Opinion
A Word For The Youth
The youths of 1960 are no doubt the leaders of today. You don’t have to be a celebrated political or economic analyst to notice what the youths of 1960 have done to their nation. At best, the word “pariah” is an understatement for the description of our State.
What would the country look like when it marks her 70th anniversary? By then, the youths of today, the very same people reading this piece, would be at the helm of affairs tomorrow. How would the country look like under them? The answer to this question should form the crux of our reflection as we discharge our duties.
For now, all the odds seem stacked against us. Somehow, we have been at the receiving end of the mistakes of the past 52 years. We suffer most as a result of successive governments’ inefficiency. When our parents are not paid, we go hungry on campus. When government and our teachers trade words, our education is stalled. During elections, we are employed as thugs and afterwards christened social misfits. During social unrest generated largely by the unholy political arithmetic of our leaders, we carry arms and suffer casualties.
The police are always quick to shoot at us like hunted animals. Our education has been commercialized. Over two million of us take exams for which less than 100,000 spaces exist and when we finally graduated, it’s like inviting one into a hide and seek game with poverty. To crown it all, the dreaded disease, AIDS, appears to have been specially programmed to wipe the young.
But the task of rebuilding this troubled nation cannot be compromised and is by no means whatsoever negotiable. Bob Marley in one of his hit tracks, called on us to emancipate our self. He even went further to say that none but ourselves can free our minds. As Nigerian youths, we must be conscious of our predicament with a view to fashioning our solution to them. It is this consciousness that would bring about a re-awakening and generate the much needed wind of change.
We are the change, we are the future; we are the hope. It is not by violence or counter-productive confrontation that we can effect change. It is by speaking out with one voice, especially, by daring to challenge the system and resisting governments unprogressive tendencies, by revamping the spirit of vibrant student unionism and negotiating our way into freedom and by standing up to say no and purging ourselves of our own inadequacies that we can reverse the unprogressive trends.
The children of Soweto in their tender age rose up to challenge tyranny, which threatened their education. They left an indelible mark. We too must do something to save our dear sick Nigeria from the catastrophe of economic malaise, air mishap and murder of innocent citizens. We cannot afford to bequeath a nation in this state to generation unborn.
It took 52 years to get Nigeria to its knees; it could take much less to get it rise again if we all work towards a progressive nation.
Who say there is no Balm in Gilead?
Ilegbara is a student of the International Institute of Journalism, Abuja.
Mercy Ilegbara
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