The Primacy of Political or Economic Power:
The Igbo Dilemma
By
Anya O. Anya
culled from NEW AGE, November 08,
2005
There is pain in the Igbo heart. There is confusion in the
Igbo mind. There are excruciating aches in the Igbo body politic and
society. The source of all that is the dilemma that faces every Igbo man
and woman as he/she observes or participates in the affairs of
contemporary Nigeria. There are varied explanations for the pain, for
the confusion and for the aches.
Some ascribe them to the apparent disunity that seems to be a persistent
but uninvited guest in any conclave of the Igbos since the end of the
Biafran war. Some would rather lay the blame on the so-called
marginalization of the Igbos. If you belong to the disunity school, then
obviously the solution lies outside the Igbo context. If you, however,
believe in the marginalization thesis, then obviously the solution lies
outside the Igbos indeed in the Nigerian context given the skewed and
irrational political and economic arrangements, which seem deliberately
designed to offend and constrain the Igbos. The question really is:
between disunity and marginalization, which is the cause and which is
the effect? Or put another way, we seem to be in the chicken and egg
situation. Perhaps, we need to start from the beginning or as our
compatriot the revered Chinua Achebe would put it: we need to know where
the rain started to beat us.
Igboland in historical perspective There is evidence that the Igbos have
been in their present location in South East Nigeria for the last 5000
years. As I showed in the 1982 Ahiajoku lecture, the Igbo culture bears
the imprint of the forest location where the culture developed, for
example, in the rugged individualism, which is emblematic of the people.
As the Igbo Ukwu bronzes attest by 968 A.D, the culture had blossomed
into a sophisticated civilization whose genius is underscored by the
fact that the quality of the Igbo Ukwu bronzes clearly better than the
Benin and Ife bronzes that came along 500 years later.
It has been suggested that there is a 500-year hiatus or gap in the
tapestry of Igbo history; this it has been speculated could have arisen
as a result of an epidemic rather than war. The recovery of the
civilization had just started when the depredations of the slave trade
was visited on the people and with it the colonial interregnum. History
teaches that unlike the situation in other parts of Nigeria and West
African, the occupation of Igboland was a protracted and piece-meal
affair, which was achieved literally village by village as a result of
the decentralised political organisation of the people.
While this must account for the republican temper of the people, it has
also bred a short-term perspective in the people’s appreciation of their
history which can often be mistaken for a lack of the sense of history.
What is more, it does explain to some extent, the misunderstanding and
underrating of the achievements of the culture by the colonial
authorities. The important point to note is that the history, politics
and culture of the Igbos bear the imprint of their ancient origin, of
their adaptation over the centuries to their environment and of their
salient difference from their latter day compatriots, the Yorubas and
the Hausas. When the Igbo man attempts, often unsuccessfully, to imitate
the political and cultural usages of these latter day compatriots, he
does a grave injustice to himself and to his roots.
The justly recognized, feared even if resented industry, drive and
intelligence of the Igbos are the consequences of their successful
adaptation and acculturation to their forest environment. “Man know
thyself” is an advice that the Igbo can use with great benefit and which
should breed in them a degree of circumspection, caution and discretion
in the adoption of foreign modes and usages rather than the loud and
often ostentation mien that we present to the outsider. It should breed
in us a resilience of spirit and an inward looking and proud affirmation
of who we are rather than the self-deprecating and whining disposition
that seems to have overtaken us and particularly the younger generation.
For it must be stated with some pride that the zest and zeal with which
our people embraced western education and which enabled them in thirty
short years (1934 1964) to overtake and some may say to “dominate” the
social, political and economic landscape of modern Nigeria was
unprecedented. Indeed, the exploits of the scientists and professionals
in the Biafran war and after were in itself a worthy testament of the
genius and resilient spirit of our people. No other African group in
modern times have shown as much pluck and serendipity. There is,
therefore, a lot to be proud of.
The contemporary state of the Igbo nation Most unfortunately, the
current reality and portents extant in the Igbo heartland are different
and often discouraging. On the social front, we project a picture of a
society, which is not only fraying at the edges but one whose centre
seems unable to hold together. From one homestead to another, from one
community to the next and indeed throughout the five states of the Igbo
homeland, there is disaffection and a general lack of the sense of
solidarity and social harmony; chieftaincy disputes, violent crimes,
youth restiveness, lack of trust in one another is shown in various
ways. It is often as if no one in particular is in charge. There is a
general lack of respect for the elders and for the leaders.
On the political front, it is as if there are no more rules. It is no
longer the politics of service and decorum as we say in the days of Zik
and Okpara but rather a cash and carry political system in which the
highest bidder is the victor no matter how unsavoury his/her political
past may have been. The leaders of the political system at the local,
state and national level are often men of questionable credentials and
past. It is as if a sense of responsibility and integrity have become
hindrances rather aid to the emergence and sustenance of a leadership
elite that cares and serves the people.
The result is the abandonment of the politics of principles and ideas
for the rule of the mob-thugs and toughies are often the ones that
dictate political outcomes. The result has been a general repudiation
and lack of interest in the affairs of the community and the state by
members of the professional and leadership elite. The debacle in Anambra
State over the last six years is merely the inescapable demonstration of
the general lack of leadership and the requisite sense of propriety and
responsible social values in the wider community. Known 419ners and
others of known disrepute have often metamorphosed into our “leader”
while men of quality, of reason and decorum appear helpless and
listless. The invasion of the traditional institutions by these
flight-by-night “leaders” is the most vivid illustration of the social
dysfunction that has become the measure of the state of depravity and
dissonance in our body politic.
The harvest has been the collapse of our economic centres of Aba and
Onitsha. Yes, what passes for business still goes on there but the army
of unemployed and the declining numbers in the schools remain a
testimony and a reminder that governance has taken leave of the pursuit
of the welfare of the people and the maximization of the common good. On
the farms and in the markets, the daily grind to make a living takes its
toll on the health and the well being of our citizens with the unkempt
and unsanitary conditions of daily existence in our towns. While erosion
ravages the land, the flight of the young and able-bodied men and women
from Igboland to the slums of Lagos, Abuja and even Port Harcourt is a
constant reminder of the failure of our collective leadership in
Igboland. As the able bodied and gifted youth pour out of the Igbo heart
land, the rhetoric of our “leaders” rise in its strident proclamation of
the good they have done and against all the evidence of decay and
decline. What can be done? How did we get to this pass?
Nigeria’s Igbo problem and the Igbo dilemma in Nigeria There is inherent
paradox and contradiction in the Igboman’s place in Nigeria. On the one
hand given his industry, his intelligence and his enterprise, the
Igboman is a desirable gift to Nigeria and the stuff of which great
nations and great civilizations can be built. On the other hand, given
his presumptive confidence in his abilities and his unabashed hunger to
succeed at whatever cost, he engenders fear and unwelcome visibility
amongst his compatriots. His lack of subtlety, his drive to overcome and
his insatiable “greed” for material progress engenders resentment often
inexplicable, and perhaps, undeserved hostility in the host communities.
His “loud” style of life and the facility with which he can adapt to and
adopt new ways can also be unsettling to foreign cultural formations
that have come in contact with the Igbos including the colonial masters.
There is thus an underlying sense of conflict in the Igbo presence in
Nigeria.
As had been noted, Igbo society developed in the tropical forests of
South Eastern Nigeria. While this honed the individualism and
independent spirit of daring, it also engendered an isolationist
tendency within which the population increased and prospered in its
simplicity and self-satisfied balance in its environment. Colonial
interregnum enabled the Igbo to pour out of the South Eastern parts to
the rest of Nigeria and beyond. The simple ways of life belied the
sophistication and ancient origin of the culture. This bred an attitude
in those who came into contact with the Igbo that often under-rated and
even misread or misunderstood the dynamism and effervescence of the Igbo
spirit and character. The prejudices and hostility that has bedevilled
the relationship of the Igbos with their other Nigerian compatriots has
its roots in this misunderstanding: it can be unsettling to the human
psyche to be worsted by those you had under-rated and would have
preferred to use for your benefit or even ignore. The love-hate basis of
such a relationship can create instability unless skilfully managed with
wisdom, tolerance and patience. This is Nigeria’s Igbo problem. What is
more: patience is at a discount in the Igbo scale of values. Thus, other
nationalities in Nigeria despite mutual antagonism are often united by
their common hostility and fear of the “upstart”. The challenge that
confronts the Igboman is how to reconcile his drive for that which is
good with discretion and a patient tolerance and understanding of other
ways. Alas, for the Igbo, there are no half-measures, he will adopt
foreign ways, hook line and sinker or he would impatiently display his
intolerance of foreign ways. Nigeria and Nigerians would want to use the
genius of the Igbos without paying for it. But Nigeria needs the Igbo as
the Igbos need Nigeria. What then is the point resolution, the center of
balance?
The place of the Igbo in Nigerian politics and the economy Neither the
history of politics nor the economy in Nigeria would be complete without
mention of the dominant place of the Igbos in the pre-Biafran war in
Nigeria. As I have had cause to observe elsewhere, the period between
1934 and 1964 in Nigerian history, politics and economy development can
justly be called the Igbo epoch. From 1934 which marked the graduation
of the first generation of western educated Igbo leaders such as Azikiwe
and Mbanefo to 1964, the onset of the Nigerian crisis which was to lead
eventually to war, the frenzied pursuit of education was an Igbo rally
cry and preoccupation. Many Igbo communities were activated and
mobilized to sponsor gifted and brilliant youngsters, without
consideration of kinship ties, to overseas universities and later to the
only Nigerian institution of university standing then in existence, the
University College, Ibadan for further studies.
The result was an avalanche of youthful and well-educated leaders in
politics, the economy, in the professions and the army that Igboland
provided to Nigeria. Such men as Mbonu Ojike, Nwapa Emole, Kenneth Dike,
Osadebe, Odumegwu Ojukwu, Imoke, Ugochukwu and a host of other worthy
Igbos were products of the frenetic onslaught of the Igbos on western
education and the western style of economy. The pay off was that in
civil service, the universities, the professions and the army, the Igbos
were certainly visible, if not dominant despite the head start of two
generations that their Yoruba compatriots had on them. Even in the fight
for Nigeria independence, the venerable Obafemi Awolowo was a late-comer
when compared with the time of entry and impact of Azikiwe, Mbonu Ojike,
Alvan Ikoku, etc. All that headroom was lost with the war.