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[Applause]
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I'm a Storyteller and I would like to
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tell you a few personal stories about
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what I like to call the danger of the
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single
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story I grew up on a University campus
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in eastern Nigeria my mother says that I
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started reading at the age of two
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although I think four is probably close
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to the
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truth so I was an early reader and what
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I read were British and American
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children's books I was also an early
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writer and when I began to write at
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about the age of seven stories in pencil
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with crayon illustrations that my poor
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mother was obligated to read I wrote
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exactly the kinds of stories I was
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reading all my characters were white and
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blue-eyed they played in the
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snow they ate
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apples and they talked a lot about the
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weather how lovely it was that the sun
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had come out
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now this despite the fact that I lived
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in Nigeria had never been outside
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Nigeria we didn't have snow we ate
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mangoes and we never talked about the
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weather because there was no need to my
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characters also drank a lot of ginger
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beer because the characters in the
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British books I read drank ginger beer
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never mind that I had no idea what
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ginger beer
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was and for many years afterwards I
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would have a desperate desire to taste
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ginger beer
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but that is another story what this
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demonstrates I think is how
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impressionable and vulnerable we are in
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the face of a story particularly as
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children because all I had read were
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books in which characters were foreign I
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had become convinced that books by their
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very nature had to have foreigners in
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them and had to be about things with
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which I could not personally
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identify now things changed when I
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discovered African books there weren't
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many of them available and they weren't
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quite as easy to find as the foreign
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books but because of writers like Chino
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a and Kamar L I went through a mental
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shift in my perception of literature I
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realized that people like me girls with
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skin the color of chocolate whose kinky
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hair could not form ponytails could also
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exist in literature I started to write
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about things I
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recognized now I loved those American
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and British books I read they stirred my
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imagination the opened up new walls for
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me but the unintended consequence was
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that I did not know that people like me
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could exist in
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literature so what the discovery of
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African writers did for me was this it
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saved me from having a single story of
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what books
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are I come from a conventional
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middleclass Nigerian family my father
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was a professor my mother was an
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administrator and so we had as was the
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norm living domestic help who would
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often come from nearby rural Villages so
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the year I turned eight we got a new
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house boy his name was
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FID the only thing my mother told us
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about him was that his family was very
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poor my mother sent yams and rice and
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our old clothes to his family and when I
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didn't finish my dinner my mother would
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say finish your food don't you know
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people like F's family have nothing so I
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felt enormous pity for
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family then one Saturday we went to his
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village to visit and his mother showed
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us a beautifully patterned basket made
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of died Rafia that his brother had made
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I was
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startled it had not occurred to me that
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anybody in his family could actually
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make something all I had heard about
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them was how poor they were so that it
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had become impossible for me to see them
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as anything else but poor their poverty
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was my single story of them
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years later I thought about this when I
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left Nigeria to go to university in the
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United States I was
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19 my American roommate was shocked by
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me she asked where I had learned to
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speak English so well and was confused
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when I said that Nigeria happened to
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have English as its official
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language she asked if she could listen
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to what she called my tribal music and
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was consequently very disappointed when
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I produced my tape of Mariah car
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sry she assumed that I did not know how
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to use a
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stove what struck me was this she had
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felt sorry for me even before she saw me
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her default position toward me as an
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African was a kind of patronizing
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well-meaning
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pity my roommate had a single story of
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Africa a single story of
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catastrophe in this single story there
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was no possibility of Africans being
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similar to her in any way no possibility
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of feelings more complex than pity no
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possibility of a connection as human
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equals I must say that before I went to
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the US I didn't consciously identify as
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African but in the US whenever Africa
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came up people turned to me never mind
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that I knew nothing about places like
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namia but I did come to embrace this new
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identity and in many ways I think of
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myself now as African although I still
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get quite irritable when Africa is
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referred to as a country the most recent
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example being my otherwise wonderful
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flight from Lagos two days ago in which
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um there was an announcement on the
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Virgin Flight about the Charity Walk in
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India Africa and other
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countries so after I had spent some
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years in the US as an African I began to
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understand my roommate's response to me
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if I had not grown up in Nigeria and if
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all I knew about Africa were from
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popular images I too would think that
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Africa was a place of beautiful
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landscapes beautiful animals and
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incomprehensible people fighting
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senseless Wars dying of poverty and AIDS
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unable to speak for themselves and
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waiting to be saved by a kind white
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Foreigner I would see Africans in the
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same way that I as a child had seen
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fed's
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family this single story of Africa
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ultimately comes I think from Western
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literature now here's a quote from the
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writer of a London Merchant called John
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Lock who sailed to West Africa in
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1561 and kept a fascinating account of
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his
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voyage after referring to the black
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Africans as beasts who have no houses he
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writes they are also people without
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heads having their mouths and eyes in
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their
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breasts now I've laughed every time I've
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read this and one must admire the
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imagination of John lock but what is
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important about his writing is that it
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represents the beginning of a tradition
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of telling African stories in the west a
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tradition of subsaharan Africa as a
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place of negatives of difference of
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Darkness of people who in the words of
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the wonderful poet rad Kipling a half
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devil half
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child and so I began to realize that my
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American roommate must have throughout
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her life seen and heard different
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versions of this single story as had a
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professor who once told me that my novel
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was not authentically
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African now I was quite willing to
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contend that there were a number of
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things wrong with the novel that it had
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failed in a number of places but I had
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not quite imagined that it had failed at
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achieving something called African
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authenticity in fact I did not know what
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African authenticity
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was the professor told me that my
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characters were too much like him an
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educated and middle class man my
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characters drove cars they were not
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starving therefore they were not
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authentically
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African but I must quickly add that I
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too am just as guilty in the question of
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the single story a few years ago I
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visited Mexico from the
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US the political climate in the us at
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the time was tense and there were
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debates going on about
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immigration and as often happens in
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America immigration became synonymous
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with Mexican
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there were endless stories of Mexicans
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as people who were fleecing the Health
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Care System sneaking across the border
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being arrested at the border that sort
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of
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thing I remember walking around on my
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first day in
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guadalahara watching the people going to
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walk rolling up to tears in the
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marketplace smoking
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laughing I remember first feeling slight
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surprise and then I was overwhelmed with
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shame I realized that I had been so
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immersed in the media coverage of
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Mexicans that they had become one thing
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in my mind the abject
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immigrant I had bought into the single
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story of Mexicans and I could not have
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been more ashamed of myself so that is
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how to create a single story show a
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people as one thing as only one thing
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over and over again and that is what
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they
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become it is impossible to talk about
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the single story without talking about
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power there is a word an EO word that I
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think about whenever I think about the
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power structures of the world and it is
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inali it's a noun that Loosely
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translates to to be greater than another
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like our economic and political worlds
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stories too are defined by the principle
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of anali how they are told who tells
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them when they are told how many stories
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are told are really dependent on power
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power is the ability not just to tell
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the story of another person but to make
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it the definitive story of that person
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the Palestinian poet mid bouti writes
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that if you want to dispossess a people
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the simplest way to do it is to tell
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their story and to start with
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secondly start the story with the arrows
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of the Native Americans and not with the
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arrival of the British and you have an
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entirely different story start the story
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with with the failure of the African
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State and not with the colonial creation
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of the African State and you have an
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entirely different
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story I recently spoke at a university
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where a student told me that it was such
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a shame that Nigerian men were were
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physical abusers like the father
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character in my
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novel I told him that I had just read a
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novel called American
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Psycho
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and and that it was such a shame that
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Young Americans were serial
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murderers now
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now now now obviously I said this in a
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fit of mild irritation
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but it would never have occurred to me
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to think that just because I had read a
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novel in which a character was a serial
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killer that he was somehow
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representative of all Americans and now
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this is not because I'm a better person
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than that student but because of
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America's cultural and economic power I
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had many stories of America I had read
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thaan opdik and steinber and Gat skill I
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did not have a single story of
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America when I learned some years ago
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that writers were expected to have had
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really unhappy childhoods to be
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successful I began to think about how I
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could invent horrible things my parents
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had done to
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me but the truth truth is that I had a
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very happy childhood full of laughter
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and love in a very close-nit family but
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I also had grandfathers who died in
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refugee camps my cousin Polly died
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because he could not get adequate Health
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Care one of my closest friends okoma
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died in a plane crash because our fired
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trucks did not have
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water I grew up under repressive
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military governments that devalued
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education so that sometimes my parents
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would not pay their salaries and so as a
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child I saw Jam dis appear from The
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Breakfast Table then maerin
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disappeared then bread became too
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expensive then milk became
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rationed and most of all a kind of
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normalized political fear invaded Our
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Lives all of these stories make me who I
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am but to insist on only these negative
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stories is to flatten my
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experience and to overlook the many
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other stories that formed me the single
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story creates stereotypes and the
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problem with stereotypes is not that
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they are untrue but that they are
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incomplete they make one story become
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the only
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story of course Africa is a continent
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full of catastrophes the immense ones
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such as the horrific rapes in Congo and
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depressing ones such as the fact that
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5,000 people apply for one job vacancy
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in
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Nigeria but there are other stories that
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are not about catastrophe
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and it is very important it is just as
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important to talk about them I've always
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felt that it is impossible to engage
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properly with a place or a person
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without engaging with all of the stories
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of that place and that person the
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consequence of the single story is this
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it robs people of dignity it makes our
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recognition of our equal Humanity
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difficult it emphasizes how we are
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different rather than how we are similar
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so what if before my Mexican trip
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I had followed the immigration debate
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from both sides the US and the Mexican
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what if my mother had told us that fed's
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family was poor and had
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working what if we had an African
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television network that broadcast
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diverse African stories all over the
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world what the Nigerian writer Chino
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Achebe calls a balance of stories what
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if my roommate knew about my Nigerian
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publisher MTAR bakari a remarkable man
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who left his job in a bank to follow his
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dream and start a publishing house now
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the conventional wisdom was that
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Nigerians don't read literature he
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disagreed he felt that people who could
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read would read if you made literature
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affordable and available to them shortly
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after he published my first novel I went
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to a TV station in Lagos to do an
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interview and a woman who walked there
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as a messenger came up to me and said I
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really liked your novel I didn't like
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the ending now you must write a sequel
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and this is what will happen
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and she went on to tell me what to write
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in the sequel now I was not only Charmed
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I was very moved here was a woman part
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of the ordinary masses of Nigerians who
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were not supposed to be
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readers she had not only read the book
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but she had taken ownership of it and
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felt justified in telling me what to
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write in the
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SE now what if my roommate knew about my
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friend fumi y a Fearless woman who hosts
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a TV show in Lagos and is deter to tell
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the stories that we prefer to forget
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what if my roommate knew about the heart
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procedure that was performed in the
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Lagos hospital last week what if my
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roommate knew about contemporary
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Nigerian music talented people singing
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in English and pigeon and IO and Yuba
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and E mixing influences from JayZ to
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fella to Bob Marley to their
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grandfathers what if my roommate knew
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about the female lawyer who recently
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went to court in Nigeria to challenge a
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ridiculous law that required women to
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get their husband's consent before
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renewing their passports what if my
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roommate knew about Nollywood full of
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innovative people making films despite
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great technical odds films so popular
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that they really are the best example of
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Nigerians consuming what they produce
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what if my roommate knew about my
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wonderfully ambitious hair braider who
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has just started her own business
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selling hair
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extensions or about the millions of
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other Nigerians Who start businesses
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and sometimes fail but continue to nurse
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ambition every time I am home I'm
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confronted with the usual sources of
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irritation for most Nigerians our failed
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infrastructure our failed government but
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also by the incredible resilience of
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people who Thrive despite the government
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rather than because of
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it I teach writing workshops in Lagos
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every summer and it is amazing to me how
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many people apply how many people are
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eager to write to tell
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stories my Nigerian publisher and I have
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just started a nonprofit called farafina
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trust and we have big dreams of building
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libraries and refurbishing libraries
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that already exist and providing books
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for State schools that don't have
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anything in their libraries and also of
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organizing lots and lots of workshops
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and reading and writing for all the
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people who are eager to tell our many
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stories stories matter many stories
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matter stories have been used to
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dispossess and to malign but stories can
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also be used to empower and to humanize
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stories can break the Dignity of a
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people but stories can also repair that
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broken
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dignity the American writer Alice Walker
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wrote this about um her Southern
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relatives who had moved to the north and
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she introduced them to a book about the
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southern life that they had left
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behind they sat around reading the book
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themselves listening to me read the book
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and the kind of paradise was
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regained I would like to end with this
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thought that when we reject the single
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story when we realize that there is
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never a single story about any
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place we regain a kind of paradise thank
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you
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[Applause]