Abdulaziz Chibuzor Ude, an elder
statesman and former acting chairman of the board of directors of Newswatch, is
dead.
The Anambra state government
announced the passing of the culture enthusiast in a statement issued on
Saturday.
Don Adinuba, the state
commissioner for information and public enlightenment, said Uze died on
Thursday in Lagos state.
According to the Anambra
government, he has been buried in his hometown in line with Islamic rites.
In a tribute to the deceased, the
Anambra government described the late Uze as an egalitarian who never
discriminated against the less privileged or those who did not share his
religious views.
“The people and Government of
Anambra State have received with sadness the news of the death two days ago of
Chief Abdulaziz Chivuzor Ude, the internationally renowned publisher,
intellectual, art lover, pan Africanist, entrepreneur and philanthropist from
Abor, Udi Local Government Area of Enugu State who played a significant part in
modern Igbo history,” the statement reads.
“Christened Bertrand at an early
age and became the first senior prefect of the College of Immaculate Conception
(CIC), Enugu, Ude attended Oxford University where he read philosophy,
economics and politics before proceeding to Columbia University in New York
where he took a master’s degree in international relations.
“Ude caught public attention when, while
working as an editor at Random House in New York, the world’s biggest book
publishing firm, he published Chinua Achebe’s classic, Things Fall Apart, in
the United States during the Nigerian Civil War of 1967-70.
“Unknown to most people because
of his self-effacing nature, Chief Ude contributed significantly to the
creation of Anambra, Enugu, Delta and Ebonyi states.
“Apart from being one of the
signatories to the petition for the creation of these states to the Ibrahim
Babangida military regime, he donated not just cash but also his private jet to
transport the Igbo patriots like Dr Alex Ekwueme, Chike Edozie, Dr Akanu Ibiam,
Chief CC Onoh and Dr Okadigbo to different cities who signed the petition.
“He also donated part of his
building at 59 Awolowo Road, Ikoyi, Lagos, to coordinate the campaign for the
creation of Igbo states and paid the staff.
“Ude’s Nok book publishing firm in Enugu, New
York, London and Lagos, published such outstanding works as Chinweizu’s The
West and the Rest of Us and Romanus Egudu’s Study of Four West Africans. He
was, indeed, a pan Africanist of the finest hue.
“Ever humble, he practised
egalitarianism in truth and spirit. He never discriminated against the less
privileged or those who did not share his religious views. Even after
converting to Islam, a result of his deep friendship with founding Guinean
President Sekou Toure, a pan Africanist in his own right, Ude remained a big
contributor to the welfare of priests and the church in his community.
“The Government and people of
Anambra State truly mourn the transition of this great Igboman, pan Africanist,
publisher and intellectual. We mourn with the Ude family of Abor and the people
and government of Enugu State. May Abdulaziz Ude’s noble soul find rest in
paradise.”
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