FELA WAS A MOVEMENT BY BABAFEMI OJUDU

Is it true that a Nigerian youngster said he is greater than Fela?
I sincerely hope he was misquoted.

Even if he were to live ten lifetimes, his art and his life could not measure up to Fela Anikulapo-Kuti.

Is it in art?
Is it in music?
Is it in activism, courage, or originality?

Fela was not just a musician; he was a movement, a conscience, a revolution in human form. His music gave birth to Afrobeat, a genre now studied in universities across the world, sampled by global superstars, and performed on the world’s greatest stages. From Lagos to London, New York to Berlin, Fela’s sound reshaped global music and African identity.

Fela stood alone—fearless in the face of military dictatorships, unapologetic in his resistance to oppression. He used his music as a weapon against injustice, corruption, colonial mentality, and state violence. For this, he was arrested over 200 times, brutalized, imprisoned, tortured, exiled, and silenced—yet never broken.

His mother was murdered by the state. His house, the Kalakuta Republic, was burned to the ground. His property was seized. He was flogged, beaten, and jailed from Alagbon to Panti, hounded by police and soldiers alike. Yet, after every assault, Fela returned with sharper lyrics, deeper rhythms, and more defiant truth.

For any young person—musician or not—to compare himself to Fela, he must first walk the corridors of Nigerian jailhouses: Lagos, Maiduguri, Benin. He must endure police cells and military tribunals. He must lose everything, go into exile, and still return with his creative spirit intact.

Fela was a multi-instrumentalist, a composer, bandleader, philosopher, and cultural theorist. He could play virtually every instrument in his band, wrote complex compositions lasting 15 to 30 minutes, and fused jazz, highlife, funk, Yoruba rhythms, and political poetry into something entirely original—something timeless.

Globally, Fela is honored as:
• One of the most influential musicians of the 20th century
• A cultural icon whose life inspired Broadway productions, documentaries, books, and academic studies
• A symbol of African resistance and intellectual freedom
• A voice for the oppressed, long after his death

Fela did not chase acceptance. The world came to him.

So, whoever this fellow is—if he indeed made such a claim—should simply be ignored. He may be one of those who would flee the country the moment the police knock once on his car window in Ojuelegba.

Fela did not run.
Fela stood.
Fela fought.
And Fela remains immortal.

Anikulapo—the man who carried death in his pouch.

  • Related Posts

    REVISITING ‘DR’ OYENUSI’S LAST TESTAMENT

    The August 29, 1971 edition of the Sunday Times carried one of the most sensational crime features in Nigerian history—“MY LIFE BY ‘Dr’ OYENUSI.” This confessional piece detailed the life…

    Continue reading
    CELEBRATING OJUDU AT 65 By Chief Femi Adagunodo

    If the late Fela Anikulapo Kuti’s personal photographer, Femi Osunla, were to be alive now, he would have been one of the leading goodwill ambassadors celebrating the milestone that Senator…

    Continue reading

    News

    JAMB MUST END THIS ‘CYCLE OF TRAGEDY’ By Kazeem Olasupo

    JAMB MUST END THIS ‘CYCLE OF TRAGEDY’ By Kazeem Olasupo

    REMI TINUBU AT WORLD SUMMIT

    REMI TINUBU AT WORLD SUMMIT

    HOW ARISEKOLA DIED THE DAY HE WAS TO RETURN

    HOW ARISEKOLA DIED THE DAY HE WAS TO RETURN

    FUBARA AND APC CONGRESS

    FUBARA AND APC CONGRESS

    QUEEN EWUARE: PELLER’S VISIT TO BENIN PALACE ‘AUTHORISED’

    QUEEN EWUARE: PELLER’S VISIT TO BENIN PALACE ‘AUTHORISED’

    ALI NDUME: VOTERS ARE NOT DEFECTING

    ALI NDUME: VOTERS ARE NOT DEFECTING