Osibisa-Sunshine Day song at the bottom of the page: At school, Osibisa was an expert in cleaning toilets and bathrooms. He was nicknamed โOsibisaโ after a Central African Band that was famous in the sixties and seventies.
In the four years that I attended the school, Osibisa โhummedโ only one particular tune by that famous band.
The piece of lyric he โhummedโ went something like, โOsibisa-ah o yeaโฆ!โ Osibisa never even sang the lyrics of the bit he preferred. He only โhummedโ it. He cleaned ablution blocks once daily, and sometimes twice a day.
As you can imagine, given the size of that institution with ablution blocks everywhere, Osibisa had his work โwell cut outโ for him.
Believe you me, more often than not; the state of the toilets and bathrooms was appalling! The bathrooms were always dirty and the toilets were often filthy, but that illiterate man knew that that was probably the only job he would ever get.
The toilets often overflowed with sewage, but under cubicles, Osibisa would hurl bucket-loads of water like โlive grenadesโ to hated enemy camps. Cleaning those facilities would have daunted a lesser man, but Osibisa was unperturbed by the entire โhullabalooโ that came with that tasking ordeal.
Every time and everywhere, youโd find Osibisa โwell-armedโ with his notorious little โwar cryโ of a tune, โhummingโ it away through chores.
He needed no lyrics, a song sheet or a music director! All he needed was a broom to brush off the stubborn filth and toilet chemicals for โthe kill.โ โWell-armedโ with his little โhumโ, nothing was any big deal!
Osibisa would โhumโ away at anything the day โthrewโ his way. It didnโt matter that the day didnโt โturn upโ right, he seemed to โhum inโ another day at will.
It didnโt matter that โMarkโ chided him often; Osibisa seemed to โfixโ himself a โstiff glassโ of his favourite โsongโ and drown his sorrows in his โhumโ! The โbattalionโ of students would hurl abuses at him, but heโd come well prepared for them to โbring it onโ, and promptly unleash his โhumโ their way.
It may sound punitive to some, but that little piece of a tune seemed to be the only โgame planโ Osibisa had formulated, to work his way to retirement.
That โhumโ was the psychological โdrillโ he needed to boost his everyday morale. It was the mental โnose maskโ that blocked off the stench of unbearable smelly loos.
It was like the only โinsurance policyโ Osibisa had, to handle any financial crisis. As long as he could โhumโ Osibisa remained motivated to keep putting food on his familyโs table.
If Osibisa could โhumโ, then he could make it through anything! He only needed to clear his throat and โhumโ his way tthrough another month and the years would come โflyingโ past; without denigrating his enthusiasm.
The โhumโ consoled him through many decades in defecated smelly toilets, a lifetime of menial labour, and condescending snobbish glances. He couldnโt read or even write it, and he would often โhumโ it out of tune, but he faced each daily ordeal with his favourite โhumโโฆโฆ
An excerpt from …”PRAYING WITH GUSTO” By Moses Gaitara.
Osibisaย ~ Sunshine day