Opinion
The Farakhan Tale
Once upon a time, one Alhaji Louis Farakhan, leader of the Nation of Islam in the United States of America, visited Nigeria on a “fact-finding tour”. The purpose was to enable him and his co-pilgrims have an unbiased assessment of the actual situations in Nigeria, so that they could correct the distortions being sponsored by Western media. That was during the era of a military macho-man called General Sani Abacha.
Like The Canterbury Tales of many centuries ago, The Farakhan Tale had to do with pilgrimage, fact-finding tour and sharing of ideas about the state of affairs on religious, political, social and other issues that needed to be put in proper perspectives. Like Martin Luther King Jnr, Louis Farakhan led a civil rights march of black Americans over human right abuses in America. He had been on global lime-light as a Black-American activist and Islamic Macho-man.
The Farakhan Tale has little to do with Louis Farakhan personally as an individual, but it illustrates the practice of self-appointed foreign messiahs, peace-makers, negotiators and bridge-builders coming to Nigeria to mediate in national crises. These foreign friends and negotiators who come during turbulent times can hardly be said to have the interest of Nigeria at heart, more than Nigerians themselves. They give awards and praises to Nigerian leaders.
Those who really know the mind-set and attitude of the Western World towards Nigeria would hardly doubt the fact that the country is rarely taken seriously. It was a surprise that Bill Gate was able to tell Nigerian government some truth, recently, without resorting to diplomacy or flattery. Not many individuals or countries would emphasise the truth that human capital development is an issue that ranks higher than structural projects. Human capital development puts emphasis on ethical orientation, vocational skills for citizens and exemplary leadership, as national policies. Nigerian leaders are known to cherish flatteries and get jittery over criticisms.
Foreigners have been known to come to Nigeria to say and do things which would hardly be tolerated in their own countries. Some experts, humanists, adventurers or tourists, after a few days’ visits to African countries sometimes claim to have a better understanding of the culture and challenges of Africans than the indigenes themselves. Many go home to write books and reports which they offer to the people and leaders for adoption and implementation. Africans have served enough as guinea pigs!
The Farakhan Tale is a tale of how developing countries ignore what is indigenous to them, fail to identify and encourage or utilize available talents and abilities in their citizens, but go for foreign values and advice. Imitating and copying what is foreign cannot uplift or advance any nation. People can only develop and progress through upward improvement of what they already possess, and not by adopting what is borrowed or foreign to them.
It is evident that Nigeria’s current predicaments and instability can be traced to the shenanigans of our colonial masters and later-day foreign friends and advisers. The practice of looking outside rather than inward for means of addressing local challenges often result in institutionalizing mediocrity as a national culture. The history and failure of the Ajaokuta project should teach us some lessons. Foreigners are not always what they appear.
Why must we de-value and under-rate ourselves and trample upon what is within us? Although Louis Farakhan denied that his visit to Nigeria was sponsored, he and his team left Nigeria with swollen pockets. Nigerians who raised issues over the Farakhan affair were seen as enemies rather than patriots. Since then Nigerian leaders have not stopped spending money on image laundering, foreign travels, wooing of foreign investors, etc.
Unless we want to continue to play the ostrich, Nigeria’s challenges and predicaments must and can be addressed by Nigerians themselves, even without help from foreign experts. From wooing foreign friends and investors, to travelling to foreign countries for medical vacation or inviting foreign marabouts, we can do better investing on our human capital. Where local talents and abilities are undermined through a patronage system and where sinecure holders receive N13.5 million monthly as “running cost”, there can hardly evolve a zeal among citizens to serve Nigeria with patriotism, loyalty and commitment.
Nigerians are weary of various forms of deceit under the guise of patriotism and serving the interest of the masses. We must strive to evolve a culture of service and sacrifice. A part of the Farakhan Tale played out in the recent Boko-Haram terrorist affair where foreign negotiators probably made some lucrative business. National security is an important affair, and Nigerians would be happier, more patriotic and feel safer if their leaders can deal with them with more sincerity and honesty. We must not de-value ourselves, which can include image-laundering.
Dr. Amirize is a retired lecturer at the Rivers State University, Port Harcourt.
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