Ever since President Buhari won the 2015 Presidential elections he was destined to win having labored in 2003, 2007, 2011 and then 2015 a very vast preponderance of South South and South East indigenes have descended on the President, pouring invectives, calling him names, abusing his person and his exalted office, preaching hate, and ethnic divisions. I have followed this dangerous trend over a year now, and it is not abetting. It is growing like wild fire everyday. In recent times the South-South people whose son lost the election have moved on except the criminal avengers who are fighting for their pockets only and destroying their environment.
I have seen spirited and genuine efforts
being made by the leaders of South-South to bring peace to the Niger
Delta, and I heartily commend them for this. It is in their own
interest. But in the South East, our people have refused to move on. In
the diaspora, in Nigeria, in schools, in the markets, on the streets, in
Churches, in Town Meetings etc Igbo have refused to move on. Every move
the President makes to rebuild and reposition the country is abused,
castigated and ethnic meaning read into it. The dangerous trend has
become so embarrassing that one is compelled to speak out. While leaders
of South-South have made interventions to make way for harmony and
peaceful co-existence, Igbo leaders have maintained a deafening silence
but this silence is no longer golden. Ethnic bigotry and hate speeches
our people both at home and abroad dish out everyday endanger our people
living in all parts of Nigeria. President Buhari belongs to a section
of Nigeria and must not run away with the thinking that his people will
be happy and clap for us when we malign and abuse one of their own.
No ethnic group in Nigeria moves and
settles in any part of the country like the Igbo. They settle and do
business in almost every part of the country, and when we throw stones
to other Nigerians, we endanger their lives and their businesses. The
worst sets of Igbo guilty of this dangerous trend are those living
outside the country. While some of them are engaged in meaningful
employment, many of them are unemployed. They have become economic
refugees and cultural savages. They have formed an association of hate
preachers and wailing bigots. They have through actions and deeds
created millions of enemies for Ndigbo in Nigeria while they waste their
precious gift of time abroad doing nothing.
Last week the Vice of the Federal
Republic of Nigeria, Professor Yemi Osinbajo was in Afe Babalola
University Ekiti State as Guest Speaker during the University’s
Convocation ceremony. In the cause of his speech, he told his capacity
audience the Niger Delta Avengers are not freedom fighters but those
fighting for their pockets only. I saw the story on facebook and other
sites on the internet. The one on Facebook caught my attention because
of nearly 400 reactions as at the time I read it. I took mental note of
the reactions and the names attached to it. 95% are Igbo names and they
abused and called the Vice President unprintable names for speaking the
truth. This is a shame. Ignorance should not be a virtue. Ignorance is a
disease. Foolishness is a tragedy. This is ignorance stupid. This is
mental darkness. A roaring lion kills no game. It is only a river that
wants to get dried up that forgets its source. A Chinese proverb tells
me that “He who blames others has a long way to go on his journey. He
who blames himself is half way there. He who blames no one has arrived.”
Now, it is time for the Igbo to move on
and join other Nigerians to begin the process of rebuilding Nigeria. I
want Igbo Governors, elected Senators, elder statesmen, House of Reps
Members, House of Assembly members, political leaders, traditional
rulers, Igbo intellectuals, professionals, market leaders, town union
leaders, village heads, etc. to rise up to defend the integrity and
honor of Igbo race. Are these ignorant ones who preach hate speaking for
us? Are they representing us? Are they our brightest and bests? Are
those asking for Biafra and using it as business venture speaking for
all of us? Have we taken a look at the situation in South Sudan today?
Shall we continue to sleep pretending that all is well? Can we be honest
enough to see the real danger ahead? For how long will our leaders
continue to be silent on these weighty issues? Can elders continue to
sleep while the kids wear snakes as necklaces? Can the young teach
tradition to the old? Who will bell the cat in Igboland? Who will call
the ignorant kids to order?
Did the Yoruba go to war when June 12
1993 Presidential Election won by their illustrious son Chief MKO Abiola
was annulled on June 23rd 1993 on a sheet of paper by IBB? Did Yoruba
go to war when Abiola’s wife Alhaja Kudirat Abiola was murdered in Lagos
in the morning of Jun 4 1996? Did Yoruba go to war when the winner of
that historic election was poisoned on July 7 1998? Did Yoruba go to war
when those who killed Abiola imposed Obasanjo on them as President in
1999? Did Yoruba accept Chief Ernest Shonekan when IBB made him to head
the interim government in 1993? Yoruba rejected OBJ and Shonekan because
this unique race has never been slaves to public office and yet they
have remained number one in Nigeria in almost everything. This is wisdom
and strategic thinking at work.
Those of us who have lived in Yoruba
land for years should not only learn how to wear Aso Ebi, eat Ewedu soup
or dance Owambe, music.
We must have also learned other unique
things from them like sharing property to both male and female children,
religious tolerance, ethnic tolerance, transferring legacies from
generation to generation. Do you know that APC National Leader Asiwaju
Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s wife is a Christian? Do you know that former
Governor Fashola’s wife is a Christian? We can learn a lot from Yoruba.
Yoruba too can learn from Igbo in areas of thinking home, business
enterprise, self-help, apprenticeship, etc.
A Yoruba woman, a Pastor Mrs. Eunice
Olawale Elisha of the Redeemed Christian Church of God old NEPA Road
Phase 4 Kubwa, Abuja was killed by unknown persons on Saturday morning
of July 9, 2016, while preaching the gospel around 5.30am. I have
followed the reactions on the internet and Yoruba do not behave like the
Igbo. They have been speaking but not preaching hate. They have called
for the culprits to be fished out, prosecuted and punished. If Mrs.
Eunice Elisha had been an Igbo hell would have been let loose. There
would have been abuses and abuses. But Yoruba are not Igbo. This is
civilization. This is strategic thinking. I hope our people can learn
from this. Civility is not a sign of weakness. He who fights and run
away lives to fight another day.
To have ears is not to listen, to listen
is not to hear, to hear is not to understand, to understand is not to
put to practice. I know that writing this may not get me many friends
among the Igbo, but it always gets me the right ones.
Case Rested!Joe Igbokwe
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