TELESCOPE
When I look around, of the
things that have bedeviled our schools, our families, the individual, the
nation, all I do is wonder. The very fabric of society is sawn in two by
unconscious misdeeds, irresponsibility and recklessness. Society is a complex
entity yet exists like a jigsaw surviving or deteriorating by minute actions
from various players. We are all players contributing to the success and
efficiency of our team (Nigeria), we are interconnected, interdependent,
interrelated and our actions and inaction have a ripple effect.
Well, I’m not a critic, neither am i a pessimist; am just an observer having
the freedom to look deeper, unraveling salient issues and ultimately breaking
them out to discerning hearts to consume. Our society is crippled by these very
actors. The teachers; I would say they possess in them the ability to transform
the history of the nation. I recently traveled to my former college; I hoped
with dire expectation to behold that great institution of my ‘birth’. I observed
my lovely teachers working assiduously to continue the work of shaping lives
for the future. Maybe our founding fathers envisaged that qualitative service and
efficient delivery would come from our schools: the student would be an epitome
of excellence, discipline, astuteness, competence. Sadly, there is substantial
if not absolute deviation from this principle. A catastrophe!
My above narration is suddenly
contrasted by my recent experience some
weeks ago. While the nation basks in the euphoria of the West African Council
examination, I was expectantly looking to see a picture; of zealous students
studying, of burning midnight candles, of an insatiable desire to succeed, of
pursuance of excellence, of……i could go on and on. But the age long monster
that has crippled our hope of a better future stood in the background glancing wearyingly as the quagmire lives on. Students contribute reasonable amount to
get ‘chokes’ from their teachers with no restraint, no fear, and no remorse. My
nightmare is further exacerbated by the fact that these students go about these
ills like it was part of the curriculum. Alas! The questions came again like water from a broken faucet; how
long? Would these students be the nation’s work force saddled with nothing but
good service delivery? Would they ever understand the principles of hard work
and healthy intellectual competition? Maybe the answers are obvious. We must all
move with such deliberate steps and urgency to build a system that will work,
bringing a turn around. Our curriculum are obsolete and need substantial
alteration to suit present circumstances. Patriotism, loyalty, tolerance,
unity, cooperation peace and progress must be incorporated in our curriculum;
we must be deliberate in building the nation of our dreams.
The next is the family; imagine if
every dad were to teach their sons morals, virtue and integrity; if every mum
taught their daughters to be chaste, pious, courteous and disciplined. Imagine
these children in turn raising their children with such foundation. The family,
sociologist agree, has a direct effect
on society. Kurt Cobain, the pop star who formed the famous “Nirvana” group
committed suicide in his magnificent residence after weeks of drugs and
alcohol. He had a very exciting childhood and showed so much promise in music,
until his parents got divorced while he was seven. Later in his life he said
the divorce had profound effect on his life. His mother noted that his
personality changed dramatically; Cobain became defiant and withdrawn. In an
interview in 1993, he had this to say:
“I remembered feeling ashamed, for some reason. I was ashamed of my parents. I couldn’t face some of my friends at school anymore, because I desperately wanted to have the classic, you know, typical family. Mother and father. I wanted that security, so I resented them for quite a few years because of that.”
Cobain was a child who
desperately needed a family that will hold him during the turbulent moments in
life, show him how to thrive and believe in him. From the legal viewpoint, in
the branch of family law, most deviants come from broken homes. Divorce is the
last resort when all other means of reconciliation fails. Though I am not
saying that children who have unfavorable environments always will fail, but statistics
put the odds squarely against them. The family possesses great ability to
present to the nation the best citizens.
The individual; of relating to, or
distinctively associated with an individual, being an individual or existing as
an indivisible whole. We all are pieces of a larger picture playing
interdependent roles. This individual ranges from the mechanic carrying on his
trade in his workshop, the pure water hawker along the busy road, the student
who sits in class to be imparted, the cobbler who waits to give help to our
torn shoes, the civil servant that works in those parastatals, the politician
belonging to a political party, the president who sits at the helm of affairs
and the individual who is undefined. We all are a chain of active participants.
The nation in recent years has been the architect of its own demise destroying
the pillar of trust from its populace. Government policies are treated with
great suspicion, the police is no longer our friend, and the soldiers?
Intimidation will be just the appropriate depiction. The instrument of our
rebirth lies in us (individuals). Our attitude goes a long way in shaping the
direction of our nation’s future. Subject A
is a student who understands that excellence is untenable unless by
malpractice, B refuses to use the waste bin, X drives through the red light, Y
only hopes to make money at all cost, Z is indifferent whether the nation
plunges into the abyss. An Igbo saying
goes; if one person does something bad, it can also affect his entire family
and in my own words the entire nation. As they say, “the child avoids the place
where his father owes a debt”.
Justice will not be
served if I do not mention the government (“our social contractors”). The
responsibility bestowed on them is enormous and sadly, they do not realize it.
If a nation will ever deliver on providing a road map for national
transformation, they MUST keep their own part of the bargain of this social
contract. There seems not to be any tangible efforts to awaken the country from
it self-inflicted slumber; from the doldrums that have held sway as far as I
can remember. A quote that blew the covers of my mind recently reads: “politicians
prepare for the next election. Statesmen prepare for the next generation”.
We merely have people who think nothing of the future of this nation except
wining the next elections. Government should not just sit and organize tea
parties rather plan for the future.
Maybe I am living in dreamland, maybe these
things are mere fables intended to blow our minds, to give us momentary satisfaction or maybe this is what we truly
need, a nation whose citizens live with a feeling of responsibility and
discipline.
Your Friend,
othman
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