|
BURNING POT BY DR.
PRINCE CHARLES DICKSON
Is reciting the National Anthem by force?
pcdbooks@yahoo.com
Beware the fury
of a patient man. ~ John Dryden
The Special Adviser to the President (Media & Publicity) Chief Ajuri
Ngelale sent out a state house press release, the summary being that
the President was directing the MANDATORY RECITATION OF THE NATIONAL
PLEDGE AFTER THE NATIONAL ANTHEM AT OFFICIAL ENGAGEMENTS.
I wrote this piece in its original form in 2006…but I am rehearsing
it again because (1) we don’t listen, (2) it is important that we
listen, and (3) Cassandra in Greek legend, I recall, was condemned
to know the future but to be disbelieved when she foretold it. Hence
the agony of foreknowledge combined with the impotence to do
anything about it. So, the pain that we know our problems but seem
condemned to an existence of being incapable of solving them seems
our curse as well.
Some people have criticized me for repeating the same story over
again, that may be true but certainly I have no apologies because
the truth is that if we were what we ought to be then I probably
would have resorted to doing something else. We refuse to listen, so
I repeat the message. I change the tempo. I changed direction. I
vary the stand but the message remains largely the same, that we
have a problem that needs to be solved but we seem impotent at
solving it.
So, again I am writing about the national anthem; In our case that
National Anthem contains the National Pledge.I shall be as civil as
possible and shall convey my thoughts in a sober mood so that we
will at the end ask ourselves soul searching questions. This take is
directed to leadership and the led, it is a one size fits all call.
A national anthem is generally a patriotic musical composition that
evokes and eulogizes the history, traditions and struggles of its
people, recognized either by a nation's government as the official
national song, or by convention through use by the people.
Many years ago, the now late Professor Grace Alele-Williams, wrote
telling Obasanjo not to worry about his successor, she said
"Nigerians should vote for a person whose activities are transparent
and dedicated towards policies and practices that will promote unity
and improve their standard of life. The person must truly believe in
God, be self-disciplined and humble, the person must be intelligent
enough to have people around him who are experienced, and also
intelligent, motivated by love for the country".
My only addition then was that these recommendations be also applied
to citizenry not just those seeking elective positions and to the
crux of my message, then the person should know what the National
Pledge says and what it takes, the requirements of the words as
simple as they may look.
Taking us down memory lane, I recall those days that the National
Pledge was the first song one learnt in school and how we were
trained to standstill even if the earth was collapsing, I recall
going on an errand for my mother and had to stand for minutes to
observe the National Anthem in its entirety, even when it was barely
audible to me from the distance it was being played.
Today things have taken a terrible turn...no offence meant kids are
taught poems and rhymes that have no bearing on nationhood in
schools...and as we say in local parlance "who Nigeria epp?"
They get an education without patriotism, and do we blame them, an
education that is nearly unaffordable for many. They have seen
Ambassadors-select that could not recite the National Anthem and to
imagine they were going to represent the nation outside her shores
is simply the naked dance of masquerades in the village square.
These days there are very few things that give us a sense of
patriotism, baring the nation's soccer team. We are engaged in the
struggle for power and the largesse that comes with it. The
principle driving force behind the 'it is our turn' policy is not
equality, equity, fairness and justice but a rotational chopping of
the National cake that has refused to finish, one which we care less
about how it is baked and who bakes it.
If as a nation we had a pittance of respect for the National pledge
we would not be the way we are, our leaders will not take us for the
present circus ride they are doing right now...the first line of the
Pledge states "I pledge to Nigeria, my country"...Have we as a
people accepted Nigeria as a country beyond the gallery display, is
there a sense of commitment to the Nigerian project both by leaders
and the led beyond what we will chop? Even if we have Biafra, Odua,
Arewa, Niger Delta, Middle, Lower and Upper Belts, the mentality
largely will remain the same.
To you reading me, take a pause at this point, recite the National
Anthem at one call, did you make mistakes with the lines, did you
believe those words or you just recited them like the Old Roger that
is dead and gone to his grave poem..., does the words sound to us
like Edris Abdulkarim's Nigeria jaga jaga, do we really have
a pledge to this nation?
Our leaders have not pledged to the nation, they only owe their
pockets, enriching their immediate families, even for some of us
critics, is it not because we were denied part of the bounty that we
cry foul, is it because we really have pledged to Nigeria...
The pledge demands faithfulness, not hope, it involves loyalty not
betrayal, honesty not palliatives. It asked very little, that a man,
a woman that has the Nigerian blood flowing in his/her veins should
be faithful to his job as a civil servant, as a contractor, it asked
for loyalty to the office one occupies, as a private citizen,
loyalty to the people that you are serving and the institutions.
In schools are we teachers honest in our dealings with female
students, are we not unfaithful by plagiarizing those textbooks as
handouts when all we need to do to uphold the pledge was to write
our own well researched books. If I insist on harping on honesty we
will have a compendium of thousands of pages, so I rest that virtue
The National Pledge requires service with all our strength, instead
from Councilors to the President, we tear the nation apart with
strength and vigor in terms of corrupt practices, with everyone
eager to break the record of his predecessor. As it stands now
Buhari is beginning to look like the saint he is and was not.
Someone recently talked about heroes, heroes go the extra mile,
heroes are models, they make sacrifices. Are we not tired of Zik,
Tafawa, Awo and their generation that gave service the best way they
could?
We as a people steal with strength; we serve with hypocrisy, moving
anywhere belly (stomach) face.
Look at the march past we had in those days when we would mourn for
days if we are not selected by our schools to march to the anthem,
but these days you see schools in drab uniforms, dull and
unattractive. Public schools without honour, without glory any more.
It is sad that every Wednesday, the Federal Executive Council
members stand to the National Anthem yet they disrespect the words
through their actions. It takes beyond understanding the National
Anthem, the point is that can it be defended, are we preserving it
by deeds. The words of the National Pledge are not just ordinary,
they convey the essence of nationhood, we need to know that our
lives as a people start to end when we become silent about things
that matter.
I end by saying that we need to go back to where we lost it, the
only hope of repulsing the tyrannical ambition of a corrupt
leadership and a non challant populace and one without the will
power is to organize a spirited people that are ready to fight for
freedom again is to instill the pride of the words of the National
Pledge—May Nigeria Win
|