BURNING POT BY DR. PRINCE
CHARLES DICKSON
What the Gbong
Gwong Jos told me about Sokoto
pcdbooks@yahoo.com
If you want to understand me
come, bend over my African soul,
the black dockworkers’ groans,
the Tshopi’s frenzied dances,
the Shanganas’ rebellion,
the strange melody which flows
from a native song through the night.
And ask me no more
if yoU want to know me…
for I’m nothing more than a shell of flesh
where Africa’s uprising froze,
it's cry swollen with hope.
Noémia de Sousa in O Brado Africano (‘The African Roar’).
Gyang Buba was born on October 10, 1951 in Madu Village of Du
District, Jos South, Plateau State. He is the first son of Buba Dung
Bot of the Lo Du, Lo-Wet family and Ngo Kaneng Buba, one among the
ruling houses of the kingdom. He began his early education at SUM
elementary school Chwelnyap in 1960 to 1963 then went to Baptist Day
School Jos to complete his elementary studies. After finishing, He
attended from 1966 to 1971, and graduated from the Provincial
Secondary School, Kuru now known as Government Secondary School Kuru
and afterwards attended the Institute of Administration in Ahmadu
Bello University and graduated with a Diploma in Banking in 1975.
He is the Gbong Gwom Jos, paramount ruler of the ancient
cosmopolitan city of Jos, he doubles as head of the Plateau State
Traditional Council. He is a firm man, an arrogant man, down to
earth, cantankerous, he is vast, it all depends on which side you
are looking at, and an interviewer's delight.
I was not with him exactly for an interview, but here we were,
Nigeria at the frontburner, and Jos at the heart, and it was
interesting that cooking fuel had to be brought from Sokoto.
The paramount ruler told us that in his work experience as a Custom
officer, none beats his 6+years in Sokoto. He stated that when he
became Custom boss, he had to take the annual Custom Retreat to the
seat of the caliphate. He talked about the Sarduana’s hut in Rabah
and the modest house he left behind in Sokoto town. He tried to
juxtapose it with the streets our leaders build as homes for
themselves.
You could see his face light up each time as he spoke of Sokoto,
whether it was his experience with Alhaji Alhaji who was a long
serving Permanent Secretary and Minister who worked with various
Nigerian administrations. HRM grinned explaining how his mum came to
visit him in Sokoto, however all that smile gave way to a wry smile
as he asked if it’s the same Sokoto where the killings are even
underreported, how so much has changed.
At this point he comes back to Jos, “I am 70 next month, as a young
child, I witnessed 1966, I was class monitor at his Baptist Day
School. I had gone to my teacher’s house, as was routine in the
morning, to pick the books for the day’s subjects (that upstairs
still stands there today). Unknown to me, killings had started, my
teacher explained to me there would be no school today. I stood
upstairs and watched as people were being slaughtered. I was in his
house, an Igbo man. He kept me till 4:00pm”.
“It was evening, arson, bodies littered everywhere, my teacher had
managed to get two Yoruba men who took me home. Till date, I
remember my mum had literally cried herself to death wondering if I
was alive and where I was, she did not even say thank you to the men
who could speak no Hausa neither could she speak English or Yoruba”.
It was years later it dawned on me, that a barely 10 year old me
looked Igbo, and would have been killed. So I am alive by sheer love
of my Igbo teacher and his Yoruba friends. It is 2021, and I still
see the same killings.”
HRM heaved a heavy sigh as he cautioned the need to understand the
issues of conflict, the need for community policing, how we are
throwing away our customs, values and cultures for all sorts of
rights. He spoke to the neglect accorded the traditional
institutions.
I reflected on this royal father's thoughts, wits and wisdom and as
I write this third, the last in the treaties for this year on Jos,
Plateau State of Nigeria. So, let me state my belief. My testimony
is anchored on value for life irrespective of creed, faith, ethnic
cleavages, political leanings or ideologies. I believe that nobody
has the right of life over the other person. I believe in mutual
respect for humanity by all.
Leadership at all levels...from community to the federal government
level has failed in its responsibilities. Its responsibility to
protect lives and property, its responsibility to provide good
governance at all levels. It has failed in nearly all facets of our
national lives.
In Plateau, despite all the blame game, the Christian and Muslim
stand. A fact that for me remains irrefutable is that the Government
has failed in solving the issues because it is part of the problem,
not just Lalong’s but administrations before it. The military
saddled with the responsibility of providing security has equally
failed. Be it in Kuru Karama or Dogo Nahauwa. Rukuba or Bassa, we
have failed ourselves. When killings go unattended to it, we breed a
circle of revenge, vengeance, retaliation, reprisal, 'do me I do
you' and all these are premeditated jungle justice.
In Jos today and by extension the whole country we have again
reached that precipice of asking what the basis of our mutual
co-existence is. Before our forced marriage by Luggard and his
bosses was consummated as a business, it did not stop the Oyos and
Egbas being at war or the Jihad that ran through parts of the North
and all the communal war in the East.
I am privileged to even have an opinion because I am alive. Many
have died in these needless crises from Maitasini, Zagon Kataf,
Bauchi, Kano, Kaduna, Maidugiri, Boko Haram, Kala kato riots...the
Miss World riots and the Danish cartoon saga. In all these both
major faiths kill for a 'god' we claim is loving and peaceful; we
fight for a deity that we believe is powerful.
I am proud of my faith, but I will NEVER kill for it under whatever
guise or reason. My own God is strong and wise enough to do Justice
His own way. Besides, I have always anchored my faith and belief on
two charges, birth and destiny. I could have been born in Delhi as
Chalia Khan and be Buddhist. I may as well have been an atheist or
even from Bosnia.
And while the slaughter goes on, our leaders carry on...milking the
nation and after all we really can do nothing. No one that has a
heart will play politics with the death of anyone. In so-called
civilised nations people have gone to jail over animal rights but we
are a different breed. We even give titles to known murderers. We
have continued to lie to ourselves. We hate ourselves, rather than
respect each other, we tolerate each other like the proverbial
soldier ant on the scrotum.
What kind of people are we. I am not perfect, maybe even naive but I
know when something is not right. For us as a nation these are
strange times, a new Nigeria may emerge or we may be consumed by
recent happenings.
The US said not long ago that 2015 was the terminal date for the
project called Nigeria. Many of us said God forbid, and we passed
that date, but every of our actions are contradictory and only
further pushes us to the brink. For how long will the Almighty
continue to save us from ourselves—Only time will tell
|