It is much simpler to see the advent of the Maitatsine and its
contemporaneous expression in Boko Haram as an objectionable, violent
and extremist religious advocacy. This is true. We however shy away from
acknowledging that the propagation of the hegemony of the Christian
faith in the black universe has become a menace. Competing with the
Maitsatsines and Boko Harams, Christian evangelisation is doing greater
violence, in the long term, to the integrity of black humanity. Although
they constitute mutually implacable antagonists, Boko Haram and
Christian evangelisation have many things in common.
Their common
objective through their violent and strident advocacies is to subvert
the integrity of the essences of black humanity. The goal is to induce a
process of repudiation of the core senses of black humanity, infuse in
the black being a new caricature of the self through transformation into
a vassal of foreign myths. More importantly, the new disoriented black
creature unwittingly becomes an agent for the protection of concrete
material interests of their new lords and master. This is what they call
being born again. Jim Crowe sings this fine when he intones “with one
hand on the bible (Koran) and one hand on the gun (sword)”, they capture
them all.
If any difference exists between Boko Haram and Christian
evangelisation in Africa, it is a tactical one. One is stuck with the
use of mindless physical violence while the other deploys mind-bending
psychological violence. The latter is the more dangerous because it is
insidious. It is like the proverbial mosquito perching on your balls.
This danger has been manifest lately in the trickling repudiation of our
traditions by those very anointed custodians of our heritage. In their
confusion and disorientation, these distressed elders begin by
repudiating their old selves to acquire imagined new identities. To show
proof of their new causes, they constitute the vanguard of a
destructive force thrashing hallowed traditions and customs that define
our humanity and our core essences as a people. Their infinitely pliable
mindset that is completely incapable of critical resistances reflects
what may be described as our demonstrated high gullibility quotient as a
people. Accordingly, the struggle for emancipation, implying identity
validation, in its various expressions has remained the constant
preoccupation of Black Earthlings in more contemporaneous times. The
struggle, in practical terms, is a resistance to the vassalisation of
the identity of the black humanity. The global black universe is thus
engaged in a three-cornered struggle to protect the integrity of his
being and spirit against marauding Boko Harams and the more insidious
ever crusading Christian evangelisation.
The crisis that has
engulfed the Kingdom of Warri today is symptomatic of the state of the
deleterious spiritual condition of black humanity. It is a crisis that
has been long in coming. The immediate pandemonium in Warri follows the
decision of the traditional custodian of the Kingdom’s heritage, Ogiame
Atuwatse II, to renounce and denounce his title Ogiame, having convinced
himself of Jesus Christ as his personal lord and savior. Also, in the
first week of November, 2012, a similar pandemonium broke at
Ogbagi-Akoko, in the Akoko South-West Local Government Area of Ondo
State when youths of the town chased away their monarch, the Owa of
Ogbagi, Oba Victor Adetona, from the palace for his refusal to approve
the yearly celebration of the Ogun festival. The Owa had flagrantly
objected to all pleas for him to respect traditions and the culture of
the people and had vowed that as a born-again christian, he would never
indulge in or encourage such traditional rites throughout his reign. In
fact, there has unfortunately emerged an Association of Born Again
Traditional Chiefs, who appear to be choreographing these seemingly
isolated odious cases of spiritual defections. The main objective of
this association is to subvert the integrity of traditional institutions
with a view to ultimately declaring their kingdoms as cleansed for a
nebulous white god. It is the expression of the more sophisticated and
subtle tactics of Christian evangelisation in Africa that it is the
traditional chiefs that are publicly defecting in the final capitulation
to foreign understandings of the cosmos and the ultimate spiritual
whitening of their kingdoms. This reveals the weaknesses of the explicit
physical violence adopted by the Boko Harams as merely crude. It, at
the same times, reveals the sophistication of the methods christian
evangelisation and western forces in commissioning the very custodians
of our tradition to destroy our true essences as a people.
This
insidious approach adopted in christian evangelisation is manifest in
all our human endeavors-from a spectrum of the economic, through the
social, the political to the religious. In the economic realm, the
experts talk of dependency syndrome. It is an arrangement contrived to
keep us as economic vassals to our foreign lords and masters. To assure
this they deploy the services of expert economic hitmen to ensure our
continued dependence. John Perkins provides a compelling narrative of
how this works. The hitmen, like bible-wielding cassock-clad priests of
old, are deployed to convince the political and financial leadership of
underdeveloped countries to saddle their countries with debts they could
not hope to pay forever. This is to make them vulnerable to political
control of their masters. Perkins affirms that through the activities of
hit men, developed countries are effectively neutralised politically
and their economies crippled in the long run. In the social realm, the
airwaves are filled with carefully packaged seductive informationals
that only exalt the white look. So our traditional Obas bleach, our
mothers bleach, our mistresses bleach, our girls bleach, our artistes
and actresses bleach, and they must be like sacks of brittle bones with
no flesh to have and to hold in their misguided pursuit of beauty. The
most dangerous though, is the spiritual whitening of the black universe
that is lately assuming epidemic proportions in Nigeria.
Spiritual
whitening begins with desecration of traditional conceptions of the
cosmos and the derivative understandings of the locus of a people from
this defined cosmos. These constitute the axiomatic foundations that
guide relationships not only with the creative force but direct
relationships among the earthlings and their ancestors. In the process
of the desecration of a people, the worship of Ogun, Sango, Osun, Yemoja
are assaulted with attitudinal and lexical violence constructed by the
hegemonic invaders that says our gods are heathen. On the basis of this
spurious construction and illogicality, black humanity had repudiated
his core essences, been transformed into a strange new creature. He is
born again in the image of not just one external
Other but of all
the external Others jousting to dominate his universe. Some become
improvised explosive-hauling, blind militants of Boko Haram and others
come as a strident and mad Reverend King [Chukwuemeka Ezeugo], or a
whip-wielding Jesus mouthing arrogant charlatan riding in a private
executive jet. The most visible sign of this capitulation however is
the realignment of the cognitive appreciation of the Self, away from the
very essence of his black Being: the spiritual whitening of the black
universe.
To this phenomenon of black whitening belongs the loss
of local languages and the adoption of foreign names as a badge of
superiority, and ultimately the willing desecration of time-honoured
culture by their very custodians. The most destructive of these
abdications is the rejection of the traditional understandings of the
sacred, the repudiations of ancient understandings of the cosmos and the
interpretation of the locus of black humanity in the cosmos. For a
people whose understanding of the cosmos and their place in it is
defined by a foreign god shall know no salvation. The disjunctions
created by the emergence of profound value dissonance arising from
externally driven identity defections account for the proclivity of
conflicts in our societies. In this boiling cauldron, Boko Haram must
confront its christians adversaries in their deadly struggle for primacy
in upending our own world by subverting our common heritage.
Since
the process of self-repudiation is to turn us against ourselves, we
become our own worst enemies. The distressed new creature in the Olu
Ogiame of Warri becomes the enemy of the Kingdom of Warri. He has fallen
prey to useless foreign myths. Femi Komolafe who writes profusely on
these issues confesses that he would never know what African Christians
ever hope to achieve by claiming that the collections of absurd lies and
forgeries, they call a Bible, is the word of an omnipotent and
omniscient god. He affirms the indisputable fact that what the
Christians today call a Bible was put together at the Council of Nicae
conference in AD 325. It is also known that the conference was called at
the instigation of one of the most murderous rulers ever, Emperor
Constantine.
Sadly, Komolafe further observes, it is mostly
Africans who remain too dogmatic, too bigoted and too blinded to reason;
most priests in Europe today no longer believe in the literal
correctness of the Bible. Of course, zealotry is an essential element of
African conversion to Islam and Christianity as the convert seeks to
prove the repudiation of their old selves. These proclivities
unfortunately are peculiarly most associated with black humanity.
In
1900 Christians in Africa totalled ten million; in 2012 this number
reached 50 million. In 1900 only 2 per cent of Christians in the world
were African; today, this figure has risen to 20 per cent. At a recent
conference in Morocco, Italian sociologist, Massimo Introvigne, revealed
that African practising Catholics not only outnumber their European
counterparts, Christianity has become the African continent’s number one
religion, clearly surpassing Islam and traditional faiths. In ten
years, African Christians will be the largest continental bloc within
Christianity, outdoing Europe and the Americas. This unfolding virtual
wholesale spiritual defection of black Africa contrasts sharply with the
demonstrated tenacity of other races to protect the integrity of their
identities. It may be noted that even though christianity in China has a
history going back to the Tang dynasty in the 8th century, today of a
population of 1.5 billion, only an insignificant 18 million, just about 1
per cent, are identified as Christians in China. In Japan less than one
per cent of the population is Christian even though the religion was
brought to the country over 150 years ago. The 21 million Christians in
India account for 2 per cent of the total population of 1.3 billion.
This is after over two centuries of Christian evangelisation in India.
Many Indians refuse to believe in the absolutism of Christian theology.
The civil resistance to Christianity in China, Japan and India says
something about the differential resilience and tenacity of different
cultures and peoples to resist foreign assaults on the integrity of
their essences. The resistance is of course through the agency of the
people and community who protect their institutions. This tenacity of
other peoples’ resistance to foreign impositions, no matter how well
packaged, contrasts the case of black humanity globally. African
communities have proven to be the least loyal to their corporate
essences–the integrity of culture, including religion. Africans, both at
home and in its diaspora, may thus be said to have a very high
gullibility quotient. We are willing clients to every nonsensical
garbage from abroad sold to us.
The waywardness of the Ogiame, the
Owa of Ogbagi and their ilk entrenched in our traditional institutions
proves this sad point. They must be rooted out. It is reassuring that
the Chiefs and the people of Warri are up in arms. If the Ogiame and his
wayfarers have denounced our heritage, the logical step is for them to
abdicate. Prince Omolubi Newuwumi in Warri, who led the protesters on
the siege of the Olu’s palace, is right. There should be no going back
on their position. The confused and errant Olu Ogiame must vacate the
palace, resign or he should be forced to leave office by all peaceful
means, including through the invocation of the wrath of the spirits of
the land. He cannot sit on the throne of the ancestors and behave
irresponsibly.
No comments:
Post a Comment