Friday, May 8, 2026
HomeNIGERIABLACK AND WHITE; AS SIMPLE AS NIGHT & DAY?

BLACK AND WHITE; AS SIMPLE AS NIGHT & DAY?

By  Okey Anueyiagu

As a young boy growing up in a household of books, I questioned many of life’s 

contradictions. My father, who was an avid writer, editing many radical 

newspapers, provided me with an environment of information on various 

issues stemming from racism, colonialism, and the injustices that rule our 

world.

One of the major issues that agitated my mind then was the issue of race and 

the prejudices against the black race. I was betrothed with how insidiously the 

problem of race, color, tribe and religion all interconnect with a range of words

and images, to the extent that black becomes associated with the dark, the

evil, the shadowy, the hopeless, and with sadness and corruption, while white 

is associated with hopeful, light, cheerful, clean, elegance and purity.

I began to ask my father questions surrounding these anomalies. I asked him 

the real meaning of being black. I wanted to know how these systemic despairs 

about the black race have become prevalent. My father was very patient with 

my prodding, and somewhat nagging questions. He took his time and explained 

certain things to me.

My father would often point me in the direction of his writings; his ploy to get 

the whiteman, (the colonialist) to realize his racist follies; to bring him to a 

psychological point, where he feels a certain sense of compassion and becomes 

self-conscious of his sins against the black race. He allowed me ample time to 

read and discover by myself the genesis of the problems of colonialism and the 

impact on our race and our country.

As a child, my early susceptibility to the fears and anxieties of oppression and 

discrimination, be it from within or from outside, was palpable and 

perspicacious. I felt a certain gravity, and an unusual strain, mixed with deep 

anger and confusion. I constantly brooded over these occurrences, wondering 

if the problem of colour and its complications was real or imaginary.

It did not take me long to realize that racism is part of the exploitative motives 

and actions of the white race against the black and brown peoples of the 

world. For the white man, the realization that the black skin is all that is 

required to keep him and members of his race in money, prosperity, power and  

comfort was the motivation for racism.

began to mature and started reading and studying the many elements of 

race issues, I encountered the role of religion and the economy in the 

perpetration of this evil. From time, I became aware that until we, the black 

and brown emancipate ourselves from mental and physical slavery, and 

become no longer the white man’s social and economic prey, the problems of 

race may never go away.

Throughout my academic life, I have become quite aware of my blackness 

without any iota of ambivalence. I have never seen my colour as a category to

transcend, or a limitation to overcome, but was deeply inspired to constantly 

make conscious and passionate effort to affirm my blackness with pride.

Today, as I reflect on my introduction to my father’s editorials on racism and 

colonialism; his preaching and admonitions on our black identity, and all the 

poignant complications with which the subjects were surrounded, I feel 

confident that I may have learnt a thing or two.

My feelings deeply represent a pilgrimage to the soil of my father and his 

ancestors. I believe that every black person, no matter what planet he or she is 

from, must undertake a spiritual journey and an understanding of the meaning 

of being black. There is an excruciating pain that is associated with the colour 

black, and also a gleaming beauty too. That pain and the power to summount 

it, and transform it into strength in endurance is the essence of being Black.

With a touch of reminiscent of my father’s writings on racism and colonialism, I 

began my inquisitive journey into the vileness of this phenomenon. With the 

publication of my book; Biafra, The Horrors of War, The Story of a Child 

Soldier, I started a new book prospectively titled; Try Being Black For One Day. 

This book in the works, chronicles the journey of blacks into slavery, the pains 

and agonies of this perilous crime against humanity, the wickedness of 

colonialism and then, my personal experiences of racism in the hands and 

homes of white people.

The matters of Black and White as complicated as they have become may 

never provide us with a resolution to our quest for peace in the world.

Dr.Okey Anueyiagu

July, 2022

RELATED ARTICLES
- Advertisment -

LATEST NEWS