Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Nigerian Given Names and Road Mantras

A few fragments of found poetry. 

 Nigerian Given Names 

 Many Nigerians have English given names. These sometimes recalled the ancients in simply noting the day of a child’s birth: Sunday (etc.). More often they expressed a kind of magic – names, for instance, that might aid a young person toward a good career: College, Engineer, or Editor. Often they would name desirable qualities: Famous, Clever, Moneymaker, Lucky, Goodluck, Pious, Blessing, Endurance, Innocent, Ebony, and Fidelity, for example. Some were a bit less clear in intention: John Bull, Didacus (and Philemon), Portuguese, Dried Meat (though “Pigmeat” is known in the American South), Whisky, Society. Some are vast: System and Empire. Our neighbor had a boy with an indigenous name Vaki which was explained as meaning “Everything has its time.” 


 Road Mantras 

These are lines collected from the sides of cars and trucks in Nigeria. In spite of the small percentage of the population that owns cars, Nigeria has an extraordinarily high rate of serious traffic accidents. 

question of time 
speak your words 
nothing in my hands 
don't mind 
life is war love 
if men were god 
truth is bitter 
more days 
my problem is not your problem 
high life 
o taste and see 
not as you think 
NO FACE 
who knows tomorrow 
see the work of god 
let them say 
no event -- no history 
how shall we escape 
are you god 
princeless youth 
OO-OO-OO

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