By Edwin Madunagu
On Africa must be modern, authored by Olufemi Taiwo, I had proposed that the book be freed from its “capitalist and idealist integument” and the result “integrated into the socialist discourse”. But Values Education and National Development, in my view, requires only to be freed from its “idealist integument” before its integration - since no “ideological preference” - in the specific sense I use the term here - is expressed in the latter book. Let me put this point differently: Values Education and National Development can be used by any serious agency of social transformation - of the Left, or the Right, or the Centre. The key word is serious. The result in either case, would be a new and better society. But if it used by an anti-capitalist and anti-imperialist agency, that new and better society would be definitively more humane, less exploitative, less unjust and less unequal.
On Africa must be modern, authored by Olufemi Taiwo, I had proposed that the book be freed from its “capitalist and idealist integument” and the result “integrated into the socialist discourse”. But Values Education and National Development, in my view, requires only to be freed from its “idealist integument” before its integration - since no “ideological preference” - in the specific sense I use the term here - is expressed in the latter book. Let me put this point differently: Values Education and National Development can be used by any serious agency of social transformation - of the Left, or the Right, or the Centre. The key word is serious. The result in either case, would be a new and better society. But if it used by an anti-capitalist and anti-imperialist agency, that new and better society would be definitively more humane, less exploitative, less unjust and less unequal.
During one of the national strikes in
the early 1980s, a revolutionary socialist group to which I belonged in Calabar
decided to set up a strike support committee. At the first meeting of the
committee a decision was taken, in principle, to co-opt other
activists. When the nomination of a certain lady, a senior journalist and
labour activist, came up, some members stoutly opposed it. Their reasons, in
the main, were that the lady was not leftist enough and that she interacted too
comfortably with “bourgeois elements”. But one male member argued that, in
that type of popular-democratic struggle, to be an intelligent, truthful and
courageous journalist was sufficient qualification for admission into the
committee. She was admitted.
Ironically, this particular lady was
the person who, at a point, suggested, and acted out, a “coup” that prevented a
particular betrayal of the national strike at a lower level. This event
was, and is, an argument against, and a victory over, “ideological narrowness”.
To guard against “ideological narrowness” is to be aware of the dialectical
relationship between revolution, on the one hand, and popular-democratic
struggle (that is, reform struggle from below) on the other. This
awareness helps to draw the lines between opportunism, reformism, sectarianism
and revolutionary line.
This is one of my attitudes to the
book, Values Education and National Development, its contributors, its
inspirers and the Foundation itself, and my advice to its radical and leftist
readers. I was strengthened in this attitude after reading the essay
contributed by Ven. Professor W. O. Wotogbe - Weneka: As will be seen later in this
appreciation and review, I explicitly and strongly indicated my rejection of
some of this man of God’s views even while commending his love, honesty and
clarity.
The premise of this book, stated
explicitly in the editors’ one-page summary, About the Book (page 6), and by
the various contributors, is the virtual collapse of Nigeria’s values system
and the grave dangers this poses for the future of the country. Professor
Anya O. Anya, in his Keynote Address, Values Education and the Future of
Nigeria (Chapter 1), however, takes a step back and explicitly asks a question
he considers “legitimate”, and that is: “Is there a Nigerian values system?”
Each chapter answers Anya’s question, after telling us what values are, and
then proceeds to show that this nation’s values system has collapsed (generally
and in a particular sphere or cluster of spheres – as shown in the table of
contents). Then follows, sometimes explicitly and sometimes implicitly, what
has to be done to reverse the situation.
What were the critical points, or
periods or historical factors, in this collapse of Nigeria’s value system? Do
they include regionalism, as Professor Anya suggested? Do they include
military intervention, the Civil War, primitive capitalist accumulation,
Structural Adjustment Programme (SAP), neoliberalism, “monetisation of
politics”, bad governance, tribalism and nepotism, public cynicism,
proliferation of religious sects (what a friend has called “deregulation of
religion”), poverty, corruption, the widening gap between the rich and the
poor, etc?
All these causative factors, except,
possibly, “deregulation of religion”, have been suggested by various
contributors to this book. However, the editors made a claim in the
introduction whose proof readers may need to track as they proceed with the
book: “Values Education and National Development gives policy-makers and
students alike a deeper insight into the critical role values education can
play in both shaping and reflecting the acceptable ways, the behaviour that
governed the Nigerian society before things fell apart” (page 6). The question
is: When did things begin to fall apart, or is it a “slip of pen” or “manner of
speaking”? I make this inquiry because some people, including my humble
self, take the questions when, why, where and how very seriously.
In his paper, The Place of Religious
Values in National Development (Chapter 4), Ven. Professor Wellington O.
Wotogbe-Weneka commends Professor Otonti Nduka for “venturing into the realms
of religious and moral values advocacy in a society characterised by glaring
decay in every facet of societal life. It is heartening to note that in a
society where religious values are, as it were, made to play second fiddle,
there are a few individuals who still believe that a godless society is heading
to its doom” (page 109).
I join the author in commending
Professor Nduka - but for additional reasons: his wisdom, his tenacity, his
genuine intellectual liberalism and his faith. Beyond that, Ven. Professor
Wotogbe-Weneka has made a serious intellectual formulation of a proposition,
which many religious charlatans nauseatingly parrot every time. He
strongly argues his proposition in a way that makes it debatable and not in a
“take it or leave it” manner. I commend it. He goes on to lament the growth
of secularism and underlines the challenge posed by “secularist tendencies” and
“human ideologies” including, in particular, “Humanism, Marxism and Socialism”
(page 112). He follows with debatable arguments. My only comment here
is to underline, and draw attention to, the fact that the writer
has here condemned and dismissed three global movements which, together with
democracy, nationalism and modernity, constituted a bloc of really great
movements that, beginning from the French Revolution, radically and
completely transformed our planet Earth - including religion itself.
Professor Mark Anikpo, in his paper,
Traditional Values and Globalisation: the Nigerian Example (Chapter 5), asks
the question: “To what extent has globalisation affected traditional values?”
The paper argues that “globalisation is the contemporary phase of capitalist
development with its imperialist tendencies still intact and perhaps more
deadly” and that “in order to understand its impact on traditional values, we
must understand the nature and logic of capitalist development” (page 131) (all
emphases mine). He strongly argues his point of view. The last leg of
Anikpo’s compound proposition, namely, that “African leaders failed to
comprehend the logic of capitalism which they adopted…” (pages 131 - 132) does
not seem to be strongly supported by the facts of history: What we are
dealing with here is more of class interest than of mere incomprehension.
In Chapter 6, under the title Values
Conflict and Social Order in Contemporary Nigerian Society; Survey of Issues
and Programmes, Professor J. O. Charles and Dr. Moses U. Ikoh set out to show
that “a trend that is emerging in Nigeria in the face of globalization and
economic reforms is the intensification of amoral values”. Their thesis continues:
“Our diverse cultures create room for diverse values. In many instances,
personal values systems conflict with social values systems, thus
obstructing actions aimed at enhancing the welfare of others’. The authors
therefore argue for the “adoption of a national values system that can be
sustained through value re-orientation and national ideology” (pages 198 – 199)
(emphasis mine). I subscribe to the theses.
In tracing the efforts that had been
made - hitherto in vain - to realise that imperative in Nigeria, Charles
and Ikoh mentioned Ethical Revolution (1982 – 1983), War Against
Indiscipline (WAI) (1984 - 1985), The Directorate of Mass Mobilisation for
Social Justice and Economic Recovery (MAMSER) (1989 - 1992), “Letter to my
Country Men” (I think late 1980s to early 1990s), the National
Orientation Agency (NOA) (merger of MAMSER with Public Enlightenment Division
of the Federal Ministry of Information and Culture) (1993 to the
present). The authors seem to suggest that what was wrong with these programmes
resulting in their respective failures - was their implementations. But I think
- and as the authors can be construed to have implied in both in the title and
the body of their work - there was also something wrong with the premises and
formulations of the programmes. I shall later generalise and pose this point as
a question.
This is the second part of the review
of the book “Values education and national development” which was presented to
the public on November 26, 2012. The first part was published last
Thursday.
• To be continued.
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