May 4, 2024

Umuaka Times

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Mrs. Nneka Joyce Duru wins international poetry award.

4 min read

It has been joy unspeakable and double blessing for the Durus in the recent time. First, Dr Duru Stephen Chiedozie was promoted to the rank of Associate Professor of naval architecture and marine engineering. Before the celebrations could settle, words came from afar that his amiable wife, Mrs Nneka Joyce Duru has won the African Writers Award which is usually organized by the African Writers Trust.

With hundreds of entries from across Africa, precisely 25 African countries Mrs Nneka Joyce Duru, a “shero” (Umuaa Times word for a female hero) beat all the entries and emerged number with her poem titled, Ode to the Blackbird.


Below is the production of the award winning poem by Nneka Joyce Duru .

Ode to the Blackbird (Haiku) –

When blackbird shall sing

The clouds shall visit the earth

Larks shall hide in shame

 

I am steaming black

When I shall sing my love song

Fair lark shall go down

 

Ho! Blackbirds gyrate!

Play to us the beaded gourd

Let earth sing our praise!

 

Fair maiden, dance on

Dark and beautiful are you

Let earth sing your praise.

 

Literary Appreciation Ode to the Blackbird (Haiku) by Nneka Joyce Duru

According to the findings made by Umuaka Times about the work of Mrs Duru, “This is a poem against racism and black inferiority. The poem begins with a prophetic declaration, “When Blackbird shall sing// The clouds shall visit the earth//Larks shall hide in shame.” This is Africa, symbolic in the form of a Blackbird. The time shall come when Africa will begin to make a great and positive impact, commanding respect in the world. When that day comes, the clouds which represent the ‘high, mighty and influential’ in the world shall make haste to be identified with Africa. Lark here represents racists and other black suppressing powers. When Africa shall finally triumph, ‘Larks shall hide in shame’ in awe of Africa’s glory.

Here in the first stanza, there is the use of allusion, symbols and personification. Personification is seen in the ‘clouds shall visit the earth’ and ‘larks shall hide in shame’ giving human qualities to both an inanimate object and a non-human creature.

In stanza two, the persona introduces her identity as African, ‘steaming black.’ Here the metaphorical use of the word ‘steaming’ is used to lay more emphasis on the color black.

‘When I shall sing my love song

Fair lark shall go down”    Stanza 2, lines 2-3

Here the persona refers to her own efforts. When her impact begins to be felt, nothing shall hold her down rather the racists and haters shall all go down. Here ‘I’ does not only refer to the persona but to Africans as a whole and there is a call for all to begin to make positive contributions to their society and the world at large. ‘The love song’ in line two refers to the universal song of oneness, that indomitable spirit of support and encouragement to one another.

‘Fair lark’ here, referring to the color of the bird juxtaposes with ’fair maiden’ in stanza 4 which means ‘beautiful maiden.’

In stanza three, the exclamation ‘Ho! is made as an emergent, awakening call to action.

‘Ho! Blackbirds gyrate!’  Stanza 3, line 1

Here, gyrate has two meanings; its literal and figurative interpretation. Literal, in the sense that to gyrate is to dance or spin passionately. Every African deserve to be happy, to rejoice, never to be dampened in spirits; and figuratively which denotes pride in one’s culture and identity.

‘Play to us the beaded gourd

Let earth sing your praise’    Stanza three, lines 2-3

The beaded gourd in Igbo land is called ‘Ichaka’ which is a  local musical instrument usually played with frenzy by lifting it high in the air and beating the beads against the gourd to produce a rattling uniform beats suitable for African songs and dances.

There should be an open, unashamed display of our culture and heritage for the world to see and appreciate-‘Let earth sing you praise’

In the last stanza, there is the exhortation of Africa as a fair maiden to continue to ‘dance on.’ Africa is already a beauty. She should continue moving ahead, be proud of her identity, portray and protect her rich cultural heritage. And in the end, the earth shall sing Africa’s praise.

The poem has four stanzas and is written in Haiku style. Haiku is a form of Japanese poetical composition comprising of three lines with syllables 5-7-5.”

Nneka Joyce Duru is a wife, mother, gospel artiste, teacher and a member of the Association of Nigerian Authors (ANA), Rivers State chapter. A graduate of English Language at the University of Lagos, she is a champion of women’s literature and women’s rights. She has visited several schools where she taught the importance of decency and the well-being of the girl-child.

Ode to the Blackbird by Duru Nneka Joyce is the winner of the 2020 African Writers Award for Poetry.

 

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