Ramadan: Sacrificing Education For Religion Is Unwise- Punch - Politics - Nairaland
Nairaland Forum › Nairaland General › Politics › Ramadan: Sacrificing Education For Religion Is Unwise- Punch (338 Views)
| Ramadan: Sacrificing Education For Religion Is Unwise- Punch by iwaeda(op): 12:38pm On Mar 03, 2025 |
RELIGION can distort a man’s vision. This is evident with some state governors in Northern Nigeria. As of February 28, four states have hastily scheduled school holidays to coincide with Ramadan 2025, which began on Saturday. This break disrupts learning and the academic calendar, making it challenging for affected pupils to catch up with their peers in other parts of the country. Some students are preparing for entrance and school certificate examinations; how will this enforced break assist them? In a digital, competitive world dominated by learning, it is a catastrophic choice to prioritise religion over education. Citing the need for full participation in Ramadan – Islam’s holy month of fasting from dawn to dusk – Bauchi State announced a five-week break from academic activities. So This Happened (EP 256) Reviews SERAP Demands For Answers Over Missing N100bn... Ramadan 2025 is set to last for 30 days. Not to be outdone, Kano announced a similar holiday, which runs from March 1 to April 6/7. Kebbi is also not left out. The holiday there extends from March 1 to April 7. In a memo on February 27, the Katsina State Hisbah Board instructed all private schools to close “for the Ramadan period”, warning that “non-compliance will not be tolerated”. Beyond these four states, others in the North may follow suit. This is a populist appeal – the people may applaud these governors, but no tangible results emerge from such a misleading, unscientific decision. First, this blurs the line between religion and politics. With the Nigerian economy in dire straits, politicians are grasping at straws to gain popularity among the electorate. Over time, leaders in the North have neglected education. Consequently, Nigeria has the second-highest number of out-of-school children globally, at 20.1 million, only behind India. Instead of addressing this figure, it is absurd that governors are disincentivising learning. These are states under the siege of Islamic terrorism, banditry, and kidnapping. There is excruciating poverty, illiteracy, high unemployment, and shabby infrastructure. Religion cannot address these sore indices. Education can. Second, this decision prompts questions about the role of religion in Nigerian society. Nigeria is traditionally a secular state, not a theocracy. However, the Constitution guarantees freedom of religion, providing state governments that have declared Ramadan breaks for schools a potential justification. This partly explains why some states in the North have controversially enacted Sharia law and established Hisbah boards to enforce religious laws in their jurisdictions. While it is debatable, Sharia law has neither reduced crime, public treasury looting, nor immorality. Rather, the governors have been undermining the means of production and economic assets, such as by crushing beer bottles, while openly accepting VAT from its production and sales. The governors are merely performing for the public. Saudi Arabia, a stronghold of theocracy, has ceased its customary practice of granting Ramadan breaks. After a 15-year mandatory Ramadan break, education departments in Saudi regions now have the final say on the 2025 academic calendar. In the United Arab Emirates, schools will remain open during Ramadan, although they are permitted to start later than usual. On Fridays, schools are to conduct online learning, a flexible and reasonable approach. In a broader context, the break contradicts the new proposal by the Federal Minister of Education, Tunji Alausa, to align with the global education system. Alausa recently suggested a 12-4 system to replace the 6-3-3-4 system. Importantly, the world waits for no one. Science and technology are advancing swiftly. Artificial intelligence is rapidly taking over. Any society that celebrates religion over learning risks being left behind. Thus, the North should shift its intense focus from religion and align itself with the best global education practices. Punch Editorial Board. https://punchng.com/ramadan-sacrificing-education-for-religion-is-unwise/ |
| Re: Ramadan: Sacrificing Education For Religion Is Unwise- Punch by madridguy(m): 12:39pm On Mar 03, 2025*. Modified: 1:00pm On Mar 03, 2025 |
I still don't get the fact why people won't respect the decision of others. Every state has the constitutional right to operate on its own, based on the influence of tradition, culture, and religion. The people of the Northern Nigeria said they want to go on a month break so why the noise everywhere? Their governors want it, the parents are happy about it, the teachers also welcome it so why all this cry here and there? A particular region for over 5 years now don't go anywhere on Monday, they even went to schools to beat children and teachers out of class and heaven didn't fall. Everything shouldn't be an attack on each other so far they're not forcing it on other region. For donkey years we have been having December holiday so what stops them from having Ramadan's holiday? |
| Re: Ramadan: Sacrificing Education For Religion Is Unwise- Punch by helinues: 12:41pm On Mar 03, 2025 |
Some Northerners have been brainwashed to the extent that as long as their politicians give them handout for Ramadan, they care less about good governance Make Allah at least take the bold moves and eradicate the likes of Boko Haram, bandits from the region. With all the prayers, with the stoning of devil in far away Saudi yet Allah refused to answer their requested prayers |
| Re: Ramadan: Sacrificing Education For Religion Is Unwise- Punch by helinues: 12:45pm On Mar 03, 2025 |
SugarBigotry:5th monikers today. Wait for this to be sent to the side line We go help you reset whatever that might have been wrong |
| Re: Ramadan: Sacrificing Education For Religion Is Unwise- Punch by Zionmdde: 12:55pm On Mar 03, 2025 |
Let them do what they want to do It is their education Even as Christians, it's dangerous to be in school during this period because your children will be in danger if they eat in school. As someone who has taught in the core north, their fasting period is a terrible period for educational activities. The kids display all.sorts of laziness and disobedience and you cannot punish them It is what it is. |
| Re: Ramadan: Sacrificing Education For Religion Is Unwise- Punch by danvon(m): 1:05pm On Mar 03, 2025 |
But banning WAEC examination for Mazi Nnamdi Kanu probably made sense. |
| Re: Ramadan: Sacrificing Education For Religion Is Unwise- Punch by budaatum: 1:43pm On Mar 03, 2025 |
madridguy:The problem is, the uneducated amongst us have the least opportunities to earn a living, and may resort to crime that affects us all. |
| Re: Ramadan: Sacrificing Education For Religion Is Unwise- Punch by iwaeda(op): 2:34pm On Mar 03, 2025 |
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