The Miraculous Deliverance Of Oga Jona by Chimamanda Adichie
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As
soon as he opened his eyes, he felt it. A strange peace, a calm clarity. He
stretched. Even his limbs were stronger and surer. He looked at his
phone. Thirty-seven new text messages – and all while he was asleep. With one
click, he deleted them. The empty screen buoyed him. Then he got up to bathe,
determined to fold the day into the exact shape that he wanted.
Those
Levick people had to go. No more foreign PR firms. They should have made that
article in the American newspaper sound like him, they should have known
better. They had to go. And he would not pay their balance; they had not
fulfilled the purpose of the contract after all. Continue...
He
pressed the intercom. Man Friday came in, face set in a placidly praise-singing
smile.
“Good
morning, Your Excellency!”
“Good
morning,” Oga Jona said. “I had a revelation from God.”
Man
Friday stared at him with bulging eyes.
“I
said I had a revelation from God,” he repeated. “Find me new Public Relations
people. Here in Nigeria. Is this country not full of mass communication
departments and graduates?”
“Yes,
Your Excellency.” Man Friday’s eyes narrowed; he was already thinking of whom
he would bring, of how he would benefit.
“I
want a shortlist on my table on Wednesday,” Oga Jona said. “I don’t want any of
the usual suspects. I want fresh blood. Like that student who asked that frank
question during the economic summit.”
“Your
Excellency… the procurement rules…we need somebody who is licensed by the
agency licensed by the agency that licenses PR consultants…”
Oga
Jona snorted. Man Friday used civil service restrictions as a weapon to fight
off competition. Anybody who might push him out of his privileged position was
suddenly not licensed, not approved, not registered. “I don’t want you to bring
your own candidates, do you hear me? I said I want fresh blood, I’m not
joking.”
“Yes,
Your Excellency,” Man Friday said, voice now high-pitched with alarmed
confusion.
“Put
that DVD for me before you go,” Oga Jona said.
He
watched the recording on the widescreen television, unhappy with his appearance
in the footage. His trousers seemed too big and why had nobody adjusted his
hat? Next to The Girl from Pakistan, he looked timid, scrunched into his seat.
She was inspiring, that young girl, and he wished her well. But he saw now how
bad this made him appear: he had ignored all the Nigerians asking him to go to
Chibok, and now The Girl From Pakistan was telling the world that he promised
her he would go. He promised me, she said. As if the abducted Nigerian girls
did not truly matter until this girl said they did. As if what mattered to him
was a photo-op with this girl made famous by surviving a gunshot wound. It made
him look small.
It made him look unpresidential. It made him look like a leader
without a rudder. Why had they advised him to do this? He pressed a
button on his desk and waited.
Violence
was unfamiliar to Oga Jona. Yet when Man Monday came in, his belly rounded and
his shirt a size too tight as usual, Oga Jona fought the urge to hit and punch
and slap. Instead, he settled for less: he threw a teacup at Man Monday.
“Why
have you people been advising me not to go to Chibok? Why have you people been
telling me that my enemies will exploit it?”
“Sah?”
Man Monday had dodged the teacup and now stood flustered.
“I
am going to Chibok tomorrow. I should have gone a long time ago. Now it will
look as if I am going only because a foreigner, a small girl at that, told me
to go. But I will still go. Nigerians have to see that this thing is troubling
me too.”
“But
Sah, you know…”
“Don’t
‘Sah you know’ me!” This was how his people always started. “Sah, you know…”
Then they would bring up conspiracies, plots, enemies, evil spirits. No wonder
giant snakes were always chasing him in his dreams: he had listened to too much
of their nonsense. He remembered a quote from a teacher in his secondary
school: ‘The best answer to give your enemies is continued excellence.’
What he needed, he saw now, was an adviser like that teacher.
“Sah,
the security situation…”
“Have
you not seen Obama appear in Afghanistan or Iraq in the middle of the night to
greet American troops? Is Chibok more dangerous than the war the Americans are
always fighting up and down? Arrange it immediately. Keep it quiet. I want to
meet the parents of the girls. Make gifts and provisions available to the
families, as a small token of goodwill from the federal government.” He knew
how much people liked such things. A tin of vegetable oil would soften some
bitter hearts.
“Sah…”
“From
Borno we go to Yobe. I want to meet the families of the boys who were killed. I
want to visit the school. Fifty-nine boys! They shot those innocent boys and
burnt them to ashes! Chai! There is evil in the world o!”
“Yes
Sah.”
“These
people are evil. That man Yusuf was evil. The policemen who killed him, we have
to arrest them and parade them before the press. Make sure the world knows we
are handling the case. But it is even more important that we tell the true
story about Yusuf himself. Yes, the police should not have killed him. But does
that mean his followers should now start shedding blood all over this country?
Is there any Nigerian who does not have a bad story about the police? Was it
not last year that my own cousin was nearly killed in police detention? Let us
tell people why the Army caught him in the first place. He was evil. Remember
that pastor in Maiduguri that he beheaded.
Find that pastor’s wife. Let her
tell her story. Let the world hear it. Show pictures of the pastor. Why have we
not been telling the full story? Why didn’t we fight back when The Man From
Borno was running around abroad, blaming me for everything when he too failed
in his own responsibilities?” Oga Jona was getting angrier as he spoke, angry with
his people, angry with himself. How could he have remained, for so long, in
that darkness, that demon possession of ineptitude?
“Yes
Sah!”
“You
can go.”
He
picked up the iphone and spoke slowly. “I want to expand that Terror Victims
Support Committee. Add one woman. Add two people personally affected by
terrorism. How can you have a committee on terrorism victims with no
diversity?”
On
the other end of the phone, the voice was stilled by surprise. “Yes Sah!”
Finally emerged, in a croak.
He
put down the phone. There would be no more committees. At least until he was
re-elected. And no more unending consultations. He picked up the Galaxy,
scrolled through the list of contacts. He called two Big Men in the Armed
Forces, the ones stealing most of the money meant for the soldiers.
“I
want your resignation by Friday,” He said simply.
Their
shock blistered down the phone.
“But
Your Excellency…”
“Or
you want me to announce that I am sacking you? At least resignation will save
you embarrassment.”
If
those left knew he was now serious as commander-in-chief, serious about
punishing misdeed and demanding performance, they would sit up. He ate some
roasted groundnuts before making the next call. To another Big Man in the Armed
Forces. They had to stop arresting Northerners just like that. He remembered
his former gateman in Port Harcourt. Mohammed, pleasant Mohammed with his buck
teeth and his radio pressed to his ear. Mohammed would not even have the liver
to support any terrorist. He told the Big Man in the Armed Forces, “You
need to carry people along.
Win hearts and minds. Make Nigerians feel that you
are fighting for them, not against them… And when you talk to the press and say
that Nigerians should do their part to fight terrorism, stop sounding as if you
are accusing them. After all, let us tell the truth, what can an ordinary
person do? Nothing! Even those people who check cars, if they open a boot and
see a big bomb, what will they do? Will they try to subdue an armed suicide
bomber? Will they pour water on the bomb to defuse it? Will they not turn and
run as fast as their legs can carry them? Let’s start a mass education
campaign. Get proposals on how best to do it without scaring people. When we
tell Nigerians to report suspicious behavior, let’s give them examples.
Suspicious behavior does not mean anybody wearing a jellabiya. After all, was
the one in Lagos not done by a woman?” He paused.
“Yes,
Your Excellency!”
“As
for the girls, we have to go back to negotiation. Move in immediately.”
“Yes,
Your Excellency.”
“I
should not have listened to what they told me in that Paris summit. Why did I
even agree to follow them and go to Paris, all of us looking like colonised
goats?”
From
the other end, came a complete and lip-sealed silence. The Big Man in the Armed
Forces dared not make a sound, lest it be mistaken as agreement on the word
‘goat.’ Besides, he had been part of the entourage for that trip and had
collected even more than the normal fat juicy estacode.
“I
don’t want to hear about any other mutiny,” Oga Jona continued. “You will get
the funds. But I want real results! Improve the conditions of your boys. I want
to see results!”
The
Big Man in the Armed Forces started saying something about the Americans.
Oga
Jona cut him short. “Shut up! If somebody shits inside your father’s house, is
it a foreigner that will come and clean the house for you? Is Sambisa on Google
Maps? How much local intelligence have you gathered? Before you ask for help,
you first do your best!”
“Yes
Your Excellency.”
“And
why is it that nobody interviewed the girls who escaped?”
There
was a pause.
“By
tomorrow night I want a report on the local intelligence gathered so far!”
“Yes,
Your Excellency.”
Oga
Jona turned on the television and briefly watched a local channel. Who even
designed those ugly studio backgrounds? There was a knock on the door. It had
to be Man Thursday. Nobody else could come in anyhow.
“Good
afternoon, My President,” Man Thursday said.
Short
and stocky, Man Thursday was the soother who always came cradling bottles of
liquid peace.
This
time, Oga Jona pushed away the bottle. “Not now!’
“My
President, I hope you’re feeling fine.”
“I
received a revelation from God. From now on, I will stop giving interviews to
foreign journalists while ignoring our own journalists.”
“But
My President, you know how useless our journalists are…”
“Will
Obama give an interview to AIT and ignore CBS?”
“No,
Your Excellency.”
“I
know some of our journalists support Bourdillon, but we also have others on our
side. I will beat them at their game! I want to do interviews with two
journalists that support us and one journalist that supports Bourdillon. Find
one that will be easy to intimidate.”
“But…”
“I
want names in the next hour.”
“Yes,
Your Excellency.” Man Thursday now stood still, lips parted in the slack
expression of a person no longer sure what day it was.
“Tell
the Supporters Club to change their television advertisements. They should stop
mentioning ‘those who are against me.’ I will no longer give power to my
enemies. They should mention only the things that I am doing. I like that one
with the almajiri boy. It shows Nigerians that I have helped with education in
the North. They should make more advertisements like that.”
In
response, Man Thursday could only nod vigorously but mutely.
Later,
after eating vegetable soup with periwinkle and a plate of sliced fruits – he
was determined to keep himself from looking like Man Monday – he asked Sharp
Woman to meet him in the residence. Not in the main living room, but in the
smaller relaxing white parlor. Sharp Woman was the only one he fully trusted.
He had sometimes allowed himself to sideline her, when he had felt blown this
way and that way by the small-minded pettiness of other people. She was the
only one who had not allowed him to dwell too much on his own victimhood. Once,
she had told him quietly, “You have real enemies. There are people in this
country who do not think you should be president simply because of where you
come from. Did they not say they would make the country ungovernable for you?
But not everything is the fault of your enemies. If we keep on blaming the
enemies then we are making them powerful. The Bourdillon people are
disorganized. They don’t have a real platform. Their platform is just anti-you.
They don’t even have a credible person they can field, the only major candidate
they have is the one they will not select. So stop mentioning them. Face your
work.”
He
should have listened then, despite the many choruses that drowned her voice.
It
was she who, a few days later, and after the four rubbish candidates
stage-managed by Man Friday, brought the new PR people, Kikelola Obi, Bola
Usman and Chinwe Adeniyi – when he first saw their names, he thought: and some
crazy people are saying we should divide Nigeria. They were in their early
thirties, with rough faces and no make up; they looked too serious, as if they
attended Deeper Life church and disapproved of laughter. They started their
presentation, all three taking turns to speak. They stood straight and
fearless. Their directness and confidence unnerved him.
“Sir,
we voted for you the first time. We felt that you would do well if you had the
mandate of the people instead of just an inherited throne. We liked you because
you had no shoes. We really liked you. We had hope in you. You seemed humble
and different. But with all due respect sir, we will not vote for you again
unless something changes.”
He
nearly jumped up from his seat. Small girls of nowadays! They had no respect!
As if to make it worse, one of them added that if the election were held today,
the only person she could vote for was The Man From Lagos. Oga Jona bristled.
That annoying man. Even if a mosquito bit him in his state, he would find a way
to blame the president for it. Still, Oga Jona could see why these foolish
small girls were saying they would vote for him. The man had tried in Lagos.
But their mentioning The Man From Lagos was now a challenge. He would rise to
the challenge.
“Sir,
the good news is that Nigerians forgive easily and Nigerians forget even more
easily. You have to change strategy. Be more visible. Stop politicizing
everything. Stop blaming your enemies for everything. You have to be, and seem
to be, a strong, uniting leader. Make sure to keep repeating that this is not a
Muslim vs. Christian thing.”
Oga
Jona cut in, pleased to be able to challenge these over-sabi girls. “You think
Nigerians don’t know that it is mostly Christian areas that they are targeting
in Borno? And what about all those church bombings?”
The
three shook their heads, uniformly, like robots. They were sipping water; they
had declined everything else.
“With
all due respect sir, if you look at the names of bombing victims, they are
Muslims and Christians. If God forbid another terror attack occurs, you have to
come out yourself and talk to Nigerians. Stop releasing wooden statements
saying you condemn the attacks. We will prep you before each public appearance.
You have a tendency to ramble.
That’s the most important thing to watch out
for. Be alert when you answer each question. Keep your answers short. You don’t
have to elaborate if there is nothing to elaborate. Stick to the point. If they
ask you something negative, be willing to admit past mistakes but always give
the answer a positive spin. Something like ‘yes, I could have handled it better
and I regret that but I am now doing better, and am determined to do even more
because Nigerians want and deserve results.’ You have to start reaching out
beyond your comfort zone. Nigeria has talent. Look for the best Nigerians on
any subject at hand, wherever they may be, and persuade them to come and
contribute on their area of expertise. Especially the ones who have no interest
in government work. Even one or two who don’t completely agree with you. Think
of Lincoln’s Team of Rivals.”
“What?”
“Don’t
worry, sir. The important thing is to reach out beyond your circle. Oga Segi
was not a calm person like you. He even used to threaten to flog people. But he
had a good network. Jimmy Carter is his friend. If he needed expertise from a
university in Zaria or Edinburgh or Boston, he would pick up his phone and know
somebody who knew or somebody who knew somebody who knew. But with all due
respect, sir, you don’t have that. Bayelsa is a small place.”
These
girls really had no respect o! He glared at Sharp Woman, who shrugged and
muttered, “You said you wanted people who would tell you the truth.”
But
he listened.
In
his first interview, the words rolled off his tongue. Those girls had made him
repeat himself so many times. “I want to apologize to the Nigerian people for
some actions of my government. We could have done better. No country fighting
terrorism can let everything be open. But we owe our country men and women
honest, clear assurance that we are taking decisive action, with enough details
to be convincing. I ask for your prayers and support. I have directed the
security services to set up a website that will give Nigerians accurate and
up-to-date information about our war against terrorism. I have also hired
specialists to manage the flow and presentation of the information.”
And
the words came easily when he shook hands with the parents in Chibok, simple polite
people who clutched his hand with both of theirs. He should have done this much
earlier; it was so touching. “Sorry,” he said, over and over again. “Sorry.
Please keep strong. We will rescue them.”
The
words were more reluctant when he wore a red shirt and asked to be taken to the
gathering of The People in Red at the park. But he cleared his throat and urged
himself to speak, particularly because, as he emerged from within his circle of
security men, the People in Red all stopped and stared. Silence reigned.
“I
came to salute you,” Oga Jona started. “We are on the same side. My government
has made mistakes. We are learning from them and correcting them. Please work
with us. Together, we will defeat this evil.”
They
were still silent and still staring; they were disarmed. He thanked them and,
before they could marshal their old distrust, he turned and left. That night,
as he sank to his knees in prayer, he heard the muted singing of angels.
Chimamanda
Adichie is an award winning writer and author of bestsellers including Purple
Hibiscus, Half of a Yellow Sun, The Thing Around Your Neck and Americanah.
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