Dennis Chukude Osadebay
Dennis Chukude Osadebay (29 June 1911—26 December 1994) was a Nigerian politician,
poet, journalist and formerpremier of the now defunct Mid-Western Region of
Nigeria, which now comprises Edo and Delta State. He was one of the pioneering
Nigerian poets who wrote in English.
As a politician, he detested party
politics and tried to form unbiased opinions on important matters of the
period. He was also a leader of the movement to create a Mid-Western region
during the Nigerian First Republic.
Early
life and poems
He was born in Asaba, Delta State,
to parents of mixed cultural backgrounds. He attended Asaba Government School at
Asaba, the Sacred Heart School in Calabar and Hope Waddell Training Institute.
He joined the labour force in 1930 as a customs officer working in Lagos, Port
Harcourt and Calabar. He subsequently went to England to study Law during the
1940s. It was while studying that he started publishing poetic
verses. He was then known as a newspaper poet, as most of his writings
were published in the West African Pilot and a few other newspapers. In
his writings, Osadebay used both his personal life and public events as
inspiration. In Africa Sings, a collection of poems, he delved with
themes from a personal point of view, such as a sullen poem written about his
25th birthday and the coming of middle age. However, his best work in the
volume were poems written from an impersonal viewpoint. In his adventurous
poem “black man troubles”, he used pidgin English to lament the status of black
Africans in colonial Africa and injustice in the society. His poems were
also notable for faithfully representing modern poetic rhythm.
Political
career
Osadebay was one of the founding
members of the National Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons (NCNC) in 1944. He
left the country to read law a few years later. After, completing his studies,
he returned to Nigeria and established a law practice in Aba and was also made
the legal adviser of the NCNC. In 1951, he contested and won a seat on the
Western Region House of Assembly, which was dominated by the rival Action Group
(AG). He soon became the leader of opposition in the region from 1954 to 1956
but gave the mantle to Adegoke Adelabu in 1956. After the death of Adegoke
Adelabu, he took on his familiar oppositional role in 1958. In 1960, he became
the president of the Nigerian Senate and upon the creation of the Mid-Western
Region in 1963, became the pioneer premier of the newly created region.
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