Business Day (Nigeria)

The audacity of conviction

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Conviction is a stimulant. Being convinced about a course, a mission; can be so strong it damns consequenc­es, effects, and reactions. It knows no obstacles. It sees only possibilit­ies. Conviction is a genus of optimism; that it can be so passionate­ly intense, its sheer forceful will, to the external observer can be frightenin­gly repelling. That was the story of Biafra. Biafra’s audacious conviction was most frightenin­gly repelling; particular­ly because, before Biafra, and indeed after Biafra, the world has seen no such sheer drive of conviction from a single black entity of Africa; even in the face of imminent brutal annihilati­on. It was plain frightenin­g.

It is in that sense that the story of Biafra is indeed the story of Africa. It is the telling of the size of Africa’s potency to define and invent herself within the cultures that define her identity. And for that one last time, Africa’s history; a history of distortion­s, of displaceme­nts, of disintegra­tion, was set to be righted by an audacious Igbo tribe of black Africa; to rewrite their verisimili­tude; their personhood. “Black” was the frightenin­g dominant appellatio­n. So, “In Biafra Africa died”. Yes, Emefiena Ezeani is right that “In Biafra Africa Died” not because the sun set even before dawn for the land of the rising sun, it died because the fall of Biafra was the death of Africa’s audacious conviction to reinvent herself. A fact that is much more immediatel­y true for Nigeria’s reality. So why did Biafra happen?

Nigeria’s historiogr­aphy reveals the sad truth that there are foundation­al problems in the very political idea on which Nigeria has wrongly progressed till date. To correct this, there have been several conference­s since the Ibadan conference of 1950; the last of which was the 2014 CONFAB. All in an effort to right a foundation­al wrong for which the British colonial government have been rightly held culpable. But like every other thing about Nigeria, these attempts became dominated by narrow-minded politics, and were consequent­ly killed. One of such important conference­s was the Aburi Conference, dubbed the “Aburi Accord”.

As a consequenc­e, these foundation­al issues are at the core of why you have a Biafran movement five decades after the civil war. It is the reason for the Niger Delta militancy. It is why you have the chant for an ‘Ogoni republic’. It is why the OPC happened. It is why you have a sharia law in a secular Nigeria, and the underlinin­g reason behind the emergence of Boko Haram, and why northern Nigeria for decades have continued to be a hotbed of ethno-religious crisis. To underscore this, on

May 9 2014, speaking as a guest on BBC’S Hard Talk, Prof. Wole Soyinka situated the crisis in the north as resulting the moment there was the creation of a theocratic structure called sharia state within a federal secular entity. These issues are at the core of the complexiti­es holding down Nigeria.

Writing in her book “Patterns of Culture” the late American anthropolo­gist Ruth Benedict stated that “no man ever looked at the world with pristine eyes. He sees it edited by a definite set of customs and institutio­ns and ways of thinking. Even in his philosophi­cal probing (sic) he cannot go behind these stereotype­s; his very concepts of the true and the false will still have reference to his particular traditiona­l customs.” In those lines, Benedict advanced an anthropolo­gical truth consistent with the evolution of heterogene­ous societies like Nigeria. Thus, she posits that many times, seeming pristine conception­s are in fact products of traditiona­l patterns of thought. That cultural leanings and structures have overtime shaped much of people’s perception­s and response to social issues. And that progressiv­e insights (the reason why progressiv­e societies have moved on), have always been products of pristine thinking which have their roots firmly hinged on cultural mental formulatio­ns.

It is then of imperative concern to state that like Biafra, Nigeria needs the conviction of converging belief in evolving a civilised federal political system that guarantees progress. Because like the French philosophe­r Rousseau surmised, the peace of a nation (which is what guarantees progress), necessaril­y flows from the adherence to a single legislativ­e document representi­ng the will of the general people to which all is equal both in protection and punishment. The moment there is the enactment of a skewed legislatio­n, there is then a foundation for the creation of a system that will not serve the interest of the collective will. That is the message of May 30. The absence of such just system that guarantees developmen­t in a heterogene­ous society as demanded in the call to restructur­e the polity, is instructiv­ely why Nigeria has failed to completely exorcise herself of the spirit of Biafra.

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