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Friday, May 7, 2010

WHEN DEATH BECOMES HONOURABLE


I'll start out making it clear I share a very strong bond with Late
Umar Yar'adua, so strong is it that it outweighs every other things
put together that you may want to consider. May Allah accept his soul
into Paradise and forgive his sins and shortcomings. Amin.

My mobile phone had woken me up at about 12:27 am, I'm a staunch fan of
crazy ringtones, I scrambled over the rug before I could finally spot
my device. A text message from a very close friend had conveyed in
simple english the demise of Yar'adua. I sighed and had a moment of
silence to pray for him; the controversy finally came to rest.
I'm not a fan of Yar'adua, but in death, I owe him very sacred
responsibilities, one of such, Respect. I'm therefore not writing to
further damage a bad situation but besides picking a lesson from death
especially in high places, it is pertinent to re-examine what factors
we put into consideration before making decisions. Also, who are the
people we so trust to guide our decisions and what exactly motivates
their approval and or otherwise.
At the end of it all, we all might come to agree I hope, that even
Healthy Heads of State die around the world either as a result of
assassination or accidents, so the main issue might not be Death as it
were but how some decisions we make having thoroughly considered our
state of health reduce our eventual demise to Suicide!
Let me quickly advice you ignore most statements credited to most
politician over this issue, it would be a rehearsed collection of
words meant to put them in a sober frame. Don't buy it, deep within,
they feel it has finally come to an end and everyone would begin to
count his gains or losses.
To say the 2007 elections were far from the true representation of the
Nigerian peoples' choice of leadership is just reproducing an
over-bothered picture of outright disrespect for the right to choice.
How men of acclaimed high moral values then get to benefit from such
anomaly beats my imagination so much so that I feel everybody and I
repeat everybody that today currently occupies a seat whereever in
whatever capacity, dead or alive, had fed fat on a grossly manipulated electioneering process and as such should willingly shed some weight
of moralty and waste the rest trying to rewrite their own very
history.
What makes Late Yar'adua's case special is that he had a choice from
day one, for the sake of a broad window of decision making, I'm
counting my day one from when the idea was first sold to him, he must
have had an opportunity to choose between his Health and the Hot Seat.
Let's give it to him that he made a wrong choice ab initio, his health
situation gave a clear warning when he collapsed during a campaign
outing, yet, his rumoured death then, rather than taken as a mortal
warning was danced around for its political gains. Today, those days
and periods would sound like yesterday!
If he had families, I would ask what their concerns were or whether
such concerns irrespective of its colouration mattered to the First
Family.
I have always been an advocate of standing by ones integrity whenever
it clashed with interest. Believe me, it pays off. I would as a result
of this score Yar'adua very low and also let whoever is advisers were
share a part of the blame because at some point going by Medical
postulations, it was obvious our Man couldn't make his own decisions
anymore. So passionate am I about this fact that I found it very hard
to agree that late Yar'adua knew he was being flown to Nigeria or that
he was even in Nigeria.
Just like I've earlier indicated the direction of my article, it is
also not meant to grace the already overblown influence of Turai but
to ponder over what choices she could have helped her husband make,
what interest she puts first, that of the nation that needs a truly
committed, hardworking and Healthy President or that of making clones
of First Ladies of her daughters or the transient title of First Lady
and its worldly attachments. Whatever she was thinking or informing
those thoughts has now set with the sun. I need not add that Nigeria
would move on.
The common 'I WOULD DIE FOR NIGERIA, IF THAT'S WHAT IT TAKES ANTHEM'
has finally come to bear its true meaning.
Ours is a country that really doesn't need anybody to die for her,a million and one had already done that and moved us away from that
phase. What we need is a Leadership that would restore hope.
Very many of these guys around the corridors of power, plan and make
authoritative statements about the future as if they had an
arrangement with death. Yar'adua most likely must have discussed what
his Second term in office would be like.
We need to give more time to reading between the lines, thats where
the facts are. The lessons of Death and the choice of Man have a way
of explaining Destiny: what every man is designed to work with.
All matters hanging around this gentleman can now be allowed to rest
with him and pay attention to the Lessons thereof. All the lobbying
and lobbyists, sycophants and their over-priced masters, whatever
categories that are left would today learn to respect the ultimate
power of Death.
If Turai had truly managed to keep things the way they went for the
sake of remaining the first lady, I think events have finally set the
stage for an official first lady.
A new page has inevitably been open and whatever falls on the old page
sadly would serve a mere purpose of historical reference. Whatever
achievements we might want to add late Yar'adus's credit, we may want
to include the fact that he is the first Nigerian President to die of
Natural cause while serving. 'Natural cause' in this context could
only mean that there wasn't a Military Coup! What a record?
The National Assembly and House of Representatives that could not come
out boldly to declare that gentleman unfit and help him enjoy his last
days have been shamed. The religous leaders who have refused to
admonish the grandstanding former First lady and the hailing President
on the stance of religion on Power and leadership have failed in their
responsibilities as custodians of Faith.
We mourn as a nation, the death of our President just as we should
united by the lessons of his death.
Let's live our lives such that when death finally comes knocking,
we'll be honourable.
God Bless Nigeria.

1 comments:

bRinE said...

This is a really nice piece. Your questions are more than valid: do we choose integrity over gain? should a wife risk her husband's life to prove a point? What a record he set! Still, in spite of all he didn't achieve, let's be grateful for the little he did. God bless Nigeria!!

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