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A while
ago, I listened to a pastors song with the title Olorun se mi o, mo
si fe gba esan lowo re, meaning that God has offended me and I want to
take my revenge on Him. Often times, most of us feel that way about
the Omni-potent and Omni-present God of Judeo-Christian God because He
seems to be slow at acting and in punishing those that have offended
us. Moreover, our different religious leaders tell us that only heaven
and hell will be the difference between those who follow the Ten
Commandments and those who flout them. Unfortunately, the wicked among
us still believe that heaven and hell are all on this earth and we go
through them at different times of our existence. Religion has
unfortunately become a politician and a jobless Nigerians opium.
Some
so-called born again Christians and Muslins mix their outward religion
with those of African gods and the marabous for their survival in
office, to protect their jobs and to conveniently dupe fellow citizens
and the nation. They kidnap children for human sacrifice and they loot
the treasury with impunity because they have been assured by marabous
that no evil shall befall them. If these leaders believe in African
gods and marabous, why not place their hands on Odu Ifa, Sango, Oya, or
other book relating to African gods that dish out immediate justice for
offenses committed again such gods norms. Then it would not matter
whether any servant leader probes a corrupt leader or not because
therell be immediate retribution on any infringements. The only thing
that would have mattered is having
a political ideology that speaks to discontinue hurting citizens of
Nigeria economically, socially, and infrastructurally, an ideology that
can empower citizens to move toward a perfect union in theoretical,
sociological, and moral approach to human existence.
Many
of us at one time or another questioned God, I mean the Judeo-Christian
God, for allowing the wicked and their children to prosper and I know
God allows it. We also recognized that those that follow the rule set
forth in the Ten Commandments and even those in our nations
constitution and other commonly acceptable norms find themselves
disadvantaged.
In
Politics these days, many leaders come to us in sheeps clothing by
claiming to be born again Christians or Muslims, a political hyperbole
if you please. I recall that during the last election, Nigerians that
wanted to sell Yar Adua to the nation told us that among his many good
attributes, for instance, they told us that: 1) He is a devoted Muslim;
2) He goes out to buy his own cigarette; and 3) He would be he first
graduate to lead Nigeria. At that time, I argued that all the reasons
given were untenable because one never knows a person because
sycophants and power except one given by God or a god can change any
human. I have no doubt that our servant leader is religious but
religion that does show benevolence, that will not question why a
leader will embezzle funds meant to improve standard of living of
ordinary Nigerian citizens and one that does not help elevate humanity
is a useless religion.
Along
the three measurement matrices of Yar Adua given above, let us look at
the snapshot of our servant leaders performance since getting into
office. On being a good Muslim, which I have no doubt he is, I see no
difference between his own policies and those of non active Muslims or
Christians. For once, I expect the servant leader to listen to
majority of citizens and begin probing the past administrations
misappropriation of funds but without vindictiveness. I expected
President Yar Adua to have set up probe to begin probing leaders for
selling the nations infrastructures to themselves through cronyism,
for giving out billion dollar contracts that did not go through due
process and that were not executed, for not reducing the insecurity of
lives and properties, for not providing pain relief to citizens who
were crying for help while leaders were becoming 1000 times richer than
before they got into office. Yet, his slow action is eroding the
little faith citizens have in him. So, it seems that religion has
little or nothing to do with how a leader would perform in office.
On
simplicity, I have no doubt that our servant leader is a simple man and
very frugal in spending but this characteristics do not help to create
jobs, reduce corruption and improve physical and economic
infrastructures if he is unwilling to go against the grain. So far, it
seems, the servant leader is generally perceived to maintain the status
quo and keep the corruption afloat. I hope we are all wrong. It is
not being frugal with our money that is important but spending the
nations money on policies that will create jobs, improve healthcare
system, reconstruct our roads with available local and foreign
professionals and encouraging citizens to venture out to develop
Nigeria. Nigerians are capable of developing Nigeria just like
Indians, Chinese, Japanese, American or the Britons are capable of
developing ours and theirs.
Education
may have absolutely nothing to do with how a man performs as a leader
but it may help. The necessary experience a leader need are ability to
listen, find credible supporting cast (ministers and members of kitchen
cabinets) who can guide him through some uncharted waters. No matter
how negative we are about OBJs administration, he surely brought to
his administration professionals that performed. In deed, apart from
the usual corruption, some performed admirably well. So far, one
cannot point to any stellar performance of Mr. Servant leaders
ministers. All they are doing is getting fired, making unguarded and
undiplomatic/patriotic statements, protecting the Iboris, the OBJs, and
so on from being prosecuted from perceived misdeeds. So far, one
cannot point to any policy in education, energy, healthy, business,
road infrastructures other than reversing some of OBJs ill conceived
policies. The reversal of previous administrations policies is a
bipartisan display of political umbrage which may be considered by some
as a product of education.
While
President Yar Aduas 7 point agenda sounded attractive during his and
OBJs spearheaded national campaign, it is now sounding as an eloquent
expression of grace in extremis. Interjecting religion in politics is
deceptive at best and it is so wide to reasonable human beings, that to
perceive one politician as good, pure, and holy, is then of necessity
to reject the other as bad, corrupt, and wicked but all are joined
tightly in the umbilical chord of time but more importantly are equal
in the sight of the almighty be it Judeo Christian God, Mohammedian
doctrine or the African gods. An idiosyncratic politics which we are
conditioned to in Nigeria only appeals to changes in leadership without
changing the nations religiously divided, zonalized, and tribalized
politics. As long as our politics is politics of job seeking and not
of service, religion instead of uniting us in one accord, will always
divide us.
Our
religious dogma should be reducing corruption or outrightly eliminating
it for our common good. Let us assume that religion is at the core of
our politics, corruption wouldnt have taken a stronghold in our
politics. But then, it is time to recognize that
corruption is almost universal amongst the younger generation as it is
among aging generation because our current system is wicked, inhumane
because it does not protect either group against retirement headaches.
It is wicked because a leader that is perceived to have enriched
himself on the backs of citizens leaves office and gives a nation an
increased petrol price. Figuring out new citizens needs which may be
different from the old paradigm, political, sociological, moral and
rhetorical scheme may be a way of solving the corruption issue once and
for all. We must look for convertible politicians and religious
leaders who are capable of giving up their lives, like Martin Luther
King, Jr. for the likes of Barack Obama to later surface. We need new
leaders that can see the advantage of reducing corruption because we
cannot sit on the political fence without taken bold steps and hope
that time will heal wounds and corruption and status quo would resolve
themselves.
Some
say that the problems in Nigeria are well known to all citizens. They
accuse many of gratuitous preaching to the choir. The root of their odd and vitriolic crusade is to shut up all voices of descent and to crystallize a pseudo peace and tranquility. In
Nigeria we must continue to restate our problems in many ways:
philosophically, morally, religiously, culturally and hoping that some
of the preaching will sip into the skulls of the leaders or at least
allow the nation to seek new leaders that will help project a good
image for Nigeria.
In this black nation called Nigeria, a nation sprawling in corporate labyrinth that includes legions of tribes and competing
religions, religion must have no place in politics other than to prick
our leaders conscience to follow the universality that if we love our
neighbors we must not do what we do not want to be done unto us. This
simple affirmation of truth is the paradox at the heart of Martin Luther King, Jr.s "I Have a Dream" speech and must ring true in America as it rings true in Nigeria and among all religions and political parties. The
economies of the nations where our stolen resources are hidden are
collapsing, so what do we expect of our economy that is not nurtured to
good health? What then will become of our leaders ill conceived
overseas investment strategies in these economies? In this black nation called Nigeria where we cannot blame whites directly in some sense, all
genuine political leaders must see that "we are able to transform the
jangling discords of our nation into a beautiful symphony of
brotherhood." Let our religion propel us to act according to the
tenets of our different religious ideologies to do good for humanity
but not to play politics of religion and spiritual death wishing.

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Posted by Robot| 05.04.2008 07:42