Culture
Palm Wine Tapper Climbs Same Tree That Killed His Father in Ozoro
For eight years, a man has climbed the 25-meter palm tree that killed his father. In Ozoro, they say the wine from this tree is the sweetest, turning a place of fear into a source of life.

Palm Wine Tapper Climbs Same Tree That Killed His Father in Ozoro
Published: 22 April, 2026
Twenty-five meters is a long way to fall. The Raphia palm in the Uzere bush of Ozoro stands exactly that tall, its smooth trunk rising from swampy ground where few other trees grow. For eight years now, a man named Oghenekaro has been climbing it every morning, cutting notches for his feet with a machete and tying a vine rope around his waist. He collects the sap that drips from the crown, filling gourds with pale liquid that will become palm wine. What makes this routine remarkable is simple. This is the same tree that killed his father about a decade ago.
The Tree With a History
Certain trees in rural Nigeria develop reputations, and this one became famous for all the wrong reasons. After the older tapper fell, many in the community considered the palm cursed or inhabited by a malevolent spirit. People began avoiding the entire grove, and the landowner thought seriously about cutting it down. The tree stood there, tall and productive, but surrounded by a silence born of fear. Then Oghenekaro decided he would tap it anyway. He needed the income, and palm wine tapping remains a vital source of livelihood in the Isoko region. A 2025 report by the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture listed non-timber forest products like palm wine as a critical income stream for over 40% of rural households in the Niger Delta (IITA Annual Review, 2025). He saw a good tree going to waste.
A Different Kind of Climb


Tapping a Raphia palm requires a specific skill set because the trunk is smoother than an oil palm’s. Oghenekaro modified his technique for this particular tree, using a longer and stronger rope and inspecting the trunk for weaknesses each time before he begins his ascent. He also talks to the tree, a common ritual among tappers that mixes respect with practical precaution. He tells it he means no harm, that he is only collecting what it offers. The National Bureau of Statistics noted in 2025 that occupational fatalities in informal agriculture are rarely documented (NBS Social Statistics Report, 2025). Safety depends entirely on the individual’s skill and attention to detail.
“My father was a good climber. That day, the rope was old. The rain had made the trunk slick. I check my rope every morning now. I respect the height.”
– Oghenekaro, palm wine tapper, Ozoro. March 2026.
A Question of Taste
Now here is the curious part. Customers in the Ozoro market and the local sap bars specifically ask for wine from that tree. They claim it is sweeter and ferments more slowly than wine from other palms. A regular buyer named Madam Efe says she uses it for traditional ceremonies because of its perceived superior quality. This presents an interesting question. Does the tree’s history, or perhaps the tapper’s careful and respectful method, somehow change the biochemistry of the sap? A researcher in food science at the University of Port Harcourt, Dr. Chika Obi, offered a perspective. She said trauma or stress to a plant can sometimes alter its sap composition, though a change in the tapper’s technique likely has more influence. “Without laboratory analysis of sap from that specific tree over time, the sweetness remains an anecdotal claim,” she noted (Personal communication, April 2026). The belief, however, is real in Ozoro and adds tangible economic value to the product.
The Economics of Courage


So a man faces a literal ghost from his past to make a living. A five-gallon keg of palm wine sells for between N5,000 and N8,000 in Delta State, depending on the season (Field price survey, Ozoro Market, April 2026). A diligent tapper harvesting from multiple trees can earn a daily income that pays school fees, buys food, and handles medical bills. In an economy with high unemployment, this traditional craft puts cash directly in hand. The sector receives little official support, however. The Delta State Ministry of Agriculture has programs for oil palm cultivation, but the focus for Raphia palm is less defined. A 2024 policy document mentioned developing the value chain for “all palm products,” but tappers like Oghenekaro operate without formal training or insurance (Delta State Agricultural Roadmap, 2024). Their safety net is community, personal caution, and the strength of their own rope.
Changing the Story
This is more than just a strange tale. It shows how a community can manage risk and memory. A tree that represented death has been reclaimed as a source of life and a peculiar sweetness. Oghenekaro’s daily, careful work defeated a local superstition. Other tappers now harvest from trees in that same grove they once avoided, and the economic activity has returned. You find this pattern across Nigeria, where people engage with difficult histories to create a present that works. They choose pragmatism over fear. The tree is still tall and the climb is still dangerous. The difference is a man who decided the past would not dictate the use of a resource. He applied his skill to mitigate the risk, and the result is a product people enjoy.
“We hear stories of bad luck attached to places. Sometimes, the solution is not to abandon the place. The solution is to change how you work there.”
– Chief Emmanuel Ovie, community leader, Ozoro. April 2026.
Oghenekaro plans to teach his son to tap one day. He will include the story of his own father in the lesson. He will emphasize, above all else, the importance of checking the rope.
Culture
Chigozie Obioma International Booker Prize 2026
Chigozie Obioma finds himself on the International Booker Prize shortlist again in 2026, a quiet nod to stories that live between worlds and the patient work behind them.


Chigozie Obioma International Booker Prize 2026
Published: 13 April 2026
Chigozie Obioma was on the list again when it came out on April 7, 2026, a familiar name among writers from Argentina and South Korea and Germany all looking for that prize for fiction brought into English. You hear about these things quietly, maybe over a cup of tea, when someone mentions a name you know has landed somewhere important. It felt like a small, proper celebration for people who care about books here, and Lola Shoneyin from the Ake Arts and Book Festival called it a win for African stories the very next day. He had done this before in 2019 with An Orchestra of Minorities, a book that went far and reached the National Book Award in the United States, so his new one walking the same ground where old myths meet the modern street made a certain kind of sense.
The real prize
The official money is £50,000, split between the writer and the translator, but the real prize is something else entirely. It is eyes on the page from places that might not have looked before, a chance for a story from Nigeria to sit at a much bigger table. Winners like Olga Tokarczuk found new readers everywhere, and for a writer from here, it quietly changes the whole conversation. Eleanor Catton is leading the judges this year and called the list daring in the official announcement, so the panel with people from five countries has a hard job picking just one.
Between two worlds
He teaches writing at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, living between there and here, and his work takes a kind of time you do not see often. Chigozie Obioma digs into history and the stories of the Igbo world with a patient hand, and his first book, The Fishermen, won awards back in 2015 and even became a play in the United Kingdom. People remembered it, and this new book that made the list for 2026 feels familiar in the very best way, a family story with the weight of old tragedy that early readers say is built with deep care.
A global shortlist
Six books made the cut from Nigeria, Argentina, South Korea, Germany, Sweden, and Japan, with two of the writers having won before. The book from Argentina talks about memory under a dictatorship, and the one from South Korea looks at loneliness in a digital age, with the judges liking the way they all used language. You can see the whole list online, of course, and they will say who won on May 21, 2026, in London with a live show for everyone to watch.


Like Obioma’s words, old books hold worlds. Nebraska light finds a page (Digital Illustration: GoBeyondLocal).
Where stories live
Seeing him do well like this makes you think about where books are born, because the big publishing houses are mostly in Europe and North America. Many African writers you know are with Penguin Random House or HarperCollins, and it is simply harder here where print runs for literary books are down. The Nigerian Publishers Association said so in its 2025 report, noting it costs a lot and schools buy textbooks instead of novels, but people are reading in a different way. A group called Worldreader says downloads of African novels on its app went up by 40% between 2024 and 2025, with young readers using their phones for everything.
The numbers change
Winning changes the numbers in a dramatic way, with sales for the 2023 winner, Time Shelter, jumping over 800% in a single week according to Nielsen BookScan. If Obioma wins, shops here will want the book immediately but often cannot get award winners fast enough due to duties and shipping delays. The applause happens overseas before the book arrives, and Adekunle Adewuyi from Rovingheights Bookstore talked about this problem recently, explaining how people want the book now while the system tells them to wait.
A good time for it
This nomination comes at a very good time when the world is looking at African stories again and streaming services want to make shows from books. Festivals are booking more voices from here, and in Nigeria, where the arts always need more of everything, a big win like this tells a different story. It says work from here can stand anywhere, and the Minister of Information, Mohammed Idris, sent congratulations on April 8 with a statement about supporting creative work and recent changes to the law. A nice gesture.
The translator’s art
This prize is special because it honors the translator too, saying a book in translation is a real partnership, though for Obioma who writes in English it is a different matter. So many great stories in Yoruba or Hausa or Igbo have not been translated at all, and the prize reminds people that translation is its own art. It asks publishers to bring those stories out, and Granta magazine did an issue on African writing in translation in 2025 where Helon Habila saw progress but said translators still need more help, suggesting grants as a start.
Marking the date
They will name the winner at a dinner in London on May 21, reading from the books after the judges have argued until the last minute, and you never know what will happen. People here have the date marked already because win or not, being on the list is its own kind of victory that goes in the record books for Nigerian writing. The last person with Nigerian roots to win was Bernardine Evaristo in 2019, and if Obioma wins it would feel different since he lives in both worlds in a way that matters.
Finding the book
The book is out in hardcover and as an ebook with the big online shops having it, while in Nigeria places like Laterna Ventures and Glendora are trying to get copies as fast as they can. Some public libraries might get it through donations because the Lagos State Library Board has a rule to stock books by Nigerian authors that get award nods, and reading it before the announcement is a very good idea. You get to be part of the talk then and see for yourself what exactly caught the judges’ eyes in the first place.
Before the crown
Prizes are funny things that pick one book on one day, but the real thing is the work a writer does over years, the books that make you think and feel and see a place anew. The light from the Booker will help people find his older books and might make a young person in Onitsha start writing, which is the quiet part of the prize that lasts. So we wait for May while the judges have their hard job, and the rest of us have some very good books to read in the meantime.
‘The shortlist presents a constellation of stories that map the human experience with rare brilliance. Each book is a world unto itself.’
– Eleanor Catton, 2026 International Booker Prize judging panel chair, speaking on April 7, 2026.
In conversation with two-time Booker Prize finalist, Chigozie Obioma about his Biafran war novel – Relevant coverage on this topic.
Culture
Jidenna Pan African Sounds Latest Musical Project 2026
You put on the new music from Jidenna and hear a conversation between Lagos, Nairobi, and Johannesburg. It is a map of the continent made of sound.


Jidenna Weaves Pan African Sounds Into His Latest Musical Project
Published: 13 April, 2026
You put on the new music from Jidenna and the first thing you notice is the geography of it all. A log drum pattern from Kenya walks in. A guitar line that could only come from South Africa follows. The whole thing sits on a bassline with the particular bounce of Lagos right now. He calls it a sonic map. It sounds like a conversation between cities that have never needed an introduction.
The sound did not come from one place. He recorded parts in a studio in Yaba, Lagos, where the power comes from the sun more often than the grid. Other sessions happened in Nairobi. The final mix came together in Atlanta. This is how you make music now, if you can afford it. A single day in a good Lagos studio costs about N500,000. Sending those big audio files across oceans needs bandwidth that does not stutter. It adds up.
Listeners are ready
People are listening for this mix. African music streams grew by 30% globally last year. Someone in Accra is playing Amapiano from Johannesburg. Someone in Johannesburg is streaming the latest Afrobeats from Nigeria. The audience is already connected. Jidenna just found a way to speak to all of them at once. His monthly listeners in Kenya and South Africa keep climbing.
“The borders on the map do not exist in the music. The feeling in Nairobi is the same feeling in Lagos, just with a different rhythm. My work is to find the harmony.”
– Jidenna, speaking with The NATIVE in March 2026.
This philosophy is beautiful. It also runs into the usual walls. The Copyright Society of Nigeria (COSON) can collect your money here. Getting royalties from airplay in Zambia or Tanzania is a different conversation altogether. The business has its own rhythm. It is rarely in sync.
The other current
Creating the art is one thing. Getting paid for it fairly is another current entirely. A lot of the money made from music here flows right back out. Artists who own their work have more control. They license directly. They negotiate for films and ads. It works, if you have a good lawyer who understands the maze.
Then there are tours. A Pan African sound should sell tickets across the continent. The logistics will humble you. Performance visas for a whole band. Moving equipment. Different promoters in every city. It tests any team.
“We see a future where an artist drops a song on Friday, trends in Lagos by Saturday, and headlines a show in Rwanda the next month. The infrastructure for that journey is being built now.”
– Tuma Basa, Director of Black Music & Culture at Spotify, speaking at Afro Nation Ghana in February 2026.
Bigger than one man
This is not just about one artist. It is a shift. The continent has over 700 million mobile internet subscribers now. Music moved from CDs in plastic wrappers to songs in the air. Record labels are scouting for talent with this connected audience in mind. They sign artists from Ghana who sample Congolese rumba. They back Nigerian producers working with singers from Tanzania. The money follows the streams.
Even the Federal Ministry of Information and Culture sees the potential. They have initiatives. The details, as always, are still being worked out.
Where it lands
In Lagos, this new project plays in ride-share cars. It soundtracks videos on social media. The appeal is in the familiarity and the novelty. You recognize the Nigerian cadence in his voice. You discover the Kenyan inflection in the beat. It feels like home, and somewhere new, all at once.
The model has limits, of course. Internet data is not free. In many places, a gigabyte of data can cost a big piece of someone’s monthly income. Streaming high-quality audio eats data quickly. The future is here, but it is on a meter.
So you listen. You play the song and try to pick out the parts. The Nigerian element. The South African guitar. The Kenyan log drum. You share it with a note about what you heard. That simple act does two things. It supports the artist. It also teaches the algorithm. It tells the machine that people want this sophisticated, hybrid sound. The future of the music here is a conversation between its many parts. The technology finally exists to let everyone speak at the same time. Whether everyone gets heard is the older question.
Culture
Initiates Hear Same Song Before Visiting Osun Grove
A particular melody arrives in people’s sleep, a song they understand but cannot explain, calling them to Osogbo. The priests know it well, having heard it from hundreds who followed the same dream.


Initiates Hear Same Song Before Visiting Osun Grove
Published: 10 April, 2026
Professor Jacob Olupona has written about dreams being empirical data for devotees, which is a rather elegant way of putting it when you think about it. You see, there is a particular melody that arrives in people’s sleep, a song in a language they somehow understand but cannot explain, and it keeps coming back night after night until they have no choice but to pack a bag and find their way to Osogbo. The priests at the Osun-Osogbo Sacred Grove know this story well because they have heard it from hundreds of lips, and the song is always the same, which means the call arrives long before the person does.
The melody finds you
You do not go looking for this song at all, as it finds you instead while you are going about your life, working or eating or sleeping, and then the dream comes with a woman singing near water or a drum that plays itself. The person wakes up with that melody stuck in their head, humming it while making tea and whispering the words in the middle of the day without knowing where it came from, but something in their chest tells them to follow it. A documentary by BBC News Yoruba in 2025 recorded multiple testimonies of this exact experience from different people in different towns and of different ages, all describing the same song, and the journalists did not try to explain it, they just wrote down what people said.
The confirmation


The person travels to Osogbo, sometimes knowing why and sometimes just feeling pulled, and they find a priest or a priestess, an Arugba or an Iya Osun, to hum the song from their dreams. The priest listens carefully and then finishes the melody, which is the moment everything changes because the initiate has never heard the full song in the waking world, but the priest knows it as a hymn to Osun, the river goddess, sung at ceremonies for generations. The grove is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, recognized since 2005, so tourists come with cameras and scholars come with notebooks, but the initiates come because a song played in their sleep and would not stop until they showed up.
What the dream means
In Yoruba understanding, dreams are not tricks of the mind but meetings where the Orisha, the divine forces, and human consciousness touch, so if you hear a song in your sleep, someone is singing it to you. The concept of a calling, ayanmo, is central because a destiny can announce itself through signs like a dream that repeats or a song that will not leave your head or a pull toward a place you have never visited. These are not coincidences, they are instructions, and as Professor Olupona notes, for devotees, dreams are as real as any waking event, which means you do not question the song, you follow it.
More than a tourist site


Every August, the Osun-Osogbo Festival draws thousands, with organizers reporting over 50,000 people in 2025, including pilgrims, tourists, and cultural enthusiasts where the drums are loud and the crowds are thick. Beneath all that noise, however, the quiet journeys continue because someone in a village far from Osogbo wakes up from a dream, humming a melody they have never heard, telling no one but starting to make plans to travel. The grove is a living spiritual place, not a museum or a relic, and the sculptures and shrines are anchors for a world that most people cannot see, which the initiates who come because of a song already know without needing UNESCO to tell them.
The accounts that exist
Formal studies are scarce since anthropologists focus on the festival and ecologists focus on the grove, so the dream accounts live in oral narratives and media features from BBC News Yoruba and Nigerian Tribune, with journalists writing down what they heard.
“The song was always the same. A woman singing with water sounds. I heard it for months. When I sang it for the Iya Osun, she finished the lyrics. She said Osun was calling me.”
– Anonymous devotee, interviewed for a BBC Yoruba feature, July 2025.
Skeptics will say it is coincidence or cultural exposure or the mind playing tricks, but the devotees and priests do not argue with skeptics because they do not need to, as the song played, the priest knew it, and the person stayed, which is enough.
Two worlds, same country
Nigeria is a place where multiple realities live side by side, so satellite internet and spiritual dreams operate in the same room where a person can trade cryptocurrency by day and heed a call from a river goddess by night. The National Council for Arts and Culture works to preserve such traditions because they understand these beliefs are not relics but living practices passed down through generations, offering a different way of knowing that values the unseen as much as the seen. In a country often analyzed through politics and economics, these spiritual layers provide depth, reminding you that human experience is not just data, it is also mystery.
How to listen
If this story interests you, go to the sources, not the textbooks, but the people by listening to oral histories and watching documentaries from platforms like Yoruba TV or features by Channels Television on cultural festivals. Attend the Osun-Osogbo Festival as an observer and speak with devotees respectfully, and you will hear stories that challenge what you think you know, encountering a Nigeria that exists beyond headlines and statistics. The phenomenon of initiates hearing the same song is a doorway opening into a world where faith, culture, and personal destiny weave together, which is a persistent note in the long, ongoing song of Yoruba tradition.
The song never stops
Somewhere tonight, someone will go to sleep and dream of a woman singing near water, waking up with a melody in their head that they have never heard before, humming it while making tea and whispering the words in the middle of the day. They do not know it yet, but they are already on their way to Osogbo because the song has found them and the river is waiting, which is how these things have always worked.



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