Son of late Fela Anikulapo Kuti, Femi Kuti on Sunday opened up to Sunday Sun about his crashed marriage to Funke, his ex-wife and mother of his first child, Made. At the moment the Afrobeat King is in Paris, France where he is due to perform at the biggest African music festival in Europe.
Does it mean you and Funke may come
back as husband and wife?
I doubt it. But you never know. You never know
what God has in plan for you. What if you say never and something just happens?
If they told me she would leave my house one day, I would have said it is
impossible. So, if she comes back one day, you never know what can happen. One
sickness can hook you down and she might be the person by your bedside, what
would happen? I don’t pray for it but you never know what God has in plan for
you. So, I am not the one that tempts fate. Right now, I am content, I am happy,
we are friendly and my children are also happy.
Read more after the cut
Tell me your greatest
memory of Funke?
Are you trying to bring us back because this question is
mischievous (laughs). There are many great memories of her. I can’t say one or
two because it is not possible to throw 10 years away. There are great, good and
bad memories. All are memories.
How did you meet Funke?
I met
her at a restaurant where I was playing jazz, at a place called ‘44’ in Ikoyi.
She came with my cousin, Funmi Ransome-Kuti, they were in UNILAG together. She
was so beautiful and she was looking at me, so I knew she likes me. So, I told
my cousin to introduce me to her. That’s how we met.
How did you
eventually propose to her?
I didn’t propose; one day, I just told her
that ‘from today, we are boyfriend and girlfriend’. She said, ‘ha ha, what kind
of love is this?’ I said, ‘when we have been calling ourselves everyday, are we
misleading ourselves? And it was on a Christmas Eve. I said to her ‘from today
you are my girlfriend, if you have a boyfriend, get rid of him now because I
must not see him when I get to your house’ and she laughed. That was how we
started.
I am sure you don’t want to pull that off your mind so
soon?
It is off. Like I said, I have a new life. I am staying with two of
the mothers of my children; we all stay in the same house. I have a very good
family. They are content, but they respect Funke. If Funke comes, they will
excuse us. They are very respectful of her. Don’t forget we are in Africa; this
is the way we grew up, so if she comes around they give her the respect. If I go
to the church and she is there, if I say ‘please I have to sit with her’, they
will accord her the respect. And I am sure she has her life. Can we ever get
together? I can never say no, because something can happen that may be for good
or bad and we’ll be together again.
Never say never! If you ask if I am
happy right now, I am very happy not just with my relationship, I am also very
happy with my children who are progressing, which is really my priority. At 52,
I have experienced a lot. If I die today, I cannot complain in heaven that I did
not enjoy my life. My biggest challenge is to ensure my children have a good
life. I want the children to grow up very stable and that requires a lot of
sacrifice on my part. I cannot use my selfish, jealous or whatever interest to
disrupt their future, which is the same attitude I have with Made. He is doing
very well. He is playing piano well. And probably if I use his mother’s problem
as an obstacle in his life, it might just be worrying him. And you never know
why children have psychological problems, but it is the parents’ duty to always
protect their children. ‘Nobody send us message; we slept with each other, we
born pikin, you now want to give the pikin problem.’ I don’t indulge in
that. Since there is a child involved, I try my best to keep my reservations to
myself by just facing the truth.
You don’t believe in
monogamy?
Yes. I grew up in a polygamous home. I grew up wanting to be
like my father. I grew up wanting to have many women; that was my training. I
will not tell you it is right or wrong. You see my son, he believes in monogamy.
He has one girlfriend that he has been following for many years, and they want
to get married. I don’t pray for them to breakup. If they want to even get
married in the church, I will not stop him. Whatever he wants to do I will not
use my own life to rule, direct or control my children. They must have the
liberty to choose because if they fail or succeed, they have to understand it is
their life. I can always be a good father. I will have to teach them how to take
good decisions because I love them.
I am not going to discourage my son
by saying ‘what if she breaks your heart, so get ready for heartbreak’, because
I don’t pray for it. I can only support him. If he is successful and even if he
breaks up with this girl, he might still go for another person. But for whatever
reason, this is the life he has chosen for himself and I love it that he is
happy. Because of the way I was brought up, there is no way I can be faithful to
a woman. I will not even try it. I wasn’t trained to do so. I didn’t grow up
with that attitude. I grew up in the real house of Kalakuta where there were
women and I loved it. So, I wanted the same thing for myself. Now, I don’t have
the life of Kalakuta but I know that I can’t leave that dream and say I want to
be faithful to one woman. I will rather be by myself; truth, I love my freedom.
I don’t love the part that I owe anybody anything. Even the people with me know
that I love my freedom. I like to sleep when I want to sleep, if I want to go
out I love to enter my car and go on my own; I love my independence. I was
brought up with total independence.
Did you give Funke a ring, that
‘with this I thee wed’?
No, she bought the ring.
And you put it in
her finger?
Yes, in the registry.
That makes you a monogamist so
you cannot marry another wife under the Nigerian law?
I am not a
monogamist because we are divorced.
It looks like you sacrificed all
when Funke was with you?
No, I didn’t. When we got married she was
pregnant and I knew it was a boy. I didn’t know how I knew but I just knew. I
told her ‘we will get married, but I will never be faithful to you’. She knew
one of my dancers then was my girlfriend. I have been dating her long before I
met Funke.. Funke’s mother and I are not good friends. When she (Funke’s mother)
came back into her life, we started having problems. I don’t know if that is
part of the problem or if it is Funke who is bored with the marriage or her
friends were talking to her, whatever the reason, I tried my best to bring her
back. I tried to even change my ways. Many things went on, those that are close
to me know that I went out of my way, when I saw that I was wasting too much
energy, I had to relax. Funke and I didn’t talk for a long time. It took us
years to understand that there is a son in our midst. I didn’t want to open the
can of worms because we have settled all these. It is something that we have
left behind. I have forgiven her and I will not tell you that I was totally
right, but was I sincere in my marriage? Yes be rest assured that I was. I
wasn’t doing anything that she wasn’t warned of before. That I won’t have
girlfriends? She knew that I was a very humble polygamist. I tried to be as
discreet as possible but you know the more you are getting popular, the more
people are taking your tales to your wife. She might find condoms in my car that
I forgot to hide very well, who knows?
Why then did people blame your
sister, Yeni, all this while…?
I will never reveal to you why our
marriage broke up, but YK (Yeni) definitely was never part of it. YK and I even
fought because she advised Funke to take Made along with her, and I said if she
takes Made I am in trouble, because I love made and I want him to be with me.
All my life was circled around Made, so if Funke had gone with Made maybe I
would have committed suicide, because everything in my life in that marriage was
based on Made. I saw Made as my inheritor; I saw him as the next Anikulapo to
take the music to another level. So, my investment emotionally, financially,
everything was stationed on Made. If Funke had left with Made, I didn’t have
another child, and a politician had already threatened me that what if Made
dies? So, I thought that was a threat from the government saying they will kill
Made. I was very protective of Made, which was another reason I decided to have
other children. What if I lose Made? What will I do? If you check the Anikulapo
and Ransome-Kuti families, there are not many boys; everybody is just having
girls. So, the only inheritor of the Kuti dynasty was Made. My cousin in America
had a girl, Yeni had a girl, others also had girls, and Made was the only boy. I
thought of protecting him or else the Anikulapo-Kuti clan will die. Seun also
had a girl; the only person that recently had two boys was Kunle. He just had
his own boys when Made was already a teenager.
Because of Made, maybe you and Funke see to talk about common things but we are shocked to see her sitting next to you at ‘Femi Segun’s burial?She is the mother of my child and we are very friendly, we even call each other. At least, what I manage to do is not to let the breakup affect Made first of all, and our relationship. Human beings must fight. There must be misunderstanding sometimes. It is now left to us if we are matured enough to overcome these problems. To some people, breakup is so bitter that they end up hating each other. I manage to take my hatred and throw it away, and still respect her as a human being and the mother of my son, and most importantly for the love of my son who needs his mother. If she too understands that he needs his father then we must get rid of our misunderstanding. He was the one at the church who said ‘please sit beside my mother’; I had to oblige him. I could have refused because I went with my girlfriend, so I told my girlfriend not to be annoyed and she understood.
Femi as a brother in Australia
We heard your father had a son in the
US?
He didn’t have a son in the US; it is in Australia.
Have
you met him?
Yes.
What is his
name?
Couney.
How did he meet you?
I went to play in
Sydney and he came to meet me there. That was about four or five years
ago.
Did Fela ever tell you about him or how did you know?
Fela
told us about one woman that probably got pregnant for him. She told Fela she
was pregnant but she disappeared with the pregnancy. Fela now came and told us
the story. He (Couney) met my sister on Facebook and told her the same story.
And he traced his mother because his mother put him up for adoption, so when he
met his mother, she then told him that his father was Fela.
How old is
he?
I am a year older than him.
So, he is part of the
inheritors of Fela?
Yes, but he doesn’t want to be known. He doesn’t want
anything, he just wants to meet us, and case closed.
He answers Kuti
too?
Yes.
Are you not inviting him to Nigeria for a
visit?
He will make his decision. He doesn’t want much publicity. It was
his son who wants to know the family. He has met us, if he wants to go the extra
mile that is his business.
What does he do, is he into
music?
He is into drawing. I don’t know much about him. We talk once in a
year. I went to Australia early this month and my sister told him I was there,
but he didn’t come to meet me because he was busy. Don’t forget that 50 years of
our lives have passed, where do we want to start the friendship. He is a very
nice person. He is probably a Fela’s son, we cannot say for sure except there is
a DNA to prove it. And to do that, would you have to bring Fela from the grave?
But from my perception he looks like Fela
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