Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Why should the youth be interested in Nigeria?

WARNING: Long post ahead! (I have however, broken it down to two parts. This is the first).

There are not a lot of things in this Country of ours today that makes the average Nigerian youth want to invest his or herself here. The costs of goods and services rise almost on a quarterly basis, while there is a corresponding decrease in the availability of jobs, and retaining already secured ones.

It is not a new thing to hear that so and so has traveled out of the country in search of the proverbial greener pastures. The shocking thing is that most of these young people travel to the western world to peddle drugs in order to make ends meet. Others become commercial sex workers, willingly giving up their dignity for a taste of some better porridge. Why blame them? They are only trying to survive. The grand hustle.

That doesn’t sound right.

If you watch the Nigerian Television Authority (NTA), which is also the government’s main instrument of propaganda, you will hear messages about human trafficking, and the punishments awaiting traffickers if caught. What the government does not say however, is that many times these “slaves” (as the government calls them,) are trafficked of their own accord, most times, seeking out the trafficker in order to make a deal. What is common among these “slaves” is that they all are young people, all of them.

What is wrong with Nigerian then? Why would her cream seek less-them-noble lives outside her borders? Are we so valueless in this generation that anything goes? I refuse to believe that. Our young people are not all without values. We have morals, we are responsible, and we want a chance. We want to be able to write our own names now that we’ve learnt how to. Stop treating us like we don’t matter and we will not be rebellious.

If I may ask, still, why are we the way we are? Is it simply because our parents have refused to see how much we’ve grown? I think not. If that were to be the case, then we’d not have to travel outside Nigeria, disgracing ourselves, just to prove a point. No, not at all. We do what we do because we have no choice. The government, our parents, has failed. It has refused to see that the ideals it holds on to tenaciously are presently insignificant – a part of history which should be kept on the dusty shelves where they belong. It has refused to feel our pulse before prescribing to us medication. The government of today is tired, and if we do nothing to help, we ourselves will be used up before we have our chance to practice the dreams of our youth.

Sadly, our parents refuse to believe that we’ve grown. In applying policies which are no more relevant, our parents have forced us into a mindset of nonchalance about our family, Nigeria. I do not blame us. If our parents refuse to see that their policies do not make sense to us, that we cannot just toe their line, that they have used the old tricks and lines a hundred times too many, why should we bother? The “friends of the family” have remained the same right from the first republic, and nothing is new. There’s no food on our table, no regular power supply, no security, no hope, no prospects. Still, we are told we must have to tighten our belts. “E go better”, they sing to us. And if we don’t agree, you are termed a lunatic, unpatriotic, and a hater of Nigeria. Go back to sleep children, for father knows best. Yeah, right.

We know the values of the new technological revolution, but our parents wish to remain in the dark ages. What can we do? We can’t force their hands. After all, it’s their country. Or is it not? You see, the problem with these folks is that almost all of them, in one way or the other participated immensely in the liberation of Nigeria. They therefore see Nigeria as their own baby which must be nurtured solely by them. That, however, is a topic for another day.

Let us go to the question before us instead: why should the youth be interested in Nigeria? The answer is straight forward: She is ours, and we are hers. If we do not get ourselves interested in her affairs, she will continually go down the drain, and take us along.

...to be continued.

2 comments:

incoherent said...

ok muse we're going to rack over this post o! 1st of all, while recognising that there are a lot of nigerians abroad making the living (VERY) illegally, they do not however constitute the majority as you imply. a lot of nigerians took their opportunities and talents elsewhere where they would: 1) be hired w/o knowing sum1 or "dropping" to get it and 2.) where infrastructure is available for them to pursue their dreams

now about older people vs younger people......what exactly are you on about? be specific. what is it that the youth has to offer that the older gen refuse to accept? in what way have they refused to move 4ward? dude out of my numerous years alive i have spent maybe 7-8 of them in nigeria. despite that, i am FIERCELY tradtional. i love love our culture. i have lived in so many diff places and i have learned to appreciate our deeply rooted culture. yeah there are some things that suck, but i believe that our CULTURE is waaay a part of us and isnt something we should discard for whatever we might be hoping to achieve. if it is this culture you want our elders to leave behind and move forward about, then dude you've lost me (and i was gearing to be your number 1 fan too!!).

so explain o! before i come and hunt you down!

SOLOMONSYDELLE said...

I find it difficult to accept that people would knowingly seek out how to become 'slaves' but as I know that I am not all knowing, I will only acknowledge that such could be possible.

That being said, yes, the government/parents have failed Nigerians, but we Nigerians have failed ourselves even more so. While I understand that average Nigerians are too busy trying to survive to focus on the government, there are Nigerians in Nigeria and abroad that have failed as well.

Ultimately, we are all a part of the problem and must find away to solve the problem. I personally believe that it is possible with the right conditions and for some reason, in my observation of Nigeria, i see a couple things coming that will be empowering to the average Nigerian in a way nothing else, not even independence, was empowering. I just hope that certain people and certain interests do not 'roadblock' the progress that is undoubtedly coming.

Anyway, forgive my 'speech'. I truly appreciated this post. It was very frank. And as for values, you might want to check this (and the following discussion) out.