Kabura Zakama | |
---|---|
Born | Garkida, Adamawa, Nigeria | 11 May 1964
Education | University of Sussex Ahmadu Bello University |
Occupation | Author/poet |
Organization | Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office |
Kabura Zakama (born 11 May 1964) is a Nigerian poet, veterinarian and an international development and humanitarian practitioner. His collection of poems, The Man Lived won the 1999 Association of Nigerian Authors ANA Poetry Prize. [1] He has identified Birago Diop, Lenrie Peters, Tanure Ojaide and Kwesi Brew as the key influences on his poetry. In 1998, Zakama established Kairos Productions in order to publish upcoming writers. His poetry is well received across Africa and beyond.
Kabura Lynn Zakama was born into the Garnvwa Family of Garkida, Adamawa State, North East Nigeria on 11 May 1964, and had his primary education at North Garkida Primary School. He had his secondary education at Federal Government College, Maiduguri in Borno State, Nigeria, where he received a Federal Government School Scholarship. He attended Ahmadu Bello University in Zaria where he obtained a Doctor of Veterinary Medicine degree in 1989. That year, he also received a Proficiency Certificate in French.
In 1997, Kabura Zakama completed a Postgraduate Diploma in Management at Bayero University, Kano. He was awarded the Chevening Scholarship in 2004 and completed a Master's degree in Governance and Development at the Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex in Brighton, United Kingdom in 2005. [2]
Kabura Zakama was in private veterinary practice for nine years before starting a career in international development. In 1999, he founded Pastoralist Development Initiative, a capacity building and human development NGO with nomadic pastoralists in North Central Nigeria, which focused on governance, health, education and livelihoods programmes. [3]
In 2003, he joined ActionAid Nigeria as a Programme Advisor for Capacity Building. He later left and helped to set up the Christian Aid programme in Nigeria in 2005, becoming Acting Country Manager in 2009. He joined the Democratic Governance for Development Programme of United Nations Development Program UNDP Nigeria in 2010 as a Civil Society Expert until 2015 when he started his current role as Regional Coordinator for North East Nigeria with the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office. [4] [5]
As a precocious but introverted child, Kabura Zakama started writing poetry at a tender age. While he was at Veterinary School, he wrote poetry and pasted them on notice boards. He contributed a poem, Farida, which was dedicated to a classmate that was killed by a stray bullet when the Police were called to quell a student riot, to the student magazine.
It was in 1994 that Kabura Zakama met Prof Zaynab Alkali who invited him to a defining poetry/short story workshop which birthed Vultures in the Air: Voices from Northern Nigeria. [6] From that time, Kabura Zakama, who was a closet poet, begin to publish his poems in newspapers, magazines and anthologies.
In 1999, the unpublished collection of poem, The Man Lived, won the ANA Poetry Prize. The collection was eventually published in 2004, the year during which Zakama was a participant on the British Council's Crossing Borders programme that paired young Nigerian poets with established British poets for mentoring. [7] Zakama worked with the bilingual Welsh poet laureate, Menna Elfyn. [8] He was reselected for the second year to work on writing in indigenous languages with the poet laureate.
Kabura Zakama now sees his poetry as a calling and he promotes young writers as well as writing in his mother tongue which is gradually disappearing. He is an active member of the Association of Nigerian Authors, Abuja Literary Society and Abuja Writers Forum where he engages in performance poetry and dabbles into short story and non-fiction writing. As an active blogger, he is also active on several online literary forums.
Kabura Zakama started writing poetry in his early teens and has contributed to national and international poetry anthologies. [9] In 1999, he won the Association of Nigerian Authors ANA Poetry Prize for his collection of poems, The Man Lived. Many of his poems address social and governance issues in Nigeria.
Sole publications
Anthologies
Kenule Beeson "Ken" Saro-Wiwa was a Nigerian writer, teacher, television producer, and environmental activist. Saro-Wiwa was a member of the Ogoni people, an ethnic minority in Nigeria whose homeland, Ogoniland, in the Niger Delta, has been targeted for crude oil extraction since the 1950s and has suffered extreme environmental damage from decades of indiscriminate petroleum waste dumping.
Nii Ayikwei Parkes, born in the United Kingdom to parents from Ghana, where he was raised, is a performance poet, writer, publisher and sociocultural commentator. He is one of 39 writers aged under 40 from sub-Saharan Africa who in April 2014 were named as part of the Hay Festival's prestigious Africa39 project. He writes for children under the name K.P. Kojo.
Kadija George, Hon. FRSL, also known as Kadija Sesay, is a British literary activist, short story writer and poet of Sierra Leonean descent, and the publisher and managing editor of the magazine SABLE LitMag. Her work has earned her many awards and nominations, including the Cosmopolitan Woman of Achievement in 1994, Candace Woman of Achievement in 1996, The Voice Community Award in Literature in 1999 and the Millennium Woman of the Year in 2000. She is the General Secretary for African Writers Abroad and organises the Writers' HotSpot – trips for writers abroad, where she teaches creative writing and journalism courses.
Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature.
Peepal Tree Press is a publisher based in Leeds, England which publishes Caribbean, Black British, and South Asian fiction, non-fiction, poetry, drama and academic books. Poet Kwame Dawes has said, "Peepal Tree Press's position as the leading publisher of Caribbean literature, and especially of Caribbean poetry, is unassailable."
Toyin Adewale-Gabriel is a Nigerian writer. She writes poetry and has worked as a literary critic for The Guardian, Post Express and The Daily Times. Adewale-Gabriel writes in both English and in German.
Amatoritsero "Godwin" Ede is a Nigerian-Canadian poet. He had written under the name "Godwin Ede" but he stopped bearing his Christian first name as a way to protest the xenophobia and racism he noted in Germany, a "Christian" country, and to an extent, to protest Western colonialism in general. Ede has lived in Canada since 2002, sponsored as a writer-in-exile by PEN Canada. He was a Hindu Monk with the Hare Krishna Movement, and has worked as a Book Editor with a major Nigerian trade publisher, Spectrum Books.
Helon Habila Ngalabak is a Nigerian novelist and poet, whose writing has won many prizes, including the Caine Prize in 2001. He worked as a lecturer and journalist in Nigeria before moving in 2002 to England, where he was a Chevening Scholar at the University of East Anglia, and now teaches creative writing at George Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia.
Menna Elfyn, FLSW is a Welsh poet, playwright, columnist, and editor who writes in Welsh. She has been widely commended and translated. She was imprisoned for her campaigning as a Welsh-language activist.
Tanure Ojaide is a Nigerian poet and academic. As a writer, he is noted for his unique stylistic vision and for his intense criticism of imperialism, religion, and other issues. He is regarded as a socio-political and an ecocentric poet. He won the 2018 Wole Soyinka Prize for Literature in Africa with his collection Songs of Myself: A Quartet (2017).
Odoh Diego Okenyodo is a Nigerian writer, pharmacist, activist poet and journalist, who founded Akweya TV Ltd and Isu Media Ltd. Odoh was one of the founders of Kaduna Writers' League, KWL. He is also one of the Directors of Splendors Of Dawn Poetry Foundation. He co-edited Camouflage: Best of contemporary writing from Nigeria, an anthology of new Nigerian writers. The anthology included works by the most renowned contemporary Nigerian writers such as Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie and Helon Habila.
Zaynab Alkali was born into the Tura-Mazila family of Borno and Adamawa States. For secondary education, she attended Queen Elizabeth Secondary School, Ilorin. Zaynab Alkali went on to obtain both her first and second degrees from Ahmadu Bello University (ABU)/BUK, Zaria. At Bayero University Kano (BUK), she studied English to a doctorate level.
Abdul Rasheed Na'Allah is a Nigerian academic, he was vice chancellor of Kwara State University in Nigeria for 10 years, from 2009 to 2019 when he was appointed Vice chancellor of University of Abuja. He was appointed vice chancellor on 1 July 2019.
Chidera Nneoma Okolie is a Nigerian writer who gained national attention with her debut novel When Silence Becomes Too Loud released in 2014.
Dike Chukwumerije is a Nigerian spoken word and performance poetry artist and author. He has eight published books, including the novel Urichindere, which won the 2013 Association of Nigerian Authors (ANA) Prize for Prose Fiction and a poetry theatre production made in Nigeria. In October 2018, he traveled to nine Nigerian cities: Abuja, Lagos, Enugu, Benin, Ile-Ife, Maiduguri, Yola, Bonny, and Jos.
Adewale Maja-Pearce is an Anglo-Nigerian writer, journalist and literary critic, who is best known for his documentary essays. He is the author of several books, including the memoirs In My Father's Country (1987) and The House My Father Built (2014), several other non-fiction titles and a collection of short stories entitled Loyalties and Other Stories (1986).
Bolaji S. Ramos is a Nigerian poet, writer, analyst and lawyer.
Trapeta B. Mayson is a Liberian-born poet, teacher, social worker, and non-profit administrator residing in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, US. Her writing primarily centers on the experiences of immigrants to the United States, the struggles of people dealing with conflict in Liberia, and the daily lives of average people, especially women and girls. She received a Master of Social Work from Bryn Mawr College and an MBA from Villanova University. She was selected as the fifth Poet Laureate of Philadelphia in 2019.
Gregory Nnamdi Nnabike Mbajiorgu is a Nigerian Associate Professor of Theatre and Film Studies of the University of Nigeria Nsukka. He is a playwright, poet, and established mono dramatist who had solo-performed his first play The Prime Minister's Son, many times both inside and outside of Nigeria. Greg Mbajiorgu is one of the earliest Africans to publish a mono drama; a source recorded him as the first, another source asserts he is the foremost solo dramatist in Nigeria. He has written other plays and poetry about water scarcity and mismanagement, climate change, and the environmental effects of plastics. With Professor Amanze Akpuda, he co-edited 50 Years of Solo Performing Art in Nigerian Theatre: 1966-2016, and in 2023, he edited the 420-page book, The Power of One: An Anthology of Nigerian Solo Plays, which comprises sixteen works, including his The Prime Minister’s Son and, The Gadfly by Ahmed Yerima. Greg Mbajiorgu was also former Public Relations Officer (South) of the Association of Nigerian Authors.