Oritsejafor and his bastardisation of CAN, By Nasir Ahmad El-Rufai
Many in Nigeria today may not remember
the name of Cardinal Anthony Olubunmi Okogie, but if there was any
opposition to the military regimes of the eighties and nineties, the
Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) under him definitely represented a
voice of resistance to those governments’ excesses. At a time when many
people kept silent in the face of human rights abuses, Okogie faced
down the military government and told them some home truths. It didn’t
matter if the victims were Muslims or Christians; it didn’t matter
whether they were from the north or south; CAN fought for all Nigerians.
Okogie had the moral authority to act, and did so with
dignity, to the
admiration of all of us.
Okogie’s bravery was not unusual for CAN
leaders; if anything, in the turbulent history of this country, there
is a proud tradition of leaders of CAN who spoke for and stood by the
people of this country. They used their moral authority to defend the
rights of all Nigerians even during the most brutal military
dictatorships or corrupt and inept civilian administrations. The courage
of the likes of Cardinal Anthony Olubunmi Okogie, Archbishop Peter
Jasper Akinola, the Reverend Sunday Mbang and Cardinal John Onaiyekan,
for instance, are shining examples of faith in action, with compassion
for the oppressed and chastisement for the tyrants.
It is a mark of the sad and uncertain
times our country faces that we have to be reminded that previous
leaders of CAN have used that platform for nobler purposes than we
currently see. In spite of the corruption that blights much discourse
these days, it is evident that a clear distinction exists between CAN as
a body and the individual that leads it. Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor cannot
be allowed to conflate himself with CAN. He bears personal
accountability for the conduct and utterances that portray him as a
messenger of the powerful, or as an active soldier of the ruling party.
Except for the informed, the casual observer may mistake Oritsejafor for
a minor protocol official of government, so pathetically has he
cheapened the erstwhile integrity of the CAN presidency.
Pastor Oritsejafor’s utterances and
behaviour amount to repudiation of the moral authority, fair-mindedness
and high standing his predecessors invested in that office. While they
spoke truth to power in the exalted prophetic tradition, he cossets and
pampers the government of the day. He even champions their politics of
ethnic and religious division by making unfounded allegations against
opposition leaders. How else can any neutral observer rationalize his
two calls for General Buhari’s arrest? In contrast, Oritsejafor was dead
silent when persons that are Jonathan’s sidekicks threatened the nation
with violence if he is not voted president in 2015! The dissonance
between the glorious past and now is rather loud.
While Pastor Oritsejafor chose to be a
subaltern to power, other men of faith rose to stem division and help
the country achieve peace, efforts for which Cardinal John Olorunfemi
Onaiyekan and the Sultan of Sokoto were nominated for the Nobel Peace
Prize. Such an esteemed global honour is a measurement of leadership
quality and character; as distinct from Oritsejafor who prefers earthly
gains and ostentatious lifestyle of private jets! Everyone can recall
that November morning in 2012 when Oritsejafor accepted the gift of a
private jet in the presence of a smiling President Jonathan.
Observers of Oritsejafor’s record should
pause and ponder why the Catholic leaders took the recent unprecedented
decision to temporarily opt out of CAN! It is not because Christians in
Nigeria today are markedly different from those that lived in the days
when Okogie, Akinola and Mbang led CAN honourably, it is because the
Oritsejafor style has driven the organisation into the ignominious
politics of hatred and division.
Due to how sensitive any discourse about
religion has become in Nigeria, many have refrained from pointing out
the errant ways of Oritsejafor, but if we are to build the Nigeria of
our dreams, we must have the courage to point out transgressions against
all Nigerians by people masking themselves in religious toga to create
strife in the country. The truth is that Oritsejafor is neither a
personalization of CAN, nor an example of the compassion, grace and
modesty Christianity teaches.
A case of the descent into toxic
politics is evident from the statement purportedly issued in CAN’s name
in defence of Oritsejafor. The language of the statement is very similar
to the gutter language usually spewed out of the Presidential Villa
whenever any citizen expresses the right to question the corruption,
impunity and incompetence of the Jonathan administration. The sudden
attempt to assume the role of political adviser to General Muhammadu
Buhari, a person that Oritsejafor has done everything to malign and
smear, amounts to everything a religious organisation should not be.
When purportedly religious leaders or organisations become brazenly
partisan, they should not complain directly and through surrogates when
they are responded to in like manner.
God’s work cannot be reduced to petty
electoral calculations. Neither should those who claim to be on the
Almighty’s mission indulge in base blackmail and falsehood, or encroach
on God’s prerogative to bestow grace, provide final justice and avenge
wrong.
Let the leaders of faith show good
example when they step into the public arena. The merchants of
religiosity, those who specialise in distorting the sobriety of faith
into wares to be traded for political and commercial favours, should not
be allowed to divide our country or to derail the diversity of our
creeds and tongues into a reason for strife. Above all else, we are all
human, sharing the same biology and deserving to be free and secure,
whatever our beliefs and ethnic origins. In the final analysis, the
needs and wants of a less privileged Christian destitute in Abia is not
that much different from that of a Muslim Almajiri in Zamfara!
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