It is no longer in doubt that Lagos, Nigeria’s most celebrated city-state, will host the 2022 edition of the National Festival of Arts and Culture (NAFEST). There are also no controversies that NAFEST is Nigeria’s biggest cultural tourism export, defining the values and strength in what unifies Nigerians than those things that tend to lubricate our socioeconomic and political dislocations.
From Kaduna to Rivers, Edo to Plateau and Ekiti states, NAFEST runs on the gasoline of Nigeria’ s banquet of festivals, dances, indigenous culinary expressions, history, artifacts, tongues and humongous display of infinite energy and patriotism, which propel endless research about the richness and unbelievable attitude of the people.
Each festival theme births the prosperity and profiles of the our sub-cultures and tradition, highlights intrinsic values and attractive inclusiveness, and opens vistas to togetherness, unity, love and connectivity.
Otunba Segun Runsewe, director-general of the National Council for Arts and Culture (NCAC), Nigeria’s chief culture officer, sets the tone for each of the festival outings, powering evangelical cultural awareness. He loves Nigeria to bone-deep, and is appreciated by many Nigerians who are amazed at our gift of nature, culture and hospitality. In the past, Nigeria’s cultural vehicle never traversed through the nooks and crannies of our virgin landscapes, until Runsewe happened on the scene.
His cultural focal message centres on the change narratives, the power to fuse our faith and trust in our way of life. At each dining table of our cultural gastronomy, the massive display of our food culture, from soups to snacks, beverages and peacocks of “swallows” endemic to each geopolitical zone unveils amazing hospitality wonders, unseen and unimaginable.
For a time, waiting for the push for our cultural tourism wonders, it was credited to Runsewe that in Nigeria and everything certainly bestowed on us by God, from hills, mountains, rivers, landscapes, groves and forests ecosystems, fauna resources, festivals and dances, indigenous culinary expressions, there lies a trajectory of a wonderfully gifted tourism nation.
For Runsewe, to understand the uniqueness and richness of Nigerian cultural advantage, students and observers of our strategic evolving cultural renaissance through NAFEST must admit that beyond our festivals Nigeria has a new song on natural resources and environmental conservation.
“I want to showcase beyond our dances and food culture the 37 wonders of Nigeria, and there no better place to do so than at Eko NAFEST,” Runsewe says to the prospect of a refreshing discovery, which Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu will unveil in November.
Indeed, our indigenous arts and crafts position this reality and, undeniably, we have a bankable economy, tailed with prosperity and a funnel to attracting international tourism spending, creating rural jobs.
Last week in Lagos and in conversation with Sanwo-Olu on Eko NAFEST, Runsewe made the point that Lagos must strategically reposition its socioeconomic reach and acceptation as Africa’s destination for commerce and tourism trade through the eyes of NAFEST and the unveiling of the 37 wonders of Nigeria.
Sanwo-Olu is a partner and champion of the new Lagos infrastructure gains on the NAFEST’s developmental template, revving up the community to community development, which has endeared him to indigenes, residents and foreigners.
On this belt, the ongoing Lagos rail lines, community theatre halls, road renewal and connectivity and mapping of water transportation routes, all most likely ready for use and unveiling during Eko NAFEST in November, certainly propels the visionary leadership of Sanwo-Olu who assured Runsewe and his team during a recent visit that his government would not leave any stone unturned to showcase a truly Nigerian festival of arts and culture.
Upbeat about a new approach to NAFEST, Runsewe further promised to dig up buried historical and traditional cultural and historical information about Lagos.
Significantly, Eko NAFEST will help power new tourism traffic arrivals, showcase the city culture, nightlife, hospitality, commerce and the wonders of Lagos, nay Nigeria, all in one full cultural tourism plate on Sanwo-Olu’s dinner table.
Runsewe says Eko NAFEST will be different and he can be trusted to keep his word and power his dreams for greater opportunities for Nigerian culture tourism rebirth and rebranding through Eko NAFEST 2022. Ready? Let us prepare for Eko NAFEST!!