Niyi Osundare on Ecopoetry and Environmental Sustainability.

Poet and writer Níyì Ọ̀ṣúndáre recently stopped by The Green Room to share some poetry and personal thoughts on the current circumstances bedeviling humanity.

See below.

The event, “What the Earth Said: A Reading and Conversation with Níyì Ọ̀ṣúndáre,” was put together by the Green Institute and moderated by Tósìn Gbogí, an Assistant Professor of English and Africana Studies at Marquette University. Directed by Dr. Adéníkẹ Akínṣemólú, the Institute runs a monthly online forum called the Green Room, now in its third edition, through which it fosters discussions about the dying state of the earth and what needs to be done to stem this. 

Ọ̀ṣúndáre is a foremost African poet whose work has been widely acknowledged for its environmental concerns and motifs. He uses the earth as an organizing principle in his poetry—a principle which allows him to pay attention to, and even question the binary understanding of, the human and non-human dimensions of our world. Ọ̀ṣúndáre’s conversation at this event revolved around this principle, which allowed him to speak about subjects as varied as childhood memories in Ìkẹ́rẹ́-Èkìtì, Hurricane Katrina, the Amazon burning, and the perils of a city like Lagos that continues to borrow the sea as its land. 

The live event was widely attended and shared on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. The poems were read in both English and Yorùbá.

Before the Storm

Last week, I rode a bicycle to school again for the first time in weeks. It was cold, as it is meant to be for this time of the year.

But it was after getting to school that I discovered the real reason why I should have been doing this a lot more than I have in the past weeks and months: there are so many cars on campus and I spend too many agonizing moments trying to find a spot to park in the morning, and a few more in the evening trying to locate my car, and then even much more at home trying to find a spot closest to my apartment. I believe that more than 80% of students/workers in this University have cars, and we all compete trying to find the right places to put them.

We’re expecting about fifteen inches of snow and up to an inch of solid ice on the roads in the next couple of days, along with snowstorms. I have a feeling that the bicycle is not going to be of much use now either.