Etcetera 'Are Ndigbos cursed?' singer asks in new article
Soulful singer turned controversial writer, Etcetera has lashed out on
Igbo leaders saying a large number of politicians the Eastern race of
Nigeria are greedy and self centered.
Source:Gbenga Bada: pulse.ng, re-posted by Abdulgafar Esho (www.econsforumnews.blogspot.com)
Once again, soulful singer turned controversial writer, Etcetera has written a new piece and in this piece, the singer took on his lineage and race, the Igbos.
Etcetera
lashed out on Igbo leaders saying a large number of politicians the
Eastern race of Nigeria are greedy and self centered.
Read his piece here:
I
was told that every Igboman who heard Ojukwu’s speech after the Biafran
war was filled with a renewed sense of pride and hope. A hope that one
day the Igbo nation will rise and become a force of reckoning not just
in Nigeria but in the entire black world. I have read that speech over
and over and each time I read through, I am filled with pride and
imagination of how those who heard the words pouring out of the mouth of
the warlord himself must have felt. Before going any further, let me
recount a little part of what the late sage said while addressing the
press:
“In the three years of the war, necessity
gave birth to invention. During those three years of heroic bound, we
leapt across the great chasm that separates knowledge from know-how. We
built rockets, and we designed and built our own delivery systems. We
guided our rockets. We guided them far, we guided them accurately. For
three years, blockaded without hope of import, we maintained all our
vehicles.
The state extracted and refined petrol,
individuals refined petrol in their back gardens. We built and
maintained our airports, maintained them under heavy bombardment.
Despite the heavy bombardment, we recovered so quickly after each raid
that we were able to maintain the record for the busiest airport in the
continent of Africa. We spoke to the world through telecommunication
system engineered by local ingenuity; the world heard us and spoke back
to us! We built armoured car tanks.
We modified
aircraft from trainer to fighters, from passenger aircraft to bombers.
In the three years of freedom we had broken the technological barrier.
In three years we became the most civilised, the most technologically
advanced black people on earth.”
Ojukwu, with
those few lines, defined the ingenuity and never-say-die spirit God has
embedded in the marrows of the Igboman. But my question for Ndigbo is,
where has this ingenuity for which the entire world has given them a
standing ovation, gone? Why can’t it be used today to enhance the cause
of Ndigbo? Can’t we re-enact the same war time feat to launch ourselves
back to reckoning again in Nigeria and in the entire black world?
Since
Ojukwu died, Ndigbo have been like sheep without a shepherd. Those who
we thought could take up the mantle of leadership are nothing but
selfish entities who care for nothing but their personal interest. As I
am writing this article, I just got words that a senator in Imo State
has been discovered as a saboteur working against the interest of his
people because he has been promised to be made Senate president in the
new political dispensation which begins on May 29.
What
is it with Ndigbo and greed? How long are we going to kill ourselves?
Isn’t it a gargantuan shame that a tribe as populous as Ndigbo can’t
provide a single individual that is seen to be credible enough to be
elected president of Nigeria?
A casual
observation of the performances of the governors of the south eastern
states will reveal their level of under-performance since 1999. Case
point, take Aba which has failed to enjoy any meaningful development
since the 1929 Aba women riot. The place is a total mess. What have the
governors done with what has been accruing to the state in the last 16
years of democratic rule? The fact that these individuals who have
mismanaged fortunes of the state consider themselves fit to even contest
election is a slap on the faces of Ndigbo.
Ndigbo,
are we cursed? The red-cap goons known as Ohaneze do nothing but crawl
from one place to another offering themselves for sale and for use. This
has been their money-making scheme for too long and it can no longer
hold water. Can’t we take a cue from the style Dangote adopted and made a
kill? The Yoruba have already adopted it and it is working. We have to
restrategise to become that economic power house we crave. The idea that
every Igboman who makes money whether through his ingenuity or by
accident becomes misguided and begins to push for political office even
though they are clearly not professional politicians should be
discarded.
We hear of Dangote, the Dantatas,
Otedola, Mike Adenuga, the Okoyas, where are the Igbo equivalent in
terms of their organisational set-up? Most of our businesses are largely
one-man businesses and whenever the founder dies, the whole thing dies.
Ndigbo must do away with their selfishness and personal greed,
otherwise we will continue to languish as a people. We must redirect our
thoughts away from the deeply engrossed notion of “to make it in life,”
“we must make money at all cost.” What Ndigbo should learn from the
just concluded elections is that without a harmony of opinion, all our
efforts will yield nothing. Igbo kwezuenu.
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