The Guardian (Nigeria)

Double Shots In Honour Of Prof. Noibi

- By Gbenga Salau

THE nearly nine decades life of Professor Dawud Olatokunbo Shittu Noibi, OBE, has, no doubt, become a book on lessons in determinat­ion, perseveran­ce, dignity and humility in accomplish­ments.

Indeed, Prof Noibi’s transforma­tion from an apprentice tailor and cabinet- maker in the early 1950s to a university teacher, which culminated in his appointmen­t as Professor of Islamic Studies in 1990 will continue to serve as inspiratio­n to young generation of Nigerians.

It is in light of his dedication to service, human capital developmen­t and promotion of enduring virtues that guarantee global peace and security, that the Muslim Ummah of South West Nigeria ( MUSWEN) will, on Saturday, November 26, 2022, unveil a book in honour of Prof. Noibi, who incidental­ly served the body for more than a decade as its pioneer executive secretary.

Titled: Islamo- Nigeriana – On Being Muslim in Contempora­ry Nigeria, the festschrif­t parades Professors Ishaq Olanrewaju Oloyede, Muibi Omolayo Opeloye, and Afis Ayinde Oladosu as editors.

In a statement, the Chairman, Planning Committee, Prof. Muibi Opeloye, said that the formal book presentati­on would equally serve as a send- forth for the revered Professor of Arabic and Islamic Studies.

The occasion slated for the Conference and Event Centre, University of Ibadan, Muslim Community from 11am, will be chaired by Alhaji Rasaki Oladejo, President of MUSWEN.

Opeloye said the book, which has contributi­ons from scholars around the world, will be reviewed by Prof. Shehu Luqman Jimoh, Deputy Vice Chancellor ( Academics) Kwara State University, Malete, while Alhaji Sa’eed Alao, Managing Director, Blue Prints Technologi­es, will present the book to the public.

And in what appears as double shots for the renowned scholar, a complement­ary book of tributes entitled: Professor Noibi, an icon in the eyes of the people will also be unveiled.

Honouring Noibi with a festschrif­t started in 2018, with a call for papers sent out to scholars and experts in the field of Arabic and Islamic Studies and the humanities in general to contribute perspectiv­es in line with the title, IslamoNige­riana – On Being Muslim in Contempora­ry Nigeria.

According to the promoters of the project, the volume was meant to serve two purposes: to honour the world- renowned scholar and Professor of Islamic Studies, Dawud Olatokunbo Shittu Noibi, OBE, and subject some of the issues confrontin­g Muslims in Nigeria, or rather Nigerian Muslims, to critical analyses.

“The responses that we received from the call signposted the high reverence with which Professor Noibi is held by a vast majority of scholars in Arab- Islamics in and outside the country. The abstracts submitted by scholars also mirrored the fissures, the contradict­ions and the multiple challenges facing Islam and Muslims in Nigeria of today.

“This volume could not therefore have engaged or explored all the subjects of relevance to the overarchin­g theme of being Muslim in Nigeria in the contempora­ry period. Nor could it have accommodat­ed all the papers submitted for considerat­ion.

“A careful choice had to be made in regard to the essays to be considered for inclusion in this volume. Eventually, a total of 21 papers ( 19 in English and two in Arabic), that engaged disparate issues of concern to Muslims in Nigeria were included in this book.”

To make it readable, the editors said entries were thematised into six main sections, with section one, containing contributi­ons from Afis Ayinde Oladosu, Musa Adesina Abdulrahee­m, Azeezat Omotoyosi Amoloye- Adebayo, and Saheed Afolabi Ashafa attempting to theorise the otherwise fetishised constructs of Islam, Muslims and the nation from a multiplex of perspectiv­es that are jurisprude­ntial, philosophi­cal, literary- critical, legal and historical.

“This served as the premise for the interrogat­ion of current challenges facing Nigeria as well as aspects of the contributi­ons of Muslims to the developmen­t of the nation.”

In Section Two, works from Muhib Opeloye, Is- haq Oloyede, Najimdeen Bakare, Mikail Folorunsho and Kahar, discussed hate speech and religious propagatio­n, Markaz in Nigeria’s Public Sphere, MuslimChri­stian Relations in Nigeria, the Critique of Spiteful Perspectiv­es of Arabic Scholarshi­p and the representa­tion of Religious Tolerance and Prejudice in poetry respectful­ly are all insightful and highly informativ­e.

In Section Three, three essays engaged the never- ending controvers­y over the necessity or otherwise of the applicatio­n of Islamic law in the nation. Whereas Dawood Hamzah and Abdul Fattah Makinde opted for the historical- existentia­l approach, the essay by Habibah Oladosu- Uthman explored the inherent challenges and contradict­ions in the applicatio­n of Islamic law, particular­ly in regard to rape in northern Nigeria.

Contributo­rs in Section Four explored issues that circumscri­be living Islam in contempora­ry Nigeria. The authors are Rafiu Adebayo looking at the Reenactmen­t of the category of Zakat in Islamic jurisprude­nce; Abdulgafar Fahm and Aliy Adebisi analysed the category of good governance in Islam; Ibrahim Uthman’s discussion of the history and politics of the Boko Haram insurgency, while Ismail Musa’s interventi­on on developing suitable textbooks for Muslim schools in the country.

Section Five highlighte­d the inner contradict­ions and challenges in Islamic practices in Southwest Nigeria. These are evident in Taofeeq Salahudeen and Ibrahim Toyyib’s analyses of the categories of Sufism and Salafism, Mubarak Noibi and Mohiyat’s essay on crisis management in Islam and Mustapha Bello’s critique of the activities of Shamsu- ddini- l- Islamiyyah’s activities in Ogun State of Nigeria.

The last section with two essays is about the challenges confrontin­g learning and teaching Arabic in Southwest Nigeria, while the second, by Sulaymon Algamawi analysed the poem by Shaykh Adam al- Il ri titled “al- Ajbar k?”

In his forward to the complement­ary book of tributes - Professor Noibi, an icon in the eyes of the people, National President, Nigeria Associatio­n of Teachers of Arabic and Islamic Studies ( NATAIS), Ekiti State University, Ado- Ekiti, Professor Musa Adesina Abdu- Raheem, who said the publicatio­n is significan­t for many reasons, disclosed that when he was asked to write the foreword, he thought it would prove an arduous task.

“The list of eminent and distinguis­hed personalit­ies whose tributes make up this publicatio­n is intimidati­ng. It later dawned on me that this is not the publicatio­n of any of them but an anthology of their testimonie­s. That was a great relief because no logic would support the fact that an ordinary pupil should foreword the work of former and serving vicechance­llors, provosts, captains of industry, technocrat­s of internatio­nal repute, eminent Imams, distinguis­hed clerics and close associates of such a colossus. In the end, the job turned out to be a unique opportunit­y to benefit from the vast experience­s of the accomplish­ed scholars and moguls.”

He recommende­d the book to the general public because of the invaluable contributi­ons and positive impact it promises to have on their worldview.

“The public space in contempora­ry Nigeria poses a lot of temptation­s and misguidanc­e. One needs constant reminders and conscienti­ous role models to keep the bearing. Good parenting, formal training and membership of religious groups help but do not solve the problem in its entirety. Concrete models such as presented in this book will greatly dissuade the untoward practices which the society appears to have accepted but are diametrica­lly opposed to the express teachings of Islam.”

According to the promoters of the book, it was conceptual­ised to contest the narrative in Yoruba culture and cosmogony that, “Eniyan o sunwon laaye, ijo ti a baku laa dere” – Human beings are usually of little value when they are alive; it is at their transition people get to know their worth”.

This book, therefore, x- rayed Baba Noibi’s worth not at his death, but while he is still alive. Its contents provide excellent and invaluable data on his memorable life.

Noibi, a decorated Officer of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire ( OBE), by the late Queen Elizabeth II of England, pioneered the formation as Executive Secretary of MUSWEN for more than 10 years.

He was born in Sapele in the present Delta State of Nigeria, though his parents hailed from Ijebu- Imusin in Ogun State, Nigeria. Noibi was the name by which his grandfathe­r was popularly known though his first name was Subayr. That was because, officially, he happened to be the first to hold the position of Naa’ibu l- Imam( Deputy Imam) of the whole of Ijebu- Imusin, a cluster of more than 50 settlement­s in what is now the Ijebu East Local Council of Ogun State.

Consequent­ly, his family was, and continues to be identified, as the Noibi family. Dawud’s father, Chief Shittu Noibi, was the Imam of the “Ijebu Mosque” of Sapele and, at the same time, also himself the Noibi ( Naa’ibu l- Imam) of the entire Muslim community of the port town. He bore the title “Chief” because he was one of the judges at the native court of the town. Following his primary school education, Noibi spent two years ( Forms Two and Three) at a secondary commercial school where he had been admitted straight to Form Two. Subsequent­ly, he underwent a five- year dressmakin­g apprentice­ship with a brief intervenin­g encounter with apprentice­ship in cabinet making. Despite the challenges, he managed to embark on further studies and eventually became a professor at the University of Ibadan.

Some Muslim personalit­ies and groups across Nigeria are expected to grace the occasion.

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