August 18, 2015 : Charles Abah

Notable historian, Prof. Toyin Falola, has warned that Nigeria will not develop fully with the continued sentiment its citizens attach ethnicity.
According to Falola, ethnicity has become “a well-entrenched bias” expressed by many Nigerians.
Falola, who teaches History at the University of Texas, United States, stated this while delivering the 50th anniversary lecture of the History department of the University of Lagos.
In a paper entitled “Ethnicity: Its Organ and Intestine”, the academic noted that ethnicity had become embedded in the psyches of Nigerians that it would be difficult to wipe it out from their consciousness.
An average Nigerian, according to him, sees himself more as first belonging to his ethnic cleavage before being a Nigerian.
The historian, who said that the development was affecting the nation’s development negatively, noted that it had also affected its resource distribution and power equation.
He added, “In Nigeria, contestation for power by political gladiators in the nation’s political space has further accentuated the problem associated with ethnicity. The choice made by voters is mainly driven by the concern for how a given political party will serve the interest of a given ethnic nationality rather than the collective good of Nigeria. This trend presupposes that the electorate will most likely form, organise and identify with any political platform that tends to accentuate and perpetuate their quest to dominate others.”
The Head of the department, Prof. Olufunke Adeboye, who spoke to journalists on the sidelines of the lecture, noted that the department had, in the last 50 years, adapted to the reality of global trends in carrying out its mandate.
She said, “You don’t expect that we have to be where we were 50 years ago today. We have adapted to the reality of global trends in the way we carry out our mandate. For instance, we had to change the name of the department from being Department of History to Department of History and Strategic Studies to cope with global trends which emphasis the need to bring a diverse focus to the study of history.
“Owing to the improvement in the course module for the areas of studies that we have had to focus on, the calibre of students that come to study here range from security agents to policy makers who have fund the courses very attractive thus enriching the pool of our alumni base.”
Copyright PUNCH.
-- kenneth w. harrow faculty excellence advocate professor of english michigan state university department of english 619 red cedar road room C-614 wells hall east lansing, mi 48824 ph. 517 803 8839 har...@msu.edu
Disturbingly,even among the supposed intellectuals,ethnicity and religious considerations,are sometimes negatively applied
Ethnicity is a complex subject to explore. The competition that it generates tends to have its roots in delusion, economics, fear, ignorance, perception, religion and most of all politics among others. Nigeria’s communities lived together and intermingled in marriage and trade among others for many centuries. Neighboring communities had their differences but they generally got along well for the most part.
Ethnicity has become a burden that bears down heavily on the country and also on many Nigerians who neither profit nor expect to profit from it. It seems to me that competitive politics in colonial Nigeria is more responsible than any other factor for the burden of ethnicity. Ethnicity-driven prejudice perhaps more than corruption has been responsible for Nigeria’s failure to make the progress that was universally expected of her at independence from Great Britain in 1960, and which she remains quite capable of. Corruption continues to feed on it. The justice system feeds on it. The electoral system feeds on it. The patronage system feeds on it. It has helped to ensure that a proper merit-based system does not take root.
The divide in this forum created by the shameful threats during the last elections by the Oba of Lagos (a lawyer and former senior police officer) to the lives of fellow Nigerians who in his mind, are not his ethnic kith and kin, is eloquent evidence of this. The present divide on which past administrations Buhari should probe is another. There seems to be some for example who cannot see the injustice in not treating equals as equals for the same crimes under the law. They invent the lame arguments of practicality, distraction, and waste of time. They do not see the difficulties that bad precedent creates.
Ethnicity has become the greatest challenge to Nigeria’s wholeness and progress. It casts a forbidding shadow on nearly everything. Corruption for example, is not unusually viewed through an ethnic prism. Appointments to offices of state and in the public service, are colored by ethnicity. Many Nigerians believe that even the selection of a national soccer team has not spared.
It seems to me that until the correct/true history of Nigeria is written and taught in Nigeria, even future generations will be poisoned as their predecessors have been. Nigeria’s “founding fathers” putrefied Nigeria’s public affairs’ landscape by selfishly resorting to the manipulation of ethnic (in some cases religious) differences to advance their political careers. They benefitted from them, and deeply implanted them in the general consciousness of their natural constituents. They made ethnicity, rather than citizenship and merit, conferrers of advantage. They should all be called out on the ethnicity question. It is time they are.
It is important that all Nigerians acknowledge that the country did not start on good feet. As has been said, if one does not know where they are coming from, they may not know where they are going to.
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On Aug 18, 2015, 8:22:34 PM, Vin Otuonye wrote: |
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