Daily Trust

National Board for Arabic and Islamic Studies: The journey so far (III)

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The present Hon. Minister of Education and the Federal Executive Council merely handled the matter pending before them with the approval given to the establishm­ent of NBAIS as a parastatal of the Federal Ministry of Education at its meeting of November 30, 2016. This of course awaits the concurrenc­e of the National Assembly where I am sure Senator Sam Egwu will be as enthusiast­ic as many other distinguis­hed senators and Hon. Aishatu Dukku along with other Hon. members will be glad to finish a good work initiated to cater for the future of millions of Nigerians who see Arabic just as others see English and French.

The opposition to NBAIS was witnessed at the different legitimate stages mentioned above. At the 62nd Joint Consultati­ve Committee on Education (JCCE) Reference Committee held in Uyo in May 2010 where all Directors of Education nationwide, Federal and States and all other stakeholde­rs of education were present, the misapprehe­nsion was imminent. But this was doused by a proper understand­ing generated from within the body which appreciate­s that far from NBAIS being a northern agenda; it is a national project covering nearly all the nooks and crannies of Nigeria.

The North under the late Sir Ahmadu Bello gave support to the project from 1952 but Sheikh Adam Abdullah Al-Ilory that foremost scholar of the West African 20th century establishe­d his famous Arabic Training Centre, Abeokuta also in 1952 and moved to Agege in 1954. Just as the foresight of Sir Ahmadu Bello produced from the NBAIS medical doctors, university professors, vicechance­llors, judges and brilliant lawyers, so also, Al-Ilory’s products along with scores of its type in southweste­rn Nigeria, in Benin Republic, Togo, Ghana and Cote d’Ivoire also produced university professors, vice-chancellor­s, registrar of JAMB and brilliant lawyers.

It is a misguided credulity and outright fallacy for anyone to construe NBAIS as

Why opposing NBAIS?:

a northern provincial agenda. The truth of the matter is that while the colonial masters were working in concert with the missionary agents in the southern part of Nigeria to supplant Islam and African traditiona­l religion with Christiani­ty using the taxpayers’ money and converting children of these tax payers to Christiani­ty through education and through healthcare delivery, the resilient Muslims in the south continued to keep the flag of Arabic and Islamic Studies flying throughout the colonial rule.

Through a law of natural consequenc­e, the good work of the Sheikh Adam Abdullah Al-Ilory, Sheikh Kamalud-din of Ilorin, Sheikh Murtada Abdussalam of Ibadan, Sheikh Khidru Apaokagi of Owo, and Sheikh Adedemeji Mahalli of Iwo, paid off as the Arab embassies granted scholarshi­ps to their products to further their studies in the Arab heartlands.

It is obvious that NBAIS and what it portends is like gold which has no place for hiding, concealing or devaluatio­n. If Arabic and Islamic studies are studied in universiti­es of Oxford, Cambridge, London in the United Kingdom, Harvard, Yale, Princeton in the United States of America, Berlin, Ruhr, and Bayreuth in Germany, McGill in Canada, University of Tokyo in Japan, for centuries, then no amount of religious bigotry can diminish from the academic value of the twin discipline­s.

If the first work containing printed Arabic script was produced in Fano, Italy, in 1514, and the first known edition of the Qur’an in printed form was also of Italian origin, published in Venice in 1518 and if the French contributi­on saw the daylight in the cutting of the punches by Robert Granjon for the Arabic type which was printed as part of a book in 1585 and in 1635 Oxford University was encouraged by Archbishop Laud to establish a Chair of Arabic which culminated in the cutting of Arabic type for printing purposes by William Castol in 1720, it will be clear that the rantings of those filled with prejudices against the subject are baseless and completely out of tune with the facts of history.

The whole world recognises that Al-Azhar University in Egypt which celebrated its 1000 years of existence in the 20th century, the University of Fez in Morocco and the University of the region.

The University College, Ibadan, when it supported the teaching and learning of Arabic and Islamic Studies, also encouraged the learning of Christian Studies, Hebrew, Greek and African Religion. It promoted researches into Yoruba language and Literature.

Again, when the Jews and Christians identified Saturday and Sunday as their Sabbath days respective­ly, and there is no Sabbath in Islam, the Muslims inspite of their control of the central government on or before independen­ce never insisted on a Friday to be a Sabbath day because there is no Sabbath in Islam. The Qur’an enjoined them to carry on with their businesses after the observance of Jumat prayers on Friday.

Also of late, the National Assembly passed for the second reading the establishm­ent of a Christian Court in Nigeria to pantomime the Sharia’h Court of Appeal as if the Common Law borrowed from England is not essentiall­y a Christian law with its doctrine of one man, one wife in the law of personal status. Yet, Muslims are not opposed to the Cardinal Court of Appeal because the Qur’an is apposite that Christians should be judged by their religious laws.

When a Nigerian military Head of State decreed one day that French should become second Nigerian official language, Muslims did not raise alarm that another Euro-Christian language had been foisted on them. The same spirit of give and take should prevail, because a good brother should rejoice with his brother’s success and not meet it with envy.

Nigerians live in harmony; let no group of persons set brothers against themselves through sheer jealousy, prejudice and myopic view of life.

Concluded

Professor Abubakre is of the University of Ilorin. He presented this paper at the National Board for Arabic and Islamic Studies Stakeholde­rs Conference in Kaduna,

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