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On Monday, which would have been Fela's 74th birthday, his sons Seun and Femi and daughter Yeni celebrated the opening of the museum, which will include a boutique hotel and a rooftop lounge and concert space. The opening comes during Felabration, an annual week of concerts put on by his children to honor their father's musical legacy. Lagos state government provided $250,000 for remodeling the home into a museum, Lawson said. Yet Femi Kuti made a point to say the family will continue to say whatever it feels like saying. "We are not a family that is supporting the government, because of what my father stood for," he said. But he applauded local officials for "being brave enough to be identified with the name that many people fear and shy away from." As he spoke, a giant diesel generator nearby kicked on, drowning out his words and showing how electric power remains out of reach for many in Nigeria. Later, someone tried to walk off with a pair of Fela's shoes from the racks hanging in the museum, a sign of the country's struggles with lawlessness. But Fela's now-grown children laughed and smiled, shouted and waved as they walked past portraits showing them as infants with unlined faces. By the end, they rushed down several flights of stairs, champagne flutes in hand, laughing and calling out: "Soldiers coming!" Below, their father's crypt sat just in front of the museum. A green bottle of schnapps lay on the tomb's steps, as if someone awaited his company for one more drink. ___ Online: Felabration: http://www.felabration.net/
[Associated
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