Showing posts with label Jesuits in Nigeria. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jesuits in Nigeria. Show all posts

Friday, February 26, 2010

North West Africa

Nigerian Man, former Muslim, now Protestant Pastor in England, "16,000 Muslims convert to Christianity everyday" watch video (here)

From the North-West Africa Province of the Society of Jesus.


Talking about the Jesuits in Nigeria and Ghana brings out the hopes and dreams of the sons of Ignatius living and working in these two brother countries. These hopes and dreams include setting foot on the other countries that also constitute the province namely Sierra Leone, Liberia and Gambia.
We, Jesuits, are united by a goal to set the world on fire with Christ's love by their zeal for the souls of their brothers and sisters, especially in Nigeria, Ghana, Sierra Leone, Liberia and Gambia.
In line with Father Ignatius and his companions who sought to bring Christ's message of love, peace, and justice to the world by engaging in various ministries-education, catechesis, and fruitful conversations with the people they encountered- we, the Jesuits in Nigeria, Ghana, Sierra Leone, Liberia, and Gambia, indigenous and expatriates, seek to achieve the magis in all our endeavours.

Link (here) to the North-West Province Website.
Photo is of Jesuit Novices in Nigeria (here)
Some Catholic history of the Church in North-West Africa (here)

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Nigerian Jesuit Fr.Uwem Akpan's New Story "Baptizing The Gun"

“Please, where can I get a mechanic?” I ask when he gives up on pushing.

“Lagos mechanics? Don’t trust any Lagosian. I’m a Lagosian. Once they see you’re a stranger, they’ll cheat you or dismember and sell your car piecemeal, no matter how old. Just listen to me.” He pushes the Beetle again. “O.K., let’s see your engine,” he says when we come to a junction. Fearfully, I open the hood. He bends down and disconnects a tube and hands it to me. “Suck this, man. The problem must be the fuel filter.”

Suck? I’ve never fixed anything in a car before. Back at my parish, I have a driver. “I think we should get a mechanic.”

“Damn it, man, you don’t need a fucking mechanic!”

He takes off his sunglasses to reveal small, angry eyes. I grab the tube. Petrol gushes into my throat, and I let go of the tube, coughing. I puke on the front of my blue-and-white buba shirt. The petrol soaks into my clothes, its cold sting reaching the zipper of my jeans. Ignoring my state, he bends down again to study the engine.

I see a pistol bulging in the right pocket of his trousers.

Why didn’t I wear my priestly habit? Why didn’t I borrow one of those church vehicles with “Catholic Archdiocese of Lagos” emblazoned on its sides?

I begin to plead with the Lagosian. “Please, I’m a Roman Catholic priest and . . .”

“So? You Nigerian clerics just want everything free! You flash your status at every chance.” When he talks, the two gold teeth burn in the night, as if he were chewing flames.

Link (here) to read the full story at The New Yorker

Photo of a Lagos street scene.

Friday, September 18, 2009

Jesuit Author To Be Oprah's Book Selection #63

A mysterious cardboard box arrived Thursday morning at D.C. bookstore Politics and Prose. It was labeled: "Oprah's Book Club Selection #63. Do not open until September 18." Politics and Prose co-owner Carla Cohen had no idea what #63 would turn out to be, but she had ordered 40 copies anyway. It was Oprah, after all.

The book turns out to be Uwem Akpan's "Say You're One of Them," according to information unintentionally leaked Thursday from a book distribution company. The 2008 short-story collection, recently released in paperback by Little, Brown, is the first book from Akpan, a Nigerian-born Jesuit priest who teaches in Zimbabwe. And it's the first time Oprah Winfrey has selected a volume of short fiction.

Winfrey's picks are hush-hush in a big-time, spy-level way. Execs at book companies sign affidavits affirming they won't breathe a word about the chosen title, and publishing companies send off the books in discreet boxes tagged with fake ISBN numbers.

When a secrecy-shrouded book arrives at Politics and Prose, the management resists the urge to pry, Cohen says. They didn't put out Dan Brown's latest early, and they didn't start selling Edward M. Kennedy's book early. And Winfrey's new shipment was kept sealed, Cohen said.

Bloggers and the like had begin putting their money on "Say You're One of Them" after Winfrey dropped her fans a clue in late August, tweeting: "Tune in Friday, September 18 to find out what my new book club pick is -- never made a selection like 'this.' "

After Thursday's leak, Angela DePaul, a spokeswoman for "The Oprah Winfrey Show," simply said: "We don't comment on advance speculation. Oprah announces her book club selections on her show and shares her reasons for choosing the books at that time."

So we won't know the reason behind the choice till Friday at tea time (the talk show airs locally on WJLA at 4). And perhaps we'll never know whether the resurrection of the book club was ratings-driven (Winfrey's Nielsen ratings dropped 7 percent last season).

But we do know that this is the first Oprah's Book Club pick in a while; it has been nearly a year to the day since Winfrey chose David Wroblewski's "The Story of Edgar Sawtelle," a first novel that achieved instantaneous success after the announcement.

Ever since Oprah's Book Club kicked off in 1996 with Jacqueline Mitchard's novel "The Deep End of the Ocean," the seal of Oprah-approval has virtually guaranteed overnight renown for authors such as Wally Lamb, Wroblewski and James Frey, whom Winfrey famously confronted on-air after his supposed memoir, "A Million Little Pieces," turned out to be more fictional than not.

While not familiar with "Say You're One of Them," Cohen was immediately enthused about its selection. "I think anything that calls attention to a book is a good thing!"

She estimates that sales for Akpan's book, which received the 2009 PEN/Beyond Margins Award, will double almost immediately. "Say You're One of Them" has been selling about five copies a month at Politics and Prose -- pretty good stats for a short-story collection, she says.

"Say You're One of Them" features five stories set in different African countries, each focusing on a different set of children, each in a different (often violent, often scary) situation. In The Post, Susan Straight described Akpan's stories as being suffused with "compassion and art." The New York Times' Janet Maslin praised Akpan's deft handling of detail and dialect, and the Guardian called the book "brave" and "terrifying."

Link (here) to the rest of the story

My previous posts on the same subject (here) and (here)

Monday, April 27, 2009

The Superior General Is In Africa

Jesuits Leader Visits Nigeria
From Kunle Aderinokun in Abuja, 04.27.2009

For the first time ever, the Superior-General of Jesuits, Rev. Fr Adolfo Nicolas, will be visiting Nigeria and Ghana , starting tomorrow. As part of his itinerary, which spans three days, Fr. Nicolas, the 'Father- General', as he is fondly called, will be visiting Loyola Jesuit College (LJC) in the Federal Capital Territory , Abuja Principal of Loyola Jesuit College , Rev. Fr. John-Okoria Ibhakewala, said in a statement that, “ we are most honoured to have him with us here at LJC for about two days.” Ibhakewala who said there will be a mass for Fr. Nicolas tomorrow and a picnic with him thereafter, called on parents and friends to join the school in hosting ‘Father-General’.

The statement also said that a dinner in honour of the ‘Father General’ which will have in attendance, amongst others, a member of LJC benefactor will be held in honour of the ‘Father-General’ at the Spanish Embassy in Nigeria inside the residence of the Spanish Ambassador.
The Supreme Head of the Jesuits was born in Palencia , Spain in 1936 and began his theological studies at Sophia Jesuit University in Japan in 1964. He was ordained priest in 1967. As an author, he has written two books in Japanese language. He has also done extensive studies about the challenges facing Christianity in Asia , immigration labourers and refuges among others. Apart from English, he is fluent in Spanish, Japanese and several other European languages.

Link (here)