Majekodunmi Fasheke, aka Majek Fashek, is a household name in Nigeria
and many other parts of Africa. For several years, he was the rave of
the nation’s fledgling entertainment industry. His songs were creative,
rational and delightful, but everything changed not too long thereafter
when he suffered a mental breakdown.
Majek had an encounter with schizophrenia, but has been through
series of therapies and is determined to prove that he is truly on the
rebound as shown by his performance at this year’s Felabration in remembrance of the late Afrobeat maestro, Fela Anikulapo-Kuti.
Following his intensive rehab in the US and Nigeria, the “Send Down
The Rain” and “So Long, Too Long” crooner is almost completely back on
track.
On Wednesday, his appearance at the main auditorium of the University
of Lagos, Akoka, elicited excitement. The event was the 46th Annual
General Meeting and Scientific Conference of the Association of
Psychiatrists of Nigeria. The theme was “Mental Health as a Driver of
Positive Change”.
Local and international psychiatrists as well as other mental health
specialists gathered to discuss the relevance of mental health in the
current Nigerian context. Majek, who put up appearance as special guest,
stole the show. Not even the scholarly presentation by Prof Ibidapo
Obe, who gave the keynote lecture, could eclipse the reggae legend’s
presence.
Dressed in the same oversized jacket, jeans and signature cap that
has been the hallmark of his musical career over the years, Majek
stepped up to the podium in his typical “rumba style” walk, exuding a
semblance of the aura of confidence and appeal with which he held sway
in the 80s.
But just before the rehabilitated Majek took the microphone, his
psychiatrist, Dr. Vincent Udenze, the CEO of Synapse Services, an
Abuja-based centre for psychological medicine that helped in his
rehabilitation, observed that the reggae legend was undergoing serious
rehabilitation.
Udenze spoke glowingly about the reggae star. “He is really on the
rebound and has become an advocate for mental health rehabilitation.”
Majek gave a short but powerful speech, topping it with a rousing performance of his famous hit track *Send Down The Rain.*
Describing people living with mental illness as geniuses whose
talents should never be neglected, Majek admitted being helpless with
his situation at a stage, requiring him to seek expert help.
He noted that it was normal practice for the mentally ill to seek
rehabilitation but abnormal to be allowed to roam the streets without
care.
He tasked the Federal Government to step up rehabilitation of mental
health patients in the country. Even as he and Ibidapo-Obe called for
the introduction of mental health screening for politicians and public
health officials in general, he was emphatic that government should not
ignore mental health patients because many of them are geniuses.
“Mental health is very important,” he stressed repeatedly. “Mental
health is very important in the lives of people and the nation. It
(mental health) should not be the yardstick to appreciate or disregard
people. Government should not ignore mental health and should look into
rehabilitation of mental health patients as most of them are geniuses
with great potentials and talents”.
Majek was emphatic about the need to create a system to manage or
rehabilitate mentally ill people while creating avenues to mitigate
mental health challenges in the nation in general.
The most commonly diagnosed mental illness in Nigeria is mood
disorders. Misuse of psychoactive substances is also significant while
neuropsychiatric disorders contribute towards the total national burden.
It is fact that one out of every four Nigerians will have a mental
health disorder during their lifetime even as at least 25 million people
who would benefit from mental health services in Nigeria are not being
reached.
Earlier, the Acting Medical Director, Federal Neuropsychiatric
Hospital, Yaba, Dr Richard Adebayo, urged the Federal Government to
institute a Mental Health Act. He said mental health is integral to the
stability of every nation and that in the Nigerian context, much of the
negative socio-economic issues have severe mental health concerns.
“Health impact is unquantifiable; there is no health without mental
health, but it is regrettable that there is no workable and realistic
policy direction, and no mental health Act to guide us and protect the
rights of our patients.”
The aim of the conference was to facilitate the change process,
drawing experience from globalisation as to how change in governance can
affect the mental health, productivity, quality of life, allegiance of
the citizenry, etc.