THE Daaga Hall, UWI, St Augustine, resounded with echoes of songs, dance, stories, and readings from his books as friends, colleagues, and well-wishers gathered to honour the life of the poet, short-story writer, playwright and administrator Prof Emeritus Funso Aiyejina.
Some of Aiyejina's closest friends also paid tribute to him through speeches and stories at the memorial service held on July 10.
Acting dean of Humanities and Education Dr Freddy James said Aiyejina was described by many as the father of the faculty and would be remembered for his leadership, wisdom and his will to be better, do better and live better.
"He embodied a complete and balanced trio of leadership skills that guaranteed personal, professional and spiritual improvement in a sustainable way."
[caption id="attachment_1095677" align="alignnone" width="1024"] Linda Aiyejina, wife of late UWI Prof Emeritus Funso Aiyejina, and his two sons, Abuenameh and Aiyejina, at a memorial service in celebration of the professor's life and work at Daaga Auditorium, UWI, St Augustine, on July 10. - Photo by Venessa Mohammed[/caption]
James said Aiyejina balanced his talent with humility and generosity which made him, his genius and scholarship accessible to all.
"His contribution as a literary giant and academic scholar is global and widely embraced.
"His work at the faculty as a dean was innovative, visionary and sustainable and his successful strategies that raised his calibre, endure."
Acting head of department of Literacy, Cultural and Communication Studies Dr Douglas-Wade Brunton had known Aiyejina since 2002 and admired him as a mentor, guide, motivator and leader.
"He was an influential figure in a generation of scholars...all of whom were working to help define and illuminate the Caribbean literary canon.
"This work and the measure of the man mean that he never has and will never leave us in spirit."
Brunton said Aiyejina's generosity and sharing of his wisdom, with colleagues whom he knew for decades and sometimes those he did not know well at all, would always be remembered and appreciated.
Prof Emeritus Brian Copeland said he was still in shock at the passing of Aiyejina, whom he described as his good friend.
"While many respected Funso as an academic, I really knew him as an effective administrator. I realised that he was one of the handful that can competently straddle both spaces."
Copeland said he always asks this when he is asked to speak at memorial services: "Release all resentment one may have toward the deceased, don't hold it back. Forgive and release."
[caption id="attachment_1095676" align="alignnone" width="539"] Abuenameh Aiyejina, son of deceased UWI Prof Emeritus Funso Aiyejina, pays tribute to his father at amemorial service in celebration of the professor's life and work at Daaga Auditorium in UWI, St Augustine, on July 10. - Photo by Venessa Mohammed[/caption]
Earl Lovelace, a fellow short-story writer, playwright and novelist who knew Aiyejina since the late 1970s concluded the tributes.
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