Sunday, September 29

Nobel Laureate Soyinka, at 79, Seeks End to Barriers on Children Education in Nigeria

NIGERIA’s governments at both state and federal level have been urged to eliminate all stumbling blocks

to education of children in the country.

 

The 1985 Alfred Nobel laureate made the call in Aboekuta on Sunday when he hosted secondary school students across the country as part of this year’s Open Door Series Project, an international cultural exchange programme. The program was organized as part of activities to mark his 79th birthday.

Soyinka appealed to the students, particularly, those studying in the violence-prone areas of the north, not to be discouraged by the activities of Boko Haram sect. He urged them to draw inspiration from the 16-year-old Pakistani girl, Malala Yousafzai, who was shot in the head on October 9, 2012 by Taliban fighters over her campaign for girl-child education in Pakistan. Soyinka, who fielded questions from 79 student participants, charged them to cultivate zero tolerance for failure and strive to excel in all their endeavours.

“It might look very negative and hopeless, but we must not allow ourselves to be discouraged. “The fact that people are still going to schools in those violence-prone areas shows that we should not be discouraged. “You are not a complete human being if you are not educated, schooled or cultured. “No matter what goes on around you, you must insist on your education.’’

The Nobel Laureate also used the occasion to dispel the insinuation that he graduated with third-class division. Soyinka said that he graduated from the University College, Ibadan with a Second Class Upper.

He explained that although he had kept silent on the issue over the years, he decided to open up for the first time over the rumour as a mark of respect for the participants.

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