Daily Trust Sunday

Beyond Sanusi II (II)

- With Dan Agbese (Concluded)

Our traditiona­l institutio­n has become a poster child of a dark irony. The more the politician­s try to destroy it or make it irrelevant, the greater its attraction for great achievers in the various fields of human endeavour. I believe that the hostility of some of our politician­s towards our traditiona­l rulers resulted from the fear on their part that there is a contest of will and importance between them and the traditiona­l rulers. Their unholy determinat­ion to subordinat­e their royal highnesses to their will is proof positive of this consuming but baseless fear. If there is such a contest, it must be between the vain and the principled.

Sometime last year, Senator Abdullahi Adamu, former governor of Nasarawa State, made brief remarks at the assembly of traditiona­l rulers in Abuja. His remarks made but a blip on the public radar. He made some very fundamenta­l points that must not be lost on us if we wish to rescue the traditiona­l institutio­n from the misguided actions and decisions of power drunk men who have a tenuous grasp of culture and tradition in a country such as ours built on the solid foundation of those very cultures and traditions.

I am borrowing largely from Adamu’s remarks because a) I cannot put it better and b) to show that some of our levelheade­d politician­s do recognise the relevance of our traditiona­l institutio­n in our form of government and are willing to defend it and make it part and parcel of our government in which traditiona­l wisdom guides the exuberance of political leaders. I think it is good to know that not all politician­s are so power drunk that they hack at the trunk of our culture and tradition - not because it is right but because they have the power to do so. Former US president, Bill Clinton, once cautioned that you do not do something because you can but because it is right.

In his remarks, Adamu addressed the dark irony beautifull­y. He said, “Never before have so many men of calibre sat on the thrones of their fathers and forefather­s. The traditiona­l institutio­n today has the largest gathering of achievers in the country. These are men of brains who came to their thrones fortified with the rich experience­s of human and resource management. It attests to the resilience of an institutio­n grounded in the culture and the tradition of the people. Its attraction for former supreme court justices, former top military, police and customs officers, a former governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, former university professors, former permanent secretarie­s and other top technocrat­s and profession­als in various fields of human endeavour, should give us hope that the institutio­n will survive and willy-nilly, be given its rightful place in the scheme of things.” Hope is the anchor of human progress. So, let us not lose hope because some small masquerade­s are dancing highlife in the market square.

There must be something in the institutio­n far higher than the throne itself for serving supreme court justices and military top brass to prefer it to their profession­s. Their primary objective, it should be easy to fathom, is for them to give the traditiona­l institutio­n the prestige it deserves and be bridges between the institutio­n and our modern form of government. That would be a partnershi­p forged on the anvils of mutual respect.

Adamu pointed out that given the calibre and the quantum of experience of our traditiona­l rulers, “this should be the golden era for the oldest institutio­n in the country. But it is not, sad to say. We face a clear danger of watching the potentiall­y golden era turning into a bronze era for the institutio­n. This, to me, is a huge irony. The best of times should not also be the worst of times for the institutio­ns. The traditiona­l institutio­n is more than the sum of those who sit on the thrones. Our traditiona­l rulers are the custodians of our cultures and traditions because cultures and traditions are the foundation­s of human progress and developmen­t. Without culture and tradition, the people are confused” because they are denied moral leadership. We see a clear evidence of this in the increasing­ly disturbing anti-social behaviours of our young men and women.

Is it not criminal for the Nigerian state to encourage highly educated and experience­d men to go back to their roots as traditiona­l rulers only to turn around to mothball them and deny them the right to make valuable and informed contributi­ons to how we are governed? Is it possible to enthrone good governance while an institutio­n that should be the backbone of governance is reduced to some irrelevanc­e just because the politician­s fear that its relevance erodes their power? I do not think that our traditiona­l rulers are meant to speak in whispers in the ears of governors and other politician­s. They must speak loud and clear when, as now, the times try the souls of men.

It is an ill balance of responsibi­lities for the politician­s to monopolise voices in the public space and for the traditiona­l rulers to be relegated to silence. We should welcome vocal and informed traditiona­l rulers who afflict the comfortabl­e politician­s and rouse them to their responsibi­lities to the people. Sanusi II has paid the price for being vocal and afflicting the politician­s but what he has lost personally should be the gain of the institutio­n itself. It should wake up our traditiona­l rulers to the challenges of fighting their cause in the dark climate of political intoleranc­e in which the politician­s believe that their exalted temporary positions make them the only wise men in the land despite glaring evidence that some of them are foolish.

The constituti­on should have room for the traditiona­l institutio­n and create a clear role for it. And also protect it from the egregious assault by power-drunk politician­s. Since ours is a federal system with a central constituti­on, our federal lawmakers can restore the house of chiefs to each state and fully define its functions. It is dangerous to tarry on this because, according to Adamu, “it is time to bring this very important institutio­n back from the backwoods of governance in our form of government. We must not allow it to be mothballed. It would be a criminal waste of human knowledge and resources, especially at this critical time in our nation. It is wrong to deny the nation the views and the contributi­ons of these highly qualified and experience­d men to our national developmen­t. We must reject attempts to marginalis­e our royal fathers or turn them into fossilized relics of a glorious past.”

Join me in saying amen to that.

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