Ifeoma Onyefulu has written over twenty
children’s books including the seminal A
is for Africa. Many of Ifeoma’s
books are published by Frances Lincoln Ltd.
Here Comes Our Bride and Ikenna Goes to Nigeria won the Children's Africana Book Award in the United States.
Ifeoma’s play No Water in the
Jungle was performed in London. Ifeoma loves telling stories to school
children and comes from a family of storytellers. Here Ifeoma introduces us to her new poetry
collection Sing Me a Song Ma.
If anyone had told me I would be writing poems in 2020, I would have laughed at
them. But in January last year something strange happened, I began to get
requests from schools to do poetry workshops, and no sooner had I said no to one
school another one would pop up like a jack-in-box toy. I had never written a
poem in my life, and that was the strangest thing. Then, two days before I was
due to travel to Scotland to do a writing workshop for a school, I was asked again.
I would gladly have done a workshop on
writing plays, if such a thing exists in schools, because of No Water in The Jungle, one of my
plays, staged in London in 2019.
Anyway, I had a decision to make pretty
fast, and it was not going to be easy to say no to the school, with two days to
go. What’s more, we, the school, and I had spent months corresponding, and setting
up the timetable, and I was to do the assembly, too.
Finally, I rang a friend for some moral
support, and she chuckled, ‘But when I read your books, I think of poetry… it
is the way you write,’ she said breezily.
Poetry - that word again.
I decided to stick with the timetable and do
the workshop as initially planned.
So, as I was wondering how I was going to compose
an upbeat email to the school about my decision, my eyes somehow wandered off
and settled on a photograph on the far end of the wall. It was a picture of a
Fulani woman I took years ago in northern Nigeria; she was dressed in bright
clothes and had beads on her hair. After staring at it for what seemed like hours
but was only a few seconds, I heard a voice in my head about a girl who liked many
colours but would only wear blue when she went to see her grandma. Why? Was it
because she liked blue or because her grandma liked blue?
I grabbed a pencil and paper and began writing.
I didn’t know if it was going to be a short story or not, but I remember reading
it back, and it felt like a poem with sprinkles of intensity and imagery, which
surprised me a lot.
So, I wrote and wrote, I was very thankful
I had something to do during the first Lockdown, and that was how I came to write
my first poem titled What are Colours to
Adaora!
Then, I wanted to write more poems children
would enjoy, as much as I enjoyed the stories our mother and sometimes our grandfather
told my siblings and me when we were children in Nigeria.
In December 2020, I published some of the poems
online, as a collection, titled Sing Me a
Song, Ma.
Two of the poems, especially Grandma’s Tree, are about nature, and
the way we treat our trees. It was inspired by a conversation I had with our
late mother about her favourite avocado tree, which didn’t produce any fruits
for a long time.
Another poem, Rain, is about water shortage, people in low-income countries often
struggle to get enough water. During the dry season, when rainfall was rare, we
bought water from a well, but in the rainy season, we saved enough rainwater for
cooking and washing, which lasted for several days.
However, some of the poems are lighthearted,
for example, Sing Me a Song, Ma, is
about a child who doesn’t want to go to sleep, so she comes up with a brilliant
way of staying awake by getting her mother to sing her song, “A song that will
make my eyes wake up and…. A song that will make me dance.”
Finally, I hope Sing Me a Song, Ma, will be an e-book for children and their
families to read aloud together.
A big thank you to Ifeoma Onyefulu for writing this blog and introducing us to Sing Me a Song, Ma which is available via Smashwords