#LetUsThink: Financial Crisis or Poverty of Vision? -Istifanus Sarki
It is easy to find a little boy of 8 on his way to school,
begging for money from passers-by, here in Nigeria. Beggars are no longer the
poor retched, rag-clothed disabled guys sitting by the corner of our streets
begging for alms. They are everywhere now.
On the right is a full grown man well dressed, if not better
dressed than you, stylishly calling you as though they’ve got something
important to discuss with you. And then they whisper, ‘please help me with some money’. Or if it’s in Nigeria, you’ll
hear all sorts of payers preceding each begging.
On the left is a young able bodied woman with two children begging
for money by the roadside, and teaching her children how to go after people and
beg, telling stories such as they have lost their parents, or that they are
starving.
At your back are young men approaching you with stories of
how they lost their money on their way from one destination to the other, or
how their goods have been confiscated and they need to pay a certain amount to
retrieve their goods - too bad for a potentially endowed country like Nigeria.
It is small mindedness to blame the leaders and the
government for your circumstances. John F Kennedy would say, don’t ask what the
country can do for you. Ask rather what you can do for the country.
Almost every day, able-bodied men gathered around a vendor by
the road’s junction, peeping at the newspapers displayed at the stand, and
arguing about what the government has done again, or about who is more
legendary between Messi and Ronaldo as at 8 O’clock in the morning, when their
contemporaries are resuming work.
Funny thing is, some of them are married with kids.
Obviously, they are not the ones paying their kids school fees. So their wives
get up very early in the morning, get the kids ready for school and then head
towards the market where they make sales, return home to take care of the
family.
We can change the economic situation of Nigeria. We can
decide to move from the level of begging to the level of giving alms to the
helpless. We can move from seeking employment to giving employment. One person
can change the course of the nation’s history. Just one person.
But the tragedy is out of over 180million people in Nigeria, very
few of this “one person” exist. We used to be hard working and very resourceful
until oil was found. Looking back today, I realize what we have as a country is
not financial crisis, but poverty of vision and of great minds.
We have two kinds of people in Nigeria: one is either always
begging or complaining about the failed economy of Nigeria and the bad leaders.
The other strives to make it in spite of the odds. Often times the latter
becomes rich. And then the former, who obviously remains poor, accuses the rich
of not helping them. But they won’t help themselves either.
Bill Gates once said, if you are born poor, it’s not your
fault, but if you die poor, it is your fault. You don’t have any excuse if your
eyes, nose, ears, mouth and mind are functioning. People with serious
disabilities are making it out there. You can’t sit down here complaining.
Here is a brief story of a woman with physical inabilities. Helen Keller became deaf and blind 19months after birth.
Despite her circumstances, she has written her name indelibly in the history of
great people. She was an American author, a political activist, and lecturer.
She was the first deaf-blind person to earn a
Bachelor of Arts degree. Her entire life has served as evidence that no one
ever is defeated until defeat has been accepted as a reality. What a true
statement.
It is okay to have a good expensive phone with good camera,
nice outlook and a large memory capacity, but if you are using all of that, and
spending quality time on social media, reading posts, checking pictures
watching videos, liking, tweeting and doing all sorts of activities on social
media that hardly adds value to the nation, then you are clearly one of the
problems of our country.
The gadgets you so cherish now was a vision in the mind of
someone who is not more human than you. Every minute you spend on social media
adds to someone’s pocket. Every click you make on someone’s site makes them
richer and consumes your data.
We’ve got to stop the habit of lazing around, joining the
crowd of mediocrity to blame others for our misfortune. We’ve got to resume
being the producers that we once were before we willingly belittled all we had
and all we are were in the face of the white men.
He who is on the ground fears no falling. If we believe, we
can achieve anything. With a positive mindset, and an attitude of great
mindedness, there is no stopping on the way to achieving our dream of a great
nation as giants of Africa, regardless of religion, tribe, or creed. Let’s stop
dreaming, let’s start living the dream. Arise, Nigeria.
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