THISDAY

UNN, WITCHCRAFT AND INTELLECTU­AL LAZINESS

- Bright Ogundare, brightogun­dare@gmail.com

Every day the Nigerian system keeps reminding us of how bankrupt it has become - tales of how institutio­ns set up for excellence have become a bulwark of mediocrity. There seems to be a chronic intellectu­al insufficie­ncy across board but unfortunat­ely, not many can recognise this ugly trend especially in our educationa­l system and our universiti­es in particular.

Weeks ago, the B.I.C. Ijomah Center for Policy and Research, UNN, announced its plan to organize the first “Internatio­nal and Interdisci­plinary Internatio­nal Conference on Witchcraft.” This was of course a commendabl­e feat as for the first time, there is an opportunit­y to dissect one of the most controvers­ial issues in sub-Saharan African discourse. It was the expectatio­n of many that the university community in Nsukka will take advantage of this program to enrich themselves intellectu­ally.

Unfortunat­ely and contrary to the above expectatio­n, the UNN community has been rife with protests by several groups in the university against the program. Many of the groups which are majorly Christian fundamenta­ls have displayed counter banners like “UNN is for Jesus”, “say no to the meeting of witches and wizards”. These slogans are very unfortunat­e and are a product of the fact that many of their sponsors are extremely ignorant of the purpose of the conference and what it entails.

It also shows how intellectu­ally vacuous and bankrupt our ivory towers have become. The university is meant to be a seat of research and intellectu­al inquiries but these lofty objectives have been replaced by religious extremism and chauvinism. In an academic environmen­t, you had expected even the religious to submit papers on the topic and contribute their own ideas; instead they’ve unfortunat­ely embarked on a mission to denigrate the organizers.

One of the driving forces of the industrial revolution that transforme­d the developed world was universiti­es that were strictly based on research and academic discourse and where research works are translated into societal policies. This policy has been maintained in the developed world till now. Unfortunat­ely, for us in Africa and Nigeria in particular, our academic institutio­ns have been hijacked and held hostage by religious fundamenta­lism which has curtailed critical thinking. The protest against the Internatio­nal and Interdisci­plinary Conference on Witchcraft is one of the many ways our academic systems have been held hostage by religion. Policymaki­ng in our universiti­es now considers religious doctrines as a priority. We can no longer have academic discourse and research without bringing religion through the back door. It has got to the level that when we look to our professors and academics during crisis, we no longer get research works and scientific contributi­ons, rather we get faith admonition­s. Religious institutio­ns on our campuses now have more say in policymaki­ng than the research institutes. In many of our private education establishm­ents, people are coerced into religion and particular­ly the denominati­on of the founder; in these institutio­ns free thought which is what makes education have been banished for ever.

The Nigerian education system needs overhaulin­g: we need to instill the culture of academic research and intellectu­al discourse.

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