I grew up in the North. I was born in Sokoto State which probably
qualifies as the nethermost part of Northern Nigeria. I attended a
Secondary School dominated by children and wards of the Sultan and his
ranking cabinet members.
I lived briefly with an Uncle whose
house was adjacent the Sultan’s Palace. This afforded me the opportunity
to befriend members of the Sultan’s household and earned me visitations
at the Sultan’s Palace.
I was equally exposed to the Northern
idiosyncrasy, their beliefs and general view of life. I can recite
several Quranic passages and I’m quite comfortable around my Muslim
friends. The only line I did not cross is becoming a Muslim despite the
earnest persuasions of my friends and classmates. Save for the resort to
extremism by certain misguided elements in the Islamic faith, the
average Northerner is a nice guy. Their word is usually their bond and
they take life quite easily.
They are not moved by ostentation
and unbridled ambition. The average northerner is not thinking of
building ten houses and having ten cars parked in major capitals of
Nigerian and foreign countries. His religion has thought him to be
Spartan, contented and unobtrusive.
That is why I agree with
northern elders who frown at the ‘westernisation’ of core northern norms
and values. They fear that the undue embrace of western cultures will
erode the core values of the north.
It is for this reason that
you see a shoe repairer or your neighbourhood ‘aboki’ who sells sweets
and detergents being able to support two wives and several children.
They simply cannot be bothered about the aspirations and pressures of
the corporate world.
That is why they can sleep soundly and snore to boot because they are a contented lot.
As
someone who grew in the North, I was able to inculcate some of those
cultures of northerners. I am a full blooded Igboman but I am not moved
by what moves my peers. I live and work in Umuahia, Abia State but I
sense an underlining difference in values between our people and others.
Here, you have to ‘gbuo ozu’ to be reckoned with.
The word
itself should have sounded an alarm to those who live by its dictates.
The literal meaning of ‘Igbu Ozu’ is killing a corpse! Its figurative
meaning is that you have acquired wealth. You have arrived. You have
bidden goodbye forever to the shackles of poverty. That is all that
matters and however you attain that feat is your problem. Curtis ‘50
Cent’ Jackson must have been talking about us when he sang Get Rich or
Die Trying.
Whatever happened to the old order of live honestly,
go to school, get a job and rise through the ranks? For instance, I know
people who are not necessarily rich but yet, they are icons of society.
I know a Bob Ogbuagu, I know an Anagha Ezikpe, I know a Joshua
Ogbonnaya, a Bath Nnaji, Earnest Ojukwu and several others who though
not rich by worldly reckoning, live a distinguished and honourable life.
Why can’t they be our role models?
I am worried, very worried
about a trend that has crept into the Nigerian system unnoticed and
seemingly unchecked. Our youths no longer have value for hardwork,
diligence, contentment and patience. They want it all and they want it
now.
Ask the average Nigerian youth who his hero or role model is
today and chances are that he will mention the name of the
neighbourhood fraud kingpin and the dishonest politician. They are awed
by the flashy cars, the bevy of beauties that flock around them and the
humongous houses they live in. nobody pauses to ask how the wealth came
about because it is all seemingly immaterial.
He more often than
not has a retinue of youths hanging around him and aping him. They pimp
for him, do errands for him that their parents should never hear of and
they hope to be like him some day.
More often than not, he is not
educated or at best, ill-educated yet he is a role model to many. As the
rave of the moment twins P-Square will say, I dey See Danger, Wahala
Dey!
The other day, I was reading in the news about the
scandalous mass failure in NECO examinations nationwide. This is
Nigeria. We have since moved on and the media that cried blue murder
have since latched unto other news. We all can’t be bothered so long as
we are not immediately affected.
Every Nigerian is a Local
Government unto himself. PHCN does not give us light, no problem, we
purchase a generator, no pipe-borne water, we sink a borehole. Our
schools are in shambles, we send our children to private schools, no
qualified doctors at our public hospitals, we go to private hospitals or
for those that can afford it, they go abroad. Nobody is asking
questions. If others can’t afford it, it’s their problem. Yet we expect
all to be well.
Now the question is, for how long shall we
continue like this? Nigerians are the most travelled people. By the
Grace of God and the benevolence of my employers, I have been privileged
to travel to 10 countries and about 14 States in America.
Each
time I want to travel and I get to the airport, I am struck by the
mammoth crowd at the airport waiting to ‘check out’. 80% of those who
travel do not intend to return until they can ‘show’ that neighbour,
aunty, girlfriend, etc who thought they would never be up to any good.
How they intend to acquire the means to show these people is anybody’s
guess.
On airplanes and at International airports, I see top
government officials. Nigerians are the most travelled people on earth.
Now the question is why can’t we translate what we see abroad to
positive developments back home? Why are we condemned to wallow in
mediocrity and backwardness?
I came to Abuja in 1998. I joined
the Redeemed Christian Church of God, Desire of Nations Parish and I can
say that that was the beginning of the change in my life. I listened to
thought provoking messages by my Pastors, Ikenna Okeke, Odun Emeasealu,
Kingsley Uluocha, Austin Ekhakheme, etc. I had leaders in Okey
Chikwendu, Bona Nwosu, Bankole Okpashi, Rogers Nwoke, Tolu Jinadu, Mudi,
Femi Blaize, Okey Uche and the likes.
The church was a
conglomeration of young professionals who knew where they were going to.
Average age was 32 and everyone was up beat and positive. We stuck
together, shared in each other’s joys and pains and watched each other
grow. It was very easy to aspire to greatness because you could see
greatness all around you. Young professionals who were diligent in what
they did and who were all evidently headed for the top of their various
callings.
Now why can’t we replicate that spirit nationwide? Am I
being idealistic? You decide. Why can’t we uphold diligence, patience,
hardwork and perseverance as a means to nation-building? Each and every
youth has a chance at being an Oil Company Executive, a Bank Manager, or
a top executive somewhere.
I have friends schooling abroad. One
is in his final year reading Law and already, he has offers from top
Wall Street firms queuing up to sign him up on mouth watering offers
once he graduates. He is not thinking of Yahoo, he is not thinking of
being a drug courier. He is actually keeping them all waiting while he
concentrates on passing his bar exams!
Now we don’t all have to
work for firms when we leave school. I was in Paris in February for an
African Leadership Conference and the Guest Speaker was Mo Ibrahim of
Celtel. He traced Africa’s problem to our mode of education. He
advocated a paradigm shift in our University system from the current
professional curricula which prepares our graduates for the job market
to entrepreneurial approach to education which enables our students
aspire to start up a business when they leave school.
Now my
head is not in the sky. I know there are impediments to that approach in
Nigeria from the seemingly intractable power conundrum to the Olympian
climb of getting capital for new businesses but for as long as there are
people who have surmounted those challenges, we can make it.
I
have an NGO, Caring Heart Foundation, which I am using to pair young
students with successful executives and entrepreneurs in the society. I
believe we can all do something about this situation in our various
stations and together, we can contribute our own quota towards the
building of a truly great and forward-looking Nigeria.
Really insightful article into Northern culture and norms, from first-hand experience of living in the land and among the people, far from what many have been fed by parochial media men. Well done on the steps you've been taking to effect change in your environment. This is the way forward for Nigeria.
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