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Christiana Eze
Christiana Eze

Christiana Eze @Bestlove   

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Title: Culture & the 21st Century
Subtitle: Between Roots and Reality

Chapter One: The Boy Who Forgot
In the busy city of Abuja, where tall buildings touched the sky and cars never seemed to sleep, lived a boy named Tunde.
Tunde was smart, ambitious, and completely uninterested in his culture.
He spoke only English, even at home. He avoided traditional clothes, calling them “old-fashioned.” When his mother tried to teach him their native language, he would laugh.
“Mum, this is the 21st century,” he would say. “Nobody cares about all that anymore.”
To Tunde, the world was global now. Culture felt like something from the past.

Chapter Two: The Invitation
One day, Tunde’s father called him.
“We’re traveling to the village this weekend,” he said.
Tunde frowned. “Village? For what?”
“Your grandfather’s festival. It’s important.”
Tunde groaned. No internet, no fast food, no modern life. Just silence and “old people stories.”
But he had no choice.

Chapter Three: A Different World
The village was nothing like Abuja.
There were no skyscrapers, no traffic noise—only the sound of birds, drums, and laughter. People greeted each other warmly. Children played freely. Elders sat under trees, sharing wisdom.
Tunde felt out of place.
During the festival, everyone wore traditional attire. Music filled the air as dancers moved with energy and pride.
Tunde stood in a corner, scrolling through his phone—until the network disappeared.
For the first time, he was disconnected.

Chapter Four: The Story of Names
That evening, his grandfather called him.
“Tunde, do you know the meaning of your name?”
Tunde shrugged. “Not really.”
His grandfather looked at him deeply.
“Your name means ‘one who returns again.’ It carries history. It carries identity. But you carry it without knowing it.”
Tunde was silent.
“Forgetting your culture,” his grandfather continued, “is like walking without knowing where you came from. You may move forward, but you are lost.”
Those words hit harder than Tunde expected.

Chapter Five: A Moment of Realization
The next day, something unexpected happened.
A group of tourists arrived in the village. They were excited—taking pictures, asking questions, admiring the culture.
One of them approached Tunde.
“Can you explain this dance to us?” she asked.
Tunde hesitated.
“I… I don’t know.”
The tourist looked surprised. “But this is your culture, right?”
Tunde felt something he had never felt before—shame.
For the first time, he realized he knew more about foreign trends than his own heritage.

Chapter Six: Rediscovery
That evening, Tunde sat with his grandfather.
“Teach me,” he said quietly.
From that day on, everything changed.
He learned the language. He listened to stories. He joined the dancers. He asked questions. He laughed, truly laughed, without a screen in his hand.
He began to see culture not as something old—but something alive.

Chapter Seven: Back to the City
When Tunde returned to Abuja, he was different.
He still loved technology. He still used his phone. But now, he used it differently.
He started sharing videos about his culture—explaining traditions, telling stories, teaching meanings.
At school, people noticed.
“Why are you suddenly so ‘local’?” one friend teased.
Tunde smiled.
“I’m not local,” he said. “I’m rooted.”

Chapter Eight: The Balance
Tunde became a voice for his generation.
He showed that being modern didn’t mean abandoning culture. Instead, it meant using modern tools to protect and share it.
Soon, others followed.
Students began celebrating cultural days with pride. They spoke their languages more freely. They stopped seeing culture as “backward.”
Final Message:
The 21st century is fast, digital, and ever-changing. But no matter how far we go, our culture remains our foundation.
Because in a world that is constantly changing, knowing who you are is your greatest strength.
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Christiana Eze
Christiana Eze

Christiana Eze @Bestlove   

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