Ajibola Ige: An Ecumenical
Spirit
By
Wole Soyinka
Nobel Laureate
Literature 1986
THE murderers are among us. Let no one
be in any doubt - they sit among us, right within this sombre gathering
that honours the passage of a hero.
There are the unwitting collaborators
whose blind politics brought this moment to be, whose primitive notions
of contestation offered up this land of sacrificial platter. Perhaps
they are contrite. Perhaps now, they realise that they have been mere
tools in the hands of their diabolically far-sighted, deeply calculating
partners.
These latter are the gloating presences
in this assemblage, mocking, ever cynical, triumphalist. Cold bloodedly,
they have begun to debate who shall be next on the list of those whose
social resolve will always plague their waking hours, those who stand
between them and their nefarious ideologies, their internal obsession to
expropriate and waste people's material heritage, and their immaterial
but palpable will. These murderers have been to the home of their victim
- and I do mean the real perpetrators of this crime, not their agents,
not the mindless mercenaries who pulled the trigger. These paymasters
have polluted the register of condolences with the abomination of their
names, and hypocritical sentiments. Their doleful countenances belie the
cesspit of infamy that has invested and now passes for their minds.
The murderers are present among us in
this space of honour, albeit one of a nation's bereavement and
leave-taking. They renew themselves in the abundance of our grief, but
they fail to understand that here, at the core of our grief-stricken
hearts is a vitality that cannot be extinguished. The stillness that
they have imposed on this form only hastens the burgeoning of a seed
that he has planted in the hearts of millions, in the hearts and will of
succeeding generations.
Our tears will water that seed, and its
efflorescence will overwhelm the blight that they sought to impose on
our horizon. I do not eulogise a saint - I know of none. I speak only of
a town-crier, a strident, sometimes intemperate witness, a gadly even to
his close associates. But no one could steal his voice, living, and none
shall steal his voice, though now seemingly muffled by the shrouds of
death.
In hamlets and villages, in private
company and public institutions, in caucuses of politicians and the
assemblage of thinkers and builders, in the pulsating nests of righteous
dissidence, conscientiously in the corridors of power, and contentiously
in the media, both on the home front and at international gatherings,
this was a voice that rang out clearly, decrying injustice and
mobilizing others, moving millions towards an infinitive vision of the
possible, the vision of human cohabitation in mutual respect, the
harmonising of diverse communities, but only in conditions of absolute
parity, only under conditions of absolute justice. Our friend, brother
and colleague turned the accident of birth into an insurgent force for
the creation of one entity, north, west, east and south.
Born of adventurous Yoruba parentage,
raised in the far Hausa north, he was, like many, a symbol of the
potential oneness of a rich diversity, but unlike most, he chose not to
remain a passive symbol. His maturity imbibed the vision of a
nation-builder whose concept of a family of nations had, at its
foundation, an egalitarian relationship of people. His temperament
rejected the agenda of domination - there, this erstwhile lamb of peace
roared with the rage of a provoked lion.
Ajibola Ige interracted with diverse
origins, beliefs and allegiances with a conviction that sometimes made
his own immediate associates ask themselves where his loyalty lay in a
non-dogmatic ideology that embraced the possibility of transcending
lines of division, of striving for a goal whose end is the upliftment of
society - from the geriatric down to youths and infants. It embraced
others who shared the same direction, even when camped across the
dividing line of party allegiances. This was a responsibility that he
accepted as a fundamental mandate of a nation's humanity, one that
transcended rhetoric and petty partisanship. Ajibola Ige was a builder
of bridges. And still, they killed him. Why? Why did they kill this man
whose battlefield lay solely in the realms of ideas, of debate, in the
skills of organisation and the ability to lead and inspire men and
women? Even children.
One whose tools of contestation would
be found only in the arena of conviction and the tenacity to pursue
noble causes? Why should they kill a man who could not kill, who could
never giver orders to kill or maim, nor would ever respond in kind to
the violators of his own humanity. Not even the most implacable of his
enemies would attribute to him this spirit of crude retaliation. And
those of us who knew him closely, who had battled alongside him in the
many convulsions that threatened to engulf this nation, can testify to
this.
We can testify to his impassioned
belief in the processes of law, his conviction that human concourse must
constantly differentiate itself from that of the beasts of the jungle by
operating through an agreed set of rules, and principles. His induction
into the International Law Commission of the United Nations, just weeks
before his death, was a recognition so summative of his life that a
short sighted, impatience Death could only misread his opening of a new
chapter as the terminal page to an illustrious career.
Why do you imagine that he constantly
sought among the artists, was at home at their gatherings and
manifestations, why did he seek the fount of creativity to renew
himself? It was only partially as an antidote to the dehumanising
tendencies of politics - he was himself a communicant at the altar of
the Arts. Both laws and philosophy, we sometimes forget, are suckled at
the same breast of the Muses of which the Arts are equal partakers.
As Governor of Oyo State where he was
confronted with a level of barbarism beyond imagining in the
manipulation of the 1983 election, Bole Ige stuck to his belief that the
rule of law would eventually prevail, establish truth, and vindicate the
cause of the just. His allies, his associates, were exasperated at such
an immovable defence of a rampart that was being eroded by day, minute
by minute, by cynicism and violence of the other side.
This then was a man whose reservoir of
generosity insisted, against all evidence, that his opponent should be
credited with a capacity to reflect to act justly, a capacity that would
surely elevate them above the propensities of beast and would exercise a
civilising control on their conduct. Again and again, he conceded them
grounds, gave them the benefit of the doubt - but remained adamant in
the contest of principles. Robbed in open daylight of the mandate of the
people, he did not respond in kind or advocate violence. This is the
rare breed of the cultured politician that has been taken from us. We
must ask ourselves - why? But we have just named the reasons, and we
need look no further.
Only the specificity of the origin of
this cowardly blow is left to determine. We are a nation that kills our
best. Generosity is a tainted word. Largesse of heart is regarded as a
medical condition, like an enlarged heart, requiring drastic
intervention. Tolerance is ridiculed as the mark of weakness. And so we
kill the generous, the large of heart, the tolerant. Even the symbol
that should heal and bind the nation together are turned into agencies
of death - including faith, piety, religion.
A man of unswerving Christian
conviction who has served on the World Council of Churches, a position
that he used to battle the iniquities of Apartheid South Africa, joining
hands with a minority to transform that body into a combative tool of
liberation. Bola Ige was, in turn, the incarnation of that liberation of
the spirit that embraced the followers of other faiths as equals before
a Supreme Deity. In this, he was twin to his predecessor on this road to
calvary, the late President of this nation who never assumed office,
Bashorun Moshood Kashimawo Abiola MKO as we all knew him - a devout
Moslem, the Deputy leader of the Islamic Council, also evolved into a
great exemplar of like virtues, the humanistic embodiment not merely of
tolerance, but of full acceptance of the other. Let the convergence of
their convictions and of the nature of their deaths serve as a lesson to
the living.
One a Christian, the other a Moslem,
both unequivocal in their embrace of the human entirety, whatever their
faiths. If either could be faulted for the sin of intolerance, it was
indeed that of an uncompromising intolerance of the intolerant. Neither
viewed a friend, or a colleague or a stranger through the distorting
veils of religion. Yet when they quit our midst, the nation assuages its
conscience with one non-denominational service after the other. To what
purpose? The non-denominational service remains a ritualistic sham, a
mockery of such lives, unless it is pervaded by the true ecumenical
spirit that animated their existence.
We need to cultivate their transforming
spirit of oneness, a virtue that also defined the poet and statesman,
Leopold Sedar Senghor, who has preceded our own Bola Ige to the land of
the ancestor. It is the highest attainment to which any profession of
faith can aspire, since it transcends mere catechism, canticles and
scriptures which, whatever claims are made, are no more than products,
interpretations and emendations of imperfect, deeply flawed humanity,
however deeply inspired. Let us bear this in mind, as we mourn, yet
again, another paraclete of the ecumenical vision that seeks to unite
all beings within the immensity of the universal cloak of the spirit.
Let the killers among us pause and
reflect. The route to the mind is not the path of the bullets nor the
path of the blade, but the invisible, yet palpable paths of discourse
that may be arduous but ultimately guarantee the enlargement of our
private and social beings. Let the killings stop and the intercourse of
minds begin. Let these killers understand that we do not simply lament
this death, we are resolved to extinguish the impulse that lies behind
it. We are bound in a common cause to terminate the impulse that takes
our best, our brightest. Everyday, we move closer to a polarisation of
the word into two communities - the community of life and other - the
community of death.
That death is inevitable is such a
banal comment on existence that it deserves no further avowal. When we
speak of the Party of Death therefore, we refer to those whose life
mission - often blasphemously transposed into a mandate of religion - is
not towards the enhancement of life as an inextinguishable continuum in
the consciousness of generation after generation - but a quick, and easy
resolution in death. We speak of the Party of Death as a mindless
surrender before the challenge that confronts and excites other with the
complexities of intuition, discovery, creativity and the social
articulations that define the human phenomenon.
The feeble twitches of the killer,
however lethal, is a confession of that intense frustration, a
confession of creative impotence, an inability to extinguish the
infinite phenomenon that is life. We reject the blasphemous who seek to
play God by appropriating the right to the measure of existence. This is
not a death in isolation. It thrusts itself outwards as an encapsulation
of the killings that have dominated our landscape these many lamentable
years.
The question that this Absence places
before us is a simple one: shall we come together and engage in a
sincere dialogue, or shall we continue to splutter through these
terminal monologues of serial violence? Those who continue to refuse
this dialogue of peoples no matter by what name it is called - who
continue to concoct untenable reasons for its avoidance, and attribute
impure motive to its advocates, have merely chosen to concede the last
word to the Party of Death.
Today it is the Ijaw, the Itshekiri or
Urhobo, tomorrow is the turn of Sagamu, Agege. Umuleri, Aguleri have
been there before, Modakeke now, Osun to follow soon after, not
forgetting the Ijaws and the Ilaje. Kano will not be outdone when Kaduna
has laid claim to hierachical preferment in the Party of Death. And then
Jos, the ancient ecumenical city of Jos goes up in flames, is awash in
torrents of blood, while Tivs and Jukuns meet at the abbatoir of mutual
repudiation. If only this death could be the last, this death that we
own so intimately, if only the death of Bola Ige, one that we may call a
true 'peoples death' could be a culmination of this ascent of the
bestial pedigree in us but - I fear not. I gravely fear that this will
not be the last.
How can it be, when a human outrage
that takes place thousands of miles away is read and preached as a
divine mandate to pour out into the street, desecrate the places of
worship of others and augment the distant tally of death with the local
slaughter of innocents. No, I fear it cannot be. Not when those who have
had the unearned privilege to rule this land before, those who
treasonably seized the reins of leadership of this nation, continue to
ignite the dormant flames of zealotry, compound their career of infamy
by fanning those flames with divisive declamations, affirming what we
have always asserted - that they are closet fanatics, wedded to a
hegemonic agenda, that theirs has ever been an opportunism that
masqueraded as a social reformist zeal.. Now, disrobed of the mantle of
power, they reveal the parlousness of their self-vaunting leadership
integrity, the emptiness of their commitment to the concept of this
nation, indeed the hollowness of their very pretensions to a common
humanity.
In the midst of the killing orgies of
the besotted, we sought to hear statesmanlike words that rebuked, that
stoutly denounced these acts of insanity. What we heard, instead - and
by which we are still assailed till today - was the manifesto of the
Party of Death, the language of human alienation and even, of
treasonable incitement. The very air waves are demeaned by the
indelicacy of their public interventions.
In our silence, in the feebleness of
our response, we set the stage, we nerve the hand towards this
definitive moment, the extinction of a voice of tolerance, of equity and
the re-harmonisation of a much violated community. Behold the resonance
box of one among the foremost, in life an anathema to the purveyors of
hate and intolerance, now entombed in the mortal frame of Ajibola Ige,
our friend and comrade. Someone has publicly described the assassination
of our brother as this nation's equivalent of the calamity that was
inflicted by human hands in distant America, whose symbolic towers of a
complex human concourse were crushed, entombing thousand of lives of
different nationalities, races, sexes, ages, political persuasions and
religious faiths.
The comparison may sound hyperbolic
but, when considered closely, as an exercise in degrees of
traumatisation, it is not really far-fetched. Ajibola Ige can indeed be
seen as a twin promontory of Political Intelligence and Creative Spirit
that has dominated the national landscape of our times, and animated its
search for a cohesive identity. His political estate is vast and
demanding, a network that reaches into virtually every corner of this
nation space, and in every field. It is an estate that cannot be
inherited by any one individual, yet must be embraced as a bequest of
duty and nurtured with care and commitment.
We must all prepare to secure portions
of that estate as dictated by our varied political temperaments and
measure of commitment, tend it carefully, yet within one collective and
cohesive context that answers the vision of Bola's fecund mind and
organisational skills. His constituency was vast, and even so much our
will expand to embrace and nurture that constituency.
To the unrepentant hegemonists, the
claimants of a divine mandate of governance who sought to drag a nation
down to their normal habitation in the pit of perdition, you, Ajibola
Ige, reached down and said - Take my hand. They obeyed. You hauled them
up to a plateau of equity, saying, walk beside me. But they replied, we
shall walk with you, but we shall dictate the destination. At which you
smiled and replied: I said: take my hand, not my voice. And that is why
they killed you. That was why they conspired and killed a man of peace,
a believer in the powers of the mind, a living exhortation of faith in
the triumph of the human Spirit.
That is why they killed a man of
politics who identified with the Arts and creativity as an integrated
process of life and community, as an expression of the cultured self, of
which he was himself a living paradigm. This is why they killed a
builder, a pathfinder through the labyrinths of man-made divisiveness.
But they cannot kill hope, nor can they extinguish the conviction and a
faith in the future that burns within our hearts.
Ajibola Ige, suun re o. You have earned
a place of rest among those giants who, mysteriously, emerge from a land
of midgets to astound and challenge the world. Farewell. Walk tall among
the ancestors.
Being the funeral oration of
Nobel Laureate Professor Wole Soyinka on January 11, 2002 at the Liberty
Stadium, Ibadan,for Chief Bola Ige who was assasinated on December 23,
2001.