PRESIDENT, PASTOR AND GOVERNANCE
Cornelius Afebu Omonokhua
I have wondered and pondered why
the new President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria had pastors as running
mates in the two past presidential elections. One could think that it was either
because he loves pastors or because it was the option of his political parties.
In 2011, Muhammadu Buhari had Pastor Tunde Bakare as running mate under the
Congress for Progressive Change (CPC). One would have expected that our new
President would drop the idea of “a pastor running mate” when on February 2, 2014, NigerianEye and some other media reported that Tunde Bakare during a sermon allegedly likens APC to the
Church of Satan. This did not happen. In 2015, Buhari again had another pastor,
Prof Yemi Osibanjo as running mate in the All Progressive Congress (APC). This
time, they won the election and took over governance on May 29, 2015. While I congratulate the new President of
Nigeria to the governance and leadership of the nation, may I welcome him with a
silent hidden puzzle: “Mr President Sir, why do you love to work with a Pastor as
your vice whereas you are a committed and dedicated Muslim?”
I ask because it would be too
much of an assumption to think that one can read your mind to presume a satisfactory
answer. According to William Shakespeare, “there is no art to find the minds
construction on the face”. On September 2014, I published in the newspapers how
Prof. Dora Akuyinli called you “a just and honest man” and you referred to her
as “a devoted and honest Christian.” You further qualify her as “one honest
Nigerian”. I published this to show that you care about quality and content of
character in an article: “This Religious
War is avoidable.” I feel that this quality of justice and honesty flow from
your true faith in Islam. If Islam is peace, then every Muslim must believe
that there can be no peace without justice.
Nevertheless, while some people
see you simply as a pious Muslim others see you as a fanatical Muslim who
desires to make everybody around you a Muslim. Could you have loved to work and
walk with a pastor to prove that you are simply a good Muslim and not a fanatic?
Some people had thought that you want a pastor for a running mate just to win the
support of Christians and get their votes. You can either prove right or prove
wrong these suspicions in the next four years.
Here is another suspicion which
you may either accept or debunk. Could it be that you need a pastor for a Vice President
because you believe in Inter-religious, inter-cultural and inter-ethnic
relations. Perhaps you must have noticed how religious intolerance has led some
part of Nigeria to a level where some people among Nigerian citizens who love,
value and cherish life later transform into suicide bombers and global
terrorists. The reason could not be far from erroneous interpretation of the Sacred
Books and unhealthy indoctrination of these pathological extremists. Working
with a pastor then could demonstrate that you are indeed a president not only
of the Muslims, your tribe and your political party but the president of every
human being in the FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF NIGERIA? You surely need a gateway to
reach out to all the Christians in Nigeria through inter-religious and
inter-cultural dialogue.
Reading one of your interviews on
“National Daily” of May 18, 2015, where you responded that you would
start fighting corruption from your own kitchen, appears to define your person.
This is in line with the message of Pope Francis on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the foundation
of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue that, “Dialogue is
possible only by beginning with one’s own identity” (Pro Dialogo Bulletin 145,
2014/1, Page 12). In that same interview, you reiterated that “the problem of
Nigeria is not ethnic or religious but corruption.” This could inspire a further
reflection on the compass of corruption. In other words, is corruption a moral,
religious, political or economic problem? Or can we enquire into the content of
corruption beyond economic related questions of cash and carry?
It can be deduced from world
experience that ethnicity and religion have been used to fuel the embers of
corruption. In Nigeria and elsewhere, religion and ethnicity has been
politicised in a way and manner that religious fanatics and ethnic bigots put
pressure on those in political positions to help them have a share in the
national cake. Consequently, some people spend their time in government
servicing this desire at the expense of the common good and national equity.
This had led to gross injustice at all levels. The result has been a disruption
of peace and eruption of violence. There is crying, weeping and whirling across
different divides. While some Christians are complaining that they are denied
freedom of worship and land to build Churches in the Northern part of Nigeria,
some Muslims are complaining of being denied land to build mosques in the
Southern part of Nigeria. All these have promoted mutual suspicion forgetting or
not recognising that we have been made victims by “failure of government” (to
use the words of Bishop Matthew Hassan Kukah). This failure of government emanates
from the religious and ethnic inheritance that has formed many public officers and
citizens in their behaviour and governance.
One of the principles of dialogue
is the capacity of every partner in dialogue to understand the tenet of his own
religion and have some knowledge of the other person’s religion. I believe that
if the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria could bring into governance
the ethics of peace, love of the poor, honesty, trust and the fear of Allah
that Islam promotes, he would lead a successful crusade against corruption at
all levels. Working with a Pastor who is a professor and legal luminary becomes
an added advantage, if the Vice president take into governance the values of
Jesus Christ who came that we may have life and have it in abundance (John
10:10). If a good Muslim and a good Christian can really work together not
forgetting the divine mandate of uniting with God on the last day as children
of Abraham, they will make paradise out of this world that has become a valley
of tears. This is what I meant when I said in my previous publication that,
“Politicians can be Saints.”
I congratulate and salute the new government of Muhammadu Buhari and Yemi Osibanjo. I pray that the change most Nigerians have been waiting for will dawn on us without delay like the rising sun. May this administration be for us a testimony of the fruits the good relationship between Christians and Muslims can give to our dear nation! I pray for the support of this government with our authentic religious values that can debrief and heal everybody of religious extremism. May whatever we have missed so far come back to us a million fold. The gun alone cannot kill the ideology of an extremist just as arrest and imprisonment alone cannot kill corruption. We surely need a change of attitude and be committed to rekindling our traditional and religious values to make Nigeria a happy home! May God bless the President and the Vice President of Nigeria! May God bless all the citizens of Nigeria! May God be praised in our lives both now and forever! Long live the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
Fr. Prof. Cornelius Afebu Omonokhua is the Director of Mission and
Dialogue of the Catholic Secretariat of Nigeria, Abuja and Consultor of the
Commission for Religious Relations with Muslims (C.R.R.M), Vatican City (omonokhuac@gmail.com).
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