By Ifeanyi Igwebike Mbanefo
There is a tendency to think that institutions emerge fully formed. They do not. Behind every enduring institution are men and women who lend it something more valuable than money: credibility. That was the role Professor Femi Osofisan played in the story of the Nigeria Prize for Literature.
When the prize was new, uncertain, and untested, he stepped forward.
When it needed legitimacy, he lent his name.
When it needed intellectual weight, he lent his reputation.
When younger writers needed encouragement, he gave it.
Like many of the giants of his generation, Femi understood that nations are built not only with roads, bridges, gas plants, and power stations. They are also built with stories, ideas, scholarship, imagination, and culture.
He understood that literature matters because it helps a people understand who they are.
Today, the Nigeria Prize for Literature stands as one of the world’s most valuable literary prizes and arguably the most prestigious literary award on the African continent. But prizes do not become institutions by accident. They become institutions because respected men and women place their reputations behind them and nurture them through their formative years.
Femi Osofisan was one of those guardians.
As he marks his 80th birthday, we celebrate not only a distinguished playwright, scholar, teacher, former President of the Association of Nigerian Authors, and current Chairman of its Board of Trustees. We celebrate a patriot who answered the call when Nigerian literature needed him.
The agenda then was a better Nigeria.
The agenda remains a better Nigeria.
And so, on behalf of countless writers, readers, students, and lovers of literature, I say:
Thank you for showing up.
Thank you for believing.
Thank you for lending your weight when it mattered most.
Happy 80th Birthday, Professor Femi Osofisan.
The debt we owe cannot be measured in cash. It can only be measured in gratitude, in respect, and in the enduring legacy of work worth reading.
Lastly, if you want to be remembered long after your time, do something worth writing about or write something worth reading.
Osofisan has done both. He will be doubly remembered. Thrice if you count Okinba Launko.
Mbanefo, founder of the Nigeria Prize for Science and Literature, lives in Montreal, Canada.
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