Punocracy

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Punocracy holds first Prize for Satire award ceremony, declares Nov. 9 World Satire Day

Punocracy holds first Prize for Satire award ceremony, declares Nov. 9 World Satire Day

Punocracy has held the prize-giving ceremony for its maiden Prize for Satire writing competition and also announced November 9 as the World Day of Satire.

The event was held on Saturday at the University of Ibadan.

The group had earlier announced the winners of the prize which was judged by James Yékú, a PhD in English and Assistant Professor at the University of Kansas, Lawrence, USA; and Oladeinde Olawoyin, an award-winning investigative journalist at Premium Times newspaper and author of the weekly column, Saturday Satire.

The winners of the inaugural prize are Jesuferanmi Igbinigie, who won the grand prize, Winlade Israel, and Funmilayo Obasa.

Saturday’s ceremony had in attendance Tijani Oluwamayowa, an award-winning Fact-checker with AFP and Development Editor for TheCable Newspaper; Dr. Yinka Egbokhare, author of Dazzling Mirage; and Olawoyin.

While delivering the welcome address on behalf of the organising team, ‘Kunle Adebajo emphasised the need for satire in the contemporary Nigerian society and the world at large.

He also announced the World Day of Satire as a way of recognising the importance and use of satire as a helpful tool in driving change in the society, correcting ills, and reducing political apathy. 

“Why did we choose November 9?” he asked.

“We could easily tell you that according to history books, November 9, 1989, was when East Germany denounced the Berlin Wall after which German citizens tore it down, and how we want the day to fit into this narrative of freedom and absence of censorship. Or we could tell you that November 9 (11/9) is actually an inversion of 9/11 and tie this to how there are always alternative, civilised ways of venting grievances … But the truth is it is just a convenient date for us.

“And one thing I’ve come to realise is we don’t need permission from history to make history,” the investigative journalist said as he formally declares the World Day of Satire.

While speaking at the event, Tijani engaged the attendees on how humour or laughter can be used to trigger nationwide development and also cautioned satirists to be wary of the thin line that exists between humorous write-ups and fake news.

“Political humorous writing has the capacity to reach a larger number of people,” he noted because humour is a universal language. “Political cartooning has the capacity to reach more people. You can get more people talking about a topic using it. And it is prophetic in nature.”

“Comforting the afflicted and afflicting the comfortable. That’s what satire is meant to do. If you’re doing the opposite, you’re not a satirist,” Dr. Yinka Egbokhare said at the World Satire Day.

Dr. Egbokhare spoke about how satire can be used as a tool for steering societal change. She broke down the three types of satire, Horatian, Juvenalian, and Menippean, and their various merits.

According to her, the satirist must amplify the voices of the less privileged and provoke those at the helm of affairs in order to inspire change.

The satirist must “comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable,” she emphasised. Otherwise, “you are not a satirist,” she added.

She, however, advised that writers of satires must be careful in what and how they write so as not to endanger themselves as well as put the society in a state of chaos due to existing ethnoreligious sentiments.

Satirists must “be culturally intelligent …because you don’t want to start a fire that you cannot control,” she said as she concluded her speech.

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The only thing you need to know about me is I speak the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth ―― well, except when writing.

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