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A Must Read; Views Of Our Founding Fathers On Our Unity And Togetherness by lightblazingnow(m): 4:29am On Apr 22, 2017
Alhaji Tafawa Balewa – 1948 • “Since 1914, the British Government have been trying to make Nigeria into one Country but the Nigerian people are historically different in their background, in their religious beliefs and customs, and do not show themselves any signs of willingness to unite …… Nigerian unity is only a British invention (imagination)”. Alhaji Tafawa Balewa became Nigeria’s first and ever Prime Minister and one of the leading icons of our independence

Chief Obafemi Awolowo “Nigeria is not a nation. It is a mere geographical expression. There are no “Nigerians” in the same sense as there are “English”, “Welsh”, or “French”. The word “Nigerian” is merely a distinctive appellation to distinguish between those who live within the boundaries of Nigeria and those who do not”. Chief Obafemi Awolowo became the first Premier of Western Region of Nigeria and a dominant political influence in the region and Nigeria. Nigeria; a nation founded on fear, doubt and mistrust.

A nation state is the progressive and evolutionary journey of the faith, vision, dream and values of their founding fathers. What Nigeria is today cannot be divorced from the faith and conviction of her founding leaders. The leading icons of our independence saw tribe, ethnicity and sectionalism but invariably did not see the possibility of a strong, virile and united nation.

What they saw of our differences was difficulties and complexities but missed the glorious picture of the limitless opportunities and promises of our diversities. They forged a nation they did not believe in and laid the foundation of a Nigerian state without a sovereign national will. In so doing, laid a national foundation based on sentiments, emotions and chance rather than principles and authoritative vision for national cohesion and transformation.

What our fathers had is what they gave the nation, perhaps given the time and circumstance. Our search for a true Nigerian state must begin from here. Our past is essential to determine why we are where we are. But what will decide our future is not what our fathers did or did not do. It is what our own generation determine to see, believe and fight for, especially at this defining moment of our history.

We cannot continue to see Nigeria from the selfish and narrow lenses of personal, ethnic, religious and sectional advantage and expect a glorious new era of national transformation and collective advancement. A new Nigeria defined by a common national spirit, character and vision is our responsibility. It is now or never.

America is an example of a heterogeneous society made up of the Irish Americans, Caucasians, Afro-Americans, Mexican Americans, Christians, Moslems, free thinkers. Yet united, advanced and made strong by a common and over-ridding national ideological values. They found both personal and collective meaning and strength in the timeless ideological truth of their collective equality and inalienable right to life, liberty and pursuit of happiness.

The root cause of our national challenge is not in our over exaggerated religious, tribal and ethnic affections but our selfishness and absolute lack of principles. There is a fundamental problem when we allow our parochial considerations assume and command our allegiances over our national consciousness. Whatever gives us undue advantage over others will never establish our collective faith, trust and hope. Our challenge is the penchant for undue reward and benefit of opportunism, mediocrity and nepotism. The resultant delusion is everyone seeking for a “one Nigeria” yet hardly is anyone willing to give up his or her allegiance and commitment to his or her religion, tribe, ethnicity and socio-cultural affiliations. We all desire a progressive nation yet no body is prepared to give up the destructive and unjust reward of nepotism and sectionalism for merit, honor and hard work. This is Nigeria’s dilemma.

No one fights for a nation he or she does not believe in. The foundation of every nation’s civilization, development and greatness is the content of what the people hold as sacrosanct. What is fundamental to a people is what defines and determines their collective character, motivation and resolve. This is what makes them a people and what gives character and authenticity to their developmental quest. It is what gives a soul to a nation and a sense of pride to the people. Nationalism is neither legislated nor a matter of mere national orientation. Nationalism is a product of personal love and passion for one’s nation inspired by genuine relationship, trust and faith based on personal conviction and experience. Life begets life.

In every generation the people have deep seated yearnings and aspirations which cry out for fulfillment. Today, what will determine Nigeria’s destiny is not mere promises of electricity, roads and houses (as important as they are) but identity and self meaning. The reason roads and houses are still an issue after 52 years of our independence is simply because we are yet to have a nation beyond a mere geographical expression.

What a new generation of Nigerians yearns for today is a nation they would call their own; a nation to live for and if possible die for. Today’s generation of Nigerians yearn for something to believe in and to aspire for. It is unarguable that a people’s sovereignty is not in the quantum of electricity, roads and houses but a right to self determination and realization. It takes identity and sense of birth right to establish a people’s fundamental essence and character.

The battle against mistrust, apathy, corruption, insecurity and indiscipline that currently bedevils Nigeria and Nigerians cannot be won by the Army or Police, EFCC or ICPC. But by our sense of fundamentality and inner security produced by our collective sense of heritage, belonging and faith. A people will not only fight and defend their birth right but live for and if possible die for the interest of a nation they believe in.

We are largely incapable of responsibility as a people, because devoid of inner force of life, we are without strength of character. For life to have meaning, standard and motivation a people must have a fundamental sense of self value and purpose. When life is motivated by what we believe in motivation becomes a matter of character. Nationalism is neither legislated nor wished, nationalism is a matter of experience, conviction and love for one’s nation.



Allow the true Light burning sun in you to make our country a more better place for you and your generations. You had better contribute to nations building instead of division.

Long live Nigerians
Long live Nigeria
Long live good leadership

Long live me and our efforts

Re: A Must Read; Views Of Our Founding Fathers On Our Unity And Togetherness by neolboy(m): 5:13am On Apr 22, 2017
ok
Re: A Must Read; Views Of Our Founding Fathers On Our Unity And Togetherness by madridguy(m): 5:27am On Apr 22, 2017
Brb
Re: A Must Read; Views Of Our Founding Fathers On Our Unity And Togetherness by 1Rebel: 5:54am On Apr 22, 2017
Biafra or nothing cool

1 Like

Re: A Must Read; Views Of Our Founding Fathers On Our Unity And Togetherness by Karlman: 6:12am On Apr 22, 2017
...
Re: A Must Read; Views Of Our Founding Fathers On Our Unity And Togetherness by lightblazingnow(m): 6:23am On Apr 22, 2017
One eye God
Re: A Must Read; Views Of Our Founding Fathers On Our Unity And Togetherness by lightblazingnow(m): 6:33am On Apr 22, 2017
One thing
Re: A Must Read; Views Of Our Founding Fathers On Our Unity And Togetherness by juman(m): 6:53am On Apr 22, 2017
Yeah, nigeria is just mere amalgamated pieces of land.

Nobody believe in one nigeria.
Re: A Must Read; Views Of Our Founding Fathers On Our Unity And Togetherness by Cekpo34(m): 6:57am On Apr 22, 2017
“We the people of the north will continue our stated intention to conquer the south and to dip the Koran in the Atlantic Ocean after the British leave our shores.”
Ahmadu Bello, 1957


“The new nation called Nigeria should be an estate of our great grandfather Uthman Dan Fodio. We must ruthlessly prevent a change of power. We must use the minorities in the North as willing tools and the South as a conquered territory and never allow them to rule over us and never allow them to have control over their future”.
Ahmadu Bello, 1960

“I will allow Sir Tafawa Balewa to go and become Prime Minister and lead the unbelievers of the south whilst I will stay in the north and lead the faithful”.
Ahmadu Bello

‘’In actual fact the policy is a northerner first. If you cannot get a northerner then you get an expatriate like yourself on contract. If we cannot get that then we will employ another Nigerian from the south on contract too. This is going to be a permanent policy as far as I foresee’’.
Ahmadu Bello

“We do not want our Southern neighbours to interfere in our development. We have never associated ourselves with the activities of these people. We do not know them, we do not recognise them, and we share no responsibility in their actions. We shall demand our rights when the time is ripe. If the British quit Nigeria now at this stage, the Northern people would continue their uninterrupted conquest to the sea”.
Balewa, 1947

There has been and there's still a geography called Nigeria. In a pragmatic sense, there's no country like Nigeria and may never be because our so-called leaders have failed to tell themselves the truth. Separate development is guaranteed in true federalism.
Re: A Must Read; Views Of Our Founding Fathers On Our Unity And Togetherness by Adabite(m): 7:43am On Apr 22, 2017
Nice write up my brother,
One thing I must note here is this, Greatness Of Nigeria is attainable if we can have one voice, one spirit and one mindset.
Our fathers have failed us and it's quite unfortunate that we are still threading on their footpath. Larger percentage of we southerners believe that we cannot get things right until nigeria is divided.
But, I have a strong belief that with heart of seflesness and with one spirit, Nigeria can be great.

God Bless Nigeria
With Unity In Diversity And In One Nigeria I Stand

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: A Must Read; Views Of Our Founding Fathers On Our Unity And Togetherness by jpphilips(m): 8:52am On Apr 22, 2017
lightblazingnow:
Alhaji Tafawa Balewa – 1948 • “Since 1914, the British Government have been trying to make Nigeria into one Country but the Nigerian people are historically different in their background, in their religious beliefs and customs, and do not show themselves any signs of willingness to unite …… Nigerian unity is only a British invention (imagination)”. Alhaji Tafawa Balewa became Nigeria’s first and ever Prime Minister and one of the leading icons of our independence

Chief Obafemi Awolowo “Nigeria is not a nation. It is a mere geographical expression. There are no “Nigerians” in the same sense as there are “English”, “Welsh”, or “French”. The word “Nigerian” is merely a distinctive appellation to distinguish between those who live within the boundaries of Nigeria and those who do not”. Chief Obafemi Awolowo became the first Premier of Western Region of Nigeria and a dominant political influence in the region and Nigeria. Nigeria; a nation founded on fear, doubt and mistrust.

A nation state is the progressive and evolutionary journey of the faith, vision, dream and values of their founding fathers. What Nigeria is today cannot be divorced from the faith and conviction of her founding leaders. The leading icons of our independence saw tribe, ethnicity and sectionalism but invariably did not see the possibility of a strong, virile and united nation.

What they saw of our differences was difficulties and complexities but missed the glorious picture of the limitless opportunities and promises of our diversities. They forged a nation they did not believe in and laid the foundation of a Nigerian state without a sovereign national will. In so doing, laid a national foundation based on sentiments, emotions and chance rather than principles and authoritative vision for national cohesion and transformation.

What our fathers had is what they gave the nation, perhaps given the time and circumstance. Our search for a true Nigerian state must begin from here. Our past is essential to determine why we are where we are. But what will decide our future is not what our fathers did or did not do. It is what our own generation determine to see, believe and fight for, especially at this defining moment of our history.

We cannot continue to see Nigeria from the selfish and narrow lenses of personal, ethnic, religious and sectional advantage and expect a glorious new era of national transformation and collective advancement. A new Nigeria defined by a common national spirit, character and vision is our responsibility. It is now or never.

America is an example of a heterogeneous society made up of the Irish Americans, Caucasians, Afro-Americans, Mexican Americans, Christians, Moslems, free thinkers. Yet united, advanced and made strong by a common and over-ridding national ideological values. They found both personal and collective meaning and strength in the timeless ideological truth of their collective equality and inalienable right to life, liberty and pursuit of happiness.

The root cause of our national challenge is not in our over exaggerated religious, tribal and ethnic affections but our selfishness and absolute lack of principles. There is a fundamental problem when we allow our parochial considerations assume and command our allegiances over our national consciousness. Whatever gives us undue advantage over others will never establish our collective faith, trust and hope. Our challenge is the penchant for undue reward and benefit of opportunism, mediocrity and nepotism. The resultant delusion is everyone seeking for a “one Nigeria” yet hardly is anyone willing to give up his or her allegiance and commitment to his or her religion, tribe, ethnicity and socio-cultural affiliations. We all desire a progressive nation yet no body is prepared to give up the destructive and unjust reward of nepotism and sectionalism for merit, honor and hard work. This is Nigeria’s dilemma.

No one fights for a nation he or she does not believe in. The foundation of every nation’s civilization, development and greatness is the content of what the people hold as sacrosanct. What is fundamental to a people is what defines and determines their collective character, motivation and resolve. This is what makes them a people and what gives character and authenticity to their developmental quest. It is what gives a soul to a nation and a sense of pride to the people. Nationalism is neither legislated nor a matter of mere national orientation. Nationalism is a product of personal love and passion for one’s nation inspired by genuine relationship, trust and faith based on personal conviction and experience. Life begets life.

In every generation the people have deep seated yearnings and aspirations which cry out for fulfillment. Today, what will determine Nigeria’s destiny is not mere promises of electricity, roads and houses (as important as they are) but identity and self meaning. The reason roads and houses are still an issue after 52 years of our independence is simply because we are yet to have a nation beyond a mere geographical expression.

What a new generation of Nigerians yearns for today is a nation they would call their own; a nation to live for and if possible die for. Today’s generation of Nigerians yearn for something to believe in and to aspire for. It is unarguable that a people’s sovereignty is not in the quantum of electricity, roads and houses but a right to self determination and realization. It takes identity and sense of birth right to establish a people’s fundamental essence and character.

The battle against mistrust, apathy, corruption, insecurity and indiscipline that currently bedevils Nigeria and Nigerians cannot be won by the Army or Police, EFCC or ICPC. But by our sense of fundamentality and inner security produced by our collective sense of heritage, belonging and faith. A people will not only fight and defend their birth right but live for and if possible die for the interest of a nation they believe in.

We are largely incapable of responsibility as a people, because devoid of inner force of life, we are without strength of character. For life to have meaning, standard and motivation a people must have a fundamental sense of self value and purpose. When life is motivated by what we believe in motivation becomes a matter of character. Nationalism is neither legislated nor wished, nationalism is a matter of experience, conviction and love for one’s nation.



Allow the true Light burning sun in you to make our country a more better place for you and your generations. You had better contribute to nations building instead of division.

Long live Nigerians
Long live Nigeria
Long live good leadership

Long live me and our efforts

You quote people without a source or those men spoke to you directly? When will you have sense?
Re: A Must Read; Views Of Our Founding Fathers On Our Unity And Togetherness by lightblazingnow(m): 9:19am On Apr 22, 2017
Long story
Re: A Must Read; Views Of Our Founding Fathers On Our Unity And Togetherness by lightblazingnow(m): 9:21am On Apr 22, 2017
Great country
Re: A Must Read; Views Of Our Founding Fathers On Our Unity And Togetherness by inkon: 9:33am On Apr 22, 2017
Adabite:
Nice write up my brother,
One thing I must note here is this, Greatness Of Nigeria is attainable if we can have one voice, one spirit and one mindset.
Our fathers have failed us and it's quite unfortunate that we are still threading on their footpath. Larger percentage of we southerners believe that we cannot get things right until nigeria is divided.
But, I have a strong belief that with heart of seflesness and with one spirit, Nigeria can be great.

God Bless Nigeria
With Unity In Diversity And In One Nigeria I Stand

Mirage is when a Southerner keeps believing that a northerner will one day drop his supremacy mindset and reason with him. The more you chase it the farther it becomes. Don't wait until their foot soldiers/Fulani herdsmen pluck your life like unripe mango.
Re: A Must Read; Views Of Our Founding Fathers On Our Unity And Togetherness by spartan117(m): 9:38am On Apr 22, 2017
Most of our past heroes were tribalistic.
It doesn't mean we can't get it right in dis generation, its up to us
Re: A Must Read; Views Of Our Founding Fathers On Our Unity And Togetherness by lightblazingnow(m): 1:01pm On Apr 22, 2017
Great
Re: A Must Read; Views Of Our Founding Fathers On Our Unity And Togetherness by lightblazingnow(m): 7:24pm On Apr 22, 2017
Wonderful

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