Stella Dimoko Korkus.com: A Story Around Mama Carol Dawes

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Friday, February 12, 2016

A Story Around Mama Carol Dawes

This is an article by Reuben Abati..some of you think his writeups are too long or that he has no right to write and then you cuss him out but i will have you know that learning from him is free..Ignorance is expensive!



Teachers are the most important persons in anyone’s life. Teachers teach us everything that we know. They inspire us. They leave their imprints, almost like genetic imprints in our lives, and those imprints survive forever. They come in different shapes. The teachers in the classrooms, the ones we meet in our life-long journey of searching and probing. The ones who cross our paths and leave indelible marks. 

       Even more importantly, the ones that do not carry dusters and chalks but whose lives redefine ours, changing us for better, for real. They write and we read their words and thoughts, or we even just hear about them and their works, and we are recruited as disciples for as long as we live.


 They could be formal teachers or village elders, raconteurs, musicians, dancers, grandmothers and grandfathers or writers and scientists, but they change us all the same, because the truth is that as we grow, we contend with a multiplicity of influences, and we get influenced, re-born, re-made.  

       All teachers inspire us with words, with methods, with what they say and what they do, and in the process, they help the world to forge ahead, they extend traditions and thoughts, and even if they never get the rewards that they deserve, they remain unforgettable all the same because teaching is one of the most divine of all professions. This then is a tribute to all teachers, all those illuminated souls who give, and nurture, so that others may grow. What has triggered these ruminations is the report of the death in the United Kingdom, this week, of Carol Dawes, a Jamaican-Nigerian mother, teacher, scholar and great influencer, at 84. Nigerian students of the dramatic arts in the 80s and 90s will remember Mama Dawes fondly, particularly her students and colleagues at the Universities of Port Harcourt, Ife and Calabar, and indeed everyone who was privileged to encounter her. 


       We never know initially, and we may never really know, but we end up knowing as human beings sooner or later, that life is a journey and that every encounter is a potential opportunity for learning, and that teachers are part of that graph.  I have, speaking for myself, been through many journeys and like every one else I am a product of many inputs. I started my own journey with a woman called Iya Ayi, who took me from my parents at a tender age of two, and turned me into a rote-learning machine of alphabets and multiplications and everything else by the age of four. 

The fable as told was that I was so smart she had to tell my parents that I was ripe enough to go to formal school. There was probably some misjudgment there because today, I am still struggling to prove that I am actually smart.  Many years later, I indeed recall the day I was taken to school and I kept failing the test, that old test of asking the child to put his hand across his head, to touch his ear. 


      If you could do that successfully, you were good enough to start school, but if your hand kept falling short, you’d be asked to go back home. It was Mrs Adewale’s class, Duro’s mother, and after every trial, my hand just could not touch my ear. My father had to confess that I was actually under-aged, but he insisted that I was good enough based on Iya Ayi’s recommendations.  A quick test was arranged. The purpose was to make me compete with other children in the class. Two different tests, I was told, and I ended up beating the other students, the ones who had in fact spent some time in the class. That was how I started school. I don’t want to report that for the first few years of primary school life, I used to pee in my pants or waste too much time before telling the teacher I needed to go to the toilet often creating an embarrassing situation, but I was tolerated because I could get all the questions right, and lead the class.  


        Iya Ayi, when I see her these days, looks really elderly and tired, but she could teach me the alphabets at that time and was the instrument that got me going. Once school started, my elder brother, Alexander took over and I was never allowed to have peace. As young as I was, I was forced to learn the difference between various figures of speech and to differentiate between gerund and whatever. Every growing day was a punishment. Between my elder brother and my father, Temidire Coaching Class at Oke Bode got added to the bill, and there was a back up, Etiko Gambia Class. I was not allowed to breathe. I was forced to learn whatever was possible. Watching television was a sin. Football was meant for specially supervised occasions, and only with known children. Etiko Gambia was even a boxer.


        The real teachers in every home, I am trying to say, are the parents, the patriarchs and the matriarchs, and as it happens it is God that decides what is best: the children of some of the most prominent people in Nigeria have ended up as charlatans, the children of nobodies have sat on the most important seats in the land. What makes the difference is the luck factor, perhaps, but life as we have seen is even far more than the luck factor. There is something extra and it is the teachers, the encounters we make in and out of our classrooms that make all the difference, the people who surround us, whose breath, whose inputs into our lives define us, the manner of our preparation. Teachers make the person. They create the universe into which we step and which we build into a personal whole. 


    One of them in my space just died. Mama Dawes we called her. She was a for many years a teacher at the University of Port Harcourt teaching Creative Arts alongside Ola Rotimi and others who turned the Crab Theatre into one of the most fertile, gestating grounds for many Nigerians who in later life would become star operators in the media, in advertising, political communication, public relations, drama and so on. Students of the performative arts across Nigeria knew Mama Dawes. Her students talked about her. Her colleagues respected her. In those days, every student of the dramatic arts had the opportunity of being taught by foreign experts who came to the country and willingly helped to nurture a Nigerian tradition, from Geoffrey  Axworthy  to Martin Banham, David Cook, to Dexter and Dani Lyndersay to Orwell Johnson, all the way down.  


     Mama Dawes soon showed up in my life as one of the readers and assessors of my postgraduate research. My MA thesis was sent to her and Professor Michael O’Neill then of the University of Dublin for independent assessment. Both of them came back with the verdict that the research was good enough to be awarded a Ph.D.  Professor O’Neill told my supervisor, the late Professor Dapo Adelugba that he was willing to accept me as a Post-Doctoral Student almost immediately at the University of Dublin. We started processing the applications. But that didn’t go through. 


       This was in the days of serious minded teachers, and these ones were really serious minded. Professor Femi Osofisan, then Head of Department, and Adelugba were not the best of friends, but they always co-operated when it came to ensuring that every student got the best training possible under their care. They conspired with the external and internal examiners to push me through many extra miles, and get me onto the Ph.D programme. I was like a guinea pig.  I discovered in the long run that even the Professors who had been asked to examine my MA thesis were part of the conspiracy.  The day I saw the final report for the first time, signed by Professors Adelugba, Osofisan, Dan Izevbaye and Akanji Nasiru, I wept, surprised that these “wicked teachers” didn’t mean any harm after all! On Mama Dawes, here is an instructive obituary written by Dani Lyndersay who, along with another Nigerian legend, Dexter Lyndersay, was my teacher, much earlier, at the University of Calabar:


      Carroll Dawes, legendary theatre director, scholar and teacher, who is generally recognised as one of the most influential and innovative theatre directors Jamaica has produced, died early on Monday [08.02.16] (on the eve of her 84th birthday) at her home in London, England, after a long illness. Her daughter, Gwyneth Dawes, was by her side. One of the early directors of studies at the Jamaica School of Drama, Dawes oversaw the building of the School of Drama at its present location, produced its first curriculum, and formed its first student company, the National Festival Theatre of Jamaica. 
      “A highly celebrated director of what are often cited as definitive stagings of some of the world's greatest plays (from Shakespeare to Ibsen to Brecht) seen in Jamaica, Dawes directed critically acclaimed productions of plays by, among others, Derek Walcott, Dennis Scott, and Wole Soyinka. She left Jamaica in 1977 and relocated to Nigeria, where she taught at several universities, including Ibadan, Ile-Ife, and Calabar. She retired in 1992 and settled in England, where she lived until her passing. Dawes was born Carroll Cecily Morrison on February 3, 1932, in Hopewell, Hanover, to Cleveland Morrison, an education officer and former vice-president of the Jamaica Union of Teachers (now Jamaica Teachers' Association), and Vivienne Maud Morrison, a teacher.



    After completing her education at the St Hilda's Diocesan High School in 1950, she won a scholarship to the newly formed University College of the West Indies. In 1955, she married Jamaican poet and novelist Neville Dawes, and the two had a daughter, Gwyneth, before their divorce in 1957. Dawes would go on to secure her Master of Fine Arts in Directing and her Doctor of Fine Arts in Theatre History at the Yale School of Drama in 1971, and even before this, had built an enviable reputation as one of the most innovative and gifted theatre artistes in Jamaica from 1950 onwards. In 1980, she was the recipient of the Institute of Jamaica's Centenary Medal in Theatre Arts…”



     It is a pity they don’t quite make teachers like that anymore. Her likes in various disciplines deserve to be identified and honoured by the Nigerian government or the various institutions  they were associated with. There are so many of them, who returned to Africa to make a difference, and whose stories still need to be properly told. Mama Dawes will be greatly missed. Thank you, great teacher. May your soul find peace in the path of eternal illumination. 



38 comments:

  1. Abeg we need a summary of 3 to 4 lines. i dont like all these long essays. I have finished my secondary school for years. I am not writing waec jare.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The Anonymous journal12 February 2016 at 10:25

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      Please!!!!!!!

      Delete
    2. Since Buhari became president, all of them have suddenly become king solomon.
      He was in a position to Advice GEJ,,,what did he do?
      GEJ was the first graduate president Nigeria has ever had but his administration saw incessant strikes from primary to the tertiary level. Polytechnics were on strike for almost 2yrs,,,
      ASUU members lost their lives going from one useless meeting to another.
      Residency programmes for medical doctors were scrapped.

      GEJ gave useless people national Honours,,,how many teachers did you nominate??? Heeeeediiiooots, na so so talk talk.
      Reuben Abati,,,stick your opinion inside lawma van.
      Hide your face in shame.

      Delete
  2. Stella i officially declare reuben abati your boo,who wan read this ,who Reuben Abati help

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I'm sure even Reuben Abati didn't read this, he just wrote and wrote



      The day he starts keeping it short is the day I'll start reading his articles again, I've tried reading one or two and I always get the feeling of reading of the ramblings of a bored, mad man bent on dragging everyone into his deep dark hole of despair!




      SHARONNA

      Delete


  3. PARENTAL ADVISORY
    ^^^Adult Content^^^




    Rueben needs a job

    ReplyDelete
  4. Who has time to read this epistle of life.
    I jump and pass biko

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  5. Shoutout to all my teachers, primary - tertiary. Special shout out to my mom - a teacher extraordinaire.

    May I also be a great teacher even outside the four walls of a classroom.

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  6. This is too long abeg, I'm not reading .Someone should summarize it for us.

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  7. Chai.. RIP Mama Dawes

    Nice piece..
    Bravo Mr Abati

    Who even shape me sef?
    #thinking

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  8. summary is better biko next time just take note.

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  9. Teachers really deserve the best.Especially the nursery and primary section,cos thats where the child can underatand quickly.
    Salute to all the teachers that taught me.
    From nursery to higher instituion.
    wonder why they say there reward is in Heaven.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Abegi jor.
    Who did he help while dey were in power?
    now he is writing epistle upandan.

    ReplyDelete
  11. I have nothing against the length of his epistles.

    I just don't have enough time to waste on people who lack integrity.

    Integrity is expensive!

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  12. Too long abeg.Atleast two or three line is okay.When he was in power with Oga jona he no get time to write all this o.

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  13. He lost the moral authority when he spoke for the most corrupt administration ever. I am not learning nothing from this guy. So N jump and pass

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  14. Oh! Memories
    Goodnight Mama Dawes

    Reading through all I had was photographic flash memories of the Recitation Classes at HillCrest Schools Jos. The early morning chill listening to character points from the teachers. They all had Masters Degree and basic knowledge in Child Psychology. And can read any countenance. So much love in one school system.
    All thanks to Sir and Lady Heckman.
    I recall the school motto...LOVE GOD. LOVE OTHERS.
    So difficult for me to do hate today. Every child got same treatment, and are to learn 4 other languages before graduating from 12th Grade.
    The days Nigeria had school. The dusty old days of Rayfield Jos. Going home was punishment. School was everything. Red and white colors allover.

    Relive the sweet and qualitative memories as you mourn Mama Dawe.
    And remember to always imbibe the good values she imparted. It is well.

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  15. Kai! Is so bad, when u read things like ' who has tym to read this epistle of life' this days! Which way nigeria students? I always wish I was born during those days of abati and chinua Achebe them, when education was really serious and fun, when students read and enjoy every aspect of education. I envy them a lot. This days nobody wants to bend down and read. Sorting have become the order of the day... Too bad!. Ak 47, expo, omukirikiri, echeta obi si ike, etc. May God see us thru. Reuben Abati may God bless u for remember this wonderful soul, and may her gentle soul rest in peace amen!

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  16. Ok good what is the lesson leartnt in this long epistle?! Why didn't he advocate anything 4 teachers when he had an opportunity to do so in govt! Long hissssssss

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  17. Why didn't he help teachers advocate for better salary when he had the opportrunity to do so!

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    Replies
    1. Exactly! 16years,,,all of a sudden he found his common sense.

      Delete
  18. You got that right reuben @ parents being the real teachers.

    My dad(bless his soul)started drilling me from God knows when, but by the time I was four, I was reading and writing, and I could look up words in the dictionary.
    I remember thinking my dad hates me,and was punishing me when he'd come home every evening with new books in hand,and I'd have to read the books all evening,cos the next day he will come home with another.
    By the time I was in jss 1, I had read all the required texts for up to ss3.
    Looking back now, I'm grateful that I had a wonderful teacher for a dad.and I'm grateful for everything I've learnt.

    Rest in peace mama dawes.you left beautiful footprints in the sand of time.

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  19. This just made my day! Stella please keep posting Reuben Abati's articles...RIP mama Dawes.

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  20. You don't have to read such an epistle to learn. When no be say I de prepare for exam. It's damn too long

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  21. You don't have to read such an epistle to learn. When no be say I de prepare for exam. It's damn too long

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  22. Yes we know the role of teachers, but this writing to long for me to read a beg.

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  23. Thank you Mr. Abati, it's a pleasure reading from you. It is very refreshing . May the soul of your teacher RIP. God bless all our teachers.

    Stella blessed, DO NOT stop posting Mr. R Abati's write ups. Please.
    If it's too long , they should jump & pass. Ignorance is crime. The time they spent typing insults on Mr. Abati or complaining on how long his epistles are, they would have read the whole thing. Stupidity in various forms.

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  24. Abeg who read this shit, kindly help a sister out by summarising it.. thanchu!

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    Replies
    1. Oh dear. You want a Summarised shit?

      Just read. It is inspiring. 5 minutes of your time.

      E-hugs

      Delete
  25. Stella, you see what is wrong with your young followers abi? Must people seek a shortcut to everything?
    ANYWAY, I read the article, long as it is and it got me thinking, really thinking about the teachers who made such positive impact in my life so far. I remember two from primary school and that was it, I probably have to do deeper thinking.
    Cheers!

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  26. NICE WRITE-UP. i had to visit google to know the face of this lovely lady that has impacted much on peoples lives.

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  27. Very nice write up. I love Dr Abati's Chronicles . Anytime. Any day. Unfortunately,this is Chronicle Extra and I don't do extras. I stopped at where he wept abeg.

    ReplyDelete

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