Bassey Otu: Prince of Paradise

  • Steve Ogah
  • Africa
  • June 23, 2023

Bassey Otu: Prince of Paradise

 

Yesterday at the foot of a giant evening bonfire

With gleeful sparkles in both eyes, someone asked

Who will sing me a song to a Prince

About Bassey Edet Otu, Prince of Paradise

Who carries with pride on broad, steady shoulders 

The hopes, dreams, and joys of millions, 

Known and unknown, seen and unseen

The elements captured the voice of the inquirer 

And the soft sea breeze of that calm Calabar night 

Carried the same words with tender care as though

Precious eggs in the gentle hands of an innocent child

And it sailed slowly but surely, destination certain

Until the syllables became recurrent verbal symbols

At a gathering of river dwellers by the banks of the 

Elegant Cross River. And there, too, water wove words 

Into floating lyrics. Choppy waves of the river danced 

With the lines of those golden questions, probing 

The politics and person, calm and charm

Of the one who is beloved like a soft chorus

From the whistling birds of Obudu Cattle Ranch

But that was not all. A beaming Calabar moon 

Illuminated the night. Kids reenacting Ekombi dance rhythms 

In colorful cultural livery, under the sky’s translucent canopy 

Repeated the exact phrase, the land and sea breeze bore aloft 

Like a golden trophy. Wind voices whispered. Dancing teens heard.

While their colorful beads and vibrant anklets echoed the words

A caravan of questions gave birth to a convoy of answers

Tongues wagging wordily as they unwrapped the mystery 

Of a charming prince, the first son of the Cross River

We remember the demand from the bonfire night

The moonlight question still shines. And river waves still shudder 

With an urge to know. But we can only know the prince

One stride at a time. He is like an epic poem of several stanzas

A delicious Afang soup sprinkled with the finest periwinkles

From Calabar’s sprawling and singing beach market

Know this: Even when cold, you can’t savor this dish in a rush

Half man, half mystery, yet fully mortal

But wait, first! But who be this Bassey Otu sef?

He is the first tenant at Diamond Hill,

He is our man, a man of the people, prince of paradise 

Our governor

First son of the Cross River, first seed of a fertile womb,

First fruit of the finest harvests from our farms

He is the sun over our green farming fields, shining at sunrise

Burning with a golden glow at sunset, serene as the calm banks 

Of our many rivers. Yet, his thoughts run deep for all who look to him

But wait, first! But who be dis Bassey Otu sef?

He is our man, a man of the people, prince of paradise 

Our governor

Providence called, and the prince answered the cry of destiny 

His bright light and a beacon of hope shining down

Like signals from the northern highlands of Cross River 

Fairy prince of the glorious Efik kingdom

Selfless Southern Senator. Now a King with two crowns

One cultural, the other political                     

Finding expression in many merry metaphors

A man of destiny, daydreams, and a human dynamo

With no fear of the drudgery of routine work

Whose name Ekombi drums tease with ease

As supple dancers turn with pride and poetry

Gesturing to the music of his praise songs 

While artists paint him on a historical canvas

For all to see, sing, and singe into memory

A man of peculiar character motifs

But wait, first! But who be this Bassey Otu sef?

He is our man, a man of the people, prince of paradise 

Our governor

His ancestors gave him history like a precious secret

The son of a royal household whose foundations stood

When English and Portuguese slave catchers, slave masters 

Raided our land, fleeing with the fit ones from farming families 

He walks tall as if a moving palm tree, juiced with a priceless trove 

Of inherited wisdom. A man of cultural decency, his name 

An ancestral code of prestige, saying this is a man 

From the core of the land, mined from the finest of regal lineages

This story has been told, the telling swift

Without contours and detours

Only with symbols without secrets

So tongues may not wag with unfamiliar motions

When probed about the prince of paradise

Searching for economic prosperity for Cross Riverians 

Planting buoyant hopes in the ground 

Even when bright black clouds float overheard

Because he is the sunny side of a gloomy day

Our man, a man of the people

Our governor

Bassey Edet Otu. 

 

 

 

 

 

Summary

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