Pastor Enoch
Adejare Adeboye, the General Overseer of the Redeemed Christian Church of God
(RCCG) is missing. I mean hiding. No, he has not fled the country. He is, as it
should be, in fine fettle, dispensing dollops of Biblical wisdom to his
extensive flock.
But other
than that, he has been hiding, by which I mean that he has morally abdicated.
In the middle of a grave national emergency, the kind that most countries experience
only once in a generation, the esteemed man of God has stood out by his
conspicuous silence. And what a loud silence it is.
The
abduction of the Chibok girls has sparked considerable outrage both within and
outside Nigeria. Within, a lethargic and episodic civil society appears to have
found a timely cause célèbre. In several Nigerian cities, thousands of
Nigerians, boasting nothing more than righteous anger, plus a firm conviction
that it is the fundamental duty of a government to protect its citizens, have
taken to the streets.
In Abuja,
day after day, protesters, mostly women, have organized peacefully but
determinedly, even surviving the Federal Government’s recent cynical attempt to
infiltrate and disperse them. In other parts of the country, and among the
Nigerian diaspora, the common will appears to have been recharged.
Of course it
is regrettable that it had to take the tragedy of the abduction of nearly three
hundred girls by a gang of murderous bigots for Nigerians to realize that we
never had a state properly called, and that what we call a security apparatus
merely flatters to deceive. Still, the significance of the moment cannot be
overestimated, and the challenge from this point forward is to make sure that
the proper lessons about state building and adequate preparation for social
emergencies are taken to heart.
It is this
very significance that throws the silence of pastor Adeboye into bold relief.
Why, you may ask, does his voice matter? The reason is simple. His intervention
matters because he is one of the people who foisted the current occupant of Aso
Rock upon us.
No, he
didn’t select him, and agreed; he did not openly campaign for him. What he did
is more subtle and arguably more pernicious: He prepared the ground for the
President’s social legitimation.
Pastor Adeboye was instrumental to President
Jonathan’s astute deployment of religious (read Christian) symbols and the
enthronement of the narrative that he- the President- is God’s anointed, the
man without political pedigree whom God himself has chosen.
The visit to
the Redemption Camp, the kneeling down for prayer, the malediction against the
enemies of the President, the President’s own ostentatious spirituality- all
are building blocks in the mighty edifice of his (President Jonathan’s) public
presentation as a simple believer who did not hanker after power, who in fact
abhorred all politicking, yet had power fortuitously thrust upon him.
Pastor
Adeboye was an active participant in the construction of this narrative. But he
was not alone. Other members of an increasingly reactionary religious elite
have played their part in its development. In the middle of 2010, I had a
debate on the pages of The Guardian with one of them, Father Matthew Hassan
Kukah, Bishop of the Sokoto Catholic Diocese.
With the champagne from President Jonathan’s
official inauguration not even properly digested, Fr. Kukah went to town to
invoke the divinity of the President. In an article titled “The Patience of
Jonathan,” Fr. Kukah, finding political sociology too constraining, attributed
the political ascendancy of the President to “a monumental act of divine
epiphany.” Not satisfied with his own personal failure to adduce a concrete
explanation, Fr. Kukah threatened those who might as follows: “This man’s rise
has defied any logic and anyone who attempts to explain it is tempting the
gods.”
In that same
piece, and in a subsequent wholly illogical response to my challenge, Fr. Kukah
took comfort in astrology, claiming that the fact that the President is called
Goodluck, and his wife Patience, can only mean that the gods themselves, for
nothing other than an a mere appreciation of nomenclatural symmetry, had
decided to reward President Jonathan with Nigeria’s highest office. Said Fr.
Kukah: “Dr. Jonathan (yes, our President has a PhD) has done absolutely nothing
to warrant what has befallen him.
I am sure I can safely say he has neither
prayed, lobbied nor worked for what has fallen on his lap. (My parenthesis.)
Fr. Kukah is
an intelligent man. So is Pastor Adeboye. Both are doctorate degree holders
who, intellectually speaking, can roll with the punches. But both are bad for
Nigeria, and decidedly so.
They are not bad people. They are wonderful
individuals who no doubt mean well for the country. But it is their politics
that is bad for the country. In the case of pastor Adeboye, most readers will
recall a time, before he became the go-to pastor whom you can count on to
whitewash Nigerian politicians’ dirty laundry, when his political sensibility
was right.
No more. Same thing with Fr. Kukah, whose
rightward social turn is as baffling as it is absurd.
The common
thing to both, as I have been pursuing, is that they literally connived in
preparing the narrative of President Jonathan’s divine installation. And now
that everything with the administration of the country has gone pear-shaped, both
have retreated into an unbecoming and morally grotesque silence.
Nigerians
must pressure them to speak up. For all their bad judgment, they remain widely
influential, and we need the weight of their reputation as we sustain pressure
on the government to find and bring back the Chibok girls.
More
important, we need their apology, apology for selling us a bad product.
President Jonathan is not, as I insisted then, a divine candidate. He is a good
family man doing his best in the current circumstances with everything in his
capacity. The problem is, he is out of his depth.
Professor
Obadare, a political sociologist, teaches at the University of Kansas in the
United States
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