Give me a nation, so I can die. Print E-mail
Thursday, 10 August 2006


Patriotism is something else when defined by controllers of power. The question of dying for one’s nation in the name of patriotism seems very laudable. But wait a minute, who really wants to die for Nigeria? Why would anyone die for a country that can’t bury its dead? Why should anyone live in a country only to think about dying in it? Why should your country kill you? Why should anyone die for Nigeria, when we never really lived in it?

I have not traveled the world to see for myself, but I have read and watched documentaries about patriots of other countries, right from when I was little I always imagined how it was to go to war and fight for a good cause, just like the Americans, Russians, Chinese and all other ‘unlucky’ countries that have had to engage in war and those with a passion for change that rebelled against their evil governments and lost their lives in the course of fighting for their beliefs and convictions. Most countries of the world have had such people and they celebrate these souls with so much passion. What baffles me is that; my country Nigeria can’t boast of any. What happened? Is it because we never fought a war of liberation? Or the fact that we gained our independence without bloodshed?

I do respect our past leaders who strove diligently to make Nigeria great, the likes of Sardauna, Awolowo, Nnamdi Azikiwe, Gen. Murtala Mohammed, but these people had their short comings that haven’t permitted them to fit into universal definition of heroes, several years after they died, they have remained heroes in their various corners of the nation. Why, I do not know! May be, now, we are finding out that they possibly compromised too much on principles and methods of taking Nigeria away from the white man and moving it to a great nation. As a caveat, I have no right to complain about their roles, I have not done anything for Nigeria. I am not qualified to assault their credentials and I would rather worship them than import a hero from Cuba or India.

Why are there no patriots and by the way, who are patriots? And where have the patriots all gone to, in a nation of 150 million people? Why does patriotism not exist in this place?

Patriotism in Nigeria is first towards ethnic and tribal groups and then later to an unjust cause of sycophantism or cronyism. Tribal identity is very important to Nigerians, even when the tribes-big-man does no good towards his people. There is always a false sense of belonging. We belong to a tribe when we can’t find a class, when we find a class; we thrash the tribe but keep it intact in case we need it? We belong in a religion, even when we don’t know God. Today we belong to neither God nor a nation!

When would a true patriot rise up?

Where is the patriot? Where is the man or woman in this nation who believes in the country and its people, if not Nigeria, at least the common humanity of the inhabitants of this geographical space? Where is the professional who respects his calling? Where is the law enforcement officer who doesn’t want to subvert the law? Where is the public trust holder who doesn’t want to rip off the public? Where is the religious leader who doesn’t want to play on God’s intelligence? Where is the traditional ruler who doesn’t want to sell his soul for a pittance? Where is the youth who doesn’t want to live big without lifting an arm? Where is the civil society that doesn’t want to pursue a cause because it is popular and international? Where are the journalists who just want report the truth without fear or profit?

Where the one who is not doing what he is doing for the sake of a big payday?

We Nigerians feel we don’t owe our country much, because Nigeria has not really done anything for us that may be true. We have totally given up on our country; I believe that is why Nigeria might also have given up on us. Imagine if you gave up on a friend, you don’t expect them to stick around, do you?

That is the same with our nation, a lot of Nigerians have fled in search of a place that appreciates their worth, where they can express and develop their potentials, where the pay is good and the institutions and public infrastructure are in superb conditions, all the good things in life Nigeria could not and cannot give them. Those that haven’t fled, live somewhere outside of Nigeria, even if only through fantasy!

No doubt; things could get really frustrating in here, but it could be better if we try to rectify the problem in anyway we can, rather than leaving it to the next person who cannot afford to get out of the country. With the hope that we can breeze into Nigeria armed with another nation’s passport and citizenship, looking for respect from the ones that couldn’t make it through the canaries.

I have been to the barracks recently, the way Nigerian soldiers live in style, thank God; we are not fighting any war soon, I doubt if any soldier will want to die in battle and leave behind fleet of cars and fat bank accounts. If soldiers are not patriots wonder who is. If Ambassadors can’t sing the national anthem, I wonder who would be able to!

I don’t wonder any more why we do not have patriots in Nigeria, I love this country, but I don’t think I am ready to die for its sake, may be this contradicts the substance of this article, but it is never going to be alright to die for a wrong idea. I am yet to understand whether this nation belongs to us or we simply belong to its owners. If this country is owned by a few of its citizens, people you and I know are shadow criminals, and then it is true that we are all enslaved. If we are enslaved, then this place is a plantation. In asking to be a patriot I didn’t want to die for a plantation owner. I meant to fight and I die for a nation. …


Halima Sadiya Mamud.
Political Science Dept, University of Abuja


RobotRobot is offline 
Villager

avatar
 # 1

Posted by Robot| 10.08.2006 23:48

Reply Quote



emjemj is offline 
Villager

avatar
 # 2


I don’t wonder any more why we do not have patriots in Nigeria, I love this country, but I don’t think I am ready to die for its sake, may be this contradicts the substance of this article, but it is never going to be alright to die for a wrong idea. I am yet to understand whether this nation belongs to us or we simply belong to its owners. If this country is owned by a few of its citizens, people you and I know are shadow criminals, and then it is true that we are all enslaved. If we are enslaved, then this place is a plantation. In asking to be a patriot I didn’t want to die for a plantation owner. I meant to fight and I die for a nation. …




Wayo---chei---mallama Halima----na why u change ur mind say u no wan die for our nation:biggrin: :biggrin: Haba i bin think say it will be very patriotic if u put down ya life oooo.

Anyways--- i just dey pull ur legs, nobody fit die for a beautiful bride, talk less of an ugly one like nigeria wey the cabals and visible criminals dem don hijack from us...so na which nation we go give u now:biggrin:

Posted by emj| 11.08.2006 00:08

Reply Quote



BiawazoBiawazo is online 

avatar
 # 3

Malama Mamud:

Sannu ki!

Abeg, leave matter for Mathias! All this our so-so pontification is empty air. Chaff! No one wants to die for any nation; it's all a matter of can't-help, abi? All the rag-heads and ditto-heads messing up our world are screwed up tight by militant mad mullahs -- jihadists-- and conniving crazy crusaders promising dumb dreams in laughable la-la land. Oh yes, religion! You guessed right!

Okay, take AREWA nation and run; that should cut it... especially with oil in the Chad Basin and with Sharia to keep the Talakwa at bay... not necessarily at Takwa Bay!

BTW, don't do anything drastic; there are no 77 studs waiting... oops, 77 virgins, I mean...

O dikwa too risky :)



Ms. Bialla Wachi Zoluwa

Posted by Biawazo| 11.08.2006 03:51

Reply Quote



MuttiMutti is offline 
Villager

avatar
 # 4


I have been to the barracks recently, the way Nigerian soldiers live in style, thank God; we are not fighting any war soon, I doubt if any soldier will want to die in battle and leave behind fleet of cars and fat bank accounts. If soldiers are not patriots wonder who is. If Ambassadors can’t sing the national anthem, I wonder who would be able to!




Dear Halima,

Good article. now that I have fufilled the mandatory protocol........

Your visit to the barracks caught my attention and you saying that soldiers live in style?!! Which barracks did you visit and what part? In what style did the soldiers live? in a style reminiscent of hogs no doubt but at least those ones have the excuse of being penned into a cage and cannot really help themselves. If i would not be beaten blacl and blue for taking photos I would provide evidence of our barracks in Nigeria and no wonder the men in uniform treat us like they do.

Gone are those days when the platoon leader would go to inspect living quaters to ensure that they are spick an span. The platoon leader himself lives in a squalour and has no justifiable rights for correcting anyone even if he could recognise what should be and how it should be.

You visited a barracks in Nigeria and could breath? The stench hits you first no jokes, then the lean-to shacks that they call homes within which more than 12 adults live most times. The cooking, the toilet and all, is done within these structures or in their vicinity. and the farm animals kept to augment families income feed from efflunce and other waste around the shacks, while leaving behind their own waste.

The ones that truly live in style are those that have been quartered in what used to be model one-room apartment blocks left behind by the colonists. In these, the walls are breaking down from years of sewage seeping through to the outside and flowing freely in streams not unlike the niger delta in microcosm with puddles that children play in. What used to be bachelor apartments now house families and their extensions so naturally the wives need to have micro-trades that have yielded the mammy markets and extensions which now spill into major roads. and cause obstruction.

Our barracks, police, army, airforce, navy, immigrations, customs are festering megaslums. The people cannot like living like that so they cannot be said to be living in style. If those people have a fleet of cars or fat bank accounts they would not have to take in tenants or become involved in armed robbery and such like. They may not being dying from wars but they are most certainly dying from disease. Those people cannot be in any shape to carry out their normal duties (whatever that is beyond shaking you and I down for bribes and acting as goons for anyone that can pay) not to mention stay in shape to fight a war. I am sure many are looking for money to pay bribes that will get them drafted into the UN Peace Keeping Force so that they can at least get to live a little even if they may pay the price of dying or becoming maimed fighting another nations war.

Posted by Mutti| 11.08.2006 05:48

Reply Quote



kvin33kvin33 is offline 
Villager

avatar
 # 5

"Nobody is anybody till somebody loves you", to paraphrase a line from a song by the great singer Frank Sinatra. Likewise, If I may borrow from that: No Nation is A Nation till her subjects will stand to her defence, in the face of certain peril. I don't think we know how to be patriots of Nigeria. The "Great Men" of the past, Sarduana, Awolowo etc, were patriots to their regions without apologies. Their students, the current crop of leaders, know of no other form of patriotism, except ethnic patriotism. Yet they speak of One Nigeria!

It is up to us, the next generation to break this trend, to reject the false comfort of ethnic patriotism, we cannot remain hostages to their past; the dishonest politics of a useless generation. We must build a common future across ethnic lines, across religious lines with respect, justice and liberty. A lot of them will say, "it can't be done", "you don't know Nigeria", well, I tell them, Sadly, we grew up to know your Nigeria, my hope is that my children will know a different Nigeria, A Nigeria worth defending, A Nigeria worth dying for.

Halima, Never stop writing!

Posted by kvin33| 11.08.2006 06:12

Reply Quote



akuluounoakuluouno is offline 
Villager

avatar
 # 6

Dear Ms Mamud,

Who sai? We are patriotic in matters that bother on corruption. Recall the metaphor about Nigeria as a beautiful virgin who has been raped beyond belief. Crude and bitter, but that is what truth is supposed to be. Those rapists are the kind of patriots we have all been turned into.
I always shudder with fear whenever I see the patriotism being exhibited by the Hizbullah's and Israelis of this world. Senseless. Reminds one of that by Biafrans and Nigerians before. In view of that I have decided to offer this prayer to God. "Thank God that we are not a nation and that we are not patriotic. If not for you dear Almighty God, they would have called me or my son up on our mobile phone to go to the battle front one day like the Hizbullah's and the Israeli's and we would have been killed before our time for no reason. Thank you for making me and other Nigerians cowards because from the house of the coward we will point out the grave of heroes in Israel et al to our grandchildren. Thank you also for setting up the UN the global maker of peace and for their successful ceding of Bakassi, our compatriots, fish and oil to Cameroun" Long live to the people who are not patriotic and who do not think of what they can do for their nation but only how they can loot and cause confusion in their nation for theirs is peace, peace and peace. Such nations also submit boundary disputes to the UN to decide eg Bakassi unlike the fooolish ethiopins, Eriterians, Pakistans and Indians(no wonder the soldiers you saw were relaxed and calm not living in luxury).
Thanks for a raising a thought we all share but were unable to articulate. Women are by nature peaceful and in today,s world we can do more with peace rather than rock the boat unecesssarily in the name of patriotism and lose our lives. Give me a nation so I can die, mba mba mba!

Posted by akuluouno| 11.08.2006 06:29

Reply Quote



ITOOKNOWITOOKNOW is online 

avatar
 # 7

You made a point that Nigeria is a plantation with slaves and slave masters. How do we destroy this plantation and build a modern, liberal society with progress, order, liberty , justice, equity and good governance ? Is the question. If you read history very well, slaves used so many tactics to liberate themselves. They killed , revolted and dialogued. But the present slaves in Nigeria are doing nothing to liberate themselves. This is why the plantation called Nigeria might last long and its compasss is ponting towards catastrophe or tragedy

Posted by ITOOKNOW| 11.08.2006 07:05

Reply Quote



MuttiMutti is offline 
Villager

avatar
 # 8

In the days of NCNC, I wonder if there are villagers around who could tell us of those gloory days, Nigerian youths that morphed into that political group were one, under the tutelage and leadership of Herbert Macaulay, that mostly forgotten creole, they united in the fight for independence, before personal interest, masquerading as tribalism reared it's ugly head.

Where are the historians? Is Nigerian History no loger taught in schools? has someone saved the newspaper articles from back then? Peter 'pan' Enahoro, et al where are they and their progeny?

Posted by Mutti| 11.08.2006 07:19

Reply Quote



IpheyIphey is offline 
Villager

avatar
 # 9

Your articles are quite refelctive and they make me think every day. Keep it up

Posted by Iphey| 11.08.2006 07:58

Reply Quote



ula-lisaula-lisa is offline 
Villager

avatar
 # 10

Where pessimists have the dominant hold, you sure are a voice crying out in the wilderness. I feel you as the say in the streets.

Don't worry, be happy!

Soon and very soon, these unpatriotic plantation owners would start dropping dead due to disease, stroke and excessive living that the Moses would be revealed.

What coup and political schemes could not achieve, God in one fell swoop would rectify because a few persons with hope have continued to hope against hope.

Keep hope alive.

Imani da mutumci na gaba.

Posted by ula-lisa| 11.08.2006 09:22

Reply Quote


Last Updated ( Wednesday, 23 April 2008 )
 

Services : E-mail news | RSS Feeds | Podcasts
Links:   About the NVS | Contact Us | Terms of Use | Privacy & Cookies | Advertise With Us
All Rights Reserved. NigeriaVillageSquare.com