Saturday, October 27, 2007

Colin Powell Interview (GQ, Oct. 2007)




This is a great interview with Colin Powell. I don't necessarily agree with all his views but wouldn't it be great to have a leader like him taking the lead in policy issues nationally and internationally. Take some time to read this if you can.


Excerpts from the interview:

About the administration's "war on terror":

Let’s show the world a face of openness and what a democratic system can do. That’s why I want to see Guantánamo closed. It’s so harmful to what we stand for. We literally bang ourselves in the head by having that place. What are we doing this to ourselves for? Because we’re worried about the 380 guys there? Bring them here! Give them lawyers and habeas corpus. We can deal with them. We are paying a price when the rest of the world sees an America that seems to be afraid and is not the America they remember.


About whether he'll vote for a Democrat like Barack Obama or a Republican:
That’s right. I did not. Because I’ve been voting now for almost fifty years, and I’ve always supported the person I thought was best. I’ve voted Democratic, I’ve voted Republican. I’m going to vote for the best person.


About the supposed "Chinese threat":
My friends in China tell me, “We know you love the idea of Jeffersonian democracy, but we don’t know how to manage 1.3 billion people using such a system, and we’re not going to try.” Their political system will become more liberal over time. But in my lifetime, it will not become what we call a democracy. And I’m not sure I lose any sleep over that. I want the 1.3 billion Chinese people under some kind of control that allows them to better their lives economically and not fall apart. We need to be patient.


America could not survive without immigration. Even the undocumented immigrants are contributing to our economy. That’s the country my parents came to. That’s the image we have to portray to the rest of the world: kind, generous, a nation of nations, touched by every nation, and we touch every nation in return. That’s what people still want to believe about us. They still want to come here. We’ve lost a bit of the image, but we haven’t lost the reality yet. And we can fix the image by reflecting a welcoming attitude—and by not taking counsel of our fears and scaring ourselves to death that everybody coming in is going to blow up something. It ain’t the case.


Read the full interview here:

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

Images from home, part deux

Contemplations

King of the roost

Garden at dusk

Gentle laughter

Hospital scenes

Monday, August 13, 2007

Images of home

No. 23 Wase Close--the wall around our home

Mummy, my sister's cat next to a picture of our mommy...

the view outside my window

Remains of a time long past

Wednesday, August 08, 2007

lafiya "it is well"

The front view of our home in Jos



We've spent most of the day running around, greeting family friends and relatives. I'm taking a brief pit stop here but I'll upload a few pictures of the city we live in a little later on. It's so beautiful during the rainy season. I'll try to also provide some more commentary on our trip by Saturday.

...life, love, death, beginnings and the aftermath


(I've broken this blog into the dates of each day the events occurred since I couldn't access the net each day to post entries)

8.4.07

The day of our mother's funeral rushed by in a whirlwind of events. We landed at the airport in Abuja at 5 a.m., rushed to a family friend's place nearby to take quick showers, and then drove two and a half hours to our hometown, Chori, getting there just in time for the beginning of the service. It was raining as we arrived and even it may sound cliched, it did truly feel as if nature itself was weeping for Momsi.

There well over two thousand people who either showed up for her wake the day before, or the funeral the next day. It was astounding. I would never have dreamed my mom had touched so many peoples lives. The procession of cars winding through towards the church that morning stretched as far as the eye could see. It was breathtaking, humbling and slightly unnerving to take it all in and to realize that this was for someone I knew, someone I loved, someone whom I was part of.

The service was overwhelming, to say the least. It started at 11 and ended about four hours later. Why? Because of the numerous testimonies so many people got up to share about our mother. I can honestly say I never realized the extent to which my mother's life here on earth had impacted so many. It seemed that everyone had a story to share, everyone a tale to tell of how she had helped to enrich their lives in some way. My mother was mother to so many--at work, at the organizations she was a part of, and in the lives of those she befriended. As we sat there listening to testimony after testimony about our mother, the extent of who she was began to seep into my dazed consciousness. Isn't amazing how you think you know someone your whole life and it isn't until after they've died that your begin to realize that you really only knew a part of who they were. It's sad in a way but it seems to be at funerals that you finally begin to get most of the pieces of a person's life and they begin to come together in a rushed jumble that slowly forms into what, at least in my mother's case, becomes a beautiful mosaic, one that shows their myriad abilities, passions, cares, faults, triumphs, failures, joys, desires, pursuits--essentially all their complexities that made them unerringly and achingly human.

To say Momsi was loved is like saying the sun shines warmly in the Sahara. Momsi was CHERISHED by most who knew her. She gave of herself completely to everyone--her husband, her children, her school, her friends, her activities, her God. As themes emerged from testimonies pouring forth like a rushing river, one rose to the top: Momsi gave so much of herself that her heart could do nothing but give out. She thought so much of others that she rarely stopped to take care of herself, even when she was admonished to do so by those closest to her.

I could go on and on about her life, about the details of her life that I learned starting from early childhood to the last few years of her life up until the last ten minutes of her life. It was incredible to hear and left me filled with pride but also a profound sadness that I had not been apart of so many of the experiences being shared others. Like I said, I could go on and on, but I won't. At least not now. I need to introspect my feelings and thoughts for sometime and perhaps even watch parts of the service again before doing so.

We laid Momsi to rest next to our family home in the village, with Mt. Chori serving as a backdrop. Before finally lowering the casket into the tomb the family got to view her remains for the last time. My mother's body was just that, a body. It looked like her but I could immediately tell it wasn't her anymore. The flame that had fueled this passionate woman had fled, the love that had enabled her to embrace me tightly within her arms was gone, the will that had empowered her to raise her voice up for those who could not was no more. I was glad when they lowered the lid of the casket that final time so that we could lower the casket into the ground. My mother as I have known her is no more. When we next meet, we will be as we should be and we will be reunited to part no more.

08.05.07-08.06.07

We spent the next two days in the village receiving people who came from near and far to pay their last respects to Momsi and to extend their condolences to the family, especially my father. It's times like this that reinforce my love for the culture I'm from; the sacrifices people made disregarding personal inconvenience and gathering around to surround the bereaved family in their time of need for as long as it takes was and has been astounding. Everyone becomes family, everyone seems to want to do whatever they can to help.

In these two days I have begun to understand even more the legacy my mother has left behind and started to ponder over how I will play my part in not only keeping it going buy building upon it. I do not feel equipped to meet such a task but I have to believe that it can be done. I must believe that.

The two hour trip back to the city we live in, Jos, was eventful--the car's engine we were driving in "knocked" half way into the trip; apparently after it had been serviced, the engine oil was not refilled. Another car was sent to pick us up which took an hour and on our way we ran into protest being held by semi-truck drivers who decided to park their vehicles across both lanes of the highway to prevent cars from getting by. In the end our two hour trip turned into six. The funny thing was that none of us in the car seemed to mind. After the weekend such events seemed trivial and not worth getting mad over.

Strangely enough it wasn't until we finally arrived and walked into our home that I have finally begun to truly feel the loss of my mother. Something is clearly missing; it seems colder, less personal, not quite complete. My brother Jireh said it best, "I wanted to turn around and walk out of the house and go somewhere, anywhere but here." It was necessary though, and now I think the process of grieving is finally starting for me. We will see where it leads.

08.07.07

Today has been one filled with running errands, visiting people we haven't seen in months (some in years), receiving more well wishers, checking my email (and being so touched by the messages of condolences I've received there); basically trying to squeeze in as much as we can in the next few days we have before we fly out early Saturday morning. We've been downtown to exchange money, met with old classmates and family friends, been to the old compound we first lived on when we moved back to Nigeria in 1980 and hung out at some of the old joints we used to go to.

Hopefully I'll be able to post pictures of some of these places and other sights for everyone who wants to to see over the next couple of days. If I can't get to it they'll definitely be up a few days after we get back this weekend.

Saturday, August 04, 2007

Dearest Momsi...I miss you so much


Our mother passed away very suddenly a few days ago, on the 30th of July to be exact. My brother and I are on our way to Nigeria right now, and I decided to post this while we're in the midst of a ten hour layover in Heathrow. We wouldn't be here if wasn't for the amazing generosity and love displayed by our friends who are in every family to us. Thank you all so much for everything all of you have done to enable us to fly back to be with our family in Nigeria. My family and I will never be able to fully express our full gratitude. So many of you sacrificed time and money to help us and, most importantly, your prayers have been what has borne us through this time of shock, sorrow and sadness. Thank you and we love all of you.

I wish all of you would have been able to meet our mother while she was still with us, but I'm comforted in the knowledge that one day you will. I'm sharing a few words I wrote to be placed in the program for my mother's funeral this Saturday below. For once, words did not flow as I wish they would but I still hope what you read will give you an inkling of what an amazing mother Rifkatu Patience Kore was and is.

If I'm able to provide updates here while we're in Nigeria I will. If not we look forward to seeing most of you after we return, Lord willing, on the 11th.

She sleeps. My mother sleeps. She sleeps the sleep of the righteous; she sleeps the sleep of one beloved by God. My mother was the epitome of the woman described in Proverbs 31—we had full confidence in her, she brought good to those who knew her, her hands were always diligent, her heart warm, her table covered with delicious food, her smile welcoming, her mind engaging, her laugh infectious, her compassion astounding.

My mother sleeps. She sleeps the sleep of a daughter at peace in the arms of her Father; she sleeps the content sleep of one who has finished a race run well. Our mother rejoices with those who have gone before her, reunited with so many she loves. This beautiful woman, this wondrous wife and magnificent mother, has been ushered into the presence of her Maker and now abides in the place of perfect Peace, unconditional Love and unsurpassed Joy.

I miss you mother, I miss you so much but I take comfort in the knowledge that you live on in our hearts; that your love for us was the fierce love of a mother who wishes for nothing but success for her children; that your passion for life and for others continues to shine before us as a beacon to light our way; that your desire to know Jesus each day has become an example for all of us to live by.

So mother, we bid you farewell with hearts heavy with sorrow and yet filled with the hope of a Joy we will one day feel when time has tempered pain and we can once again can laugh as we reminisce over the days we were privileged to have you in our midst. Rest assured when we remember you we will always echo these words found in Proverbs:

Her children arise and call her blessed;
Her husband also, and he praises her:
“Many women do noble things,
but you surpass them all.”

We will meet again one day but until then may my path, indeed, may the path of all of us who have been touched by you, be a testimony to how you lived your life on earth—to bring glory to our Savior.

I love you Mama.

Your son,
Weykyoi Victor

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Let's play!


memorial_day_07_16.jpg, originally uploaded by koréboy.

Sunday afternoon we had friends come over to chill out, barbecue, listen to good music and just relax. It was good times. Check out more photos here: Memorial Sunday barbecue pictures.

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Oblivious


Oblivious, originally uploaded by NanaKofiAcquah.

NanaKofiAcquah is a Ghanaian photographer. His work is mesmerizing and he possesses an amazing ability to capture the soul of his subjects through his lens. Take a few moments to check out his images here.

Thursday, May 17, 2007

China, Nigeria, Space, and...???


Here's an interesting story that highlights China's quiet take over of markets all over the world, especially in Africa.
China launches Nigerian satellite

China has successfully launched a communications satellite for Nigeria.

The official Xinhua news agency says it is the first time that a foreign buyer has purchased both a Chinese satellite and its launching service.

The Nigerian Communication Satellite NIGCOMSAT-1 is expected to offer broadcasting, phone and broadband internet services for Africa.

China beat 21 other bidders in 2004 for the $311m contract to launch the satellite, Xinhua says.

The satellite, lofted by a Long March 3-B rocket, is expected to reach its final position later this year and to remain in operation for 15 years.

The launch is being portrayed as part of a drive to enhance rural access to technology and the internet and boost Nigeria's and Africa's knowledge economy.

read the rest of story...

Pharoahe Monch - Body Baby

Pharoahe Monch is killin' it.

Saturday, May 12, 2007

Looptopia


Heading over to Looptopia and hopefully I'll return with some great shots of the event. Will keep you posted.


So I've finally put up my pictures from the first ever Looptopia (I believe the first of its kind ever for any US city). The events were cool but it was so damn cold!We ended up hanging out for about an hour and then taking off. Of course most of the real interesting events didn't start until after midnight. Here are some of the pictures I took Looptopia pictures

perfect in their art


perfect in their art, originally uploaded by Okaypro.

Each week I'll be highlighting a favorite contact from Flickr. If you love photography and haven't been here yet, you need to hustle your a$$ there immediately. Great online community, tons of suggestions, tips and helpful criticism.

This week's featured flickr photographer is Okayprofessor. Check out her sets and her amazing eye for composition and storytelling through the lens of her camera.

Thursday, May 10, 2007

Issues of visual intelligence & personal involvement

Visual Intelligence
[Thanks, Anthony, for finding this story.]

Well let's start with the "lighter" topic. Here's the link to the story of the controversial billboard that was up for a week or so in the "viagra triangle" here in Chicago. So much has been said about it that I think I'll refrain from further comments, well, except to say there is no such thing as an "innocuous ad." They all deliver messages.


Personal Involvement
warning: there are images of a dead body so stop reading now if this is something you cannot handle!

Just when I'm beginning to have some faith in the goodness that can be found in the human race, this happens: This past Saturday my brother, my cousin and I went downtown to the Shedd Aquarium (my cousin was visiting Chicago for the first time) and Millennium Park. As we crossed the railway tracks south of the Art Institute heading towards Buckingham fountain and the lake we decided to pause and take check out the trains passing below the bridge. I happened to glance towards the train platform where passengers were waiting to board and noticed that there was a man lying face down at the far south end of the platform, his satchel lying next to him. I focused my camera on him, zoomed in and noticed that a small pool of blood had formed around his head. At the moment a south bound train pulled up and all the waiting passengers boarded the train and left. We waited for a few minutes expecting someone to come and assess the situation. When no one showed up I yelled down and got the attention of one of the passengers who had showed up for the next train. I pointed out the person lying there and he at first indicated to me that someone had called and then he walked over to look at the person lying down. He then walked back into the station and returned moments later with one of the train station attendants. She took a look at the person lying there, and after pausing for a while pulled out her phone and called the police. A few moments later a squad car pulled up and two officers got out, ran across the tracks and approached the body. At this point, after taking a few shots of the events transpiring, my brother, my cousin and I decided to continue to the aquarium, since everything seemed to be under control (at this point we weren't sure if the person was dead or just seriously injured). When we were walking back about an hour and a half later, we decided to go past the scene and see if we could figured out what happened. When we got there we looked down and saw that the person had been moved into a refrigeration truck (confirming that he was dead). There were still blood stains on the platform with evidence that there had been attempt to at least partially clean up part of it.


So here's what's tripping me out: Lord knows how long the person had been lying there, I know that at least one train load of passengers had seen the body, ignored it, boarded the train and headed out to meet the next part of their lives. Why hadn't someone bothered to, at the very least, call the 911 or inform one of the train station attendants that there was a person lying face down at the far end of the platform? If someone had checked in on the person is there a possibility that the person might be alive today? Who knows, but the sad thing is that nobody wanted to involve themselves in the situation. Have we become so jaded and desensitized as a society that when we see what could possibly be a dead body we just keep moving along without any compassion or desire to see what may have befallen our fellow human? Or is it that we have become so self-centered that the idea of taking a few seconds off of our busy schedule is not entertained even if doing so might be the difference between life and death of a man lying face down on a platform?

In one of my classes this quarter I've been learning about issues of injustice, hegemony and counter-hegemony and over the last couple of weeks the focus has been on the myriad reasons for why the Holocaust took place and why Germany and its people could carry out such an atrocity and also how many countries were indirect participants in this genocide (several countries refused to allow Jewish refugees into their borders). Much of this happened because no one wanted to be inconvenienced, no one wanted to get involved if they could help it. Look at Rwanda, Darfur and other regions around the world were atrocities that could have been prevented were allowed to come to fruition because those who could have stopped the horrific violence were more concerned with their own affairs. Does the indifference of a few people on a train platform who are ignoring a dead body really compare to the atrocities mentioned above? A resounding "YES!" If people are not moved by what they see in their own personal backyard where they can see, smell, touch and directly determine the fate of one of their own, what's to make any of us care or respond to the pain and suffering of people in other parts of the city, our state, our country or on other continents?


I know there is good in our souls, and I haven't lost faith in humanity, but I'm glad I experienced this because it brought me back to the reality of our human condition and to the reality that is our human nature with its propensity towards selfishness, self preservation, and callousness. It also has highlighted to me the importance to examine myself and make sure that I don't become so focused on myself that I forget to be a voice for those who cannot speak, hands for those who cannot help themselves and a defender for the defenseless.

I'm done venting...at least for now.

Saturday, April 28, 2007

Runaway

Check this out. It's a short film my cousin in film school created.

Tuesday, April 24, 2007

And the elections were a success...

Well that's what the government would have you believe. Nigerians supposedly voted Yar'Adua--he officially garnered over %70 of the votes--as the next civilian president of my beloved homeland, Nigeria. Now don't get me wrong, his opponent, Buhari, is probably the worse of two evils but c'mon, who's going to believe such a disparity in the voting count. Okay, I'm happy that there was at least a vote--that's a huge step for almost any country these days, heck even the US can't seem to get that part of democracy exactly right and they've had over two centuries to try to get there--but that still does not excuse the reports of voting improprieties and malpractices that were allegedly rampant. But there is hope, and where there is hope there is faith, and with faith, determination, which, Lord willing, will move our fledgling democracy in the right direction. God bless Nigeria.

Friday, April 20, 2007

Remembering...


Hokie Nation, originally uploaded by kevincupp.

Just taking a moment to honor the memory of those slain in the horrifying shootings at VT this week.

The time for debate is NOT now. We'll get there soon enough.

God's comfort and our prayers go out to all who have been affected directly by this tragedy.

Thursday, April 19, 2007

DC spring break trip


Went to DC for spring break. You can check out pictures here:
DC trip

Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Talib Kweli - More Or Less

Here's the newest video from the lyrical, social-conscious one, Talib. When, O when will BlackStar release a new album...