The Plagues of Friendship
by
Book Details
About the Book
While untold hardship and plagues affect the villagers in the remotest of rural areas, the culture of the West mingles unevenly with the indigenous African culture to brew its own special brand of pestilence. The human desire for riches and advancement clashes with traditional rites and taboos, to simmer in a rich steamy pot of betrayal and intrigue. Njeleulem is an introvert. He values friendship. He has a high standard of ethics. He holds steadfastly to his communal beliefs. His friends mistake his integrity for cowardice and weakness. Aware that yesterday’s friends have decayed into today’s scoffers, he reacts with confusion and bitterness. Ngarbel, the first friend to betray him, places impediments in Njeleulem’s path at every opportunity during their parallel careers. The two, once good school friends, face each other in deep hostility from their positions as top managers for powerful organizations. Njeleulem’s harsh childhood shapes his personality and eventually, his ruin. Ngarbel is rude and aggressive to the core, much like his volatile father. This fictional story ends with Njeleulem’s suicide. The pressures on him have become too much to bear for one so sensitive and moral. His ultimate retaliation consists of inducing heartfelt remorse in Ngarbel, who went insane and had his wife Dembede leave him as a result.
About the Author
Sem Miantoloum Beasnael was born in Doba Chad, on December 16, 1948. Child of four villages, he hailed from Béladjia, Mbikou, Komé and Donia, his parents’ villages. He was educated in the Primary and Public schools of Bébédjia and Moundou. Trained as a High School Teacher, he graduated from the Teachers college (University of Brazzaville, Congo in 1973.) Back to Chad, he taught African Literature, French and English at the Evangelical High School of N’djamena. He pursued his Higher Education in N’djamena and upon graduation, taught English at the School of Law (University of Chad). Due to civil war, he moved to Moundou where he became the Head of Personnel, at the Tobacco Factories (MCT), and at the same period, taught African Literature at the Moundou Polytechnics (Lycée Technique Commercial). From 1981 through 1989, he was appointed Program Officer, in charge of the Inter-African Scholarship Program, at the Association of African University (AAU) in Ghana. He used his free moments to pursue Post graduated studies in the Department of African studies at Legon/Accra (University of Ghana). He also studied at the Ghana Institute of Management and Public Administration (GIMPA) where he graduated in 1989. He was at the same time member of the Council of Elders of Ridge Church of Accra, Ghana. In Fall 1989, he went to the Dallas Theological Seminary (USA) where he graduated in Spring 1994. While studying there, he registered at the Writer's Digest School, at Cincinnati (Ohio). He graduated from the WDS in 1995 as a novel writer. He published several articles on African culture in The African Herald, a Dallas based Newspaper. Radio KRA invited him for a live debate about his eye-opening articles. He also taught African Literature and culture at the University of Texas in Dallas (UTD). At the same time, he taught French, Philosophy and History-Geography at the Dallas International School and worked part-time with Federal Express as Team Leader. Beasnael who initiated the foundation of the Evangelical University of Chad, now owned by the Fellowship of Evangelical churches and Missions in Chad (EEMET), is now a Missionary, Dean of Agricultural and Animal Husbandry Institute in Moundou, Chad. Africa.