Doyin Okupe |
What’s in a name? Nothing,
says Western culture, for a rose by any other name would smell as sweet.
Everything, say the cultures of Africa, for every name is a messenger, running
errands of family history and circumstances of birth for its bearer. That is
why an African seldom jokes with the interjection: call me this or call me
that. Self-naming is serious business, very serious business in Africa. Doyin
Okupe, one of the caterwauling blights on Nigerian manhood currently littering
Aso Rock, said to call him a bastard if APC survived the first year of its
formation. It is time for Nigerians to obey his instruction and grant him the
Chieftaincy title he requested: Bastard Doyin Okupe. I hope you understand that
I did not call him a bastard. He insisted and who am I not to respect a man’s
wish to be called a bastard? If you want to know how to handle a man’s
calabash, watch him and study how he handles it himself. Doyin Okupe
Although he is sadly in his
sixties – I say sadly because his behaviour always suggests that he is trapped
in a pre-teenage stage of development – the patriarchs in Ogun state need to
summon Doyin Okupe and flog him in a public assembly. It is rare to see a
Yoruba elder in Doyin Okupe’s station do so much damage to his culture because
he either misunderstands it or his desire for stomach infrastructure stands in
the way of wisdom. “Call me this if that does not happen” is a commonplace
Yoruba cultural formula. Like all cultural formulas, it is not to be used by
fools. Any secondary school kid in Yoruba land knows that you wield that mode
of discourse only when you are absolutely certain of the results of what you
are boasting about. Call me a bastard if January is not succeeded by February;
call me a bastard if PHCN provides one year of uninterrupted power supply all
over the country in 2015; call me a bastard if the EFCC ever prosecutes
Olusegun Obasanjo, Abdulsalam Abubakar, and other beneficiaries of the $180
million Halliburton scandal. These are three contexts a Yoruba person would
deem appropriate for that cultural formula because it is certain that none of
the propositions would ever happen. However, call me a bastard if a political
party lasts a year? Only a very foolish Yoruba person would say this.
You know that this person is
foolish because the more you slice off his fingers, the more he insists on
wearing diamond rings. Doyin Okupe is now into the business of comparing his
boss with Jesus Christ. Suddenly, Martin Luther King, Nelson Mandela, Barack
Obama, and Lee Kuan Yew are no longer enough for these deranged minds in Aso
Rock. Oga Goodluck Jonathan is now better than all these people put together.
Trust Doyin Okupe. He did not even stop at the Pope. He went directly for Jesus
Christ. He even forgot that there is no vacancy for a second Jesus Christ in
Aso Rock. Evans Bipi already named Patience Jonathan Jesus Christ over a year
ago. Patience Jonathan accepted the honour and returned from Germany claiming
to have raised Lazarus from the dead. Which of the two Jesuses in Aso Rock will
step down for the other now?
There is something else I
like about Yoruba culture. There is a point at which that culture determines
that somebody’s behaviour has become so outrageous that you stop blaming him or
holding him to account. Yoruba culture will migrate to the person’s kinsmen and
ask them critical questions. The moment Doyin Okupe started comparing his Oga
with Jesus Christ for the simple reason that what he will eat is standing in
the way of wisdom, you are unlikely to find anybody in Yoruba land still
blaming the man. Instead, questions will be asked of his kinsmen, his molebi in
Ogun state. What did Doyin do? Who did he offend and what is the scale of his
offence that you, his kinsmen, would fold your arms and watch him dance naked
in the public square all the time? Why did you allow him to cross the market?
Does he not have molebi in this town? What is his olori ebi – family head –
doing about his matter? Are you his kinsmen just going to be looking at him?
Won’t you do something? Ee ni jade si oro Doyin ni? I am sure these questions
are being asked of Doyin Okupe’s kinsmen already.
Doyin Okupe is not the only
one who has suffered misadventures recently in the field of naming. President
Jonathan and the career Jonathanians who worship him on social media are also
suffering from a crisis of identity. One of the rules of naming is that people
tend to associate you with whatever you speak approvingly of. In certain cases,
it could become your sobriquet. If I speak approvingly of football all the
time, people could start calling me Pele or Messi. Whatever you approve of is
usually a pointer to how you wish to be called. I am not sure that President
Jonathan and career Jonathanians understand this basic rule. We must therefore
break it down for them to help them avoid the pitfall of poor self-naming in
the future.
President Jonathan went on
prime time TV to proclaim that stealing is not corruption. He reprimanded those
who take corruption too seriously for misunderstanding ordinary, mere, simple
cases of stealing. Watching him, I told myself that he was very effective in
making stealing look like the new cool in Nigeria. At first, career
Jonathanians were stunned on social media. It was such a huge gaffe on the part
of their Orisha that they initially did not know what to do about it. Then,
like a herd, they started cutting and slicing the statement; defending it;
justifying it; rationalizing it; explaining it; accounting for it; mitigating
it; diluting it. As is usual with career Jonathanians, they forgot their Orisha
who made the error and turned against Nigerians who dared to scrutinize it.
They hounded the nation. You
must accept Oga’s premise that stealing is not corruption or you’re a hater.
Perhaps the most celebrated instance of Jonathanian defence of the maxim,
stealing is not corruption, happened when I delivered Pastor Tunde Bakare’s
60th birthday lecture recently in Lagos. Our brother and recent convert to
career Jonathanism, Governor Olusegun Mimiko of Ondo state, was on the high
table with us. He kept wincing in pain and discomfort throughout my lecture.
Stealing is not corruption was one of the planks of my lecture.
I got a standing ovation
after it. Governor Mimiko was asked to respond. He spent almost forty minutes
philosophizing President Jonathan’s statement. He defended, polished, cleaned
up, explained, rationalized, disinfected. He was sweating. He accused me and
the rest of the country of having not taken the time to research corruption and
stealing. We have not theorized it enough. We have no research archives. Once
we understand the theory of stealing and corruption, we would have a deeper
understanding of President Jonathan’s statement. The audience booed him. Sahara
Reporters later published the video.
In essence, for President
Jonathan and career Jonathanians, there is nothing wrong with the statement
stealing is not corruption. We got tired of their harassment and granted them
their wish of calling them what they wanted to be called. Oga Jonathan went to
Obafemi Awolowo University, Ife, and some students shouted “Ole! Ole! Ole!
Thief! Thief! Thief!” You’d think that career Jonathanians would be happy. After
all, they’d spent months on social media screaming themselves hoarse and saying
there is nothing wrong with the President’s beatification of stealing on
national television in broad daylight. If there is nothing wrong with that
statement, why is your mental carburetor suddenly overheating because some
students called your Oga what he wishes to be called?
Career Jonathanians went
into overdrive on social media. They screamed. They hee-hawed. I laughed really
hard, reading and watching their contortions. At first, they said it did not
happen. Then they said Sahara Reporters manufactured the story. Then they said
that only a handful of students sponsored by APC screamed at the president.
Then they said that even if it happened, it was rude and unpatriotic to call
the President a thief – a president who had found a moral euphemism to
rationalize stealing on national TV!
As we approach 2015, we must
advise President Jonathan, his handlers, and career Jonathanians on social
media: self-naming is a serious business. This is no time for you to suffer an
identity crisis in the theatre of naming. You cannot say, one minute, that
stealing is not corruption is the greatest philosophical statement of the
century and turn around, the next minute, to burst a vein when the author of
the said statement is called a thief. That is called confusion break bones.
Make up your minds what you wish to be called.
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