Witness History

Wole Soyinka: Imprisoned during Nigeria’s Biafra war

Dec 4, 2025
In this discussion, Wole Soyinka, a renowned Nigerian playwright and the first African Nobel laureate in Literature, shares his harrowing experience during the Biafra war. He recounts his secret mission to meet Biafran leader Emeka Ojukwu, his arrest upon returning, and the brutal two years he spent in solitary confinement. Soyinka reflects on the deep-seated grievances that fueled the secession and how those feelings still resonate today, offering a powerful commentary on war, survival, and the lasting impact of history.
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ANECDOTE

Secret Mission To Biafra

  • Wole Soyinka left Europe and secretly crossed into Biafra to meet its leader and try to avert civil war.
  • He undertook the mission despite personal danger and missing a planned trip to a Greek wine festival.
ANECDOTE

Crossing The Niger And Child Soldiers

  • Soyinka described crossing the Niger by canoe and encountering child soldiers with wooden guns who threatened him.
  • He witnessed youths being prepared for sacrifice and felt the tragedy of recruiting children into war.
INSIGHT

Images Fuel Separatist Resolve

  • Graphic images of massacres helped explain why the Igbo wanted to secede and felt alienated from Nigeria.
  • Soyinka argued that deep grievances make separatist ideas persistent and likely to re-emerge.
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