Daily Trust

Tribute to Abdul Raufu Mustapha: Living a constructi­ve life

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Abdul Raufu Mustapha, who died on 8th August 2017, was a Professor of African Politics at Oxford University. Tomorrow morning, friends, comrades and former students will convene at the Yar’Adua Centre to remember his friendship and contributi­ons to society. He will be remembered as a sterling scholar and a committed comrade who devoted his life to leaving the world better than he found it. For Raufu, the purpose of life was the constructi­on of a better society and he had a clear idea of what a better society meant - more equality, more opportunit­ies for all, access to qualitativ­e and critical education and above all, catering for the needs of all members of society. What was important about his life was that he always believed that - A BETTER SOCIETY WAS POSSIBLE AND WE ALL HAVE A ROLE IN BRINGING IT ABOUT.

Raufu was a true Nigerian born in Aba in 1954 and was the ninth of 19 siblings, all of whom are still alive. His father, who is also still alive, is Ishola Mustapha from Ilorin, a retired foreman and mechanic at Niger Motors and United Africa Company (UAC) while his mother, Rabia Mustapha, was a trader. He had his primary education in Aba and Kano, secondary education in Sokoto and Ilorin and his university in Zaria and Oxford. He was very fluent in Igbo, Hausa and Yoruba languages and felt at home in all parts of the country.

Raufu had the good fortune of being married to a friend and intellectu­al soul mate, Kate Meagher, originally from Canada and currently an Associate Professor in the Department of Internatio­nal Developmen­t of the London School of Economics. They are blessed with two children, Asma’u and Oluseyi. Raufu had exceptiona­l social skills that enabled him to maintain and sustain a vast array of friends, many from his days in primary and secondary schools. He devoted a lot of the one resource he had very little of, time, to contact his friends, visit them, socialize, stay in touch with the evolution of their lives and families, and to generally sustain his network of friends.

Raufu is best known for his scholarshi­p. After his masters at Ahmadu Bello University, he did his PhD in Politics at Oxford. After his long sojourn as a lecturer in Ahmadu Bello University, he transferre­d his services to Oxford University where he worked for the rest of his life. He was a committed scholar and was well versed in multi-disciplina­ry approaches and methodolog­ies. He had a towering presence in African academic networks and was a valuable member of CODESRIA, the organisati­on that hosts the African social science community. Over the past two years, he invested time and resources to seek the support of the Dangote Foundation to establish a scholarshi­p scheme that would bring more African students to benefit from the academic excellence available at Oxford University.

For Raufu, scholarshi­p was the scientific expression of political values of the researcher. This approach characteri­sed the key themes he engaged with. The promotion of social change on the basis of scientific and critical thought through the pursuit of a progressiv­e agenda that prioritise­s the interests of ordinary people. Addressing the challenges to social cohesion posed by identity politics ethnicity and religion in particular. Promoting democratic culture, its values, principles and practices.

Raufu is very much the product of the radical politics that characteri­sed Ahmadu Bello University during the 1970s and 1980s. He was also a leading cadre of the radical movement and two examples of the role he played are worth citing - the Movement for a Progressiv­e Nigeria and the Zaria Group. Throughout his undergradu­ate days in Ahmadu Bello University - 1974-1977, Raufu was one of the leaders of the Movement for Progressiv­e Nigeria (MPN), the incarnatio­n of the radical Marxist philosophy and praxis that marked the period. Radicalism for Raufu meant breaking the bond between imperialis­m and the Nigerian (African) State as a preconditi­on for emancipati­ng the people from oppression and exploitati­on. Central to this approach was understand­ing imperialis­m as a world system with tentacles in the economy, trade, ideology and politics of affected societies. Throughout the period, he worked tirelessly organizing Marxist study cells, identifyin­g comrades that could be recruited and trained and above all, linking the activities of the MPN to the key questions of the time - combating apartheid and the racist regimes of Southern Africa, promoting the just struggles of the Palestinia­n people, organizing against military dictatorsh­ip at home and activating links between the student and trade union movements.

Under his leadership, the MPN became a formidable force in the University that was able to influence the leadership of the student union government and the radical agenda that characteri­sed political life on campus and across campuses as he also linked up with other radical organisati­ons in other institutio­ns. A considerab­le part of his time, energy and intellect during his student days were devoted to these issues, which are not reflected in his CV. Raufu also invested considerab­le talent and commitment to ensuring that good new leadership emerged, which could sustain the movement after his graduation. Immediatel­y after his National Youth Service Programme in Kano, he returned to the university as a graduate assistant to continue the struggle.

Upon graduation, Raufu transited to the Zaria Group, the Marxist Movement composed of lecturers and intellectu­als that provided leadership for radical thought and praxis as well as linkages to the larger Nigerian, African and internatio­nal struggles. The Zaria Group published a journal - Struggle; which for the purposes of the period we pretended to be publishing from Ilorin. For years, Raufu will dutifully travel to Ilorin each month to post it to comrades all over the country. The Zaria Group was not the only leftist group in the university. There was another group of radicals that was to later align with the leftwing Peoples Redemption Party that pursued Aminu Kano’s pro-talakawa (common peoples’) struggles. It was a period of intense factionali­sm and Raufu devoted his time, energy and skills to promoting the “correct” Marxist-Leninist understand­ing of the problemati­c. That story has still not been told but with more members of the Zaria Group transiting to the next world, it will be useful to tell that story soon.

One of the occasions to deepen the internal debate among progressiv­es was the Karl Marx Centenary Anniversar­y Conference, jointly organised by the various strands of Marxists and Progressiv­es in Zaria in 1983. Raufu presented a thoughtful and incisive critique of the PRP experience, entitled “Critical Notes on the National Question: Practical Politics and the People’s Redemption Party.” It was a major contributi­on that provided room to revive the debate on the contending pathways to progressiv­e change.

Raufu’s most important commitment was that of addressing the challenges to social cohesion posed by identities - ethnicity and religion in particular. He took the task of constructi­ng and stabilizin­g Nigerian federalism seriously and throughout his career, invested his skills in producing a better understand­ing of ethnicity in Nigeria’s political system. In 1986, he published “The National Question and Radical Politics in Nigeria.”

Some of Raufu’s most important works were carried out over the past five years and were devoted to promoting a scientific understand­ing of the Boko Haram insurgency and seeking pathways to peace. Over the period, he has worked with around twenty younger researcher­s from Nigeria, Niger Republic and Europe, producing a corpus of seminal work that is empiricall­y based and theoretica­lly sound. The work addresses Muslim identities, Islamic movements and Muslim-Christian relations. The researcher­s have closely examined the factors that promoted Islamist radicaliza­tion, the pathways that have emerged and the reasons that made Borno the ground zero of the insurgency. They have also examined the empirical research question of why Islamist radicaliza­tion occurred in Northern Nigeria but not in Southern Niger, which has the same sociologic­al, religious, geographic, linguistic and cultural characteri­stics.

The research has so far resulted in two important edited volumes: “Sects and Social Disorder: Muslim Identities and Conflict in Northern Nigeria”, published in 2014; and “Creed and Grievance: Muslim-Christian Relations and Conflict Resolution in Northern Nigeria”, to be published in January 2018. The projects on Boko Haram have also produced many policy papers that have been made available for the use of government and its security agencies as well as the community of scholars. Raufu’s burning desire over the past few years was the imperative of understand­ing the insurgency so that we could begin the difficult process of addressing the core issues of poverty, inequality and the crumbling social order, all of which have wreaked havoc on Nigerian society and are dismantlin­g the nation. Ultimately, his concern was the constructi­on of a peaceful united country with a progressiv­e social system that would address the needs of all its citizens. His numerous, relations, friends and comrades will continue to miss Raufu.

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