Thursday, 23 May 2013

Awakening the Reader within You



Text of a paper presented by Richard Mammah, MD/Editor-in-Chief, Sunbird Africa Media, publishers of the pan-African weekly, The Difference at the Edgewise Reading Promotions event held at Government College, Ikorodu on May 22, 2013.

The Convener, Principals, all other guests, students, Ladies and gentlemen
This week in which we have gathered is a most important one. Even as we are here trying to better understand the importance of reading to us, the whole world is at the moment paying tribute to one of the most important contributors to the reading enterprise that we have known till date, across Nigeria and Africa. I am referring to that most illustrious writer and son of Africa, Professor Chinua Achebe. I now invite us all to stand up and pay our respects to him. May we rise up now and observe a one-minute silence in honour of the writer of great books like Things Fall Apart, Chike and the River, No Longer at Ease, There was a Country, How the Leopard Lost its Claws, Arrow of God, Beware Soul Brother, Girls at War and Morning Yet on Creation Day.
(May His soul rest in peace. Amen)
In paying tribute to Achebe and indeed the writers in the nation, we are acknowledging the basic fact that without writers there would not be books. And without books there would be nothing to read.
 Now this would be scary! A world without books? That would be a tough one as it would mean there would be no schools, no teachers, no principals, no students, no professionals and no progress as we know it today.
Look around you for a minute and make the connections. The hall in which you are sitting was designed by an architect. He read books. The teacher that stands in front of you went to school. And read books. The parents that sent you to school went to school also -where they read books. The television you watch, the mobile phones you use, the sandals on your feet, the clothes on your body, the water you drink, the food you eat, the bed on which you sleep and the language that you speak have all benefited and continue to benefit from this great world of books.
For everything in the universe to benefit from books means that there must be a very deep connection that we all have to books. Yes there is. And I would explain it.
Before humans came to the world, there were already other species on the earth. Whether you are basing your story on the Bible account or on the research of archaeologists, there is evidence that other creatures were on the earth before man came.
But man’s coming changed the entire picture. Man was Homo Sapiens - thinking man – and this was the critical difference. For the first time in the history of the universe, there was now a created being that could think!
Thinking indeed is very powerful. Hear what the Christian Bible has to say about this activity: ‘As a man thinketh in his heart, so is he!’ Yes, thinking truly is everything.
We are in school now and we have thoughts. Someone in this hall has thoughts to be a doctor. If you follow it through and it aligns with God’s original will for you, you will truly become the doctor you are presently thinking to be.
As a growing child, former American President Bill Clinton, thought he could be President. One thing led to another and he became his thoughts. You too can become your thoughts.
Because thoughts are so powerful, there is therefore a responsibility imposed upon us to ‘guard our hearts with all diligence.’ And this is where reading comes in.
Reading is a critical feeder for our thought process. Through reading, we come in contact with information that is stored in the brain against the day it will be required to be used. For example from the first day of this school term till date, our teachers have been instructing us in line with the already defined scheme of work. At the end of the term, examinations would be conducted with questions that are taken from this scheme. It is how much and how well we have imbibed what we have been taught that helps guarantee how well we do in the examinations.
But then how exactly does this work? Two words are very important to help us understand the reading process so we can fully understand and appreciate how to awaken the reader within.
The first is recognition and the second interpretation.
To read requires that we recognize the text characters in which we are reading. For example to read in English would require a sound knowledge of the 26-alphabet English Language. But this knowledge would not automatically confer you with the ability to read in say Arabic or Chinese which have totally different alphabetical scripts.
Also, beyond alphabet recognition there is the point about the words that are available in a language and their normal or regular patterns of coordination and arrangement. For example, when the English reader meets the word Professor in a text, his idea is of a senior lecturer in a University. For the French reader, even when the ‘Professor’ is also an academic, the reference does not really confer an element of class or rank!
And on the arrangement of words, we should note that languages have different forms of ordering. While the average English sentence uses the SVO structure, several other languages use different syntactic systems in the main.
The second critical word that we need to understand is Interpretation. After recognizing words, we need to interpret them.
To interpret involves conferring meaning. And this can only be done from an already pre-assigned system of meaning values. For example, in nursery school, children are taught to recognize shapes. While the adult reader finds this funny and simplistic, the truth is that the children are at this early stage being handed critical meaning markers that would shape their lives continually. It is from these meaning markers that we all have been given that interpretation comes.
So when we talk of interpretation we are really referring to taking the words and passages that we are being asked to assign meaning to, and matching them with our pre-existent meaning markers that we had built up over time.
What reading does for us then is to help us develop a stronger interpretation base. As we continue to read, we increase the number of words that we are familiar with as well as the permissible forms in which they can be used. This is what comes in handy when we have to write new compositions and speak extemporaneously to audiences.
You cannot give what you do not have. If you do not continue to read, you are starving your data base. On the day you will be required to write that essay or make that speech you will find yourself, as we say in these parts, ‘eating your mouth’ and not bringing out the words that should be flowing. In that day, it would not be anybody else’s fault. You made your bed yourself and can now enjoy your embarrassment!
But this would not be your portion. So pick up that book now and read. And when you are done, pick up another one and read. And when you are also done, pick up yet another one and read! This is the only way to go.
Thank you for listening. And God bless you.

Richard Mammah


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