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This Nigeria: From the Journal of a Visiting Native
Son
by Prof. Dominik Deitim Iyorlu
What is the hardest thing of all? That which
seems the easiest For your eyes to see, That which lies before
your eyes. -Goethe
Every race has a soul, and the soul of that
race finds expression in its institutions, and to kill those
institutions is to kill the soul.... No people can profit or be
helped under institutions which are not the outcome of their own
character. -Edward Blyden
Visiting Nigeria early this year, I was shocked by the fact of
how remarkably different the real Nigeria of today differed from the
Nigeria of my imagination. While I have been an ardent critic of
Africa’s most populous and most important nation--both when I lived
there as a youth and all these years I have lived abroad (like so
many other sons and daughters of Africa) in self -imposed exile,
nothing would prepare me for the surprising aspects of decay I ran
into in Nigeria.
The fact that the general state of affairs had deteriorated--or
had not improved--since my last visit there only a few years ago,
made me wonder about the survival of the nation itself. Frankly, I
feared that the country was actually dying--not just a slow death
but a rapid one--considering the years in terms of history. Now,
where does one go to find a new nation to replace a vanishing one in
which he or she was born? To the United States of America? One must
wait until one becomes an old person in America before answering
this question truthfully.
The Nigeria I saw reminded me very much of Plato’s classic fable,
“The Allegory of the Cave.” I felt like an escapee of the cave who,
after living far away in some sun-lit land thereafter, had returned
to the sunless cave again. And not without love for the familiar
cave! I say this not out of any disrespect for my wonderful loving
people of Nigeria, but rather out of deep disappointment at the
subsequent failed Nigerian leaderships. Symbolically, good,
enlightening leadership represents the sun, while the absence of
such leadership means the absence of the sun.
Was my perception of Nigeria as an utterly chaotic place due to
the fact that I had returned there after decades of “conditioned”
sojourning in America? Maybe. Still, any perceptive person (the type
that does not just look, but sees) visiting Nigeria these days will
discover to his or her chagrin, that the real casualty in Nigeria’s
mess is Reason--the grandchild of the human Mind--God’s best gift to
Man and Woman. But why have Nigerians abandoned Reason when their
ancient African ancestors delighted in the use of this, despite the
disastrous personal and societal consequences of doing so? I will
let the reader provide the answers. The following is a report from
my journal account of the trip.
A couple of minutes before entering Kano state’s airspace, the
KLM pilot’s customary announcement tells us (passengers) that the
airport conditions in Kano are not as good as those of the Amsterdam
airport (from which we had departed). There is a hush…and the
Ivorian sister sitting next to me I’ve been talking with, and I stop
our halting conversation, becoming curious about the elements viewed
through the plane’s windows. Shortly thereafter, the mighty iron
bird descends considerably from its maximum position to a few feet
above sea level.
The mighty wonder of the sky is now floating so deliberately low
over the area near the Kano International Airport (re-christened the
Mallan Amimu Kano International Airport, as I find out afterwards)
that the landscape becomes clearly visible. It is hamattan
(Northeast Trade Winds, or hii) season and the dust-coated roofs,
the withered brown vegetation, and the rough-looking cracked ground
is a noticeable sign of its effects. Perhaps due to the lack of any
human activity (such as construction or the movement of vehicles,
etc.) around the complex, an eerie sense of desolation seems to be
hovering over the area like the great shining magic now aiming for
the runway in the northeast.
Finally, the white man’s wonder lands thunderously, slipping
smoothly from the runway to the center of the tarmac.
As the passengers stream out of the belly of the huge iron bird,
this passenger/reporter notices that the KLM pilot is right: The
difference between this airport and that of Amsterdam we flew from
is like that of the earth and the sky. As we trek toward the
multidirectional building, this reporter notices that physically,
nothing much has change; it is the same airport at which he had
worked for seven years as an immigration officer some twenty years
ago. It looks so familiar he feels he can still recognize it with
his eyes partially closed! Later on, he will recognize the stagnant
airport as well as the city’s unpaved dusty streets as symbols of
the dying nation itself.
Still, in the spirit, it feels great to be home among one’s own
people. Despite the difference....
As the immigration officers begin peering over our travel
documents (we have formed into two files), the electric lights above
suddenly go off. The clearance hall and all around it turn ink-dark.
“Welcome to Nigeria,” someone--a passenger or one of those people
waiting for passengers two or three yards away within the hall,
announces sarcastically. Some of the passengers laugh.
Fortunately, the blackout lasts for only a minute or two.
Clearance resumes, and we are finally cleared to depart the confines
of the airport. Jacob, Dan, and Bob, my African brothers--two Tiv
and one Igbo-- help pull my suitcases to a waiting Mercedes-Benz,
the vehicle they have arranged to take me to Prince’s Hotel, which
they consider fittingly “modern” for me, located off Andu Bako Road,
near Central Hotel. I’m not at all keen on isolating myself in a
hotel in my old city, indeed in my own country, but I’m not eager to
discuss the issue at this moment. So I am booked at the hotel.
I had planned, before leaving the United States for the African
visit, to spend at least two days in Kano so I might locate some
friends and relatives of the old days I believed were still living
in the ancient city. For this reason, as well as for the fact that I
had already decided I was not going to carry myself during my trip
as one of those “overseas” visiting African elites, I politely avoid
the “distinguished personality” transportation arranged for me by
one of my well-to-do relatives days before arrival. I have decided I
am going to spend my visit as an ordinary citizen--which is actually
what I am.
[And that’s what I’m doing for the most part of my stay: being
squeezed inside ill-maintained buses and taxies, which at times are
driven by seemingly death-proof drivers. In competition with these
vehicles are so many motorcycles of all types. Motorcycles, with
their ubiquitous presence and irritating cries, are all over the
country, like invading grasshoppers of large croplands.]
I both succeed and fail in my quest to see my loved ones of old.
Some have proved unlocateable. Some, I learn, have actually passed
away. Died. This failure saddens me a great deal (even though I can
understand). Because living long enough to meet again a person one
once knew and befriended and loved is one of life’s rarest pleasures
and events; one of the highest spiritual rewards for staying alive.
For what’s life without those who have known one well enough to tell
one’s own story?
I leave Kano for Makurdi on the third day of my visit. In my
company is Jacob, mentioned earlier, who has traveled all the way
from Makurdi and at whose place I’ll be staying while sojourning in
the Benue capital. We choose the state’s transportation company,
Benue Link, since passenger planes don’t fly to Makurdi
anymore,boarding a minibus in which squeezed passengers can barely
turn. I am surprised that passenger vehicles are still “assisted” by
the shamelessly lying and incomparably rude “conductors”. One of
these, a youthful chatter-box, sits directly in the row facing me,
his back against the bars shielding the driver’s section, with one
of his knees thrust between my thighs.
“Just don’t mistake me for your girlfriend”, I tell him in Tiv,
just before take-off, to the laughter of the passengers, who are
mostly Tiv. We leave at about 11:00 a.m.
Throughout the long trip, the traveler notices the many mangled
vehicles lying on their sides--or supine--on both sides of the road.
All of them casualties of the frequently occurring deadly accidents
nation-wide. Some of the accidents have just occurred, with the dead
and the injured placed around the fallen vehicle. Petrified mourners
and curious onlookers loosely surround the scene. This will become
the common sight on all the other roads I will be traveling later
on--from Takum to Yola, Makurdi to Ogoja, to Ekot Ekpene close to
the Atlantic Coast, et al. Not once do I see an ambulance flashing
its trademark red lights at or around an accident scene. And every
such accident scene is as desperately hopeless as anyone can
imagine. In fairness, most of these long-distance roads are in
fairly good condition.
Before reaching my destination in Benue State and during the
period of my sojourn in Makurdi, the state’s capital, I have already
noticed several interesting things in the nation.
Random Observations:
* People generally look emaciated--thinner than usual. Indeed
underfed. This is visible especially in heavily overpopulated Kano.
* Nigeria is a country without coins. Now, one does not have to
be an economist to know the dismal effect of this on the economy.
* There are countless “businessmen” and “businesswomen”--evidence
of U.S. inspired capitalistic democracy--all over the place. These
include roadside traders in roasted rats (myôngom), foreign wears,
religious calendars, etc.
* Nigeria, not Germany, is the Mercedes-Benz capital of the
world. There are unbelievable numbers of these vehicles almost
everywhere. The nation is an interesting catalog of paradoxes.
* Consciousness of one’s identity as deriving from one’s
Africanness does not exist in Nigeria. Thus, for multitudes of
Nigerians on this planet, life is the equivalent of a seamless
garment. Consciousness of external enemies does not exist either,
despite the fact that Africa, as a whole, has had such enemies for
centuries now.
* Solemnity is totally absent, usually in the cities. Instead a
general sense of chaos heightened by a climate of lawlessness,
hopelessness, and despair and fear, permeates the national
atmosphere. Fear and confusion reign supreme. The very “expensive”
state and national dailies carry pictures of severed heads and
torsos on certain days. Evidence of the infamous activities of the
notorious Bakassi boys in the eastern segments of the country. And
amid the terror and horror, there is not-so-secret whisper of
Babangida becoming the next president of Nigeria. Babangida, the
sole foreign-sponsored architect of that unfortunate nation’s
destruction.
* Buying fuel is an arduous task--another interesting irony. In
the cities, the queue and the waiting can be painfully long.
* During the day, a death caravan (that is carrying a diseased
person), with music sad and loud, is sighted every now and then.
This is a common sight everywhere I’ve been in Tivland.
* Yet, this is the shocking part: the dearth of not just good
books but books in general and the absence of bookstores and the
emptiness of libraries. Each time the sojourning son of the soil
mentions this shameful problem to a fellow national, the customary
response is, “naa book we go chop?” A very varied question,
considering the desperate nature of the situation. And when so many
cannot afford even a local newspaper. (Thoughts on this later).
* One good thing: So many streets and public places now carry
names of indigenous “heroes”. Thus, imagine the thrill for this
reporter seeing a tree of a major road-street in Makurdi carrying
the name of one of my secondary school classmates, Dr. So-So Road.
How wonderful he must be feeling for having himself immortalized
while he’s still alive and while he is still a young man (somewhat),
I think. And how envious I’m feeling since I can’t even imagine
having a bush path named after me anywhere in TarTiv.
* The high number of churches in Nigeria is incredible enough to
raise the concern of even a pope. And there is no reason to think
the high number will not continue to grow. Some of the church people
now constitute a big nuisance--even a menace--as they crusade loudly
and relentlessly, everywhere in their mission to “save souls”. The
sojourning son of the soil envies them, wishing there is a similar
crusade to save the people’s God-given best gift: the human Mind.
* Still, amid the terrible suffering, one finds so much genuine
love--outpouring, incomparable love among the people--wherever one
goes in Nigeria. The foods are wonderful.
Benue State, I have discovered to my chagrin, remains one of the
most backward states in the nation, especially in terms of economic
development. As this eye-witness has mentioned earlier, Makurdi, the
state capital, is his home base during his sojourn. Specifically, he
has chosen to stay with Jacob, again as mentioned earlier, his
brotherly friend of so many years. In Jacob’s unsanitized residence
of wonderfully hospitable residents, people listen almost daily over
the radio of the “numerous accomplishments” of the current governor
of the state. Some merely laugh dismissively while some remark
derisively that those remarkable “accomplishments” include opening
beer parlors and donating twenty thousand naira to a lady parlor
owner. Ironically, the sojourner has already noted that an unbridled
culture of alcohol and alcoholism has taken a serious toll on the
state and the nation as a whole.
The Tivland itself, the heart of the state, is busy
self-destructing. And the cause of the self-inflicting wounds is
myopia, which has led to clashes--some very bloody--between the
Jengbar and the Jerchira clans. (The governor belongs to one of the
factions.) Clan pride--the healthy type that builds feel-good
attitude and self-esteem, to which this Tiv, the great-grandson of
the fabled mighty Tor Agbe Dajoh in Shirtileland subscribes, is
fine; but clan arrogance and ignorance, the type that breeds nothing
but raw hatreds of members of other clans, is what’s at play here.
And as far as this reporter can make out, there is no leadership
effort to stamp this out, or discourage it.
Random Thoughts
Hope. Our African people, both at state and national
levels, so desperately need something to give them hope. Hope to
enable them find good justification for their existence. Hope that
displaces despair. Given the reality of the tragedy of our history
in the world, the good leadership of the people should know how to
raise the consciousness or self-esteem of the people so these can
feel confident enough to use their God-given gifts or talents to
accomplish ordinary and extraordinary things. So the people will
ultimately break away from the ever-tightening grip of mesmerizing
Whiteness. So the people can overcome the chronic problem of psychic
inferiority complex. The frightening thing is that there is no
slight evidence of the existence of such leadership at either state
or national level in Nigeria today. This fact, when such leadership
is long overdue? Indeed, even a dynamic leadership tone is yet to be
set.
Future. Good or real leadership persuades its governed to
realize that real people essentially live for the future and not
merely for the present; in other words, for Posterity. For our
children today and our children’s children tomorrow. That this is
what it means to exist in the Universe as human beings. Any evidence
that any leadership in the nation has emphasized this Truth? The
visiting son of the soil saw none.
Europeanity. This is the deadly one. This reporter knows
this fact well: that it is useless arguing religion. Therefore, the
purpose of this point here is not so much to start a fight as to
“reason together” with the reader, to use Prophet Isaiah’s phrase.
Europeanity disguises itself as true Christianity, but thinking
people know better. Europeanity, to this writer, is a pandemic worse
than AIDS. For unlike AIDS, Europeanity is an invisible destroyer
that charms and intoxicates the victim with its sweet poison even as
it wrecks havoc on the victim’s psyche and consequently that
victim’s culture.
Europeanity, for instance, imposes something as strange and as
hypocritical as Mkôôm, an aspect of Protestantism in Tivland. The
Catholic faith imposes celibacy on its leaders, an inherently
unnatural idea to the African. Needless to state, that both
practices are a disaster to the African psyche and culture. In fact,
Archbishop Milingo of Zambia, whose brief and dramatic marriage to
that good but unfortunate South Korean woman recently, is today’s
living symbol of the unnatural order that has been imposed on the
African world by Europeanity’s belief system.
Again, Europeanity is the main reason so many Africans
instinctively side with Israel, to them God’s Chosen People, in the
Israeli-Palestinian imbroglio. To these African followers of
Europeanity, even a punishment as terrible and as sinful as
“collective punishment”, which is what Israel metes against the
Palestinians, does not mean a thing. And this from a people who,
only yesterday, were being collectively “punished” by Europeanity’s
sojourning elements right there in their own homes and on their own
African soil! That’s the type of harm Europeanity does to the
uncritical African engulfed by it.
Yes, the explosive activities of Palestinians’ walking time bombs
are equally detestable, but has it become that hard distinguishing
between such desperate acts...and the massive use of high-tech
weapons and collective punishments against a militarily overwhelmed
and oppressed people? Thus, it is not surprising that Europeanity is
largely responsible for the state of Powerlessness the Africans are
suffering today. Examine, for instance, this deluding aspect of this
imperial organization, the claim that that exceptionally Good Man,
Yehuda or Christ, whose spirit the African readily identifies with,
instructed people to “love thy enemy”, the equivalent of telling
someone to grab the poisonous snake (igbinde), by the tail. Christ,
who was a very smart man, likely said “respect” your enemy, which is
a sensible thing to say. Examine the words “love” and “respect” in
Aramaic, the ancient Southwestern Asian language Christ spoke then,
for better understanding. To wit: imagine the number of times the
Tiv word soo, which contains more than one meaning, has been
misinterpreted as “love” in English.
Of course, the “love-your-enemy” mantra remains a deluding tactic
for the tireless colonizing promoters of Europeanity, while they
waste no time in singing dreadful “retaliation” for their enemy or
enemies, real or unreal. The bottom line is this: Europeanity
remains a devastating form of European nationalism, whose modus
operandi is to tame the minds and souls of non-European peoples
around the globe so these can be manipulated and controlled much
easier. It does not have anything to do with true, original
Christianity whose members sought to be known by their godly actions
rather than by their empty professions.
Other peoples, such as those of the Orient and the Middle East,
have developed their respective “cultural shields” against
Europeanity. Even so it hasn’t been easy for these peoples to
withstand the onslaught of Europeanity.
But us Africans? Europeans destroyed much of our “cultural
shield” hundreds (some might say thousands) of years ago. The
vestiges left would be destroyed later on by their cousins—the
Arabs. The task now for patriotic Africans, therefore, is to build
anew another cultural shield for our own people.
Arabism. Another deadly one. A counterpart or rival of
Europeanity, Arabism is a dangerous form of Arab nationalism that
disguises itself as true Islam. Due to Arabism’s deep cultural roots
among Black Africans and the apparent usually conditional humane
practices on the part of its members, an obvious traditional African
trait, Arabism’s atrocities against Africans are not as apparent.
But they are real nonetheless.
For together and for centuries the two imposed belief systems
have caused untold damage to Black Africa and have been relentless
in obscuring the African Way with the intolerant rules of their
dreadful foreign gods that blunt, dilute, and confuse.
Unfortunately, Nigeria has never had leadership that has attempted
in any way to save the people from Europeanity and Arabism. Why?
Because Nigerian leaders have always professed membership in either
Europeanity or Arabism, thus splitting the citizens’ loyalty
accordingly.
Africans who are interested in understanding original
Christianity should take a close look at the much older Coptic and
Ethiopian versions. Also, those interested in original Islam should
take a close look at the early Islam of Black African founders and
generals who conquered and civilized much of Southern Europe of the
Dark Ages.
Education, not Mis-Education. True education is the rocky
foundation on which national life is necessarily built. True
education is the axis around which the entire national life
revolves. Thus, it is a mournful situation today in Nigeria that a
true education system, which, contrary to what some pundits are
saying today, was not even strong in the first place, has collapsed.
A genuine national leadership of the people would readily design the
education system based on the people’s common Africanity,
emphasizing ancient Africa’s beautiful, humane belief system, in the
process. This would be the effective way of easing Europeanity and
Arabism’s strangleholds on the battered psyche of the citizens. This
would also mean making Africa-centered literature limitlessly
available to all the people of the nation. Africa-centered homegrown
literature would be the effective medicine, especially for
Europeanity’s whitening plague which, along with Arabism, have been
causing senseless deaths among our naturally peace-loving people for
decades now. Let’s all resolve that the latest such deadly clashes
in the beautiful city of Jos will be the last.
A sensible education system would also stress Contribution over
Acquisition, thereby making a dramatic departure from the present
colonial type that emphasizes acquisition of degrees, degrees and
more degrees, which consequently leads to attaining positions of
power for the mere sake of gaining “prestige” and feeling
contentedly satisfied thereafter. Development of talent must be such
a policy’s cornerstone. The time is long overdue for replacing our
anachronistic education system with a culturally suitable,
result-oriented type.
The architect of such a positive system would understand that in
the game of Power in today’s heartless world,
Organization/Management, technical/high-tech skills, are inevitable
toward lifting the nation to a respectably secure position of power
on the global scene. The nation’s educational curriculum would
emphasize these areas accordingly, although not at the expense of
the Arts, the indispensable source of food for the human soul. Thus,
given the desperate need for such a sound education system in
Nigeria, it is rather tragic that the system has entirely collapsed.
It is particularly sad at this critical stage in Nigeria’s history
that the nation is without books and bookstores and that its
libraries are almost virtually empty, as mentioned earlier.
To their credit, though, some Nigerian elites or groups residing
abroad have been trying to ease this great national shame by
exporting books to various segments of Nigeria. A noble effort on
their parts; nonetheless, this is like offering a piece of yam to
respective huge crowds of famine-stricken villages.
No doubt, such efforts are praiseworthy. In fact, this visiting
African son too donated a few (Africa-centered) books, in person, to
the Benue State University through its charismatic Vice-Chancellor,
Professor David Ker, during his aforementioned visit. Indeed, Ortwer
Ker was hospitable and gracious enough to autograph his beautiful
book for me.
The problem, however, is that not only do such efforts fail to
offer any lasting solution to the dearth of books in the nation, but
that the books of a culturally different society can actually prove
to be harmful to the “other culture” that indiscriminately feeds its
citizens--especially its children--with such alien material. Imagine
a child reading about hotdogs, cherry pie and apple pie, and of
course, snow, and so forth, in Nigeria. The ensuing confusion in
that child’s mind would be incomparable. Books, as potent civilizing
and energizing tools, are too sacred to be compromised this way by a
people.
Only a serious fundamental effort can provide permanent solutions
to this national shame. But such efforts, for so long, have never
been forthcoming. For the Nigerian elites living abroad and such
African elites in general, who have lived inside the entrails of the
beast for so long, like their hypnotized counterparts on the
Continent, have consistently proven unwilling to find fundamental
solutions to Africa’s deep-rooted problems.
At the MUTA (Mkohol U Tiv in America, or Mutual Union of Tiv in
America) held in Ohio State in 1998, I proposed a scholarship
program in Akiga’s name, donating a token, but symbolic $150.00 for
the project, asking other MUTA members to join in promoting the
idea. Akiga Sai, for those who do not know, was a unique Tiv man who
lived in the early 20th century and was the first Tiv to write so
copiously and voraciously on all the vital aspects of Tiv life. And
he wrote all the volumes in Tiv. Indeed Akiga, who happens to be
more popular among Western anthropologists than he is among his own
people, can rightly be considered the Founder of Modern Tiv society
for capturing his people’s essence so eloquently in his writings,
thus raising their consciousness about themselves as a Tiv-African
people. Something no member of the tribe had done before.
The idea was to start offering a small financial reward on a
yearly basis to the best writer of any work written in Tiv. A work
produced in the tradition of the Master, Akiga himself. And how did
my “elite” colleagues of the organization respond? With silence,
deafening silence that has remained unbroken. Now, if I had mounted
a baseless ad hominem (personal) attack on some member of the
organization, such a negative act would have triggered a passionate
response from those very people, a response that would have gone on
for weeks, if not months. This is just the way we are at this time
in our tragically and deliberately distorted history: deaf to Ideas
and Ideals, but prone to time-wasting, senseless and destructive
fights.
The need for the development of a culture of books, and
consequently the development of some prominent, indigenous languages
in Nigeria, cannot be overemphasized. And the time to start this
crucial work in earnest is now, since so much time has been wasted
already.
An aspect of Nigeria’s sound education system’s philosophy should
also aim at attracting some of Africa’s talented sons and daughters
of the Diaspora, so that these can be encouraged to come and
contribute their gifts to the land of their roots, should they
desire to do so. Shuffling talents this way around the globe is what
Europeans have been doing for a long time among themselves.
Conclusion
True patriotic Nigerians of today, who have become tired of that
nation’s inept subsequent leaderships, must rise and resolutely
demand for the Nigeria we believe we deserve. Such proud Nigerians
must remain steadfast and uncompromising in our demand for common
sense and thoughtfulness from our leaders as a condition for
accepting them as legitimate leaders, and vice-versa.
The saddest part is that Nigeria’s humiliating failures do not
only affect the helpless and hapless Africans living within its
borders; Nigeria’s shameful failures affect black people all over
the world. The implacable enemies of Africa, who had dreaded the
possible rise of this blind giant in the past, are now quietly
gloating over her present demise--thanks to their own stooges,
Nigeria’s subsequent rulers.
Indeed, it was out of realization of the importance of Nigeria to
the Black World and its apparent backward slide that I made the
ominous observation about the nation in the discourse I posted on
the Internet—Tivnet, to be specific--last year. I had written
figuratively, that “everyday Nigeria exists, Africa suffers a great
deal.” A good brother, Dr. Yakudu Tor-Agbidye, commented
sarcastically on that statement--putting a little spin on it-- in a
note he posted on the Tivnet this past July. No hard feelings at
all. I only hope that my brother has been listening to the strange
comments being uttered by some of the current Nigerian leaders,
especially of late.
In his address recently to the Conference on Racism in Durbar,
South Africa, Nigeria’s President Obasanjo said that while he
supports apologies on slavery from some nations, financial payments
for the horrific slave trade atrocities would “further harm the
dignity of Africa.” The leader of the most important Black nation on
earth sounded very much like some cunning Western leader as he
spoke.
Speaking on the deadly clashes in Jos between followers of
Europeanity and those of Arabism, Obasanjo expressed surprise that
those who profess belief in God would apparently kill other human
beings. Apparently, the president has not heard of the words Crusade
and Inquisition and Jihad.
President Obasanjo: Did the African people of Nigeria
elect you as their leader so you could turn around and become a
shameless mouthpiece or puppet of the West? Have you forgotten the
long-time, anti-African record of the West, especially that of the
British and their White American brethren of the United States? In
addition to this people’s historical racist crimes against our
people? Was Thomas Jefferson right when he made one of his
characteristic racist remarks about black people, that “Their griefs
are transient”? Does it bother you at all that all the eyes of the
Black World are focused on you and your team? Why are we Africans of
today so cursed with bad leadership? Also, at another recent
international conference on Zimbabwe’s land crisis held in Nigeria’s
capital, Abuja, Nigeria’s foreign Minister Sule Lamido, aiming his
comments at the Zimbabwean black representatives, stated that Africa
could not afford another war, especially a war “with racial
undertones”. Think about it: have Black Africans been the cause of
racial wars on the African Continent or elsewhere for that matter?
And what’s wrong with fighting a racial war that is imposed on us?
Not surprisingly, the Nigerian delegation was acting on behalf of
Britain, the forever Nigeria’s colonial master, whose bombs have
been killing the children and women of Iraq--nonstop--for about ten
years now!
The present Nigerian leaders in particular have bought into the
sophistic rhetoric of their foreign masters, which they have been
using ceaselessly to obfuscate the tragic reality of the nation’s
overall situation. Thus, the mantra nowadays is democracy, something
the white man has taught them of late. Not known for any sound
critical trait, these Nigerian “infant men,” who like to parade
themselves as the people’s authentic leaders, have embraced this
democracy with the enthusiasm of a monkey eating a donated banana.
One only needs to ask the question: How can Nigeria claim to be
democratic when that nation’s economic/financial lifelines are being
controlled from abroad? Or when the nation lacks something as basic
as books?
Given the country’s current backward slide, its leaders would
have had the unrestraining powers to introduce draconian policies
toward stabilizing the nation, including educating the masses about
their own Destiny’s Way as an African people. In other words, some
form of Revolution that’s guarded jealously by the principles of
good governance (or democratic principles), would be the appropriate
medicine for the nation’s serious crisis at this time. In concert
with this train of thought is Dr. Umez's recent book,
"Nigeria: Real
Problems, Real Solutions," which provides an insightful and
cogent analyses of how to achieve economic development and good
governance/democracy in Nigeria.
Yet, this is unlikely to happen. At least not for now. For the
white man’s new gift to Africa called democracy--a Trojan horse--has
actually become a stumbling block toward any rapid, substantial
change not only in Nigeria, but also throughout Black Africa. And
elsewhere. We know from our experience with the West that if this
new “gift” were a good thing, its people would rather have hidden it
from us, just as they have so successfully hidden both low-tech and
high-tech knowledge from us. Knowledge that is fact did not
originate in the West. And if we had tried to get the good system by
some other means, they would have accused us of trying to steal
“classified information”.
The only reason Europeans (Euro-Americans included) are so
vigorously imposing their imperial democracy on Africans today is to
cement their control of all aspects of the lives of Africans. With
so many of these jelly-headed African leaders now collaborating with
the enemy instead of vigorously fighting him and against his wiles,
so their African people might be liberated, the enemy now imposes
his will on the Africans with insulting relish. Just look at this
people’s preceding “gift”, Europeanity. Look at what this
colonizing, mind-softening belief system has done to the psyche of
the African. How it has left him gazing helplessly at the world as a
severely wounded old lion that can’t hunt or defend his own within
his domain anymore.
The irony of Nigeria (and perhaps that of other African nations)
may well be that its envisioned, glorious future maybe made possible
by the leadership of her sons and daughters living in their
seemingly secure, peaceless paradise and futureless existence abroad
today. For if there are any high-minded, clear-sighted Nigerians
left, who possess high energy and strong resolve enough to declare
one of these days: We cannot go on living like this, and back up the
declaration with solid action, these are destined to be the ones.
And it may take just one bold, firmly grounded Nigerian exile to
ignite this long-awaited, all-important fight for the genuine
transformation of that hapless African nation, this Nigeria. These
may be the individuals who shall help their needlessly abused
African giant find her soul.
As Black America’s Frederick Douglass reminds us, “Power never
concedes anything without a demand. It never has and it never will.”
Treacherous power, such as the type we have in Nigeria today, must
have been what the gifted African Diasporan orator had in mind. The
type of power that deserves to be dislodged by any means necessary.
Postscript:
Since returning from Nigeria many months ago, I have been kept
abreast of the goings-on there by various reliable sources. One of
these, brother Jacob, has informed me several times, that the
violence and starvation that I saw during my visit have actually
grown worse. That a sense of despair and hopelessness on the part of
the people continues to grow.
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