Address delivered to the students, staff and guests at the Edgewise
Reading Network’s Readership Promotion event held at Comprehensive High School,
Isawo, Ikorodu, Lagos, Nigeria, on Wednesday, February 13, 2013, by Mr. Richard
Mammah, MD, Sunbird African Media Ltd.
Good Afternoon, Mr. Chairman, the Principal, guests,
staff, students, ladies and gentlemen.
Permit me to start this address by expressing my
heartfelt gratitude to PreyeTambou and his team at Edgewise Reading Network for
fighting so ebulliently to get this programme going. As a long-time devotee of
the cause of reading promotions in Nigeria, I very well know what a yeoman’s
task this has, and continues to be. I salute you.
Now, is there really joy in reading? And what kind of
joy exactly would that be?
I will call to the witness box the child, aged four
who has just been told his favourite bed-time story and is vigorously pleading
for one more take. Is there joy in reading? Ask him!
My second witness would be that candidate in the
university semester examinations who finds out in the course of answering a
question that not only is he able to largely recall a lot of what he had read
up from his course notes and texts, but that several other bits of information
from other books and materials he had encountered at different times and
seasons are easily returning to his mind at this moment to guarantee that he
would no doubt get a very good grade in the course under reference. Is there
joy in reading? Again, we request that you direct the question to him!
My final witness for now would be that Professor who
has just finished delivering his inaugural lecture to find himself looking down
- from his perch up there on the podium - at a packed hall full of applauding
listeners much impressed with the depth of scholarship that he had so
effortlessly handed down.
Interestingly, as I speak, my friend and fellow
champion in the course of the book in Nigeria, Professor Remi Raji is at the
moment putting finishing touches to a paper in that mould that he would be
delivering at the Trenchard Hall of the University of Ibadan. Is there joy in
reading? You can ask the good Professor, who is also the current President of
the Association of Nigerian Authors (ANA), after he has finished his lecture
tomorrow.
I have called up these witnesses to make the first
basic point that contrary to what many of us have been made to believe reading
indeed is and should be fun.
So from where do we get the idea that reading equates
drudgery and what should be done to help that student who finds reading as a
boring chore to get over his erroneous feeling and begin to better appreciate
the great bliss that is inherently contained in the reading enterprise?
Let us begin from trying to understand what reading is
in the first place?
The Oxford Dictionary of Current English defines reading to involve a process of understanding ‘the meaning of
written or printed words or symbols.’ Whether it is in decoding bus-stop
directions, instructions on a drugs’ pack or sifting through several volumes of
texts to prepare a research paper that would help you get that certificate or
degree, the reading enterprise always involves making meaning out of the
processing of characters and alphabets that the reader can recognise.
Broken down therefore, reading would simply be an
interface of words, recognition and meaning. You confront a text; you recognize
the words, read them together and make meaning out of them. From sentence to
paragraph, chapter to section the process does not change. It is:
Words-Recognition-Meaning.
Would you sometimes meet strange words? Yes. Would
some passages sometimes not read like ‘Greek?’ Yes. Would some authors not
sometimes be talking above your head? Again, my answer is yes. But the solution
dear student is not to run away. And to help explain this point, I will take a
slight detour into the world of driving.
If you ask the average driver on our roads, he would
tell you that there was a time when he really did not think he would today be
driving through the streets and highways of Lagos. But having come to grips
with the fact that this was one vocation that he was almost compelled to
master, he had no choice but to pick up the proverbial gauntlet and get on with
it. Today, the rest is history.
Happily, the reading enterprise is not that
‘oppressive.’ Looking around you, you will find that there are indeed things
that you naturally like reading. You may not be the greatest fan of bed time
stories but your favourite could be poetry. You may just tolerate biographies
but comics would make your day anytime!
And this indeed would be our first point in joy-reading: read a lot of
what naturally excites and interests you! Indeed, in some situations, it would
be from reading and continuing to read more and more of the stuff that
interests you that you would find readily recognizable cross-reference material
with which you would better explain yourself when you get up higher on the
educational and career planes where the focus is on depth and breadth.
Let me illustrate this point some more with three
references. One, as a journalist, who had to write an opinion essay on the
level of corruption in the ruling People’s Democratic Party a few years ago
when Ahmadu Ali was Chairman of the arty and Baba Olusegun Obasanjo was
President, I drew upon my fictional knowledge of the story of ‘Ali Baba and the
Forty Thieves’ to caption my essay; ‘Ali, Baba and the Forty Thieves.’
Second, as a copy-writer for an advertising agency
several years back, I chanced upon a spectacular piece of word-play in an
advert about the satellite product, Capsat that took its bearing from the
historical saga of the French Emperor, Napoleon Bonaparte. It read: ‘If
Napoleon had a Capsat, he would not have lost the Battle of Waterloo!’ I was impressed.
Days later, I was commissioned to write a copy for the
public relations firm, Imprint Communications, and with the Capsat copy still
reeling around my head for inspiration, I penned these lines: ‘Many years ago,
dinosaurs roamed the face of the earth. We know about this today because they
left their Imprint! Needless to say, my own word-play involved matching the
name of the company with the saga of dinosaurs that had since gone extinct but
whose tales I had read in some of my voracious life-long searches for story
after story to devour! So do not let
anyone discourage you that you are reading too much of the stuff you like to
read! Rather, politely tell them that ‘it would come handy someday!’
That settled, our final point would have to do with
what you have to read but do not like. Being in school as we currently are, I
am sure that you will find situations like that. To address this, you could
adopt one of two possible responses.
The first would be to appreciate the truth that there
is indeed no hurdle under the sun that cannot be confronted and scaled. For
example, people say that it is almost impossible learning new languages after
childhood. Well, this speaker did learn to speak and write Deutsch at age 36!
And he does not have the gift for languages per se as is apparent with
his continuing battles with French and Yoruba. Beni!
The answer really to coping with tough and difficult
reading encounters would be in finding an appropriate method with which to
prevail.
In this, one first point that must be made is for the
reader to recognize that escape would not be the answer. While the temptation
would be strong to damn the subject because you do not enjoy it presently, the
truth really is that it could be all-too-critical for your future that you must
secure a credit pass in or you could find out in the course of time that ‘the
stone that the builders rejected has become the cornerstone.’
This in a sense is the story of my relationship with
Geography. After having dropped the subject because I had considered it
‘uninteresting,’ events and circumstances made me to do a u-turn in my final
year in secondary school and I signed-in Geography as one of my Certificate
Examinations subjects. I then proceeded to break it down to subjects and
sections as contained in the syllabus, gave the subject more time in my private
study time-table and thankfully also, the subject teacher, Mr. Kwame Ayekpa,
kindly availed me all of his time and resources (including meals at his home in
the staff quarters!). The result was stunning!
So it comes down finally to the environment within
which you read. Again, I repeat? Would there be difficult moments? You bet.
Would reading be boring sometimes? Correct. Is it okay to shut the book and
take a walk? Absolutely!
But even as you have your way and take that break when
you must, you must also equally pay attention to that soft, nudging call from
your books as they gently implore you long after you have rested: ‘can we
please return to our world of study ...and fun! Respond to the prompting and
you will ultimately find out like many others before you that truly, ‘reading
maketh a man.’
I thank you for your patience and attention.
Source: http://richardmammah.blogspot.com/
Source: http://richardmammah.blogspot.com/
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