Veteran writers and Achebe’s compatriots, Prof. Wole Soyinka
and J.P. Clark, have linked his death to the bomb attacks that occurred
in Kano on Monday.
In a joint statement they issued on Friday, entitled
“On the Passing of Chinua Achebe,” they noted that his death might have
been hastened by the shock from the violence that those they described
as Achebe’s people suffered during the attacks.
The statement read, “For us, the loss of Chinua Achebe is, above all
else, intensely personal. We have lost a brother, a colleague, a
trailblazer and a doughty fighter.
“Of the ‘pioneer quartet’ of contemporary Nigerian literature, two
voices have been silenced – one, of the poet Christopher Okigbo, and
now, the novelist Chinua Achebe.
“It is perhaps difficult for outsiders
of that intimate circle to appreciate this sense of depletion, but we
take consolation in the young generation of writers to whom the baton
has been passed, those who have already creatively ensured that there is
no break in the continuum of the literary vocation.
“We need to stress this at a critical time of Nigerian history, where
the forces of darkness appear to overshadow the illumination of
existence that literature represents.
“These are forces that arrogantly pride themselves implacable and
brutal enemies of what Chinua and his pen represented, not merely for
the African continent, but for humanity.
“Indeed, we cannot help wondering if the recent insensate massacre of
Chinua’s people in Kano, only a few days ago, hastened the fatal
undermining of that resilient will that had sustained him so many years
after his crippling accident.”
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