Alhaji Nurudeen Lemu |
Since the
commencement of debate on the President’s speech at the national conference,
the chairman placed embargo on clapping.
However, that
embargo was overturned after an electrifying speech by Alhaji Nurudeen Lemu
from Niger State, a delegate representing the Supreme Council for Islamic
Affairs.
His speech
attracted a standing ovation and thunderous applause from everyone.
Here is the
transcript of the speech:
Alh. Nurudeen
Lemu, a delegate from the Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs.
As a delegate,
and as a people representing people of faith in God from the Islamic
perspective, one thing we believe is that God will protect the community that
stands for justice, even if they are not Muslims; and God will not protect the
community that goes contrary to justice, even if they call themselves Muslims.
God is not a
religious bigot. He is not a male chauvinist. He is not an ethnocentric
tribalist. God is not the oppressor of anyone. God is with those who care;
those who want for others those things they want for themselves.
One tendency
for people who claim to follow a religion is to slide into the position of
believing that we are better than the others. We over-estimate our virtues and
under-estimate the goodness in others. The tendency is for us to become
spiritually arrogant; to forget that others are people like us.
There is always
a tension between representing our religious communities or our ethnic
communities and our loyalty to the virtues and values and teachings of our
religion, even those lofty ideals of our ethnic groups.
It is our
prayer that delegates will try and ensure that the spiritual strength we have
in us will keep us from getting angry and allowing our bitterness from others
to make us sail from justice. It is in this vein and as a delegate from the
Supreme Council of Islamic Affairs, we condemn the murder of all Christians, we
condemn the murder of all Muslims. Not because they are Christians or Muslims,
but because they are human beings – creatures of God.
There is no
compulsion in religion. We all own Nigeria. We all belong here. And we all have
the right to self-determination. We should respect that right and do unto
others what we will do unto ourselves.
There are many
other countries that have ethnic and religious diversity far greater than what
we have here in Nigeria. But something that distinguishes us from them, be it
Singapore, United States, is that they have been able to respect the rule of
law so that any bigot, any nepotic individual who tramples on the right of
anyone, especially that of the minority, the rule of law will catch up with
him. Satan will only find a hole if there is a crack in that rule of law.
Every ethnic
group is an oppressed minority somewhere. Every group is a religious and ethnic
minority somewhere. Every majority or settler is an indigene somewhere. In one
way, we are all settlers; we just don’t remember where we came from or why we
came.
But,
ultimately, we are all visitors to this planet, from God we come and to Him we
return. As Muslim delegates, we come in brotherhood, as brothers and friends to
solve our common problems and not as adversaries.
We come against
the exploitation of religion and religious sentiments. We come against
stereotyping, stigmatizing and dehumanizing of each other. We come against the
use of religion as a political decoy and as a distraction from the critical
things that bedevil our nation.
I pray that at
the end of this conference, we will all grow in our humanity and respect for
each other.
What we need is a better nigeria
ReplyDeleteI sincerely agree with you...my brother
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