‘We Are All Red Inside’

By Tunde Oseni

One sunny Sunday

I ran across the Park

And I jogged along the mark

As I looked left and right

I saw faces around the pitch

Every kid of Mother Nature within reach

Wandering about

In the sea of life

From wherever each of us may come

And whichever race each of us may claim

Only one race indeed exists

And that is the human race

White, black, blue or brown

‘We are all red inside’[1]


[1] Phrase first encountered during a Xmas Lunch (25 December, 2010) conversation with Terry Dunn, a 64-year old British Linguist and University Receptionist at Hope Hall, Exeter University, United Kingdom:  The idea is that all humans, black or white, carry red blood in our veins, and therefore we should see ourselves as one.

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Tunde Oseni In Town With ‘My London Poems’

Tunde Oseni, who also writes for TalkAfrique,  launched his new book “My London Poems’ a couple of weeks ago. I join all readers of TalkAfrique to congratulate Tunde and wish him success on the project.
Please enjoy the report and photos sent in by Ms. Akhagba.
By Omoye Akhagba, Nigeria.

It was a season of ovation when Tunde Oseni, a Phd Student came to the country to launch his book titled My London Poems With My Nigerian Story.

The anthology contains twenty-two poems that talk  about different spheres of life including ‘Obama’. He decribes Obama as a phenomenon of faith and hope to do things that seem impossible.

The event was not only about the public presentation of the book but also  presentation of awards to notable Nigerians  who have made remarkable impact in the lives of the people.

The awardees were Hon. Abike Dabiri -Erewa, Member, Federal House of Representatives, who is also the  Chairman, House Committee on Diaspora Affairs. She is being recognized for the numerous  scholarships awarded  to many youths in her community and sponsorship of several Bills in the House one of which is  the Freedom  Of Information Bill.

The second awardee was  Mr. Ayodeji Babatunde Iginla, Rector of the Lagos State Polytechnic, Ikorodu who was represented by the Director of Students’ Affairs, Mr. Isaac Omolumo. The Rector is recognized  for his remarkable transformation in the institution with the latest ICT facilities to improve academic learning.

The third awardee was Mr. Aletile Oluwaseyitan Lawrence a.k.a SeyiLaw, a stand up comedian who has been involved in humanity projects such as the Live Green and War Against Rape campaigns.

The event was graced by friends, associates and families of the scholar as he told his early childhood story and the struggle to keep faith alive.

Tunde Oseni studied political Science from the prestigious  university of Ibadan, where he bagged a first class honours. He then proceeded to study for a  Master of  Science in  African Studies at the University of Oxford on scholarship. Tunde is currently a Phd Scholar and Teaching  Assistant  at the University of Exeter in United Kingdom.

Tunde Oseni, presenting the Youth Focus Role Model Award 2011 (Leadership) to Hon. Abike Dabiri-Erewa, member, Nigeria Federal House of Representatives, and chairman, House committee on Diaspora Affairs. Hon. Dabiri-Erewa has given several scholarships to many youths , inspired several young leaders in her community, constituency and country, and has remained a source of inspiration to her and next generations
Tunde Oseni, presenting the Youth Focus Role Model Award 2011 (Education) to Mr Ayodeji Babatunde Iginla, Rector, Lagos State Polytechnic, Ikorodu (represented by the Director of Student Affairs, Mr Isaac Omolumo): the Laspotech has undergone unprecedented growth, especially in the area of ICT under Mr Iginla, earning him the sobriquet: The e-Rector
Tunde Oseni, presenting the Youth Focus Role Model Award 2011 (Entertainment) to Mr Aletile Oluwaseyitan Lawrence a.k.a Seyi Law, a popular stand-up comedian, who has been involved in 'Live Green' and 'War Against Rape' campaigns.
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Making It Slowly but Surely

Success is a marathon, not a sprint. But many of today’s youth do not know this, or they know but not make it a maxim in running their life race. If we take things easy, and act as purposely and positively as we can, success will surely come our way.

There are rules for success, and one of them is: ‘Never rush’. If you look around you, you will discover that those who have made it to the top are not only those who inherit wealth, fame or name. Yes, wealth, fame, and popular name can open door of opportunities for some folks, but the lack of them, ab initio, does not lock such doors and windows of opportunities either.

If you want to make it in life, as we all make efforts to achieve greater potentials and accumulate better aspirations of life, the rule , ‘never rush’, applies. What do you want to make in life: intellectual progress or social mobility? The best and possibly easiest way to make it in life is to make it slowly but surely.

With this recommendation, I am not saying we should be lackadaisical about life, or that we should sleep off all the twenty-fours and expect miracles to come, what I am saying is that we should organise ourselves, and see our dreams come true one by one.

Remember the scriptural axiom that the battle is neither for the strong nor the race for the swift, but that time and chance happen to them all. In the year 2006, I gave a speech at the orientation event organised by the Student Leadership Development Programme, SLDP, at the University of Ibadan, Nigeria. The coordinator of that novel student programme, who read my modest citation on that day, is today the Chief Economic Adviser to the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. I am talking about

Prof (Mrs) Precious Kassey Garba, a woman of substance; respectful, respected, and respectable scholar and teacher.

Prof. Garba always told us to believe in ourselves, and that no matter how big a challenge could be, determination can melt it. At the event mentioned above, I spoke about why and how the youth can take their destiny in their own hands. I said  the youth should always plan their time and time their plan. I said the youth should always choose their friends and make library one of their friends. I reminded the youth about what Prof Adedoyin Soyibo used to tell us, that when you add value to yourself, the distance from your success is reduced by miles. We can make it slowly but surely. Nothing is worth-worrying or worth-rushing about in life.

The biggest god most people worship is money. Money is good but money is not god. How you get is more important. Remember Napoleon Hill, who wrote in Think and Grow Rich that ‘Quick riches are more dangerous than poverty’. What we need most of the time is organised planning, faith, hope, and action, and slowly but surely we shall make it.

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Freedom, Opportunity and Tolerance

Sitting at less than five metres from the former President of Ghana, John Kufuor, I listened to what turned out to be one of my favourite public lectures in my adult life. The venue was the Rhodes House in Oxford. President Kufuor was still in power then.


Three words summarised his incisive paper: freedom, opportunity and tolerance. He said in a university, individuals were free, they had opportunity to express their ideas, but these must be nurtured with tolerance if progress was to be made.


I have always held a similar view that we proceed to a higher level of consciousness only when we can tolerate other people’s views. This idea of tolerance, or what some social scientists would call ‘toleration’, does not mean jettisoning our independent opinions for those of other folks. What tolerance actually means is that we are broad-minded, open-minded, namely we reconcile our views with those of others.

Freedom to think, act, and make judgements about issues of life is never absolute. But, in one way or the other, we are all, more or less, free, in the highly globalised, opinionated and competitive world.


Opportunity is available, even though it is not always widespread. But if we dig deep, inside of us, we will see modicums and atoms of opportunity, inherent in all of us. What we need most to keep freedom and opportunity afloat is tolerance. We need to reconcile ourselves with others. We need to complain less, and act more. We need to do as Mahatma Ghandi of India did: be the change we wish to see in others. If we all seize opportunity that comes our way, and we cherish our freedom, and respect the freedom of others, within the context of a tolerant global society, the world, not only us, will be better for it.


Let’s go back to some intellectual basis of reconciliation of opposite views and epochal events. Remember Karl Marx, and remember Thomas Kuhn. Karl Marx (1818-1883) argued fervently, that historically, every society is not static, and that after primitive communism comes slavery, then feudalism, then capitalism, then socialism, then classless communism, which he believed will be the result of all former epochs.

What this means is that all historical stages of development are never perfect, and that remnants of them are carried over into a new beginning. For Thomas Kuhn (1922-1996), the writer of The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, there is always a Thesis, the reigning paradigm, which then gives away to an Anti-thesis, which in turn gives a way to a resultant outcome called the Synthesis. What this means is that no knowledge is absolute, and that no matter what we know of an issue, there will always be an additional knowledge about it.

This makes us remember the position expressed by the award-winning writer of Half of a Yellow Sun, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, who passionately spoke about ‘The Danger of a Single Story’ at TED Talks. Please see and hear her out on possibly ted.com or TalkAfrique.com, and you will get more insights of what she meant, and what I am actually talking about.


It is only a dialectic and eclectic approach to issue, or what Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe called the ‘harmony of opposites’ that can enrich our freedom as a people, increase our opportunities as a human race , and in turn, make tolerance a virtue we all can share, we all must share, and we all will share

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