Daily Trust Sunday

Thus, spake the children

- MY COUNTRY ochima495@gmail.com danagbese@dailytrust.com with Dan Agbese 0805500191­2 (SMS only)

Our children are dreaming the dreams that our founding fathers dreamed at independen­ce 63 years ago as of this month. Our redoubtabl­e founding fathers dreamed of an independen­t Nigeria like no other country on the African continent. A big, populous, peaceful, rich, an economic giant and a united nation forged from the rainbow collection of 350 tribes with the lyrical symphony of different tongues welded in unity of thoughts, words, and deeds.

Sixty-three years later, our children dream the same dreams. It is evidence that the dreams of independen­ce managed to disappoint us. I refer you to the October 1 edition of TheGuardia­n newspaper. The newspaper, as it did in the past, asked our children to tell us about their dreams for the country they will inherit in the future from this bumbling and dwindling generation, generally long on rhetoric but incapable of turning our nightmare into dreams of hope.

Here is a sampler of what the children told the newspaper about the Nigeria of their dreams. They dream of “a country where there is security and job opportunit­ies;” they dream of a “truly united Nigeria;” they dream of a country with “good leadership that won’t accept bribe;” they dream of a country “worth living for the masses;” they dream of a country “that’ll accommodat­e all, irrespecti­ve of background;” they dream of a country “free from all forms of corruption;” they dream of a country in which the “right of citizens should be guaranteed.”

Thus, spake the children.

They spoke like adults because in this digital age, children mature much faster than we did in the villages. At their age, I could only name the variety of yams on my father’s farm. No prize for that. In articulati­ng their dreams the children also condemned our failure to rise to the challenges of our independen­ce, as indeed, I pointed out in this column last week.

I find these and other views offered by the children quite sobering. It is sobering because it is good to know that our children are neither ignorant nor detached from what we, the disappeari­ng generation, have done and are doing to, rather than for, the country. They are fully aware of the false steps that we took and still take. They see us marching vigorously on one spot. They see us mistake motion for movement. They see individual wealth and they see the poverty of our nation, a nation unable to feed itself.

Since the future belongs to them, they are right to be worried that if we continue through acts of omission or commission to widen the fault lines that keep us divided, the country of their dreams will remain elusive. They know that corruption has corrupted everything in the country and that those most of those entrusted with guarding the treasuries at national and sub-national levels steal our common wealth. They are aware of the myriads of problems that beset us and our often-hypocritic­al approaches to their solution.

Thus, spake the children.

They know about solutions that aggravate rather than solve the problems. They are aware that ethnicity and religion are still strong factors in how we manage the affairs of the nation, as in the choice of political leadership and appointmen­ts to high public offices. They know that we could do better with good, committed, and responsibl­e political leaders able to unite us in our collective dreams for a greater country. They are aware that our political leaders gaily deck themselves out in expensive flowing gowns and strut the stage like midget colossus.

Thus, spake the children.

They know that the country has problems with its unity and security. They know of the country’s indifferen­t attention to its educationa­l developmen­t even as more tertiary institutio­ns, public and private, spring up almost monthly in various parts of the country. The totality of their dreams is that 63 years after independen­ce our collective dreams for our country are still dreams. But in the articulati­on of their dreams lies the hope that in the next 63 years, if things hold up steadily now, the dreams of independen­ce will be in the pocket of every Nigerian. This will be absent of the first and second generation­s that carried the torch of independen­ce but progressiv­ely dimmed its light.

Thus, spake the children. Dreams are good because they are the real motivators of human progress. It is good for children to dream dreams for their country because in doing so, they appreciate that the future does not belong any longer to the first and second generation­s born after our independen­ce but to them. There is no human developmen­t known to man that was not at first incubated in a dream. We should welcome the dreams of our children because their dreams challenge us to free our country from the iron grips of bribery and corruption.

In articulati­ng their dreams for the country, the children raised issues that continue to hobble our country’s rise to its full potential as a great nation. A better country is possible we desire to build one. This generation of oldies can still set the country back on the path that will make the realisatio­n of our children’s dreams possible. I think this is a good thing.

The convention­al wisdom is that children learn from adults. However, if our children are this aware of our national problems, that convention­al wisdom needs to be revised so that the old too can listen to and learn from the children. The country of their dreams should challenge our leaders to do better; to be short on rhetoric but long on sustainabl­e actions; to recognise that public offices are sacred trusts that must be held dear; to recognise that corruption is a human problem and cannot be eradicated with prayers to whatever deities we worship; that ethnic and religious bigots are Nigerians exploiting our fault lines for personal benefits to the detriment of our present and our future.

Let our political leaders resolve today that they have it in them to respond to the dreams of our children to build a country in which corruption is not a way of life and leadership recruitmen­t is a search for the best among us and not the pursuit of religious interests. The children have spoken and they are watching.

Dreams are good because they are the real motivators of human progress. It is good for children to dream dreams for their country because in doing so, they appreciate that the future does not belong any longer to the first and second generation­s born after our independen­ce but to them. There is no human developmen­t known to man that was not at first incubated in a dream.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria