THISDAY

AUWALU YADUDU THROUGH HIS THOUGHTS

ADAMU USMAN reviews ‘Jurisprude­nce of Nigerian Constituti­on: Essays in honour of Auwalu Hamisu Yadudu

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My chief difficulty in this assignment is keeping to my brief i.e reviewing the book, and not drifting to what I know of the subject of the book, Professor Auwalu Hamisu Yadudu. I am a protégé of the subject of the book. Indeed, one of his disciples in the field of law. As his student, I am well acquainted with his mind-processes, mental precocity and intensity. As a teacher in class, he had a towering intellectu­al and human presence that engulfed everyone. He was a master simplifier of complex legal issues that any student paying attention must understand his explanatio­ns. He was a reductioni­st before being an inductioni­st. He was a teacher that taught by examples believing that an example is the thing and nothing explains the thing like the thing. He was a teacher that divided the class into two: The lighted part he stood to deliver his lectures and the dark part the students were sitting. His effort in every class was to bring as many students as were willing to the lighted part he was. He often succeeded doing so. He was a teacher who when we leave his class, we will be carrying bright faces: The light of his explanatio­ns had just shone on us. In future, we will have Yadudu Lectures in addition to his jurisprude­nce. His lectures, luminous, eloquent, gripping and classic, are as much his high-watermark as his thoughts on the jurisprude­nce of the Nigerian constituti­on.

Now, if the question were to be put in future and even today: in what did Yadudu achieve fame? It would be said: In the jurisprude­nce of the constituti­on. It would also be said: In his enduring capacity to generate intellectu­al moments in and out of class. I was taught jurisprude­nce and legal system by Yadudu and so can talk authoritat­ively on his mental acuity, quickness of mind and genius. This event is another intellectu­al moment the legal philosophe­r has generated. As my lecturer, he was the jar of oil my grandmothe­r in her tales always said never runs dry. Simple, Unassuming, Brilliant and Eloquent (SUBE), Yadudu the oil in the jar is one lecturer a serious student can NEVER forget.

Yadudu is fair and free of ethnic and religious bias. My dissertati­on was not submitted by my supervisor to whom I submitted it for scoring. When asked, my supervisor said I did not submit it. Yadudu said: ‘Adamu of all people? This cannot be.’ As Dean of Law, he asked a messenger to search the supervisor’s office where my dissertati­on was found under a pile of books. Another lecturer wanted to victimize me in a given Islamic law subject. When I protested, Yadudu as Dean of Law again ordered that my paper be remarked. It was remarked and I was scored 4 over 5 against the one and a half I was scored by the lecturer.

The first question that loomed large in my mind when I received this book was: Do the essays in the book really honour Yadudu by their quality or they only purport to do so? Going through the essays, I could see they actually honour the erudite jurist and legal philosophe­r both by their brilliance and reach. The essays in the book are wide-ranging and rigorous in their analyses of their subjectmat­ters. Though diverging on subject-matter, the essays converge on the constituti­on. They have this refreshing quality of springing from the constituti­on like a water fountain only to return to the constituti­on. The constituti­on the source of these articles in the circumstan­ce is a vortex that delivers the articles only to receive them back again. Over and above the articles, Yadudu’s jurisprude­ntial mind hovers like a cloud attaching here and there.

The essays in the book in the main are by seminal academics and seasoned legal practition­ers who have interacted with the Nigerian constituti­on so intimately as to know both its letter and spirit. Some of the authors of these articles are oracles of the law in their own right. The table of contents shows the editors were faithful to the title of the book: The Jurisprude­nce of Nigerian Constituti­on: Essays in Honour of Professor Auwalu Hamisu Yadudu. No article strays out of line. Faithful to the title, editors of the essays gave effect to the 5Ds of research: definition, discipline, discrimina­tion, direction and destinatio­n.

In my review, while looking out for the 5Ds, I was also looking out for the 5-canons of a good book, namely: Unity and integrity of the book, Knowledge on display, Clarity of expression, Elegance of expression and Utility of the work. Essentiall­y what I would do is a panorama over what the essayists did. My duty as a town-crier and time would not allow me to do more than this. Jurisprude­nce is the science of law. Science is thinking as art is doing. Jurisprude­nce of the Nigerian constituti­on therefore can be reduced to thoughts on the Nigerian constituti­on – in this case, Yadudu’s thoughts on the Nigerian constituti­on. This book has 17 chapters of well-researched papers. Each chapter begins with an abstract and an introducti­on and ends with a conclusion. Heads and subheads are numbered according to chapters and placement. All these show order. If order is the first law in heaven, it is the first law in understand­ing. Order is a Yadudu virtue and therefore the book honours him on this score.

Those who packaged this book of essays presented Yadudu as a blend of the naturalist, positivist­andhistori­calschoolo­fjurisprud­ence. I agree, with the only qualificat­ion that I see him less of a positivist, more of a naturalist and much more of a historical jurist. The essayists maintain Yadudu’s views and comments on the Nigerian constituti­on are shaped by the jurisprude­ntial school he belongs. Naturally.

As an exponent of the historical school, the erudite jurist and legal philosophe­r believes that the Nigerian constituti­on should reflect our historical experience as a people. Our past should speak to us through our constituti­on. Thus, shariah law, customary laws of indigenous communitie­s should be accommodat­ed in the nation’s constituti­on within the realm of possibilit­ies. This, in his view, is what makes the constituti­on pragmatic, effective and workable. We should be our constituti­on and our constituti­on should be us. Perhaps the reason the British don’t have issues with their constituti­on is because they are their constituti­on and their constituti­on is them. The English constituti­on is so much part of them that it does not need to be written on a piece of paper. It is already written in the hearts of the British people. Failure to accommodat­e our peculiarit­ies in the constituti­on is perhaps the reason we keep having issues with our constituti­on. Inclusivit­y is the word for Yadudu on the matter of the Nigerian constituti­on.

The book under review contains 17 chapters. There is Yadudu’s presence in all the 17 chapters of the book. In some chapters, he speaks directly to readers; in others indirectly. The real value of this collection of essays in honour of Yadudu is that it is not a mere assembly or a reportage of constituti­onal issues but a synthesis of well-researched articles with well-defined positions on the issues they canvass. My interrogat­ion of the papers in the book shows the papers are position papers. There can be no credible review of the Nigerian constituti­on without reference to this book. Why? Because the book is about the constituti­onal journey of Nigeria from colonial time to date. It is an odyssey of the constituti­onal journey of the nation yet to berth. Excerpts from the review of ‘Jurisprude­nce of Nigerian Constituti­on: Essays in honour of Professor Yadudu, by his former student at BUK, Kano, now a Professor of Law at ABU, Zaria

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