It is hard to dispute that Prof. Wole
 Soyinka’s Keynote Address at the last South-South Economic Summit was 
the high point of that gathering. I was in the audience. The end of that
 speech, probably one of the finest oratorical excursions I have ever 
witnessed, produced an ejaculation of awe in admiration as I turned to 
the corporate chieftain sitting by me. Kongi is a spirit, I muttered, 
elevating the essence of his remarks.
That high tribute acknowledging the 
profundity of thought in the tour de force of the Nigerian condition by 
Soyinka as he reviewed the state of our nation was also at once a 
celebration of a rare personage in patriotism and capacity to take on 
complex matters, speak truth to power, and communicate it in prose that 
makes the object of his commentary, if they have the capacity of 
understanding, to feel naked. On that day in Asaba those who had ears 
felt the shame of a nation that was in all but garb a failed enterprise 
in which people who were given the privilege to shape history had all 
but wasted their life’s journey, damaged the future of their children 
and set fire to the possibilities of their grandchildren, even if they 
still think that bank accounts built up in the abuse of the common good 
will assure the tomorrow of their direct offspring.
Why does the enigma of Soyinka continue 
to puzzle? In my view, because he has defeated himself and is 
comfortable with truth and speaking it to those who have become used to 
being lied to. If his speech did something for me, it was on how to hold
 many of us to account for the ruining of something so beautiful, the 
dream of Nigeria.
Mostly, he held the feet of politicians 
to the fire. Rightfully so, but it is important to show that more are 
guilty for the catastrophe of what became of the dream of my youth, a 
great new nation. Surely much blame goes to politicians in fatigues and 
flowing robes, but many more need to account. Our blame is total in this
 collapse of culture that has immobilised the sense of service, with 
literal gang-raping of the citizenry into a state of stupor that 
restrains them from asking how come the misery index, measured by 
objective criteria such as unemployment, attainment of the Millennium 
Development Goals and placement of Nigeria in the United Nations 
Development Programme Human Development Index remains a show of shame. 
Even as few of our people boast of bank account sizes that make the 
wealthiest in countries scoring high on these inculcators could never 
imagine having, not much seems to have happened here. We continue to 
scramble for wealth without work in a manner that would make India’s 
Mahatma Ghandi shake his head in his grave.
The Soyinka speech in Asaba, obviously 
because you can not say all that needs to be said in one speech, did not
 highlight how much our men of commerce have helped cripple Nigeria, 
just as our intellectuals in abdicating their moral authority have added
 to the challenge of now. In the same vein, the youth cannot be spared 
for the loss of idealism that marked our younger days and the 
bureaucracy cannot escape the charge that goal displacement and 
unbridled corruption as their ways, have left us so far from where we 
could be. The pain is worsened by the loss of basic civility in how we 
deal with one another and how the judiciary makes justice seem so out of
 reach for those who need it most.
I like to begin with men of commerce. 
Ghandi in his deadly social sins laments commerce without morality. 
Everyday I interact with businessmen who find in “neutrality” an alibi. 
They argue that to protect their business they must not only avoid 
speaking truth to power but avoid those who speak truth to power. But 
the “neutrality” is a living lie as they aid and abet the looting of an 
orphan nation in league with those in power. They cooperate in blackmail
 with elements in the media who blackmail them just as they yield to 
politicians who they finance and siphon state money through. The outcome
 is the state of play today that you are supposed to yield to blackmail 
to get on with the bigger prospect of money worship.
Businessmen are supposed to be smart but
 you find greed and laziness brought on by a rent-seeking behaviuor in a
 rentier state make them forget that where wealth by stealth 
predominates and injustice becomes the social condition, peace becomes 
elusive. And when anarchy comes, as it seems to have come to us, private
 jets will find no parking space. I experienced the hypocrisy of the men
 of commerce first hand when nearly 13 years ago, I created Patito’s 
Gang as an open forum for all, an electronic village to help speak truth
 to power. Commercial Nigeria which professed to love the show ran from 
commercial participation even when the reach was evident to extend their
 messages. There were clearly exceptions to the rule. Even as Patito’s 
Gang continues to run today on a few channels at home and on Ben TV in 
Europe, its history tells a part of the story of Nigeria. Its one year 
hiatus was laced with remarks by such men of commerce about missing the 
show that we made it return in January to Galaxy Television. But it 
really is in trying so hard to be close to men in power, and corrupt 
abuse of weak institutions and avoiding truth that our business class 
sets itself up for the judgment of history.
Then come the intellectuals. How many of
 them speak as clearly as Soyinka? As a graduate student in the late 
1970’s, I came to admire a remarkable policy scholar at the University 
of California, Berkeley, Aaron Wildavsky, because of the title of his 
book; Speaking Truth to Power; and another of his kind, Yzikiel Dror. In
 his epic discussion of Leadership, in a book titled, Leadership, a 
former President of the American Political Science Association, James 
MacGregor Burns, makes the point that the intellectual derives his 
leadership attribute from a moral authority that flows from knowledge. 
Where are our men of knowledge? Why does Ghana make more progress? Is it
 because its most senior political leaders tend to be intellectuals 
committed more to the power of ideas than political machines that 
deliver real and imagined votes? There is a long history of explaining 
how the military got the sword to become mightier than the pen. In the 
main, they are rationalisations for abdicating personal responsibility 
to history. What will Franz Fanon say of us? We fled and sacrificed our 
children for fear of guns. Surely as intellectuals, we cannot in 
confidence say we have not betrayed the mission of our generation.
The Clergy seem uncertain about their 
role. They are often locked in romance with those in power yet power 
creates conditions that prevent their flock from living out the promise 
of being co-creators with God, man overcoming his environment, and 
building a better society. I have struggled with the responsibility of 
religious leaders on the subject of wealth, poverty and human destiny, a
 subject often discussed by Michael Novak, philosophically confronted in
 Doug Bandow’s volume on the subject.
The failure of our religious leaders to 
strongly affirm the living of a unity of life such that the Tuesday man 
at the boardroom is same as the hugging usher on Sunday is reflected in 
why power ridicules truth in Nigeria. Concern about the faithful and 
dignity of the human person so often crushed by the conduct of leaders 
that are not accountable to the people should rouse religious leaders to
 active pursuit of a more just social order.
How did we all come to act with little 
care for that which we have in common and share? From theories on the 
curse of oil to leadership recruitment and succession errors, 
rationalisations have been offered. The real question is, are we willing
 to salvage this sinking ship in the interest of a generation whose 
interest we have unfairly mortgaged. If Soyinka’s is a wasted generation
 and mine is a hapless generation, can we then sacrifice so our 
grandchildren may have the redeemed generation? The pathway to restoring
 the dignity of man for Nigeria is for Nigerians to get together and 
talk in candour. First, we have to talk about what went wrong and then 
about how to construct a modus vivendi just to all. How do we form civil
 servants so they do not steal money they do not need leaving pensioners
 to die uncared for because of their greed? The only reasonable way 
forward is talk.  And talk we must if we must all move forward as a 
nation.                       
 
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