Paper
Independence
What’s it we
were celebrating? How could we as a country continue to delude ourselves and
say we are independent or free? We all know that we are neither independent nor
free. All indexes of independence or freedom are completely absent in our
lives, in our ways and in our thoughts as a people. But nonetheless we continue
to make ourselves a laughing stock in the eyes of the international community,
especially the diplomats in our midst who are witnesses to our daily actions
and activities.
We were not
given any Independence
on October 1, 1960,
even though on that fateful day, ignorant young people like my humble self were
dancing our heads off all night on the streets of Ago Iwoye and throughout the
country. Our girlfriends with their heavy turban-like wigs and mini-skirts also
shared in the parade of idiots with us as we jazzed all night to the fast high
pitched tempo of Chubby Checker and the pulsating rhythm of IK Dairo and Roy Chicago. We were
drunk with ecstatic expectations.
Events since
that day have proved beyond reasonable doubt that what the cunning and ever
deceitful Colonial masters handed over to our inexperienced leaders was a mere
paper document. A piece of document that was not as worthy as a toilet paper.
We graduated
from full blown colonialism to wobbly neo-colonialism and from thence to a
carefully pre-programmed Civil War that would have put paid to the young
geographical contraption but for the good heart and good sense of young Yakubu
Gowon.
Since 1970,
it has been experiment upon experiment. And these recurring experiments
continued to ignore the basic fundamentals of nation building. You cannot grow
a country out of mere intent, or worse, through force of colonization.
There was
actually no Nigeria before the
so-called paper Independence
was handed over to leaders who were not born Nigerians. Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe,1904,
Chief Obafemi Awolowo, 1909, Sir Ahmadu Bello 1912, and even Chief Ladoke
Akintola, Mallam Aminu Kano,
were all born before Lugard’s wife dreamt up a name for the Niger river area.
The fact
that some one, out of administrative convenience, gives a label to several
diverse nationalities within his/her trading area does not make the nations in
the area answer to the label. Several nationalities in Africa are
comfortable with collective name of Africa ,
because that is the continent they all belong to, but when you call some one a
Sudanese, many nations in the enclave will contest the title and the label.
It is within
this context the nationalities in this contraption kept clamouring for a
conference where the marriage which Lugard contracted on their behalf, and
without their consent, should be discussed and agreement reached on terms
governing the union.
The
structure of this union is very faulty. The foundation is, to say the least,
baseless. And those who contrived this union knew that it would never work, and
they of course did NOT want it to work or succeed! Herein lies all the woes
that have befallen this place called Nigeria since the day of paper
independence.
As Dr Yemi
Farounbi is fond of saying, Nigeria
is like a dilapidated building about to collapse, and you assemble the best
painters in the world to give it a beautiful whitewash and paint.
There are
basic imperatives that we must satisfy before we can ever consider ourselves
free, and thereafter think of celebrating Independence .
The most important, and certainly non-negotiable, is the consideration of our
terms of union. This must be resolved if the country called Nigeria can ever
take off and get itself out of this perennial toddler stage. Do we want to be a
federation or a confederation? Do we want semi-independent regional entities
bound together only in matters of defence, common currency and common foreign
policy?
As earlier
hinted, this cardinal issue ought to have been settled before the Colonialists
left. But that would not be in their selfish interest.
I dare say
that all other issues would fall in line once we are able to resolve the
encompassing question of terms of the union and the structure of the entity
that evolves from the kind of union is agreed to.
Talking
specifically of freedom in its literary entirety, we have a long way to go. We
are far from free from ignorance, from diseases, from poverty, from
unemployment, from insecurity, from crass inequality in terms of equitable
distribution of the country’s resources, and far from freedom of thought.
One of the
great leaders of Africa had opined that the
greatest problem of the African is his mental colonisation. Of this, we may
write a whole 1000-page book to address the terrible problem. Nowhere is this
colonisation more visible than in the realm of religion. Nigerians are simply confused
and totally enslaved.
The most
insulting to the dignity and sanctity of our traditions and cherished cultures
is the nauseating practice of changing our forefathers’ noble and historic
names in the name of religion.
How can
anybody be ashamed of beautiful and meaningful names like Ogungbemi,
Ogundayisi, Ifaturoti, Ifalae, Esubiyi, Esuruoso, Osowemimo, Osoleye,
Osodimimu, Osoyimika, Osofoluwe, Osofowote, Osonaike, Osogbesan, Osonubi,
Osowale, Ifape, Ifasawe, Ifabunmi, and Ifagbemi?
The fact is, THERE ARE NO MUSLIM NAMES. THERE
ARE NO CHRISTIAN NAMES. There are Arab names and there are Jewish names. The
name Mohammed had existed thousands of years before Prophet Mohammed was born.
And there had been many Emmanuels and Jesuses before the birth of the chosen
One. Worse still, the so-called Arab and Jewish names don’t even come to us in
their original form. They have all been anglicized or Yorubanised or Igbonised.
Albert thus becomes Aliba in Okirika, and Mohammed becomes Mamudu, Momodu,
Momoh, Memet, depending on the level of corruption.
Nigerian Compass
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