by Isi Esene
Nigerian writer Rotimi Babatunde has won this year’s prestigious Caine Prize for African Writing.
The £10,000 ($15,700) prize was given for his short story ‘Bombay’s Republic’ (read here) about Nigerian soldiers who fought in the Burma campaign during World War II.
“It is about liberation and how a character can have his world widened,” Mr Babatunde told the BBC.
With this feat Rotimi Babatunde join the league of young Nigerian writers that have won the coveted prize in recent years. They include, Heleon Habila, who won the prize in 2001 and EC Osondu in 2009.
The chair of judges, Bernardine Evaristo, presented the award at a dinner held at the Bodleian Library in Oxford on Monday evening. “It is ambitious, darkly humorous and in soaring, scorching prose exposes the exploitative nature of the colonial project and the psychology of independence,” she said about the winning short story.
Afterwards Mr Babatunde told the BBC’s Network Africa programme he felt happy to have his story recognised and privileged to have been on such a strong and diverse shortlist.
“The story is about African soldiers who go to Burma and came back with a sense of new realities and new possibilities,” he said.
The boundaries that the main character, Bombay, witnessed in Nigeria fell away during the heat of the campaign, he explained.
“He lost his reverence for the colonial officers,” he says.
He is a winner of the Meridian Tragic Love Story Competition organised by the BBC World Service and his plays have been staged and presented by institutions which include the Halcyon Theatre, Chicago and the Institute for Contemporary Arts.
He is currently taking part in a collaboratively produced piece at the Royal Court and the Young Vic as part of World Stages for a World City.
Mr Babatunde, who currently lives in Ibadan in Nigeria, will now be given the opportunity to go to Georgetown University in the US, as a writer-in-residence for a month at the Lannan Center for Poetics and Social Practice.
He said he was now working on a novel about migration, choice and love.
Source: British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC).
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