It was
once the fashion to single out four men of letters as the supreme titans of
world literature – Homer, Dante, Shakespeare, and Goethe – each the embodiment of a
great epoch of Western culture – ancient, medieval, Renaissance and modern. These
four literary icons of all times remain secure, but idolatry of Professor Wole
Soyinka as the prototype of the inquiring spirit and courageous intellect of
modern man has been sharply appreciated in our time, especially as we pass
beyond the more leisurely issues of the post modernist era.
The intensely contemporary character of his works has made him
the tallest iroko tree in the post-modernist forest of global dramatic
literature. Yet, the commencement, two weeks ago, of the Wole Soyinka 85th
Birthday Festival, which ultimately climaxed on July 13, his date of birth,
unfortunately doesn't seem to wear the official insignia of the Nigerian
government especially because he has started telling them the truth about the
Nigerian condition. But, it is expected, as Christ Himself says in Matthew
13:57, "A prophet is not without honour, save his own country and his own
house."