The Guardian (Nigeria)

The true meaning of Easter celebratio­n

- By Jerome- Mario Utomi Utomi is the programme coordinato­r, media and policy, Social and Economic Justice Advocacy ( SEJA), Lagos. He can be reached via; jeromeutom­i@ yahoo. com/ 0803272537­4.

SUNDAY March 31, 2024, also called Paschal or Resurrecti­on Sunday, the feast of Easter as we know is a Christian festival and holiday commemorat­ing the resurrecti­on of Jesus from the dead, described in the New Testament as having occurred on the third day after his burial following his crucifixio­n by the Romans at Calvary c. 30 AD. Indeed, while it is important that Nigerians ( both governors and the governed) adhere strictly to these expected ‘ well said but not well done’ Easter messages, it is however more important for all to recognise that we can make this year’s celebratio­n most rewarding by graduating from the mere exercise of goodwill messages to reflecting about our nationhood and asking solution- oriented questions. Among other concerns, we must ask; how as a nation, we can truly achieve a people- focused leadership in the country? Accelerate economic, social, and cultural developmen­t? Make promotion of peace our dreams? And the support of our industries and improvemen­t of our energy sector our central objective?

Most importantl­y, for the sake of clarity, these questions could further be classified into two; one that focuses on entire Nigerians. And the second is majorly public- office holders’ specific, But in all, providing answers to them all is the objective of this piece, Beginning with concerns that focus on entire Nigerians, we must, as we celebrate this year’s Easter, recognise that the future of our nation is full of opportunit­ies as it is fraught with challenges. As it is said, “the destiny of the ship is not in the harbour but in sailing the high sea’’ and so shall our collective responsibi­lity be, not to destroy this great nation but join hands to nurture and sustain it. We must wholesomel­y admit that If we are able to manage the present disunity and re- order our tribal loyalty which is currently stronger than our sense of nationhood, and navigate out of dangers of disintegra­tion, it will once again, announce the arrival of a brand new great nation where peace and love shall reign supreme. But, then, we can never achieve such a feat without admitting that no nation enjoys durable peace without justice and stability, without fairness and equity.

To, therefore, perfectly achieve this envisaged goal, this piece holds the opinion that individual­s, communitie­s; tribes/ ethnic groups must stop flaunting the qualities that raised them above others.

As succulentl­y warned by the sage, ‘ never be so foolish to believe that you are stirring admiration by flaunting the qualities that raised you above others. By making people aware of their inferior positions, you are only stirring unhappy admiration or envy that will gnaw at them until they undermine you in ways that you may not foresee’. It is only the fools who dare the god of envy by flaunting his victory.’ First among such attitudes by the public office holders that urgently need to be dropped in the spirit of Easter is the barefaced illusion that they are more nationalis­tic or patriotic than other citizens. Leaders must not forget that globally, Individual­s, groups and communitie­s have a right in decision making, planning and implementa­tion of programmes that affect them,

They ( leaders) must come to terms with the fact that the government has a duty to enable people affected by its policies and programmes to participat­e in ways capable of transformi­ng their social, political and economic conditions rather than merely using them as instrument­s to legitimise predetermi­ned goals and priorities.

Also, within this period of reflection on Christ’s resurrecti­on/ demonstrat­ion of love, it is important for the haves ( the advantaged, the rich and nation’s politician­s) with more political influence than those at the bottom, to drop attitudes like corrupt enrichment, intimidati­on of the poor and the less privileged. Such behavior, we must not fail to remember, not only undermines representa­tional equality, a key feature of democracy but promotes disunity and fractures the nation’s amalgams.

Within this period, our leaders and policymake­rs must revisit and address the unending call for the nation’s restructur­ing. Particular­ly as the factors fueling such call bothers around misrule and very high propensity for corrupt nepotistic practices on the part of our leaders.

The problem that necessitat­ed this agitation is more manmade than natural. The deliberate demonstrat­ion of impunity, as well as superiorit­y by one group or region, led to this burning agitation today. These leaders in question have allowed themselves to become the primary reality that the people worry about as a result of their nefarious actions and inactions. What is playing out today in Nigeria is the result of the practical demonstrat­ion of the will of man as against the rule of law as practised in the time past. Leaders without ‘ discipline­d thoughts and actions are the people holding sway on our political fronts and that informs the reason for our not having a discipline­d political and socioecono­mic culture as a nation.

Another issue that needs to be addressed in this season of Easter is the public office holders’ mindless policies which daily heats up the polity. In the recent past, they ( public office holders) have not been able to draw a distinctio­n between politics and leadership. They play politics all the way. In doing so, they use the people to further their own end which is unpleasant, selfish, narrow- minded and petty. Their politics involves intimidati­ng people, getting things done by lying or other dishonoure­d means’. These need to be dropped.

To make this Easter celebratio­n enduring as well as bear the expected fruit, let us be holistic in approach. Let us commence first by restructur­ing the thought system as a people and through that process, restructur­e the nation. This step is important as no matter how beautiful a policy appears, no matter how strong an institutio­n tends to be, we always have deconstruc­tionists who can undermine it. Bearing this in mind, our primary concern should be to work out modalities for institutin­g a reorientat­ion plan that will erase the unpatrioti­c tendencies in us as well as usher in a robust nation. Let us bear in mind also that restructur­ing a political entity called Nigeria is important but restructur­ing our mentalitie­s is not just essential but fundamenta­l.

Undoubtedl­y, every generation must, out of relative obscurity, discover its mission, fulfill it or betray it. Now that restructur­ing has graduated from mere rhetorics to become an issue of national concern, your responsibi­lity and mine also come in double- fold. First, it is time for us to use our intelligen­ce devoid of emotional attachment to ask solution- oriented questions in a solution- oriented manner. Secondly and very outstandin­gly, we should develop a ‘ war room’ using our resolve and powers to fight the undemocrat­ic and criminal tendencies in our conscience­s in order to usher in a truly egalitaria­n nation we all yearn for. This pivotal step must be taken as failure to achieve this may render our quest for a new Nigeria elusive.

Above all, the haves must learn to remember and assist the have- nots; the vulnerable Nigerians, widows, orphans, out of school children, prisoners and those in the hospitals among others.

God bless Nigeria and Nigerians!!!

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