The story has been told often enough and is now old: A response from
Chief Orji Uzor Kalu to the recent forced removal of some Nigerians from
one part of their country to another vexed and caused Chief Femi Fani
Kayode to write a series of essays, one of which he termed, 'The Bitter
Truth about the Igbos'.
That the response was from his 'friend and
brother' and was merely to aver that Lagos belonged to no one would
appear to warrant nothing more than a private telephone call between the
two men. Instead we got a tribal fire-fight after Fani Kayode's essays
squared 'the Yorubas' off against 'the Igbos'.
I am reluctant to
enter a conversation uninvited especially one I feel has exceeded
certain boundaries of propriety. But I simply cannot remain silent at
this treatment meted out to what FK repeatedly as 'the Igbos. With that
term, oft repeated in his essay he has taken millions of his compatriots
and mine, millions of people from every imaginable walk of life,
wherever in the world they may live, or whatever relationship or
association they may have with the statements and assumptions made in
the essay, irrespective of whatever else may define them as human
beings, and collecting them together as a unit, tongue-lashed them, as
though with a 'koboko.'
Estimates are that there are now 171
million Nigerians. About a fifth of these are Igbo. Thus, Fani Kayode's
essay and its 'the Igbos' can have as its ambition no less than to
encompass the entire 30 million or so of them alive in Nigeria and
across the world. And with the historical ambit described therein he
seems to have included their forebears also. This is a violation, of
stupendous and unacceptable proportions, of the uniqueness and
individuality of each human being and the dignity inherent thereof. That
dignity, the according of which to each, is the first law of humanity,
after only which justice now becomes relevant or necessary.
I will
seek to speak here more about ideas than about people or events. Not
for Eleanor Roosevelt's maxim 'Great minds discuss ideas; average minds
discuss events; small minds discuss people.' I have read and heard great
minds hold forth and I am quite comfortable with the realization that I
am not one. Rather, it is because I have innumerable times in my life
arrived at and held firm conclusions about people and events that I
subsequently found out were wrong or severely limited. Anyone can read a
history book, or write one, even, and I want to be careful with things
about which I do not have perfect or complete knowledge. As the
Christian mystic Meister Eckhart once said, 'the hand that will write
the true thing must first learn to erase'.
But first to some
points from the essay: If even they were substantiated, comments made by
one man representing Enugu at some council or the other in 1945 cannot
be held as evidence that a 'they' (the Igbos') were 'the ones that FIRST
(emphasis his) introduced tribalism into southern politics'. The verbal
lathe that turns a 'they' out of the actions of one man is a
dehumanizing one and deserves to be abandoned. It robs the humanity of
every Igbo person other than the supposed speaker of those words to pay
for the convenience of a point.
And in the same vein, the 'Igbo
people' never carried out a failed coup, as is asserted in the essay,
referring to the first coup of January, 1966. The coup plotters were not
delegated to do so by the wider community. And an 'Igbo Coup' as Fani
Kayode refers, would have required millions of more participants' names
than the 25 names listed in the essay.
There are many more
generalizations and scapegoating in the essay but my purpose here is not
to debate Fani Kayode's essay. It is simply to condemn the widespread
practice of taking a community of Nigerians and excoriating or insulting
them as a group for actions which they are not to a person culpable of.
Or the practice in which behaviour or traits of one sort or another are
ascribed to entire communities or groups. That it is convenient to do
so does not make it right.
All societies are unique but I submit
that the nature and degree of diversity and plurality that exists in our
Nigerian society is without precedent or equal: Nigeria is the biggest
society in the world and in the history of mankind that has an equal
number of Moslems and Christians. Papua New Guinea 's 830 languages make
that country arguably the most diverse on earth, but they are spoken by
just 7 million people. India , with its teeming cultural diversity and
its more than 1 billion people speak 438 languages. Nigerians, with our
515 languages spoken by 171 million citizens easily ranks our society
the highest in the world on a plurality- diversity matrix. No country in
the world with more people speaks as many languages.
With this
complexity and diversity come a great requirement of care and
reasonableness in the way we talk to, relate with and refer to one
another, especially in public spaces. A care and discipline greater even
than practised in other countries. Rather than being a reason for
strife, our diversity is a greater imperative to work harder to stay
aligned. Along with wisdom, we have to acquire and evince not only the
unity with which to manage our diversity, but the maturity also.
We
feel we know one another's history and have seen each other in our
houses and kitchens. We have learned to sneer at one another because we
have peered into each other's backyards and bedrooms. Familiarity breeds
contempt, after all.
But need it be so? That the truth is said to
be bitter does not mean everything bitter is the truth. The
recklessness with which many of our commentators and leaders speak about
and act towards other Nigerians is irresponsible and has been at the
heart of our issues as a nation. The most important lesson we can learn
from history is how to prevent it from becoming destiny. Our history
tells us that it is easier to destroy bridges than to build them. But
that it costs inestimably more to wage war than to sustain peace.
The
New Testament's 'Parable of the Faithful Servant' cautions that to whom
much is given, much is required. And the Quran's Surah al-Hujurat says
'O mankind! We created you from a single (pair) of a male and a female,
and made you into nations and tribes, that ye may know each other (not
that ye may despise (each other)'. I believe there lies the great
challenge of our society, and the greatest contribution that we can make
to the world, in showing all how the most diverse country on this
continent of diversity can live together in amity.
I am drawn back
to Fani Kayode's essay in which I read these words with dismay: 'It
does not come so easily to those who never had any history at all and
who never even had monarchs or structured, properly-organised hierachial
societies that placed value on tradition and culture'. This is a most
painful statement. How can it reasonably be said that the Igbos (or any
group of people in this world) are without a history or that their
society do not place value on tradition and culture.
'The Fulanis
are uneducated and the Hausas are violent'. 'The Yorubas cannot be
trusted or are loud'. 'The Igbos love money and are crude'. We take
individual human traits and tar entire groups and communities amongst us
with them. Yet, many American leaders use principles such as 'decency',
justice' and 'hard work' in their rhetoric, appropriating universal
values and presenting them as 'American' to unite and inspire their
society. It is wrong to ascribe traits or behaviours to a group that the
speaker must know are not individually held by all in that group. That
is prejudice and the evidence against it is stark and unassailable. Even
children do not automatically take on characteristics of their parents.
'The acorn does not fall far from the oak', the old chestnut holds, but
it falls.
Last week marked the 50th year anniversary of Martin
Luther King's 'I have a Dream' speech, the title of which is taken from a
simple sentence of enduring profundity: 'I have a dream that my four
little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be
judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their
character'. Half a century on, his country has made great strides in
that regard not even at all by electing Barack Obama, but by
promulgating and enshrining the Civil Rights Act, and vigorously
dispensing censure to those who violate it in either spirit or letter.
Fifty
years on in our experience as an independent nation, human beings are
still tarred and feathered for no other reason than 'crimes' of
ethnicity and provenance. The stereotypes with which we straitjacket one
another have an insidious effect on our society and the way in which we
communicate with another.
There is little point listening to
another when all that is needed to know about them is to know that they
are Idoma, Bini or Igala or from Kafanchan or Modakeke.
Overly
negative images conjured up and reinforced easily produce stereotypes
which become tinder for hatred and violence. At a Kukah Centre
Roundtable in July, Bishop Mathew Hassan Kukah spoke about how genocide
and explosions of violence are preceded by a shift in nomenclature.
About
how Hitler described the Jews as 'vermin' and in Rwanda, the Tutsis
were called 'cockroaches', just as the Ogoni Four were described as
'vultures'. According to him, once these perceptions are internalized
and the violence begins, you are not killing human beings, but vermin,
cockroaches and vultures. The Kukah Centre, his new initiative, has
resolved to take on the issue of hate speech in our society and this
could not be more topical.
I am a Yoruba man and a Nigerian. The
former denotes my tribe and the latter my country. Both are important to
me. The Yoruba language is my most treasured possession however my
citizenship of Nigeria is of more primacy to me than my being Yoruba.
That I cannot renounce being Yoruba but can my Nigerian citizenship mean
to me that the latter requires more of a commitment from me. Just as
couples enter into marriages that acquire more immediacy to them than
the families into which they were born, we come together as a nation so
that we can be and achieve more than we otherwise would. I have not
given up my 'kin' but simply expanded the notion of that word and the
ambit it describes to a tribe called Nigeria .
Still, Yoruba and
Nigerian confer personal identities, not definitions. I am a human being
and my mind is mine and it defines me. It is not a Yoruba mind, nor a
Nigerian mind, and my ambition, my desires and my abilities and actions
are neither Yoruba nor Nigerian- they are Dipo Salimonu's. I am the
aggregate of my experiences and the unique formative factors which have
influenced me beyond my ability to know or define. Factors which no one
alive or dead could ever replicate and which make me unique.
I
have two siblings and though we lived together and grew up in the same
house we are completely different people. Different so that I cannot
imagine one word or trait that could successfully describe all three of
us. Yet, in our society today we seem easily to find behaviours and
traits to describe all in groups comprising thousands or millions of
human beings. And to easily hold these stereotypes and prejudices to be
sacrosanct even as we are confronted every day by the logic that they
cannot be true and evidence that they are not true, We don't see or
register this evidence, sadly, not because we are blind, but because our
eyes are closed. And it as wrong to tar a 'tribe' as it is to laud one.
I chuckle at how many people delight in accepting positive stereotypes,
while rejecting any negative ones, as though the sweet alone, and never
the bitter, can be true. All blanket 'tribal', 'religious or 'regional'
identities are flimsy and porous ones, and display intellectual
laziness.
I have long marvelled at the preciseness with which
mathematicians apply the term 'at least one'. It applies to situations
where existence can be established but it is not known how to determine
the total number of solutions. There is an enlightening joke about it in
'Men of Mathematics' the E.T Bell classic. The story goes that there
are three men on a train leaving England for Scotland . One, an
economist, another, a logician and the third is a mathematician. As they
cross the border into Scotland they see a brown cow in a field standing
parallel to the train and the window that is their vantage point. Says
the economist, 'Look, the cows in Scotland are brown.' The logician
replies, 'No. There are cows in Scotland of which at least one is
brown.' Then, the mathematician: 'No. There is at least one cow in
Scotland , of which one side appears to be brown.'
To me the
promise and beauty of Nigeria is best illustrated by a simple point. The
aforementioned Bishop Mathew Hassan Kukah is the Bishop of Sokoto
Diocese, and an Ikulu from Southern Kaduna . Yet this man has done more
for me and been a better friend to me than virtually every Yoruba alive.
He is a mentor, an older brother and a friend and one I have done
little to deserve. And I see him do the same to countless others from
across the country.
This is a gift Nigeria has given to me,
personally, a gift enhanced by the promise that amongst more of its
citizens lie the potential for relationships as enriching. And my
gratitude to Nigeria in return is the decision that I have made to
extend to all its citizens the ties that would seem to bind me only to
other Yoruba. Not out of magnanimity but because I have learned that in
times of need the man that comes and proves that he is your 'brother'
has done little, but that the one who proves that he is your 'friend'
has done a lot. Birth certificates proffered do not provide succour. But
solidarity does.
Walt Rostow's book, 'Five Stages of Economic
Growth' contains an interesting idea having little to do with economics.
He says that when a child is born, the cot is its entire universe but
within months it ventures out of it and the room becomes its universe.
And then the house, the street, and then the neigbourhood in steady
progression. Gradually, with time and new experiences its idea of the
world expands but that this process stops in different people at
different times. In my view there is a psychological curb in many of us
that stops the expansion of our world at those that speak our language
and eat our food and know our taboos and our ways. It is a natural
phenomenon but that a thing is natural does not mean it is right.
I
believe that we can achieve a modern and prosperous society only when
we participate in the economic and political affairs of our country as
individuals and not as tribal blocs or Efiks, Junkun, Yoruba or Hausas.
Citizens, not tribes, are the unit of Democracy. Apart from being a lie
and unsustainable (no tribe in Nigeria is a monolithic) to assume we
think, act and die as one, eliminating tribal activism removes the
inbuilt inequities which members of the more populous tribes enjoy at
the expense of members of smaller ones. And it would reduce drastically
the noise and effectiveness of our ethnic merchants and entrepreneurs.
To
be termed a 'leader' in Nigeria today, I need little qualification
other than to be able to tell 'my people' that it is our 'turn' and that
we have been 'marginalised'. We see and hear voices such as these in
the newspapers and on television every day and little wonder that they
push no actual ideas outside of resenting some other tribe or community
or strident ethnic chauvinism.
Enough is enough. There can be no
more asinine pastime today than debate over members of which tribe were
the first or are the most to go to school. Men and women achieve deeds
of distinctions because of the application of their minds and
determination, not because they are of this or that tribe. And claiming
the efforts of individuals as 'tribal glory' is drawing a false solace.
Soyinka's Nobel Prize is his, and evidence of his talent, not that of
'the Yoruba's' or mine, just as Dangote's wealth is his, and evidence of
his industry, not that of the Fulanis.
Other than a national
conversation about who was the first to read medicine or about who owns
what percentage of Lagos maybe we should discuss instead the fact that
that we are the country in the world with the highest number of children
out of school. According to UNESCO findings, we have 20 per cent of the
world's total of 57 million, and twice as many as Pakistan , the
country with the second highest number.
I also suggest we debate
more innovative ways in which to manage diversity than by the rotation
of positions and offices between zones and tribes as though playing a
game of musical chairs. There are good and understandable reasons for
the practice but maybe we ought to discuss whether these outweigh the
benefits of a meritocracy.
It is not a coincidence that I have
taken for this title the name of an organization/movement convened by
young Nigerians, including Chude Jideonwo. He and his friends decided
that they had enough of the practises and poison that have been fed us
as national pap. The public space in the Nigeria they have been
bequeathed is one marked and marred by rank suspicion and hostility.
One
in which national and inter-communal discourse is conducted largely
through invective, vitriol and epithets. Even former Heads of State are
not exempted, engaging in public spats or hurling abuse at one another.
Headlines in the national newspapers scream daily with personal abuse
for the government from opposition politicians. And in a dispiriting
cycle, the President's spokespersons reply with further personal insults
and abuse. I do not need to cite names, simply read the headlines of
tomorrow's newspapers.
And then this war that just will not die: A
certain aspect of our history as a nation is that decades ago a war
between Nigerians ensued after matters had been decided by leaders at
the time. In the lead-up to the war and in its aftermath, many of our
leaders said despicable and incendiary things about other communities.
It does not mean that they were right then or right forever. The purpose
and evidence of progress is the extent to which we exchange former
totems and assumptions and practices for more evolved and enduring ones.
Last
month's Ethiopian Airlines flight to Enugu was the first international
flight to the South East region of Nigeria since the war ended.
Reasonable minds can agree or disagree on whether this interlude was
part of a continuing war of attrition against those held to be legatees
of Biafra for waging a war that was lost, or whether another example of
how we are sometimes slow to do the right things. What cannot be
gainsaid is that Igbos are a necessary, valued and integral part of our
country, as are all communities that constitute it. We are a society of
human beings all with each possessing attendant human strengths and
frailties and idiosyncrasies. And we are a collection of communities
however we define them. Though these communities cannot leave without
declaring secession, we are not together to be insulted or scapegoated,
or to have our material and existential well- being threatened, either
as citizens, families or communities or groups. That is not why we are
together as a country.
Chief Fani Kayode, you owe the Igbo people
an apology. If we persist in speaking to one another as you did in your
essay no power on earth can keep us together as a country. You dragged
more into the mud than had caused you offense. In doing that you were as
wrong as those you recently wrote have threatened and abused members of
your family members over this issue for words you authored, and not
they.
At this point as a nation, we need substantive debate about
the fundamental and existential issues to our collective well-being and
prosperity, conducted with civility, and not words and actions that
divide and reduce us. You do not have a measure to determine which has
been the most hospitable tribe to whom.
The idea and ideal of
Nigeria has best been sustained not by the carrot of crude oil proceeds
or the stick of Nigerian Army weaponry but by the countless acts of
material and moral kindness extended and reciprocated across our great
nation by neighbours, colleagues and strangers.
'The Igbos are the
least close, the most distant and the least familiar with our customs
and our ways', you wrote. This was the unkindest cut of all. On behalf
of all the Igbos who belie these words, Igbos I personally know and have
worked with in my life, or that I have as great friends; or those that I
know have entered into marriages and/or lifelong and great friendships
with Yorubas; or simply the countless that I have heard chatting away
comfortably or haltingly in Yoruba, cracking proverbs with ease or
demolishing them, or that I have seen resplendent in 'geles', or tossing
'agbada' sleeves over shoulders, I ask that God forgive you for this
cruel statement. It is for this alone that I wrote this overlong piece,
Chief Fani Kayode. I could not remain silent at them, lest that be
consent. There can be no 'least close' and 'more distant' and 'least
familiar' communities in any country that deserves to remain as one.
Chief
Fani Kayode, the tone and words of your essay were hateful. They
constituted hate speech as is defined: hate speech (noun) 'speech that
attacks a person or group on the basis of race, religion, gender, or
sexual orientation'. Your words have spurred attacks not only on
yourself and your family, but those you sought to defend. You cannot
defend the Yoruba or Lagos . You have neither the equipment nor the
authority to do so. And you cannot defend what is not under threat. An
apology would not reduce you if even you deserve such, for reducing
millions of human beings to epithets of scorn. You cannot know the
'truth' about the Igbo people, simply because it is not given to any one
human being to know the 'truth' about millions of other human beings.
One
last word: Along with the Yoruba and Nigerian tribes I seek membership
of yet another tribe. A tribe of people that seek to see past the limit
of concepts such as Yoruba, or Itsekiri and Nigeria or Muslim and
Christian and recognize instead that we are all human beings and the
children of the One that has no limit. A tribe of people who seek to be
inspired and not to denigrated and want to believe that our lives and
the society we have formed have a meaning and purpose beyond and far
greater than the prerogatives of the wealthy and the grab for power by
politicians and their god-children. But not to alienate, this tribe
includes certain members of the elite, and politicians also.
It is
not a political party or a movement. It does not have a name, or even
yet a cause and still less a means. But it has a language, Nigeria 's
516th. It is the language and tolerance and temperance. The language
that speaks with restraint and respect for all others.
The
language of 'giving the benefit of the doubt' and the mathematician's
'at least one'. A tribe of Nigerians who, as Jideonwo described in an
essay earlier this year, evince 'the courage to be reasonable.
This
tribe is probably more numerous than any other in Nigeria . The irony
is that there are indications that Messrs Fashola and Obi are members.
But I do not know either of them and it is not for me to select members.
I seek to be a member, not a leader or spokesman. As the Gospel
according to Mathew says, 'By their fruits ye shall know them.'
Chief
Fani Kayode, more than being directed at you or to take you on, the
thrust of this essay is to provide an alternate view-point to matters
broached in yours. I do not know you and though you spoke as a bigot
this may have been more the quick rush of anger than the slow burn of
hatred. But this is not for me to judge. My views are my own and I have
expressed them here not to make converts or enemies. It is your fulsome
right to disagree with me. If you do I cannot help but find apt the
Quran's simple instruction to those that disagree with its message, 'To
you be your Way, and to me mine'.
Dipo Salimonu is an Abuja-based Entrepreneur.
0 comments:
Post a Comment