Why Nigerians are special By Reuben Abati

Whatever problem 
we may have in Nigeria at this or any other time, this country is 
sustained by the fact that we are indeed a very special people. We have 
been described as the happiest people on earth, we have also described 
ourselves as resilient, gifted and determined, and in one report, 
Nigerians are said to have the strongest shock absorber against some of 
the deadliest diseases in the world. If anyone doubted this last point, 
well, recall that we won the battle over Ebola virus, and polio.
The
 more you look at it, the more it seems as if there is something in the 
Nigerian DNA that defies defeat, that automatically deletes any virus 
that can result in system shut down, there is that X-factor in our 
affairs that rises when hope seems lost, and life seems tragic.  
Somehow, the Nigerian spirit regenerates, recreates and reinvents 
itself, turns failure into possibilities, pessimism into new 
expectations, and tomorrow into an anchor for renewal. 
We are at such a 
crossroad, right now. But in the midst of the despair, the listlessness,
 the anxiety, the what-happened-to-us and what-the hell-is-going-on, you
 can’t miss the fact that the average Nigerian has not lost his bounce. 
The biggest tragedies that can hobble other nations happen here and we 
just shrug them off.  Boko Haram alone has claimed thousands of lives. Hun hun. Herdsmen have killed men and women in their hundreds. Hun hun. More lives have been lost to vehicle accidents on our poorly made, badly maintained roads. Well, hun hun. Many fingers have been caught in the national cookie jar. Ha. What is this? Who dunnit? But, o ma se o.  hun hun. The national leaky bucket has a thousand holes. Ha, no country can live with this? Still, hen hun hun. 
 We voted and there were promises of a new spirit of the age. But that 
spirit is yet to manifest. So? Nothing good comes easy, therefore. No 
miracles in the new agenda. So, ni igba yen wa n ko? So, life goes on. 
Whatever life 
throws at the average Nigerian, he protests, he complains, but he 
accommodates it.  It is the reason why nobody will throw stones because 
power supply is at the worst level in years. It is the reason why 
workers who have not been paid for months after months will still see 
the same Governor who is responsible for their misery, after collecting 
Federal money to help them, and has refused to deliver and they will 
still scream: “My Excellency, sir.”  When workers go on strike, someone 
calls them together, says something nice, provides something nice and 
everything falls nicely in place. The late Chief MKO Abiola was quoted 
saying “eto ni gbogbo e”, that is anything in Nigeria can be arranged nicely.  
The June 12
 debacle sadly could not be arranged nicely. It cost the Chief of native
 wisdom and martyr of Nigerian democracy his life, but many lessons have
 been learnt.  And one key lesson is that in this country, the people 
are determined to live no matter what. They can grumble as they wish 
about the public space but Nigerians are not ready to give up their will
 to live, their right to live and their understanding of how to live.  
And if you put your neck on the line on their behalf, you will be 
shocked that you will the subject of memes and what’s app jokes. The 
people laugh at martyrs and heroes because they see no reason why anyone
 should commit suicide, defending Nigeria, when there is so much life to
 be enjoyed. 
Nigeria is 
probably the global headquarters of enjoyment.  The way the ordinary man
 has complained in recent times, about political change and the 
socio-cultural changes it has brought, you would think Nigerians are in 
serious trouble.  But that is not the case. The foreign exchange market 
has gone into a crazy overdrive impoverishing the whole nation. Parents 
whose children are schooling abroad are afraid that they may no longer 
be able to pay fees. The manufacturing sector is abusing the Minister of
 Finance-what’s-that-her-name-
I beg, leave 
matter. And if you don’t want to leave it go to the nearest fuel station
 where many Nigerians are queuing up for fuel with power generating sets
 and jerry cans. The people are going through the hardship but they are 
laughing at their leaders. You think you can mess us up, na lie. If you people like, sell fuel for N150, we go survive. They
 stay in front of that fuel station and they review Nigeria’s history 
and lament the choices they have made, but their spirit remains strong. 
That is what makes them Nigerian. Go to the vendors’ stand. The crowd of
 poor people who cannot afford to buy a newspaper copy, have all the 
same listened to the news and the only place where they can compete as 
pundits is that roadside corner, where sometimes one drunken idiot loses
 control behind the wheels and sheds human blood, wasting those who have
 gathered not to buy any newspaper but to debate Nigeria. This special 
crowd knows it all. You don’t want to get involved with them. They will 
remind you that a Ph.D holder is actually a real idiot, and that nobody 
needs certificates of any type to be a Nigerian, and well they add too, 
that if you ever worked in government, then you are a confirmed idiot, 
and a professional trickster. 
Nigerians are so 
inventive, they find every way of beating bad news, bad experience, or 
anything that tries to defeat them.  Everyone says there is no money in 
town, they claim things have gone from bad to worse but the parties have
 not stooped. Go to any of the joints around Lagos, nothing has been 
spoiled. Isi ewu, nkwobi, asun, sawa, orisirisi, point and kill
 have all defied the Forex market. Yes, the price of staple commodities 
has risen, but that has not stopped the people from throwing lavish 
wedding parties. Nor has it stopped anybody from marrying three times 
when once is enough: our people do traditional wedding – valid, they go 
to the registry: valid, they rush to church- valid: rather than marry 
once, they do it thrice all within a week. Nor has the austerity in town
 stopped anybody from burying the dead as if the more money is thrown at
 the grave, the likeliest the possibility of the dead suddenly becoming a
 Lazarus of the 21st century. 
Is there poverty 
in town? You answer that question based on the evidence of your eyes. 
What I have seen is that Nigerians are still living as if there is too 
much money in the country. Take a look at the garments Nigerians wear 
every week. We certainly don’t look like electricity is a problem or 
that money is in short supply. Soon it will be another Ojude oba 
among the Ijebus, for example.  You go and check them out. As a teacher 
at Ogun State University in those days, (I served later as member of the
 Governing Council), we used to go from one party to the other, guzzling
 free food and quaffing free drinks. Today, those lavish parties have 
not ceased. Nobody eats like that in Europe or North America. When you 
go to all the old joints, in Agarawu in Lagos or Tarmac, nothing has 
changed either. The music still flows, the swag is on. Elsewhere, new 
buildings are springing up; new cars are being “washed”, additional 
wives are being acquired. Leave matter, I beg. Nigeria will survive, and
 these same people who are complaining about change, you’d be shocked, 
they’d still vote for their stomachs in 2019.  
And
 that is why Nigeria is one country that beats all the textbook 
theories. We are just something else. There is more in the social arena 
that defines who we are, than in the theoretical arena.  The same people
 who are complaining that they have not seen change are actually hoping 
for more. They are not ready to adjust. They are not ready to make 
sacrifices. If they have an opportunity to be close to government in any
 way, they will jump at it. The corruption that we talk about is not 
just in government corridors, it is in society, but the one inside 
society is so difficult to trap because it is amorphous and inchoate in 
so many respects. Invariably, the snake feeds on itself: mobius strip. 
What
 we are left with is the image of the people laughing at government and 
themselves. Have you taken time out to check what happens on social 
media?  Anybody who ever ventured into governance is easy game. The 
people design caricatures and mock them. Nigeria produces more memes and
 graphics than any other country in Africa not necessarily because of 
the events that happen here but because of the people’s consciousness, 
and if I may add, private greed. In that other world, political change 
is ridiculed, poverty is deplored, GEJ is becoming a saint and PMB a 
villain, but the people are still having fun, and blaming Nigeria and 
the politicians.
I tell you, the 
problem with Nigeria is not the politicians but the people themselves. 
We are very special people, but we don’t really know what we want, and 
because we are like that, we confuse the politicians and the nation. But
 for as long as we can wear those impressive attires and throw those 
parties and dance to old music and pay our private bills, we see no 
reason to care enough.  Pity is: no country can ever move ahead if the 
people do not care enough. For us, life goes on, no matter what. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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