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Where do we go from here?

Where do we go from here?
Big trouble, as more Nigerians sink deeper into poverty
A map of Nigeria

By Donu Kogbara

 

The following article was written last week by Aduke Gomez, an old friend of mine and a Lagosian. I’m sharing it with you because it is beautifully written and struck a chord in me:

For their souls dwell in the house of tomorrow, which you cannot visit, not even in your dreams…For life goes not backward nor tarries with yesterday…” – Khalil Gibran.

I have watched as my beloved Lagos – a city by the sea known for its tolerant and welcoming attitude to strangers from both far and near – has been reduced to a city under siege.

Even without the horror that scrolls minute by minute across the tiny phone screen that I clutch in my hand, I have heard the gunshots myself long into the night and seen and smelt the smoke of a burning high court – fitting in its symbolism.

READ ALSOFG begins nationwide distribution of 1m free meters in Kano, Kaduna, Lagos 

Why did we get here? And how do we mourn the dead, rehabilitate the injured – both the visible and the far more insidious invisible injuries, rebuild the destroyed and looted physical assets, and above all memorialise these events so they never happen again?

It started as all good stories must with an intention – an unarguably reasonable request by young people that they would no longer accept being the subject of extra judicial killings by a police unit that appeared to have gone rogue.

The allegations of horror stories of extortion, of missing persons, of rape, of torture chambers began to emerge. As the request became a demand – the young people began to gather.

They organised their peaceful protests – displayed their demands on placards, fed the hungry, provided legal aid, sang songs and danced, took photos to update their social media pages and incredibly cleaned up after themselves.

All this to begin again and again the following day with unflagging determination and energy. Their numbers began to swell – they came out in their thousands all over the country. They met in person and mobilised online utilising all the digital skills that to them are innate while we stare in wonder at their manipulation of that virtual world.

Then on the 14th day of their peaceful protest in the evening of October 20, 2020 as they sat singing the national anthem and waving the green-white-green flag they were attacked – in the dark.

They didn’t stand a chance. How many? The numbers like the allegations of the perpetrators and the denials swirl – amorphous and dangerous. Whatever the intent of that attack this on-going terrible fallout cannot have been envisaged.

These brave young people are not of the persuasion of their parent’s generation, nor of their grandparents’ generation. Each generation that goes before has its own beliefs and values formed by the extant societal demands and pressures at that singular moment in time.

Each of these earlier generations when young have made their own demands of the authorities, staged dissent and faced up to the might of the State – from tax protests against the colonial authorities to university student protests during the military era to demands for civilian and democratic rule.

The difference in this current crop of young people is that they have not grown up in an atmosphere of fear of people in uniforms.

They have to a large degree been able to form and express their own opinions without having to couch them in hidden language or utter them in secret. This lack of societal repression has emboldened them and will allow them to continue to press their demands.

We have to respect the fact that the last 20 years of democratic rule has nurtured young people who are confident, opinionated and well informed.   Their parents’ generation has had to realise that successful modern parenting is not achieved solely by the use of the issuance of orders for immediate compliance and the threat or actuality of brute physical punishment but has to involve elements of discussion and compromise.

In the same way, society now has to embrace this lesson and realise that these young people deserve to have their voices heard, their opinions respected and their suggestions implemented if we are to forge our way out of this impasse.

 

FOOD FOR THOUGHT

In Purple Hibiscus, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s award-winning first novel, my favourite character is Ifeoma, a feisty, golden-hearted academic and aunt to the main protagonist, Kambili.

Ifeoma loses her job at Nsukka University for being openly opposed to the tyranny being inflicted by a military regime; and she’s forced to flee to America…from where she writes to Kambili, as follows:

“There are people who think that we cannot rule ourselves because the few times we tried, we failed, as if all the others who rule themselves today got it right the first time. It is like telling a crawling baby who tries to walk, and then falls back on his buttocks, to stay there. As if the adults walking past him did not all crawl once.”

Chimamanda was only 26 – and therefore laudably mature beyond her years – when she put those wise words in Auntie Ifeoma’s mouth.

But Chimamanda is now all growed-up and 43; and, given that nearly two long decades have elapsed since she and her charming, cerebral fictional creation urged us to put the multiple failures of our leaders into perspective, some of us are running out of patience and are sick and tired of tolerating excuses for Nigeria’s arrested development.

As far as I am concerned, this nation is no longer a bumbling baby that can be forgiven for ignorance-driven screw ups that occur while it is struggling to figure out how to acquire sophisticated adult skills.

As far as I’m concerned, this nation is more like a bolshy, toxic teenager who has the brains to shine but deliberately makes bad choices and therefore deserves a few seriously hot slaps!

And it’s not just leaders who are to blame for Nigeria’s terrible woes, given that leaders are not aliens who descend from Jupiter or Mars…and are our relatives, friends and acquaintances.

Some leaders even start off being poorer and less powerful than those they wind up oppressing. And WE – yes, WE the complaining followers!!! – frequently allow and actively encourage them to massively misbehave when they rise to the top of the greasy pole.

When Nigerians have TRULY had enough of lousy leadership, they will act accordingly and won’t give up the fight for a better deal until superior leadership has emerged by force or democratic consensus.

Until then, good luck and best wishes to us all!

 

The post Where do we go from here? appeared first on Vanguard News.


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