Poetry Enclave Set To Honor Bayo
Adebowale With Poetry Festival
By wole adedoyin
The
Poetry Enclave, Ibadan has set aside Wednesday March 4, 2020, to honor Prof.
Bayo Adebowale, Nigerian Poet, Educationist, Critic, Librarian and Founder of
the African Heritage Library and Cultural Centre, Adeyipo, Ibadan Oyo State with a poetry festival tagged “Bayo Adebowale Poetry
Festival - BAPOFEST 2020).
According
to POEN President, Mr. Ebika Anthony, the event will take place at Alliance Francaise,
beside Magistrate Court, Iyaganku, Ibadan by 11:00am prompt.
Bayo
Adebowale was born
on 6 June 1944 in Ibadan, the capital of Oyo State, southwestern Nigeria into
the family of Akangbe Adebowale, who was a farmer. He was educated at Secondary
Modern School at Ibadan, where he obtained the West African School Certificate
in 1958 before he proceeded to St Peter’s Teacher College where he received the
Grade III certificate in education in 1961, the same year he was admitted into
Baptist College in Ede for a Grade II Teacher certificate. On October 1971, he
proceeded to the University of Ibadan, where he obtained a Bachelor of Arts (B.
A) degree in English Language in 1974 and completed the compulsory National
Youth Service Corps in 1975, the same year he joined the services of the
Western State Public Service Commission as education officer before he later
became an English instructor at Government Trade Centre, Oyo State. Three years
later (1978), he obtained a master's degree in English language, the same year
he joined the Oyo State College of Education as Lecturer I and was later
transferred to the Polytechnic of Ibadan, where he rose to the position of
Deputy Rector between 1999 and 2003 having obtained a doctorate degree (Ph. D)
in Literature in English from the University of Ilorin in 1997.
Adebowale had published hundreds
of books, short stories and novels as a prolific writer. His debut novel, The
Virgin, was adapted into two Nigerian films: The Narrow Path, a 2006
Nigerian film produced and directed by Tunde Kelani, which starred Sola Asedeko,
and The White Handkerchief. He authored Lonely Days, a book that
focus on African culture.
He had played a significant role in Black African
Literature in English. He also authored a novel titled Out of his Mind.
In 1972, his short story, titled The River Goddess bagged the Western
State Festival of Arts Literary Competition and In 1992, his poem, titled Perdition
bagged the Africa Prize in the Index on Censorship International Poetry
Competition in London. His work had been used in research and teaching by
several universities.

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