • Others
    • LeVogue Magazine
    • Conferences
    • National Economy
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
Leadership Newspapers
No Result
View All Result

Footnotes For A Nativeland: A Review

LEADERSHIP News by LEADERSHIP News
27 seconds ago
in Opinion
Footnotes For A Nativeland A Review
Share on WhatsAppShare on FacebookShare on XTelegram

By Angela Agoawike

Emman Usman Shehu, PhD, has had a distinguished career as journalist and author. From NTA Sokoto to the Daily Times and Daily Independent, he is currently, he is the Director of the International Institute of Journalism, IIJ, Abuja. As an author, his latest outing is FOOTNOTES FOR A NATIVELAND. Published by Topaz books in February 2026, it is a 120-page collection of short poems, that describe the aspirations, dreams, challenges, and state of the nation. Here’s my short take on the book.

EVERY DAY, young men and women in major cities across the country wake up at the crow of the cock, or sound of alarms from their cheap smart phones. With their back packs slung over their shoulders, they stand by the roadside waiting to be hired for the day’s work.

Eventually, a vehicle stops, negotiations take place, and the young men  are loaded and deposited at construction sites where they provide cheap labour for the many houses and structures that dot the landscape. At the end of the day, tired and exhausted, they trudge home, for a few hours of rest before the next day’s drudgery begins.

Meanwhile, at other ends of the cities, those who have illegally cornered the nation’s wealth are busy, dusting up their agbadas and ironing their pseudo-designer suits in readiness for housewarming of their insanely huge ‘mansions’ and commissioning of structures that increase the depth of their already bulging bank accounts.

At this point, no one remembers the young men whose hands built the structures, or the young women, who with pots on their heads, babies strapped on their backs, fed the young men at the construction sites, as they fade out, retreat to the back, to become  mere ‘footnotes’ in the sharing of a looted commonwealth.

Like the men and women at the construction sites, so is the woman in  ‘Kiss the Truth’, one of the sixty-two short satire-infused poems that make up Emman Usman Shehu’s Anthology – Footnotes for a Nativeland.

For all of these folks, their inheritance is indeed, a ‘Bouquet of Broken Promises’ by an elite that keeps them on the outside, from where they look in, watching helplessly as their patrimony is stripped in what is best described as ‘Harvests of denial’ of the things that ought to be done to give everyone a fighting chance at decent living.

Footnotes for a Nativeland is an eschatological dissection of the threat greed and corruption pose to the survival of a country;  when ‘shadows on the compound wall’, signal the arrival of the marauders, dampening the zeal of a people who, like the itinerant city construction laborers, dare to seek their ‘daily bread’ under the sun’s unyielding whip and mute indifferent sky.

The beauty of this Anthology as put together by Shehu, lies in the ability of the author to make the 62 short poems inviting and easy to read. For anyone who has come in contact with the author, easy-to-relate with, could also be an apt description of him as he delivers an accurate reflection of the state of the nation with nostalgia subsumed in infectious mirth.

RELATED NEWS

Understanding UNESCO Convention On Intangible Cultural Heritage

China, Poverty Eradication And The Global South

Governor AbdulRazaq: A Leader With Peace, Unity Identities

‘Cracks in the Boabab’s skin’ is particularly interesting as it paints a picture of a country, gradually giving way from its former near-perfect state, even if romantically viewed, to one with cracks that run straight through it, and as the great Chinua Achebe would would have said, the centre can no longer hold as things keep falling apart. As this happens, the question most of its children ask is whether ‘the drummer’s hesitant beat’ is enough to ignite a spark in the night’s stern hush?

From a ‘whisper to the river God’, to the ‘song of the open palm’, from ‘breaking the clay’, as the nation weaves through the ‘hawker’s shadow, through the ‘fisherman’s empty net’, as the ‘maid’s silent scream’ gets lost in the  open seas, the hope is that one day, ‘the sun chews their bone’ as the nation’s children are rid of the ‘ghosts of the hammer’.

Till then, however, as ‘the wound refuse to close’, all the emotions, the ups and downs, highs and lows are but ‘one voice in the shadow’  waiting to see if ‘Mokwa heals” enough to allow its children, sing in a new tongue away from the ‘language of our nativeland’, which according to Shehu, is ‘forgetting the meaning of compassion, and yielding to the domineering tenor of harshness”.

And that is where I have a view, antithetical to Shehu’s. The beauty of poetry is that it sets the mind free, to adopt an interpretation that suits individual conviction or view. It is, that freedom that allows me to interpret the ‘language of our Nativeland as one that is, instead, filled with compassion, consideration for one another, and love of neighbour, but exploited by those that prefer for the people, a legacy of a ‘land that drinks its blood’, thereby making the people who toil daily for a living, nothing but footnotes in a nation which story of an arrested development is still unfolding.

I recommend Footnotes For A Nativeland for everyone, especially communication students to enable them pass on critical messages, without getting in harm’s way.

 

We’ve got the edge. Get real-time reports, breaking scoops, and exclusive angles delivered straight to your phone. Don’t settle for stale news. Join LEADERSHIP NEWS on WhatsApp for 24/7 updates →

Join Our WhatsApp Channel

BREAKING NEWS: Nigerians can now earn as much as $15,000- $25,000 with premium domains. You decide if you want payment in Naira or US Dollars. Be sure to ask for evidence and proof of people benefitting daily from this. CLICK HERE TO START
LEADERSHIP News

LEADERSHIP News

OTHER NEWS UPDATES

Nigeria Needs Curriculum Relevant To Its Needs – UNESCO
Opinion

Understanding UNESCO Convention On Intangible Cultural Heritage

60 minutes ago
China, Poverty Eradication And The Global South
Backpage

China, Poverty Eradication And The Global South

1 hour ago
Kwara Hosts 2024 Best Nollywood Awards In November
Opinion

Governor AbdulRazaq: A Leader With Peace, Unity Identities

1 hour ago
Advertisement

LATEST UPDATE

Footnotes For A Nativeland: A Review

28 seconds ago

Arsenal’s Saliba Faces Five-Month Layoff After World Cup Injury

20 minutes ago

Understanding UNESCO Convention On Intangible Cultural Heritage

60 minutes ago

China, Poverty Eradication And The Global South

1 hour ago

Governor AbdulRazaq: A Leader With Peace, Unity Identities

1 hour ago
Load More
Advertisement
Facebook Twitter Instagram Youtube Whatsapp

© 2026 LEADERSHIP Media Group - All Rights Reserved | Hausa | Online Casino.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sport
    • Football
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Education
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
    • Columns
  • Others
    • LeVogue Magazine
    • Conferences
    • National Economy
  • Contact Us

© 2026 LEADERSHIP Media Group - All Rights Reserved | Hausa | Online Casino.