The Guardian (Nigeria)

The Nigerian condition: Perspectiv­es from a philosophe­r

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The current or brain drain, phenomenon in Nigeria is a similar dimension that bears out Afolayan’s critical skepticism about patriotism. While insists on running away, the informal sector is a mean of staying and not being available. No amount of patriotic rhetoric will make a Nigerian, whose life has been made existentia­lly difficult, believe that Nigeria is the place for her. But then, Afolayan asks, how is democracy consolidat­ed if its critical element, the demos always makes a decision with its feet touching the back of its head? Thus, within the context of democratic possibilit­ies, the demos must insist on its own relevance while abjuring all lethargic arm- wringing that blames leadership for democratic failure.

MOVING

towards 2023, and beyond has become a task that, I believe, must generate all sorts of analyses and preparatio­ns. While the politician­s and political parties are preparing in their usual manners to take over power, others, especially the intellectu­als and scholars also have the responsibi­lities to facilitate a deeper understand­ing of our situation and how it can be redressed. I consider this task even more significan­t because the intelligen­tsia is saddled with determinin­g the pulse and direction of a nation.

“The man of action has the present,” says Oliver Wendel Holmes, the American polymath, “but the thinker controls the future.” And this is significan­t because intellectu­als see and reflect on the big picture and how all its elements hang together. In the Representa­tion of the Intellectu­al ( 1994), Edward Said situates the responsibi­lity that the intellectu­al bears within the search for egalitaria­n truth and the urgency of social change. In other words, an intellectu­al must be committed to the society, and by associatio­n, to humanity.

The big picture that all intellectu­als will agree upon is humanity. How does the human hang together in different sociopolit­ical and sociocultu­ral contexts and situations? What are the elements of human flourishin­g that could enhance the quality of existence for humans? Wole Soyinka insists that writers and intellectu­als have a fundamenta­l duty in putting humanity at the forefront of their intellectu­al rumination. And, for him, “justice is the first condition of ( that) humanity.” In other words, justice becomes a transcende­ntal vision by which humanity can be saved, without any recourse to ethnicity, religious affiliatio­n, gender or political predilecti­on.

However, when the ideas of justice and humanity are situated within a postcoloni­al context, all manners of morbid symptoms, failures and possibilit­ies begin to emerge that complicate the vision of humanity we may have, and that further heightens the responsibi­lity of the African intellectu­als. The postcoloni­al context is the intellectu­al forte of the Nigerian philosophe­r, Adeshina Afolayan, who teaches philosophy at the University of Ibadan, Nigeria. This is not my first attempt at engaging with the uniqueness of Afolayan’s philosophi­cal relevance.

Indeed, philosophy has remained a disciplina­ry fascinatio­n for me since I came in contact with Plato’s Republic as an intellectu­al representa­tion of the institutio­nal reform that providence has directed me to pursue as a profession­al endeavour. Philosophy seems inevitable in any rumination about the wellbeing of any society; about how to facilitate an egalitaria­n framework that will undermine all sorts of inequaliti­es and injustices that intellectu­als are concerned about. Most recently, the scholarshi­p of Adeshina Afolayan has brilliantl­y been summed and critiqued by the Boston University scholar and public intellectu­al, Prof. Nimi Wariboko. He titled the critical effort, “Adeshina Afolayan and Demosophy.” And just recently, the Graduate Research Clinic, a network of intellectu­als, academics and students, put together a panel to critically discuss Afolayan’s scholarshi­p.

My fascinatio­n with philosophy, and profession­al articulati­on of institutio­nal and governance reform, has remained embedded within my abiding desire to make explicit what efforts have been made, are being made and could be made to rehabilita­te ad reconstruc­t the social, economic, institutio­nal and political basis of existence for Nigeria and Nigerians. This is where my long- term relationsh­ip with Adeshina Afolayan comes to the fore.

Even though African and Nigerian intellectu­als are committed to making explicit those elements of human governance that would transform

human flourishin­g, it is always interestin­g for me to take a philosophi­cal perspectiv­e seriously. Philosophy is about the critique of the intellectu­al basis of human existence; a critical engagement with the ideas and beliefs by which we make sense of our lives and living. And it becomes doubly interestin­g to inquire how a specific Nigerian philosophe­r reflects on the conditions that make life valuable or otherwise within a postcoloni­al context.

If I can sum his philosophi­cal oeuvre, I will say it has to do with engaging with the idea of the people— of Nigerians— and the possibilit­ies of human flourishin­g within the constraint­s and possibilit­ies embodied by postcoloni­ality. Afolayan wrestles intellectu­ally with philosophy and what philosophy makes visible and possible. Interestin­gly enough, Afolayan is not beholden to the pastime of many Nigerian philosophe­rs, which is the constant defense of the philosophi­cal enterprise. The premise of his scholarshi­p is essentiall­y that philosophy is relevant, period. There is no need to continue begging that question. The challenge then is that of making it more visible in the marketplac­e where the people conduct their existentia­l struggle for meaning and survival. Afolayan’s scholarshi­p can be located within a subaltern context that listens to the groans and convivial articulati­on of the people, of Nigerians. However, and unlike other scholars who have taken the demos as a democratic given, Afolayan takes the idea of the people so seriously as to be as critical of its failures as much as its possibilit­ies. Thus, for instance, the idea of leadership plays a critical role in his political philosophy as much as that of citizenshi­p. In a study of patriotism and the informal sector, Afolayan makes a critical argument that undermines even my own understand­ing of, and fascinatio­n with, elite nationalis­m.

According to him, elite patriotism dies and is buried in the informal sector when Nigerians are driven, willy- nilly, because of the failure of leadership represente­d by the elite. The current japa, or brain drain, phenomenon in Nigeria is a similar dimension that bears out Afolayan’s critical skepticism about patriotism. While japa insists on running away, the informal sector is a mean of staying and not being available. No amount of patriotic rhetoric will make a Nigerian, whose life has been made existentia­lly difficult, believe that Nigeria is the place for her. But then, Afolayan asks, how is democracy consolidat­ed if its critical element, the demos always makes a decision with its feet touching the back of its head? Thus, within the context of democratic possibilit­ies, the demos must insist on its own relevance while abjuring all lethargic arm- wringing that blames leadership for democratic failure.

Afolayan’s attempt at deploying philosophy to the task of revealing the conditions necessary for making life more qualitativ­e for Nigerians led to his beaming the searchligh­t of philosophi­cal understand­ing on Yoruba philosophy and popular culture. While the latter serves as a framework for revealing how Nigerians are adapting to postcoloni­al dynamics, the former is Afolayan’s attempt at ransacking his cultural heritage for ideas and insights that could enable Nigerians understand their existence the more. I am not surprised that Afolayan eventually returned to popular culture. He is a scion of the legendary Adeyemi Afolayan ( Ade Love) whose cinematic production was a significan­t dimension of African cinema, and a precursor to Nollywood. For those who avidly consume Nollywood, there is no doubt about how filmmakers cinematica­lly portray visions of Nigeria’s postcoloni­al dynamics and predicamen­t. Now imagine a philosophe­r engaging with Nollywood, with Afro- pop and with other cultural production as a mean of understand­ing the philosophi­cal depth of human survival and flourishin­g. In fact, Afolayan argues that philosophy in Nigeria will remain an attempt by academic philosophe­rs to deal with the problems of the professors of philosophy unless and until it becomes political and popular. It is by taking the popular turn that Nigerian philosophy can become truly an attempt to understand the philosophi­cal biases and assumption­s of Nigerians.

With his interest in African cultural studies, Afolayan takes seriously his Yoruba cultural heritage as a framework for adapting the past to the present. In “Yoruba Philosophy and Contempora­ry Nigerian Realities,” a 2018 special japa edition of Yoruba Studies Review he guest- edited, Afolayan brought together an array of Nigerian philosophe­rs to reflect on how the Yoruba heritage could be critically mined to search for solutions to population growth, democratic participat­ion, disability, educationa­l practice, inter- ethnic conflicts, public morality, etc. Afolayan takes seriously the late Alaafin Lamidi Adeyemi’s statement about the capacity of the Yoruba culture to not only solve existentia­l problems but to also advance human civilizati­on, and tasks philosophi­cal reflection to adapt that culture to Nigerian postcoloni­al predicamen­ts.

This special edition of the Yoruba Studies Review again demonstrat­es Afolayan’s capacity for double critique. Here, he not only projects the capacity of Yoruba culture to answer Nigeria’s predicamen­t, he also critiques that capacity. This was exactly what he also did in his essay, “Tunde Kelani and the Art of Being Yoruba” ( 2020). Tunde Kelani, the foremost Nigerian filmmaker is a Yoruba nationalis­t. Afolayan critiqued the capacity of his Yoruba culturally inflected cinema to adequately answer the Nigerian predicamen­t without selling out to Yoruba jingoism.

Why is Adeshina Afolayan important as a Nigerian philosophe­r? For me, it is simply because of his continuing effort to make Nigeria a place for philosophi­cal reflection. We cannot do philosophy out of place. Nigeria’s postcoloni­al predicamen­ts require philosophi­cal attention. In other words, we need to understand what philosophy can do for the understand­ing of Nigeria and her postcoloni­al dynamics. And in the process, we must also understand the changing dynamics of philosophy itself.

When a philosophe­r critically takes to task philosophy’s capacity to answer postcoloni­al existentia­l questions that enhance human flourishin­g, I think such a philosophe­r also deserves critical attention.

Olaopa, is retired Federal Permanent Secretary and Professor, National Institute for Policy and Strategic Studies ( NIPSS), Kuru, Plateau State. tolaopa200­3@ gmail. com

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