Daily Times

‘Peter Pan’ Enahoro, Nigerian journalist and publisher, was not afraid to speak his mind

Retrieved on: 
Monday, June 5, 2023

One of these was Peter Osajele Aizegbeobor Enahoro, the Nigerian journalist who was also known by his pen name, Peter Pan.

Key Points: 
  • One of these was Peter Osajele Aizegbeobor Enahoro, the Nigerian journalist who was also known by his pen name, Peter Pan.
  • As a journalist and journalism teacher, I have followed his career – one of professional excellence and achievements.
  • He was a bold journalist who was not afraid to say what he thought was right.
  • Enahoro served as subeditor, features editor, (the Nigerian) Sunday Times editor, editor of the Daily Times and editor in chief of Times Group.

Early life

    • Born on 21 January 1935, he came from a well-heeled and well-known political family in Uromi, now in Edo State.
    • His parents were educationists and he was one of 10 siblings.
    • Another well-known sibling was also a journalist: Mike Enahoro, who died in 2015, was a broadcaster of note in the 1980s.

A great journalist

    • Enahoro became perhaps the youngest Nigerian journalist to edit a national newspaper, Daily Times, in 1962.
    • The editor of Daily Times, another legendary Nigerian journalist, Biodun Aloba, had spotted him taking on a politician at a press conference and invited him to join the paper, then owned by the Daily Mirror of London.
    • It was the beginning of Enahoro’s rise to become “perhaps Africa’s best-known international journalist”, as Frank Barton described him in his book The Press in Africa.
    • Enahoro escaped from Nigeria in 1966, fearing for his life after the 15 January coup, as stated in his memoir.

A long shadow

    • Enahoro was long gone from Nigeria by the time I became a journalist in the mid-1980s but his reputation loomed large.
    • Many younger journalists of the day became interested in international reporting because of Peter Pan’s example and success.
    • But we are not yet very good at suggesting what can be done to heal it so that we don’t become part of the problem.

Romance with a dictator

    • A part of his life that he only touched on in his memoir was his return to Nigeria in 1996 to work for the government of the late dictator Sani Abacha.
    • In his memoir Then Spoke the Thunder (2009) he tried to justify his acceptance of the offer to “take over the Daily Times”.
    • For his incisive writings and commentaries, Enahoro’s seat in the pantheon of journalism in Nigeria is assured, his latter-day romance with the military notwithstanding.

Phi Iota Chi Alumna Starts 365 Days of Kindness

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, October 28, 2021

BLOOMSBURG, Pa., Oct. 28, 2021 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ --Bloomsburg University and Phi Iota Chi alumna, Brittany Scharr, answered her calling during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Key Points: 
  • BLOOMSBURG, Pa., Oct. 28, 2021 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ --Bloomsburg University and Phi Iota Chi alumna, Brittany Scharr, answered her calling during the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • As the donations kept rolling in after Christmas, Scharr decided to extend the 12 Days of Christmas and start 365 Days of Kindness.
  • 365 Days of Kindness is a reminder that every day is an excellent day to be kind.
  • If it weren't for the confidence she found as a member of Phi Iota Chi, 365 Days of Kindness would not exist in the capacity it is today.