The Catholic Bishop of Sokoto
diocese, Matthew Kukah described Nigeria as ship stranded on the high sea.
He
added that Nigeria is on the crossroads and its future hangs “precariously” in
a balance.
Kukah
made this known in Kaduna during his homily at the funeral mass of Michael
Nnadi, a student of the Catholic Good Shepherd Seminary, Kaduna, who was
abducted and subsequently murdered.
Gunmen had invaded the seminary on
January 8, abducting four students, including Nnadi. Three of the students were
released after a ransom was paid, but Nnadi did not make it out alive.
Lamenting
over the nationwide insecurity, Kukah said: “Our nation is like a ship stranded
on the high seas, rudderless and with broken navigational aids.”
He
said, “Today, our years of hypocrisy, duplicity, fabricated integrity, false
piety, empty morality, fraud and Pharisaism have caught up with us.
“Nigeria
is on the crossroads and its future hangs precariously in a balance. This is a
wake-up call for us. As St. Paul reminds us; the night is far spent, and the
day is at hand. Therefore, let us cast away the works of darkness and put on
the armour of light (Rom. 13:12). It is time to confront and dispel the clouds
of evil that hover over us.
“Nigeria
is at a point where we must call for a verdict. There must be something that a
man, nay, a nation should be ready to die for. Sadly, or even tragically,
today, Nigeria, does not possess that set of goals or values for which any sane
citizen is prepared to die for.”
He
said the average office holder in Nigeria is ready to die to protect his office
but not for the nation that has given him or her that office.
He
said, “We have practiced madness for too long. Our attempt to build a nation
has become like the agony of Sisyphus who angered the gods and had to endure
the frustration of rolling a stone up the mountain.
“Each
time he got near the top, the gods would tip the stone back and he would go
back to start all over again. What has befallen our nation? Nigeria needs to
pause for a moment and think. No one more than the President of Nigeria, Major
General Muhammadu Buhari who was voted for in 2015 on the grounds of his own
promises to rout Boko Haram.”
Accusing Buhari of
falling below standard, Kukah said: “No one could have imagined that in winning
the presidency, Buhari would bring nepotism and clannishness into the military
and the ancillary security agencies.
“No one could have imagined that his
government would be marked by supremacist and divisive policies that would push
our country to the brink.
“This President has displayed the
greatest degree of insensitivity in managing our country’s rich diversity. He
has subordinated the larger interests of the country to the hegemonic interests
of his co-religionists and clansmen and women.
“The impression created now is that,
to hold a key and strategic position in Nigeria today, it is more important to
be a northern Muslim than a Nigerian.
“Today, in Nigeria, the noble
religion of Islam has convulsed. It has become associated with some of worst
fears among our people.
“Muslim scholars, traditional rulers
and intellectuals have continued to cry out helplessly, asking for their
religion and region to be freed from this chokehold.
“This is because, in all of this,
neither Islam nor the north can identify any real benefits from these years
that have been consumed by the locusts that this government has unleashed on
our country.”
He said even Buhari’s “north has
become one large graveyard, a valley of dry bones, the nastiest and the most
brutish part of our dear country.
He said, “Why have the gods rejected
this offering? Despite running the most nepotistic and narcissistic government
in known history, there are no answers to the millions of young children on the
streets in northern Nigeria, the north still has the worst indices of poverty,
insecurity, stunting, squalor and destitution.
“His Eminence, the Sultan of Sokoto,
and the Emir of Kano are the two most powerful traditional and moral leaders in
Islam today. None of them is happy and they have said so loud and clear. The
Sultan recently lamented the tragic consequences of power being in the wrong
hands. Every day, Muslim clerics are posting tales of lamentation about their
fate. Now, the Northern Elders, who in 2015 believed that General Buhari had
come to redeem the north have now turned against the President.
“We are being told that this
situation has nothing to do with Religion. Really? It is what happens when
politicians use religion to extend the frontiers of their ambition and power.
Are we to believe that simply because Boko Haram kills Muslims too, they wear
no religious garb? Are we to deny the evidence before us, of kidnappers
separating Muslims from infidels or compelling Christians to convert or die?
“If your son steals from me, do you
solve the problem by saying he also steals from you? Again, the Sultan got it
right: let the northern political elite who have surrendered the space claim it
back immediately.”
Copyright 2020 Elombah.com.
Comments
Post a Comment