Nigeria: It’s another ‘JUNE 12’, & Yoruba Socio-Cultural Atayeṣe to Buhari – “it’s true federalism or nothing”


This year, we need to recommit ourselves to the Ọmọluabi values of personal integrity and public probity. The country is in the throes of inequity, iniquity and worrisome non-performance by a government to which so much has been given and from which so much is expected. We call on President Buhari to justify the hopes and faith reposed in him by millions of our people who voted him into Nigeria’s highest office, on the mantra of ‘CHANGE’.

emotanafricana.com

Today June 12, marks another anniversary- a remembrance of the tragic waste of Nigeria’s greatest opportunity for democratic consolidation.

The sacrifices that MKO Abiola like others before him made, will be in vain if Nigeria continues on its uncaring way and path to the failure of the state which we hope will be avoided by the opportunity of a Buhari government.

This year, we need to recommit ourselves to the Ọmọluabi values of personal integrity and public probity. The country is in the throes of inequity, iniquity and worrisome non-performance by a government to which so much has been given and from which so much is expected. We call on President Buhari to justify the hopes and faith reposed in him by millions of our people who voted him into Nigeria’s highest office, on the mantra of ‘CHANGE’.

We want to use this anniversary of June 12 to demand from President Buhari the change he and his team promised. In his business and political lives Abiola was daring, innovative and generous. We call on the President…

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By adejokeiyabadan Posted in REBLOGS

History and National Development: The Historians and Government


It is essential that in every society that a sense of continuity be kept alive,  so that issues can be seen form a long term perspectives and be better understood.  Keeping alive in society such a sense of the flow of time is one of the most important functions of historians.  This why the proper teaching of history in schools at all levels [sic] is important.  Many other societies find ways to reinforce the teaching in schools,  through visual aids in museum,  national festivals and celebrations,  and various efforts in the mass media.  These forms of support either hardly exist in Nigeria or the notion of history that they project are themselves misleading.  It thus doubly necessary for us in Nigeria to look I again at our programs of historical education. 
Our planners need to abandon the imported model of modernization.  They need to educate themselves in the reality of our society in the present and how it has evolved from the past.  They need a healthy understanding of our history and our traditional culture so that they can be part of the dialogue between the past and the future, and confront the past in our present rather than continuing to waste effort in trying to run away from it. 

An excerpt from ‘Tradition and Development’  J.  F.  Ade-Ajayi. 

Book: Falola, Toyin Ed.  2000. Tradition and Change in Africa: The Essays of J.  F.  Ade-Ajayi.