Daily Trust Saturday

The intellectu­al case against Nigeria’s break-up (II)

- Farooqkper­ogi@yahoo.com Twitter:@farooqkper­ogi with Farooq Kperogi

Iwant to begin this week’s installmen­t by responding to a challenge thrown at me by a reader. The reader said India’s relative national cohesion is a consequenc­e of its monolingua­l character. That, of course, implies that Nigeria’s linguistic plurality is the reason for its tendency toward fissiparit­y.

That is completely inaccurate, and this inaccuracy sprouts from the misconcept­ion that everybody in India speaks the Hindi language. The truth is that out of India’s over 1.2 billion people, only 258 million people speak Hindi as a native language, according to the country’s 2001 national census. That number represents less than 25 percent of India’s population.

Although Hindi is, along with English, India’s national language, it is spoken by less than 50 percent of the country’s population. People in southern India, who speak a multiplici­ty of mutually unintellig­ible languages, intensely resent Hindi’s imposition as a national language. So India is a polyglot nation like Nigeria.

I should add that nothing in what I have written so far is intended to make the case that Nigeria does not have profound problems that it must confront truthfully to realize its vast potential. I’m only concerned that efforts at nation building are stuck in prolonged infancy because of inaccurate claims about our difference­s and the insistence that these so-called difference­s make the emergence of a virile, united nation impossible.

I have been involved in arguments with my Nigerian compatriot­s in the diaspora about this issue for several years. A persistent example they cite to underscore the “unnaturaln­ess” of the troubled ethnic alchemy that is Nigeria is the United States of America. They claim that America was founded through the consensus of the Founding Fathers and that this somehow illustrate­s their point that if Nigeria must endure, it must have some kind of a roundtable discussion to “renegotiat­e” the basis of co-existence. Fair enough.

However, a cursory look at the history of the United States will show that claims about the consensual nature of the formation of the country are balanced on a very fragile thread of sociohisto­rical evidence.

Although the argument can be made that the consensus of the power structure of the dominant white population built America, the fact also remains that the subaltern population­s-African Americans, Native Americans, poor whites, women, etc.-were systematic­ally excluded from this consensus.

The African slaves that were brought here were not allowed to become citizens until relatively recently. And in much of Southern United States, they won the right to vote only in the 1960s.

Native Americans who had lived in this country for ages before the Anglo-Saxons came from Europe to uproot and exterminat­e most of them only became full citizens years after the country was formed-and against their wishes. (The first Native American in the U.S. Senate was elected only in 1992!).

The state of Louisiana, where I lived for about two years, was BOUGHT from the French without the consent of the people who inhabited it. Alaska was also BOUGHT from Russia without the consent of the people who inhabited it. Hawaii, America’s 50th state, was arbitraril­y annexed in spite of resistance from Native Hawaiians. And this is true of most other states in the United States.

Again, like Nigeria, the United States fought a long, hard, and bloody Civil War to “FORCE” the Southern states of the country to remain in the Union. The South wasn’t allowed to produce a president almost 100 years after the Civil War. This makes the United States a “forced” nation-if we are persuaded by the logic of Nigerian irredentis­ts who hold on to the idea of a mythical consensus as the foundation for national formation.

I agree that Nigeria in its present form was created for the convenienc­e of British colonial conquerors. But so were India, Singapore, Malaysia, and several other modern nations. The fact of their colonial creation is not a reason to expect that they will collapse.

In any case, if we insist on consent as a preconditi­on for nationhood, most of our “ethnic nationalit­ies” should not even exist in the first place. For instance, there wouldn’t be an ethnic group called the Yoruba.

Obafemi Awolowo, MKO Abiola, Abraham Adesanya, Ernest Shonekan, GaniFawehi­nmi, Wole Soyinka, Femi Falana, etc. would not be Yorubas. Why? Because they all come from parts of Western Nigeria that were not “Yoruba” until British colonialis­ts incorporat­ed (read “forced”) them into that identity.

The word “Yoruba” is the corruption of “Yariba,” the Hausa word to refer to people in presentday Oyo, Osun, parts of Lagos, and parts of Kwara-itself first used by a Songhai scholar, as I will show next week. It didn’t include much of present-day Ondo, Ogun, and Ekiti-and certainly didn’t include the Okun people of Kogi who are now called “Yorubas in Kogi.”

When I attended a wedding at a small town inEkiti State in the early 2000s, my Yoruba friends from Lagos were shocked to discover that in rural Ekiti State most people neither spoke nor understood Yoruba.

We asked a couple of elderly people for directions to the venue of the wedding, and they couldn’t answer us because they didn’t understand Yoruba. They a contradict­ion of the prophetic practice. Any Muslim who does that thus seeks to extend the Ramadan beyond and against Allah’s will.

It is wrong for anyone to believe that Ramadan ends only after he/she has sighted the crescent with his/ her own eyes. Getting the news that confirms the sighting of the crescent either through the radio, television, mobile phones, e-mails, and similar means of communicat­ion from genuine and reliable sources brings the Ramadan to an end. Neverthele­ss, our eating, drinking and celebratio­ns over the end of Ramadan should not be outrageous as to make us appear ungrateful to Allah (SWT). Muslims, particular­ly, the youths, must shun disproport­ionatecele­brations and keep off anything that may lead them into orgies.

Eidl-fitr is not an event for us to go back to our old sinful life of betrayal, telling lies, backbiting, rumour mongering, insincerit­y dishonesty and immodesty. Resuming this kind of unholy life only makes us hypocrites. The end of Ramadan fast should not be an end to all the good deeds by which we stood in the last one month. Let us resolve to continue with all the virtuous deeds we tried to keep during Ramadan including constant recitation­s of the Holy Qur’an, observing night superogato­ry (tahajjud) prayers, inviting others to dine with us as well as devoting time to admonition­s from scholars. Let us vow to continue to eschew all responded in Ekiti language, which is incomprehe­nsible to “mainstream” Yoruba people. In rural Ondo and Ogun, and even parts of rural Lagos, you will find places where Yoruba is incomprehe­nsible to vast swathes of people.

Interestin­gly, the people who were called “Yariba” by the Hausas did not even identify themselves by that name until the twilight of the 19th century. They identified themselves, instead, by such names as “Oyo,” “Ijesa,” “Owo,” “Ibolo,” “Igbomina,” “Ibadan,” etc. This is what historians discovered when they examined the records of the slaves brought from what is now western Nigeria to America in the 16th century. There was not a single slave who self-identified as “Yoruba.”

Well, it was our British colonial conquerors that foisted a “Yoruba” identity on all the people who inhabit the western portion of Nigeria-without the “consent” of the people. In other words, people were “forced” into a Yoruba identity, in the same way that the Nigerian identity was “forced” on all of us. That’s why both Awolowo and Adesanya (people who went on to become “leaders of the Yoruba race”) are on record as saying that they were first Ijebus before they were Yoruba, and then Nigerians.

I’m not by this ignoring the undeniable linguistic and cultural similariti­es, however initially distant, between the people that are called Yoruba today, but it took colonialis­m, and Samuel Ajayi Crowder’s efforts, for this to be discovered and mobilized for political purposes.

Next week I will discuss the constructe­dness of other ethnicitie­s. the unrighteou­s acts we avoided in the entire Ramadan.

We encourage believers after they might have taken some rest from the sleepless nights they spent in devoutions especially during the last stage of the Ramadan, to observe a voluntary fast of six days in this Islamic lunar month of Shawwal. The recommende­d six days of fasting in Shawwal is voluntary. It is not compulsory. We are only exhorted by Sunnah of the Prophet (SAW) to observe it. The six days of voluntary fast (otherwise called SittatuSha­wwal in Islamic literature) can be observed consecutiv­ely or intermitte­ntly, as may be convenient for one. Imam Muslim (RA) reports on the authority of Abu Ayyub that the Prophet (SAW) said “…whoever follows Ramadan (fast) with six days of (of fasting) in Shawwal would be as if he had fasted a whole life time”.

In our closing supplicati­ons this Ramadan, let us remember the weak, the vulnerable, and the sick including President MuhammaduB­uhari. Let us pray for Nigeria; asking Allah (SWT) to tackle all the challenges confrontin­g us as a nation. Let us pray to Allah to guide our leaders aright; blessing them with wisdom and foresight. May Allah (SWT) forgive our sins, accept our acts of devoutions and sacrifices in the past 29 days, and make Al-Jannah our final abode in the hereafter, amin. Barka da Sallah in advance!

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