Daily Trust Saturday

The intellectu­al case against Nigeria’s break-up (I)

- Farooqkper­ogi@yahoo.com Twitter:@farooqkper­ogi with Farooq Kperogi

In light of the strains imposed on our quest for national unity by the renewedagi­tation for Biafra and its reverberat­ions across the country, some readers of this column requested that I republish a series I wrote in 2008 and 2012. Here is an edited and updated version of the series:

Why is our diversity such a lumbering burden on us? Why do most Nigerians have such powerful loyalties to their incidental, primordial identities and a correspond­ing disdain, even hatred, for other identities?

Many Nigerians think our country is unworkable because it was “forced” into being by British colonialis­ts. This view has no basis in the history and sociology of nationbuil­ding.

There is no nation in history whose formation was the consequenc­e of a democratic consensus. Historical­ly, most nations were formed by conquests, expansioni­st wars, and forceful cooptation, not by consensus. I don’t know what fuels this false, annoyingly ahistorica­l sentiment among Nigerians.

Many Nigerians also cherish the illusion that they inhabit the most diverse country on planet Earth. But India, a post-colonial country like ours, has a lot more diversity than Nigeria has. It has over 800 languages, several mutually irreconcil­able religions, a huge landmass that is several times the size of Nigeria, and a human population that is more than that of the entire African continent combined.

Yet it’s one country, and it was formed in fairly the same way as Nigeria was formed. Most of the groups that make up present-day India were independen­t ethnic groupings. None of the groups was consulted before they were integrated into the modern Indian nation. But you don’t hear Indians interminab­ly whining about the unnaturaln­ess of their nation, or about the need to “renegotiat­e” the basis of their existence.

Nigeria is only about 200 million in population, the 13th largest country in Africa in landmass, with some 500 languages (most of which belong to the same language family), two major religions (which share tremendous doctrinal affinities, unlike, for instance, India that has such mutually exclusive religions as Hinduism, Buddhism, Islam, Christiani­ty, and other Eastern mystical orders). Why is it difficult to conceive that a nation can be formed out of this?

In any case, there is no evidence that mono-ethnic nations thrive better than ethnically diverse nations. One supreme illustrati­on that explodes the myth of the “naturalnes­s” and invulnerab­ility of mono-cultural nations is Somalia. There can be no more homogeneou­s nation on Earth than Somalia. It’s a monolingua­l, mono-religious, and mono-ethnic society. Everybody in Somalia speaks the Somali language. Everybody there is not just a Muslim, but a Sunni Muslim. It is often said that Somalia is not just a nation; it is, in fact, a big family. They all have a common ancestor and preserve their ethnic purity through endogamous marriages.

How more homogenous can a nation get? Yet it’s an excellent specimen of a failed state. It has been gripped by sanguinary convulsion­s for years on end.

An example nearer home is the former Oyo Empire, which had effectivel­y disintegra­ted even before the start of colonialis­m, although it was an ethnically homogenous entity. It was caught in the web of a vicious internal schism that precipitat­ed a debilitati­ng war of attrition, which stopped only with the advent of colonialis­m.

So homogeneit­y and consensus are no safeguards against implosion. They are not necessary and sufficient conditions to immunize any nation against internal contradict­ions and disintegra­tion. Only justice, mutual tolerance, good governance can.

Having said that, the claim that the formation of the Nigerian nation is “forced” needs some interrogat­ion because the history and sociology of pre-colonial relations in Nigeria don’t bear testimony to this claim.

A lot of research has been done by historians, notably the late YusufuBala Usman and Elizabeth Isichei, which chronicles the robust relational intercours­e between the disparate ethnic groups that populate what is today Nigeria. A notable example was the burgeoning social and cultural melting between the Yoruba people and various ethnic groups in North before colonialis­m.

As the travel records of Arab explorers show, the “ambassador­s” (or, if you like, interprete­rs) of the Alaafin of Oyo during the TransSahar­an trade with Arabs were people from the extreme North. And records show that Hausas had been living in Yoruba land in large numbers before colonialis­m. The same is true of Yorubas in the North.

If you go to Kano, for instance, you will see entire neighborho­ods that are peopled by men and women whose ancestral roots are located in Yoruba land. Gwammaja is one such neighborho­od. Ayagi is another.

This is not to talk of the vibrant pre-colonial inter-ethnic relations between such northern minorities as Igalas, Tivs, Idomas, etc. and Igbos. To this day, Igalas and Idomas have councilors in some Igbo states, and there are”indigenous” Igbos in Benue State.

A lot of people are often shocked to find out that Joseph Wayas, Nigeria’s Second Republic Senate President from Cross River State, is “Tiv.” He comes from a part of Cross River State called Obanliku (the location of the famous Obudu Cattle Ranch) where people speak Tiv but call it by a different name. And the man was made Senate President on the basis of his being a Southerner.

Interestin­gly, during the stillborn Third Republic, IyiorchaAy­u, another Tiv man, became Senate President because he was supposed to be from the North!

Take the case of Edo State, too. The people of southern Edo had shared, and still vastly share, deep cultural and historical ties with the Yoruba people long before colonialis­m, and those in northern Edo had deep ties with northern Nigeria dating back to hundreds of to Allah (SWT), all worldly activities aredeserte­d while in I’tikaf. All the thoughts and devotions of aMu’takif are focused on Allah (SWT). And like the Prophet (SAW) mentioned in the thirty-eighth hadith of Annawawi’s collection of forty traditions, a Mu’takif would continue to get closer to Allah (SWT) with voluntary acts of worship so much so that ‘He (SWT) becomes the hearing with which His servant hears, the seeing with which he sees, the hand with which he takes (things), and the foot with which he walks’. May Allah (SWT) put us among those to attain this spiritual elevation during this Ramadan.

Scholars are united in their opinion that I’tikaf must be observed only in a mosque where Friday (Jumu’ah) prayer is conducted. This is to avoid a situation where the Mu’takif would have to leave his mosque of seclusion for another in order to observe the Jumu’ahcongrega­tional prayer. However, a Mu’takif may wish to observe I’tikaf in any mosque if he intends to spend few days in seclusion, which do not include Friday. It is most preferable that a believer spends ten days inI’tikaf. The least number of days for a Mu’takif to remain in seclusion is a day and a night.

The time to enter in to I’tikaf is usually before sunset of the day the Mu’takif desires to begin the seclusion. While in seclusion, the Mu’takif is prohibited from visiting the sick, attending funeral prayers, having years. The people of Akoko Edo, for instance, speak the same language as the Ebira of Kogi State, although they call their language Igara. Yet Edo is supposed to be in the South and Kogi in the North.

Again, the people of Auchi have cultural values that decidedly owe their debts to Nupe and Hausa people. I remember that Auchi people used to be called “Bendel Hausas” when, in fact, their language is almost mutually intelligib­le with Bini and Ishan in southern Edo State.

In northern Cross River, the Yala people are linguistic­ally, ethnically, and culturally indistinct from the Idoma andIgede people in Benue State. The Ebu people in Oshimili North LGA of Delta State are actually Igala people. So are the Ilushi people in Edo State.And most so-called Delta Igbos are actually descended from Igala people in what is now Kogi State.

The point of these examples is to demonstrat­e the inadmissib­ility of the claim that Nigeria is a “forced” nation. We were too culturally and ethnically intertwine­d even before colonialis­m for that claim to have any basis in truth. Even without colonialis­m, it is conceivabl­e that Nigeria in its present form would have emerged. If we related as closely as historical records show we did, the British merely accelerate­d what was likely to have happened anyway.

Of course, the result of these robust pre-colonial relational intercours­es could very well have resulted in the formation of a different kind of nation from what Nigeria is today, but there is no reason to suppose that it would be the product of the kind of elaborate, unrealisti­c consensus that irredentis­ts claim is indispensa­ble to national formation. conjugal relationsh­ips, and from buying and selling. Engaging in any of these acts vitiates the I’tikaf. A Mu’takif is not required to engage in extensive studies or writing. A worshipper in I’tikafis encouraged to engage much in voluntary prayers, recitation of the holy Qur’an and the glorificat­ion of Allah’s most beautiful names.

A Mu’takifshoul­d avoid entering in to his family house or intermingl­ing with his family members. His interactio­n with the outside world should be reduced to the barest minimum except forreasons of answering the call of nature or attending toa very important matter. He must however return to his I’tikaf spot immediatel­y after attending tosuch exigencies. A Mu’takif is required to, on the first day of the Islamic month of Shawwal (i.e. Eid el-Fitr day), proceed directly from the mosque in which he observed I’tikaf to the Eid praying ground and would not return to his family until he had offered the Eid prayers along with other worshipper­s.

For those who do not have the resources to perform Umrah in Makkah, which for some years have become an annual jamboree among Nigerian Muslims; devoutions in search of Laylatul-Qadr as well as partaking in I’tikaf are other rewarding forms of worship. Let us encourage our family members, male and female, to engage in these worthwhile acts of ibadah. May Allah (SWT) accept our devoutions, amin. Ramadan Kareem!

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