Falling
in Love in War Time
A Review of Wale Okediran’s MADAGALI
By
Idowu Layo*
Publisher; Evans Brothers, Nigeria PLC
Pagination; 244 pages
Date of Publication; March 2020
MADAGALI is typical of
many of Okediran’s fictional works, with its copious research, cliff hanger
suspense, realistic settings and topicality. What is different here is the author’s liberal
use of female characters who sometimes seem strong enough to take over the
story from the main protagonist, Lance Corporal Buka Salisu. From his Liberian
mother Sonia Salisu, (nee Johnson) to his sisters Fatima (Emine), Zainab (Shelia)
and Rabia (Ella) on to his girlfriends, Jewel and Safiya, Bukar (Jabbie) the professional
soldier seemed to be more affected by the actions and inactions of the women in
his life rather than the instructions of his commanders as the Nigerian forces
engaged the Boko Haram insurgents in a seemingly unending war.
Actually, what the author
has done is not new because literary fiction is replete with the different roles
women play in a time of war. When they are not actually doing the fighting themselves
as soldiers, they could be in the background as pensive mothers and wives, workaholic
spies, nurses, doctors, factory, sex and welfare workers or adoring daughters
and girlfriends. All these roles have hitherto been captured by writers in various
fictional accounts of the Second World War, the Vietnam War and the Nigerian
Civil War among other wars. However, this would be the first time that the role
of women in a fictional account of the Boko Haram war would be explored.
Apart from a fictional account of
military operations, MADAGALI was also able to examine the various ways women responded
to war, in this case as supporters to a son, brother and lover. We also saw how
some natives of the war- torn area were eager to give out their young girls
into marriage either to Boko Haram fighters or Nigerian soldiers in return for
protection. Sadly, some of the women willingly or by force became sex workers
especially, some refugees in the IDP camps.
The story begins with the
young Salisu, a vibrant and committed Nigerian soldier being shot by the Boko
Haram insurgents at the Madagali front ‘one foggy evening’. The injury which
was initially thought to be inconsequential was later discovered to have damaged
a major nerve and made the young man impotent. To add to his woes, Salisu was lured
by his Company Commander, Lt Col Bala Humus to serve as a courier in Humus
nefarious business of supplying ammunitions to the Boko Haram insurgents. When he was caught, Salisu went through a grueling
court martial which found him guilty of the charge of ‘’supplying dangerous
weapons to the enemy’’. Fortunately, he narrowly escaped facing the firing
squad through the support of his close friends, his mother and three loving
sisters.
Apart from a Liberian
girl, Jewel whom the mother and sister arranged for him to meet in Liberia
during his leave, Bukar also fell in love with Safiya, the seductive daughter
of a repentant Boko Haram fighter. These relationships formally confirmed what
he had all along known, that he was impotent.
Thus, while he continued
coping with the ordeal of fighting a war with all its inadequacies and dangers,
Bukar was in addition under pressure from his mother, sisters, Jewel and Safiya
to find a solution to his sexual inadequacy. A surgical operation was quickly arranged for
him in Liberia. It was while he was waiting for the surgery to take effect that
Safiya offered him what she explained was a faster and cheaper solution; a very
potent herbal remedy in return for a favor.
It was not clear if what worked for Bukar was
Safiya’s herbal remedy or the Liberian surgical operation. What was clear was
that for the first time after his war injury, Bukar regained his libido. Unfortunately,
Safiya’s request led to the loss of several Nigerian soldiers in an ambush by
the Boko Haram insurgents. The novel ends in medias res, without further triumph or tragedy, only with
further possibilities, as Bukar Salisu locks himself in his room leaving the
reader to ponder and wonder.
·
Idowu Layo is the pen name of a teacher and Literary enthusiast
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