Monday, November 22, 2010

Building Bridges

So J William Fulbright had a vision
Friendship of nations shall be based on knowledge
Bright students and scholars of other nations to America come
Bright American students and scholars to other nations go
Move freely to share your knowledge and ideals
Share the fruits of human learning over the centuries


Thus we found ourselves here in the US
From all nations, cultures, races and creeds
Sharing the Fulbright badge, sharing humanity
We came to Houston and housed friendship
We discussed, listened to one another and learnt
At Rodeo we even produced Cowboys


Knowledge and ideas exchanged
Friendships evolved and matured within hours
New bridges of understanding constructed
Strong pillars of friendship and trusts erected
We are diverse yet united for common good


This Fulbright microcosm epitomized friendship
Symbolizes the best humanity could offer
God bless Fulbright for his visions
God bless Fulbrighters for implementing the vision
God bless us all

Houston
March 2 2002
This poem was read by six Fulbrghters at the Houston conference of March 2002,
each from the six inhabited continents, it was a memorable experience I still cherish.

Saturday, November 20, 2010

Writer’s block? I had it the day my computer crashed

This interview was published in Nigeria's newspaper THE SUN on Tuesday, April 3, 2007
It was conducted by SEGUN AJAYI

 Dr. Yusuf Adamu is a geographer cum writer. According to the immediate past Chairman of the Association of Nigerian Writers (ANA), Kano State Chapter, there exists a strong link between Literature and Geography that cannot be wished away.

The university lecturer is also a culture activist having kick-started his writing career in Hausa language before returning to English. Although the poet realises that it is more lucrative to write in Hausa than English, in Kano, Adamu believes it is time writers of northern extraction are exposed to modern ways of writing.



In his candid assessment of the standard of literature in Kano particularly, the writer reveals that women are having an upper hand because they write in vernacular and in the process turn out larger volumes than their male counterparts. He speaks on the challenges of creative writing in northern Nigeria, his works, publishing and how he once lied that he had writer’s block the day his computer crashed.



Background

I have two identities. My father hails from Zamfara State, while my mother is from Katsina. I was born in Katsina but grew up in Kano. Officially, I claim Zamfara State.

I had my first degree in Geography, in 1990 from Uthman Dan Fodio University, Sokoto. In 1994, I bagged a Masters degree from the University of Ibadan and a PhD from Bayero University, Kano in 2003. I am a medical geographer and I wrote my PhD desertation on maternal mortality. I have been teaching in the Department of Geography at the Bayero University since 1995.



Between Geography and Literature

On account of my interest in writing, I have introduced a course in my department called Cultural Geography which addresses the issue of literature, popular culture, and how they relate to Geography. There are connections between the two subjects. In literature, you write about people, yet the people do not exist in vaccum. There are people in places and in Literature, we write about places.

But, most of the information we gather about places are not even contained in the atlas or regional geography textbooks. Rather they are contained in novels. So that’s how Geography is closely related to Literature.


Writing career

I had my first contact with Literature when I was in the secondary school. I started writing short stories even when I was in the primary school. Actually, I started serious writing in 1983 when I wrote my first Hausa novel. The book is yet to be published because when I read it over, I realised that I needed to re-write it. Later, I wrote a number of novels like Dukan Ruwa which won the northern Nigerian Literary Prize in 1990. It is the story of a family which endured the normal family and economic problems. Essentially, the story teaches patience and perseverance.

After that, I wrote another novel in Hausa in 1989. It was after that experience that I ventured into writing in English. I’ve written two collection of poems for children. The first one is entitled Butterfly and Other Poems, and My First Book of Rhymes. After that, I published another collection of poems after which I returned to writing in Hausa. I published Ummul Khairi. The book is about the challenges of education. I realised that whether we like it or not, the Hausa muslims have to be educated in the modern way.

However, the book is a kind of compromise between tradition and modernity. The next book I published was an anthology of poems. I ensured that I covered the entire country in my choice of poets. I hope to release another collection which I wrote in 1997 entitled Landscape of Reality, and a collection of political poems. These are the works I hope to release soon. I’m also working on another collection which will be a link between my literary interest and my training as a geographer. It is expected to be a collection of poems about places, towns and cities in Nigeria and other areas of the world. The book will be entitled Places and would be accompanied with photographs and maps.



Why I write in Hausa

I started writing in Hausa because the books that inspired me to write were written in Hausa. A lot of people in the Northern part of the country read Hausa. So it was a good medium to put my messages across.


Inspiration

Normally, I write when something happens. Each poem I wrote has a story behind it.


Messages

The most important of my messages is the accessibility of my poems. Considering the fact that poetry is not a popular genre, I have tried to make it accessible. For instance, I have written about happiness, mathematics, globalsation, politics and so on.


When I write

I don’t have a particular time for writing. Even if I am going to write an examination and the inspiration comes, I will write. But when the inspiration is not forthcoming, I will not be able to do it.


Process of writing

It begins with an idea; then the presentation of the idea in the best way. Whenever an idea comes, I’ll put it down on paper.


Challenges of writing

The first challenge is that Nigerians hardly read. When I started writing for children, I was so excited because I was contributing something new. In Northern Nigeria, there are few poets that write in English. So, I told myself that I wanted to write something that will be relevant to the environment. But when I took the books to the education ministry, there ensued a long drama. When I took the works to schools, they would either tell me that the books are too expensive or give me the excuse that the schools were on mid-term break. Eventually, I gave copies of the book free-of-charge to the schools and that gave me some satisfaction.


Publishing

The solution to the problem is involving members of our generation in publishing. I run a small publishing outfit and I published my works through that medium.


Writer’s block

I suffer from it. In fact, I wrote a poem on that. In ANA, Kano chapter, we hold our monthly readings. On one of such days, my computer crashed and I had all my materials stocked in the system. I then told my fellow writers at the reading that I could not remember any of the poems that I had to present at the reading off-hand. But because I had to present something, I came up with the excuse that I had writer’s block. There is a book that I have almost completed work on, but I am no longer interested in the work. That is another manifestation of writer’s block.



Advice to upcoming writers

As most people advise, upcoming writers should be patient and be willing to get their works criticised by others before rushing to the press. For example, when I write, the first people that will read them are my younger brothers and sisters. After that, I’ll give it to others. Secondly, they should write stories that are relevant to the society. I don’t subscribe to writing-for-writing-sake. People should treat topical issues that will be relevant to the development of the society.


Feedback

I have published a few poems on the internet and I received responses from people. One of my poems was published in Germany. There is also a book titled Cultures which is a high school English textbook. I posted it on a website called globalisation. Later the book was published and the publisher contacted me and sent me one hundred euros. Unfortunately, the money got stocked in a distressed bank.


Reward for writing

There is no financial reward for writing in this part of the world. For instance, most of my works have been broadcast on radio and I know that they have made great impact. My books in Hausa have sold up to 20,000 copies, but for the English books, I have not sold up to 100 copies.


Self-publishing

This can be good if there are good editors. If you take your works to a printer, the printer will reproduce them the way you gave them to him. Whoever must do self-publishing must have good editors. Manuscripts can’t wait for ever at Heineman, Longman, Spectrum and others but the books must be well edited.


Literature in Kano

To do that, you have to consider literature at two levels; Hausa and English. Literature in Hausa has gone far in Kano because of the dominance of writers who write in Hausa. In Kano for instance, there are more literary works being published by women. And it has become a phenomenon. The significance of this is that, women buy more books than men in Kano.


The only problem is that the quality is not as good as we expect it to be. But because we have a monthly writers’ forum in Hausa, and workshops, the quality is improving and the volumes are increasing. People come from far and near to buy Hausa books. But as for English texts, people write more of poetry. However, the major problem we face here is that people are not able to publish their works.


Source: http://www.sunnewsonline.com/webpages/features/how/2007/apr/how-03-04-2007-001.htm

Friday, October 1, 2010

A New Poetry Book

They Can Speak English (my new poetry collection) has just been published in Nigeria. The blurp on the back cover is hereby reproduced below:

Yusuf Adamu’s third collection of poems, his first since Landscapes of Reality (2008), shows him working on a new territory that extends from the politics of language to the question of geography in poetic imagination. Grand, great, as graceful as they are grounded, these poems seem intent on evincing a take on everything: from the veracity and virtue of English language to geopolitics and gender. At the centre of the book’s concern is a kind of a displaced and subtle “elegy” for Nigeria’s miscarried dream and hope, and that elegiac tone permeates the whole book. As W. H. Auden would say: a born poet always looks absolutely natural.

“Yusuf Adamu is indeed a true poet in the mould of Wordsworth and Walcott. Poem after poem, he has an identifying personal tone, a sort of Muse-tainted uniqueness which, in a way, is almost independent of what it portends. The magnitude of his achievement in this collection appears more stunning. They can Speak English quite easily proves why Yusuf Adamu may well have been the most original poet of his generation. Every discerning reader who reads the poems collected here will be delighted by his linguistic subtleties, for he follows the lead of both Brand and Brutus, dazzling in many of the display of imageries that they partake in”.

Ismail Bala
Poet, Critic and Lecturer
Department of English and French, Bayero University Kano, Nigeria

Independence Day Celebrations

As a kid in the years gone by

The nation and we are eager for that day

October first of every year

For our nation is moving forward

Progress is sprawling everywhere

Suddenly the boys stroke and took over

That we move backwards backsliding

Everything in the land made a commodity

Corruption laid sway on the land

Inequality ascends into supremacy

The national purse pauperized by rats

Should my children celebrate October 1st?

Of course yes, I reasoned

It is our nation’s birthday

But looking at where we are today

How our lives are frozen by inaction

How backward we moved over the years

Love for country is questioned

My loyalty too is being questioned

Has my nation done enough…

To deserve my congratulations on its birthday?

September 30, 1999

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

WHEN THEY BURN THE KORAN

America of the brave and the just

America of the free and the independent

And oh dear! America of the Koran burners

When the ashes of hatred are dusted

The wave of Islamaphobia will drain out

Majority American rather read the Koran

From among them shall raise believers

Who will bring America from darkness

And free it from the shackles of ignorance

There shall be a new community

Who shall discover true Islam

Not the Islam of media ranting

But that practiced by Muhammad (PBUH)

The world shall be watered by love

The true spirit of Islam is descending

On the God’s own country in God’s own time

Islam has come to America

America will accept Islam whole heartedly

America shall read the Qur’an.

September 14 2010

Thursday, July 29, 2010

WHICH HUMANITY?

Which of your humanity are better than mine?

Or which of my humanity is better than yours?

Is the planet you inhabit not same as mine?

Is it the air you breathe different from mine?

Is your sky red or bluer than the sky I watch each morning?

Is your mother star and its satellite not the Sun and the moon?

Which of your humanity is better than mine?

Do you smile and laugh when you are happy just as I do?

Do you sneeze, cough and yawn just as I do?

Do you get angry, shed tears and weep just as I do?

Are you ever hungry?

Are you ever emotional?

Then which of your humanity is superior to mine?

In this sphere called Earth within the Milky Way

From far in the vastness of the universe

Our tiny planet earth is but a speck

All that is in it is our collective humanity

So your humanity is just like my own

My humanity is same as yours

My humanness is the same as yours

Madina 7/11/09


HOPE

For Abubakar Dandogo

Hope drives our wishes with whirl wheels

It keeps human spirit active and alive

It flies our dreams on its wings

Hope keeps us alive despite all odds

It rekindles our heart when its flames are dim

Hope keeps us going when we could have stopped

Hope gives us strength and reason to pursue dreams

Hope keeps us afloat and always anticipating the best.

Jiddah (11:10pm)

9/12/09

Monday, June 7, 2010

DOUBLE STANDARDS

For Richard Tellinghast

They shout of existential threat

Of their right to exist all the time

Yet, they are an existential threat

Denying others that right to exist

What kind of people are these?

Who see other people as not fit to live

They stole others' land and continue to steal

They occupy others' territories and continue to do so

They keep them under murderous siege

Denying them every basic necessity of life

No medicines. no schools not even clean water

No electricity, no building materials not even cherries

Yet, they shamelessly shout the song of freedom

They beat the drums of high moral values and standards

Where is freedom and where is morality?

Only Uncle Sam and his cronies could tell

They attack with full force at slightest provocation

They care not killing and maiming women and children

Not even the United Nations is spared of their madness

Yet the most powerful democracies world over are mute

Oh great powers, bear witness to the senseless killings

Bear witness to the arrogance of this murderous State

Bear witness to the flight of the innocent and powerless

And shall also bear witness to what injustice and inaction leads.

Kaduna, June 7 2010

Monday, May 3, 2010

Unceremonious Walk outs

When they walked out, they worked out their chances

That their action would bring other nations to their side

Instead, their walk out expose their utter helplessness

Telling the world that they are indeed not in control

It exposes their sorry state and puppet status

They walked out shamelessly because they are cowards

If not cowardice what else explain their action?

03/05/2010

Friday, January 22, 2010

LIST OF ACADEMIC PUBLICATIONS

ACADEMIC PUBLICATIONS

Peer reviewed journal articles and chapters in books and conference proceedings

Adamu, Y.M. (1996) ‘Distribution of Health Facilities in Urban Kano’ in Mala, M.M. Issues in Environmental Monitoring. Proceedings of the 39th annual conference of the Nigerian Geographical Association held at the University of Maiduguri. (1996)

Adamu, Y.M. (2000) ‘The New Hausa Literary Movement’ West African Journal of Language, Literature and Culture, Volume 1 Number 2 (2000)

Adamu, Y.M. (2002) ‘The Development of Hausa Neologisms: The role of Urban Spaces’ Proceedings of the Fifth International Conference of Hausa Language, Literature and Culture. Centre for the Study of Nigerian Languages, Bayero University, Kano. (2002)

Adamu, Y.M. (1996) ‘Between the word and the screen: a historical perspective on HausA literary movement and home video invation’ Joural of African Cultural Studies, Vol. 15, No 2 December 2002, 203-213

Adamu, Y.M. (2003) ‘Health Place and Inequality: Distribution of Health facilities in Kano State’in Shitu M.B and Adamu, Y.M. (Ed) (2003) Studies on Inequality in Nigeria: A multi-disciplinary perspective. New Academia, Kano.

Adamu, Y.M. (2004) ‘Town and Gown: Bayero University and Its Environs’ in Jega, AM, Abba, IA, Wakili, H (Ed) (2004) Consolidating the Citadel, Bayero University Kano 1994-2004. Center for Democratic Research and Training, Kano

Adamu, Y.M. (2005) ‘Patterns of Maternal Mortality and Morbidity in Kano State, A Geographical Analysis’. Journal of Social and Management Science, Volume : Special Edition 2005 pp. 196-221

Adamu, Y.M. (2003) Bulungudu: Space and Coinage in the Hausa Home Video Industry’ in Adamu,AU, Adamu, YM and Jibril, UF (ed) 2003 Hausa Home Video: Society Economy and Society. Centre for Hausa Cultural Studies, Kano.

Adamu, Y.M. (2006) ‘Presentation of Literature Review’ in Adamu, YM, Mohammed, H and Dandago KI (2006) Readings in Social Science Research, Faculty of Social and Management Sciences, Bayero University Kano. (Chapter 11)

Adamu, Y.M. (2006) ‘Learning and Scholarship in the Sokoto Caliphate: Legacies and Challenges’ Bobboyi, H and Yakubu AM (2006) The Sokoto Caliphate: History and Legacies 1804-2004, Arewa House, Ahmadu Bello University Kaduna (Volume Two, Chapter 23: pp.369-395)

Adamu, Y.M. (2007) ‘Attractions and Barriers to the Utilisation of Antenatal Care services in Urban Kano Kano Studies, New Series 2007

Adamu, Y.M. (2008) ‘Maternal Health Issues in Kano Region” in Olofin E.A. et al (2008) Wudil in Kano Region: A Geographical Synthesis, Department of Geography, KUST, Wudil.

Adamu Y.M. Hamisu M. Salihu, Nalini Sathiakumar, Greg R. Alexander‘ Maternal mortality in Northern Nigeria: a population-based study’ European Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology and Reproductive Biology 109 (2003) 153-159

Adamu, YM and Salihu H.,‘Barriers to antenatal care and obstetric services in rural Kano State, Nigeria’. Obstetric and Gynaecology November 2002 Vol 22, No 6, 600-603

Adamu Y.M. and Liman, M.A (2003) ‘Kano in Time and Space: From a city to a metropolis’ in Hambolu M (ed) (2003) Perspectives on Kano-British Relations. Gidan Makama Museum, Kano.

Adamu, Y.M. and Dantata, U (2003)‘Hausa Oral and Written Expressions: The British Colonial Influence’ in Hambolu M (ed) (2003) Perspectives on Kano-British Relations. Gidan Makama Museum, Kano.

Adamu, Y.M. and Awaisu S, (2003) ‘Distribution of Health Facilities in Jigawa State’in Shitu M.B and Adamu, Y.M. (Ed) Studies on Inequality in Nigeria: A multi-disciplinary perspective. New Academia, Kano.

Adamu Y.M., Salihu, H, Aliyu, M.H and Aliyu Z.Y ‘Pregnancy-associated morbidity in Northern Nigeria. Journal of Obstetric and Gynaecology. Volume 24, Number 4, 367-371 June 2004

Adamu Y.M and Tanko A.I. ‘What is Where? Near or Far, Primary Geographer, October 2004, pp 18-21, The Geographical Association, UK

Adamu Y.M. and Liman, M.A (2005)‘Urbansation and Spatial Development of Urban Centres in Yakubu AM, Jumare IM, Saeed A.G. (ed) (2005) Northern Nigeria, a century of transformation, Arewa House, pp. 90- 99

Adamu Y.M and Radda, S.I. (2006) ‘Conceptual Framework in Social Scineces’ in Adamu, YM, Mohammed, H and Dandago KI Readings in Social Science Research, Faculty of Social and Management Sciences, Bayero University Kano. (Chapter 10)

Adamu Y.M and Umar Y.A (IN PRESS) ‘Riding Youths: A Preliminary Analysis of the Acaba Motorcyclists in Metropolitan Kano in Umar, B.A (forthcoming) (Ed) Issues on Youth.

Adamu, Y.M. (IN PRESS) ‘Youth in Informal Petroleum Distribution In Urban Kano: The Cuwa-Cuwa Phenomena, Umar, B.A (forthcoming) (Ed) Issues on Youth.

Academic books co-edited

Inequality in Nigeria: A Multidisciplinary Perspective (2003) New Academia, Bayero University, Kano. (With M.B Shitu)

Hausa Home Video: Technology, Economy and Society (2003) Center for Hausa Cultural Studies, Kano (With Adamu, A.U and Jibril, U.F)

Corporate Survival, Competitiveness and Consumer Satisfaction in Nigerian Industries (2005) Department of Business Administration, Bayero University, Kano (with Sagagi, MS)

Readings in Social Science Research, (2006) Faculty of Social and Management Sciences, Bayero University Kano (With Mohammed, H and Dandago K.I)

Introduction to Social Sciences (2008) Faculty of Social and Management Sciences, Bayero University Kano (with A.A. Adepoju & M.A. Yusuf)

Issues in Youth Development in Nigeria (forth coming) with Aliyu, BU and Dandago KI

Creative Works

Prose Fiction

Idan So Cuta Ne (1989) AJ Publishers, Kano, (Hausa novel)

Ummul-Khairi (2000) AJ Publishers, Kano (Hausa novella)

Kowaggyara (2005) A Daidaita Sahu, Kano (with Magaji Shitu & Yusuf Shehu) Collection of Hausa Short Stories

Maza Gumbar Dutse (2007) Gidan Dabino International (with UNESCO & Francaphonie)

Poetry

Litters (2000) AJ Publishers, Kano, (Collection of poems)

Pregnant Skies: Anthology of 50 Nigerian Poets (2003) AJ Publishers, Kano (Editor)

Landscapes of Reality (2007) AJ Publishers, Kano

Mazan Fara: ANA Zamfara Anthology of Poems and Short Stories, (2008) AJ Publishers, (Editor)

Children Literature

Butterfly and other poems (1995) AJ Publishers, Kano, (Children rhymes)

My first book of rhymes (1998) AJ Publishers, Kano, (Children rhymes)

Animals in the Neighbourhood (2007) AJ Publishers, Kano (Children’s book)