In my opinion, Professor May Akabogu-Collins missed an auspicious teaching moment that would have allowed him/her to educate his/her students. We should never be ashamed of our African countries to the extent of excluding ourselves as citizens of African states, or denying our citizeship! I always tell people that I come from the best country in the world: Ghana. On occasion, this statement had surprised and even ferry uneasiness to my audience, including students.
I am frightened by the way Nigerians write about Nigeria as if it is the only hell-hole on earth. Give it up: 419 in the Internet Age and we Nigerianize it! Go to Ghana and see. We call it sakawa, that is, we silently call it sakawa. Read about similar if not the same phenomenon in Russia, India, USA, China, etc. It is called scam, rip-off, swindle, con, racket, fraud, etc. When it happens in France, America, Russia, etc., it is sanitized. Only some individuals do it in France, America, etc. In Nigeria, it is an epidemic: all Nigerians are involved is what the media and even Nigerian scholars, such as Professor Akabogu-Collins, who should distill such hegemonic thrash, tell the world.
As noted, Professor Akabogu-Collins missed a teaching moment. S/he could have put the state of Nigeria into historical perspectives, for example, that Nigeria was barely fifty years old suffering from the cumulative depredations of slavery, colonialism, neocolonialism, unidirectional globalization, globalized vampire capitalism, and that with time Nigeria would come into her own. Furthermore, in spite of all the problems that Nigeria is facing today, she has produced exceptional men and women who have continued to make stellar contributions to the world.
Thanks to my Ghanaian gods: Papa Valentine Ojo is no longer here to terrorize me for daring to comment on Nigerian issues; and Papa Quansy Salako is not here to question my perspectives on colonialism and its lingering effects.
Kwabena
From: aassenso@indiana.edu
To: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com
CC: nana_garba@yahoo.com; dejigiri@yahoo.com; uosili@iupui.edu; ovaughan@bowdoin.edu; anthonyakinola@yahoo.co.uk; nnaemeka@iupui.edu; osafoaku@indiana.edu
Subject: USA Africa Dialogue Series - FW: A Nigerian Spring — Long Overdue
Date: Sat, 2 Feb 2013 13:38:25 +0000
Subject: A Nigerian Spring — Long Overdue
A Nigerian Spring — Long Overdue
By MAY AKABOGU-COLLINS, Paris
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