Opinion
Re: Alibi And Pilgrimage Sponsorship
RThis piece is in response to Mr. Idang Alibi’s postulations in his Daily Trust column of Thursday, June 21, 2012, where he mentioned three out of ten things that amaze him about modern Nigeria. The three things he discussed in the said publication started include the much talked about, but conspicuously misconstrued holy pilgrimages to Mecca by the Muslim faithful and to Jerusalem by the Christians. The second was the educational backwardness of the north and the third the trooping out of Nigerians outside the country in search of medical attention.
In relation to Mr. Alibi’s assertions on pilgrimages from Nigeria, the Sun and Punch newspapers once quoted part of Stephen Oronsaye Panel’s reports, which revealed that the Federal Government expended N6.449 billion on matters relating to pilgrimages between 2007 and 2011. I was shocked by this revelation that caught the whole awareness of some responsible Nigerians. But is this amount up to a single per cent of what the Federal Government and some rich states expend on things that do not benefit a per centage of Nigeria’s population?
Why then are some people not happy that Muslims and Christians are benefitting from governments’ subsidies in matters relating to their holy pilgrimages? Why all these attempts to explore ways to block such laudable gestures from the Federal Government? There can be no justifiable reason to stop what over 80 per cent of the nation’s population benefit from. Religion is an integral part of human life and government should not be drifted away from it.
Both the Muslim and Christian faithfuls, in pursuit of their religious obligations and spiritual uprightness, should become more devoted even when things get tougher in their ways.
Nonetheless, there are all the reasons for government to be involved in matters of religion. The federal, state and local governments and politicians should never be discouraged from channeling resources into ways that have direct benefits for Nigerians or larger segment of our society. It is believed that people who have little or no faith and those who do not believe in the peaceful coexistence of Nigerians are the ones coming up with the hypothesis that the yearly pilgrimages have no impact on our society. with the high level of immorality in our society today, how would Nigeria have looked like without these highly spiritual journeys?
However, I do know that the Federal Government sponsors some Nigerian pilgrims to the holy lands along with some government officials. These pilgrims conduct specific duties to pray for peace, stability and progress of Nigeria and their states. Is it something not worthy of commendation?
Again, many of the pilgrims, to the holy lands come back to Nigeria, better exposed, informed and reformed. In general, the merits of these holy journeys are far more reaching than any observed demerit. So, government’s non-involvement will be counter-productive against its struggle to ameliorate the country’s social menace.
For clarity purpose, hajj as one of the pillars of Islam is not a religious tourism to Mecca and Madinah. It is a fundamental time-specific, spot-specific, manner/condition-specific and financially tasking Islamic obligation which, instituted by a divine injunction of the Holy Qur’an and practically exemplified by Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him). It is to be fulfilled by the Muslims despite whatever challenges that may be associated with it in terms of funding, political interference, national/natural infringement or even global conspiracy.
Pilgrimage to Mecca predates the existence of Nigeria and therefore cannot stop even if government does not pay a kobo or subsidize anything attached to hajj. A clear case to this is that the number of Nigerian Muslims who embark on the non-compulsory lesser hajj (Umrah) is five times more than those who embark on hajj despite government’s direct non-involvement in it.
So, if government hands-off completely from the little subsidies it grants Muslims and Christians, who constitute 90% of the nation’s population, it certainly cannot stop hajj and pilgrimage to Jerusalem.
And again, who says that the Federal Government favours only Muslim and Christian pilgrimages? What about other sponsorships being made by government in favour of non-Muslim and non-Christians to places like India for spiritual elevation and power acquisition?
Therefore, it is sufficiently evident that the call for scrapping of pilgrimage commissions in Nigeria or withdrawal of subsidies from pilgrimage related-matters cannot be an issue for development for Nigeria.
Ajah, resides in Port Harcourt
Muhammad Ajah
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