| Why They Hate Nigerians So Much: A Personal Experience |
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| Written by Phil Tam-Al Alalibo | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Sunday, 02 September 2007 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Why They Hate Nigerians So Much: A Personal Experience By Phil Tam-Al Alalibo
I have often wondered at what convention it was decided that the Nigerian is the one to be hated by the world. Perhaps, the invitation to this convention was diverted by our notorious NIPOST thinking it contained dollars since it must have had a foreign stamp. Believe it or not, the hatred for Nigerians around the world is alarming and streaming along quite well with such venom only reserved for used car salesmen (no pun intended). It is the kind of hatred that would make the average Nigerian, bemused rather than angry as it has assumed an utterly comical proportion. It appears everyone has an opinion about Nigerians and they are ever ready to passionately defend their position. In all my travels, I have never met anyone that is tittering on the fence on the matter of love/hate of the Nigerian.
In all these, there is a tinge of respect for anything Nigerian, be it in academics, sports, science, etc and there lies the silver-lining.
Of much interest was the fact that the match occasioned the resuscitation of a 14-year old abandoned railway system to ferry fans to the stadium and fetched the Ugandan Football Federation (FUFA) more than SH560 million, the most ever. Afterwards, the hosts made bold to declare that the defeat of the Nigerians has transposed them into the elite class of soccer powerhouses (never mind that they have never won a single continental glory) that had hitherto been the preserves of the 4-time African Cup winning Cameroons and
Many attribute this hatred to the behavior of Nigerians seen to be annoyingly arrogant and often boastful and if the truth be told our Owamberic ways have not enhanced our reputation in this regard. To them, there is no modesty in the Nigerian lexicon. An African friend once noted to me that Everything in Nigeria runs in the millions, when a politician embezzles, it in the millions. I have never heard of a Nigerian who embezzled thousands. I responded in jest that embezzling thousands is no longer news worthy or fashionable. This ascribed behavior and perception of Nigerians present a perfect case study for the adventurous sociologist or perhaps, an ambitious dissertation topic. It will be interesting to know why Nigerians have distinguished themselves in this manner, good or bad, why their entrepreneurship dwarfs others. On per capita basis or percentages, if you will, Nigerians remain the pioneers in education and invention in
But the question still looms, why then do they hate Nigerians so much? Why will CNN muddle in stereotype of this tribe of over-achievers? Why would Collin Powell say that these Nigerians are a bunch of scam artists? Why would Oprah Winfrey, quite unfortunately, assert that all Nigerians, no matter the level of education are corrupt? Seen as a threat, I mean economic and intellectual threat, hating Nigerians thus appears to be a measure of self-preservation for most of these Nigerian haters. Give a Nigerian an opportunity and he would make hay of his good fortune. I am reminded of the words of Senegalese President, Abdoulaye Wade, who noted in frustration that there cannot be a unified and borderless
There are varying levels of perception of the Nigerian on the continent and this belies, immeasurably, the ineffable intrigue of the Nigerian. In Kenya, for example, Nigerians, for the most part, are viewed with much interest as though, alien beings, mesmerized by the likes of former president Ibrahim Babangida (imagine, Babangida of all characters), football star Austin Okocha and the legion of Nigerian soccer stars who ply their trade in the envied English Premiership League and other parts of Europe. To the average Kenyan, every Nigerian is either rich or a Pele on the soccer field. A group of Nigerian journalists recently traveled to
But the Nigerian visiting
The fact that we share a common ancestry has not spared Nigerians from scorn in the hands of the African-Americans. In the
A few years ago, as a member of a faculty search committee at my university, we received over one hundred and fifty resumes for two advertised faculty positions. Among those short-listed for one of the two positions was a Nigerian whose first and second degrees were from
For good measure, he was also a recipient of a national award only given to students with exceptional academic and research abilities. None of the others had this merit. When he came on campus for his interview, being the last of the four, our suspicions of him being a good fit were well confirmed as there was abundant evidence that the job was his to refuse. We were all impressed or so I thought. But somehow, in their infinite wisdom, my African-American colleagues found an assortment of reasons not to extend an offer to this candidate. First, they talked about his perceived inability to socialize with other professors as though that were the primary reason for being hired; then the focus was on his accent which, if I should state, was never an issue during his phone and on-campus interviews; then they talked about his first and second degrees being from an African university with the argument that it may not enhance the overall profile of the department, blah, blah .Since the committee rules required a simple majority before an offer can be extended, and deadlocked at three against three, the candidate was overlooked for another who failed miserably in his very first year, thus, occasioning another search.
If crime (of some Nigerians) were to be the basis of such hatred we need no statisticians to tell us that the African-American and Caribbean communities in the
In
The ambidextrous Nigerians have even infiltrated South African football as players, coaches and managers as well as their corporations as CEOs and top executives. The black South Africans are resentful of this upsurge of the Nigerian humanity as they ponder this new form of apartheid that has subjected them to the background in their own land. The mis-education of the South African under apartheid has regrettably yielded a tribe of unskilled and inexperienced professionals incapable of managing the affairs of the country without resorting to the highly sought skills of the Nigerians and other Africans, especially, Ghanaians, proven intellectuals in their own right. For the thousands of Nigerians who reside in Mandelas land, it is a daily struggle of survival in a society that has earmarked them as public enemy number one for no singular reason but their innate ambition.
The story however, is markedly different in
In
I was the first, out of three hundred or so passengers, to disembark and unaware of their presence initially, I took a few steps and found myself in the waiting arms of the overzealous armed officers who dissected my documents as though a pathologist performing an overdue autopsy. I watched in awe as one of the officers pulled a magnifying glass and held it against my passport anxiously checking for authenticity. Unsatisfied with his initial test, he waived me aside, to free up the line, and continued his test in his make-shift lab. The questions were abundant far more than what a serial killer in the dock would have been subjected to. Much to my chagrin, I discovered that even the usual protection afforded by an American passport was brazenly thrown overboard and replaced with intense scrutiny as long as the holder was of Nigerian origin. Such was the plight of the Nigerians on that flight.
O' what contempt.
__________________________________________________________________________________________ Author can be reached at alalibo@gmail.com. This article also published at www.newnigerianpolitics.com
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Posted by Robot| 02.09.2007 02:18