I thoroughly enjoyed reading Pius Adesanmi’s “A Nigerian,
Library and Lawmakers” (Sahara Reporters, December 24). I
will like to add a footnote to what he has raised: hopefully, the likely
beginning of a useful conversation around the subject of reading, literacy,
politician-constituency relationship, and the normative/practical value of
knowledge and research in governance. At the risk of over-simplification,
Adesanmi’s argument is that Nigerian politicians, unlike their counterparts in
Canada and I suppose elsewhere also, do not read. They don’t do research.
Nigerian legislators don’t make use of libraries either for research or for any
other purpose.
The average Nigerian politician
does not connect with his constituents at the level of ideas. What drives
Nigerian politics is the sharing of cheap envelopes, containing a percentage of
stolen funds. Adesanmi laments in that elegantly comparative piece, but
he does not tell us what can be done to get the Nigerian, not just the
politician, to return to a culture of reading and research. I’ll probably also
spend more time in the next paragraphs, lamenting. That is how bad and serious
the problem is.
When I arrived in Abuja in June 2011 to take
up appointment as Official Spokesperson and Special Adviser on Media and
Publicity to President Goodluck Jonathan, one of my first concerns was how to
set up a library at home. It would have been difficult for me to move my
libraries (in Lagos and Abeokuta) to Abuja. I needed to set up a new one,
focusing majorly on the new assignment and its research requirements. I
made contacts and asked for the big bookshops in town. I didn’t know I
was fooling myself. I spent more than a week, driving around the city trying to
locate bookshops. I was told there was a bookshop around the old
secretariat in Area One. When I got there, the most important item on
display was stationery and different copies of the Bible from King James’s
version to the New International edition. I left the place.
I was then directed a few
days later to Odusote Bookshop, Abuja branch. I was excited. Odusote Bookshop
used to be a major centre in Ibadan in those days. Together with the CSS
bookshop around Oke Bola, and the University of Ibadan bookshop, the Odusote
bookshop served the city of Ibadan and its intelligentsia very well. This was
before the arrival of Mr Kolade Mosuro’s Booksellers Limited in Jericho. I
rushed to Odusote Bookshop. What did I find? A shadow. Old, worn out books. The
Abuja branch looked like a run-down store. Books have a certain smell.
Bibliophiles sometimes go to bookstores just to smell the books, have a feel of
the new arrivals section and then take a cup of coffee and go home. A
bookstore is a centre of culture; in London and Washington DC, some of my
favourite bookstores truly fit that definition. A dusty, stale bookstore
discourages you. I bought a few books from Odusote, but my search around Abuja
continued.
I kept calling persons I thought would
know, but no one could really help. Each time I asked for a bookshop and
mentioned something about buying books, the conversation always ran into a
ditch. The only person who paid attention was Oronto Douglas. He offered to
introduce to me a gentleman who would help me set up a library. He would get
the books from wherever and deliver them. I only needed to indicate subject
areas. I didn’t think this was the way to go. I like to choose my own books. I
enjoy moving from bookrack to another, engage the booksellers, examine the
books the way a pimp checks out a prostitute, before making a purchase. If it
is a recommended book, I like the experience of going after the book myself and
when it arrives, nothing compares to the exhilaration of a new discovery.
I finally found what looked like a book
section inside a Supermarket at the Abuja Silverbird Galleria. I walked
round. The best books you could get there were “how to” books, those
get-rich-quick-become-a-strategist-and-an-achiever-in-one-week-type-of-publications.
I read such books too, but in this particular bookshop, there was no doubt that
the books were dollar-denominated. They were so expensive you’d be busy
palpitating while reading the books later, once you remembered the cost. I
tried other stores around the city, but these were mostly those stores where
books are displayed next to groceries, cosmetics and toiletries. I wanted law
books. I eventually found specialized bookshops, which sell only law
books around the FCT High Court and the Corporate Affairs Commission. Building
up a law section on my shelves was probably the easiest task.
I later stumbled on another bookstore
at Ceddi Plaza. It was newly set up by a young man who knew what he was
doing and who obviously understood the importance of knowledge. It was a neatly
organized bookshop, small, but well-appointed. The fellow had read some of the
books himself and he could recommend books of interest. It was always a delight
going there to look at new acquisitions. One day, I went back there and found
the place boarded off. I asked around. What happened? The bookshop had been
transferred to another floor. The owner could no longer afford to pay for the
strategic location he had chosen. I found the bookshop in a hidden corner of
the Plaza. Six months later, it had disappeared altogether. The
owner’s dream died. The gentleman is probably now busy running a pepper
soup joint, a short-time hotel or he is at best, a harried investor in the MMM Ponzi
scheme: these are far more profitable enterprises in Nigeria than the selling
of books or ideas.
One day, someone took me to Biobak
Restaurant for lunch, and in between trying to find a parking space, I saw
something that looked like Booksellers in a place called City Plaza. I couldn’t
believe my eyes. I rushed into the place. Booksellers: Abuja branch? It didn’t
quite look like the big centre in Jericho, Ibadan but I established a
relationship with the staff, and throughout my stay in Abuja, they helped me to
source any book I wanted, if they could. But for the most part, I bought books
from Glendora in Lagos, at the airport outlet and Awolowo Road, and from Amazon
(by order) and Waterstones on Oxford Street, London: my favourite spot in London.
I have gone through this
narrative simply to show that in Nigeria’s Federal Capital Territory, nobody is
interested in books or ideas. Abuja does not even have a public library,
digital or analogue, that I know of. And yet it hosts about five universities
(!), and just a few kilometres away in neighbouring Nasarawa state, there is
another university in Lafia. Abuja is the home/workplace of probably the most
important people in Nigeria from lawmakers to the big politicians, but it is
also an ideas-person’s hell. The first day I went to the bookshop in Area One,
the man on duty, sensing my agony, called me aside and told me:
“Oga, are you new in town?”
“Yes”
“The way you are looking for bookshops and books, I can figure
it out”
“For me, books are important.”
“Oga, take it easy, nobody comes to Abuja to come and read.
Everybody is here to make money.”
I was puzzled. He continued:
“I am telling you. This place is the city of government
and contracts. People are looking for contracts and money. This our bookshop,
we are just selling stationery and exercise books and religious books that the
people will need, because anybody that comes here either has an alfa or a
prophet working for them. With time, you will learn. I will advise you to
forget about books. Look for contracts, Oga.”
Asking me to forget about books is like
asking me to forgo oxygen. But the man was right and Pius Adesanmi put his
fingers on it. And it is not simply an Abuja problem. Since the politicians
took over governance, they stopped worrying about education, reading, research
and ideas. We like to blame the military for everything, but ironically, under
military rule, things were not this bad. I wrote my Ph.D thesis in those days
visiting a local library in Imo, Abeokuta. It was owned, and managed by the
local council as a community library!
That library was later moved to
Ake, just behind the Centenary Hall. When the universities were shut down and
we were all sent away, I ended up writing three chapters in that new library.
This was in those days when we relied on index cards for research and those
secondary school graduates who helped to type our drafts on manual, usually
damaged typewriters, often insisted on correcting syntax and punctuation,
instead of admitting that their typewriters were either faulty or that they did
not understand what they were typing.
There were libraries in other major
cities in Nigeria too. You could borrow books from the community library
and return them later. Local councils built libraries. State governments
encouraged reading and even bought books for students. There were national
archives, with the most patronized domiciled at the University of Ibadan. In
those days, when Nigerian lawmakers stood up to make a contribution in parliament,
people listened because they made a lot of sense. They spoke like men and women
who could think. Today, things have gone so bad we now have lawmakers who know
next to nothing about anything. They want to ride the most exotic cars
that money can buy. They import the prettiest girls from across the globe. They
insult women. They don’t even know the history of Nigeria.
Abuja big men and women in fact employ assistants to read newspapers for them!
While Abuja has no libraries, standard bookshops, or gentlemen, it is
nonetheless very rich in hotels and napoi joints.
Hotels have become the new libraries. They are the only places where any form
of thinking takes place. As it is in Abuja, so it is in the states, and that is
why government at all levels seemingly considers investment in education, an
avoidable distraction. There is an Ake Arts and Book Festival. Before it,
there was the Garden City Book Festival in Port Harcourt, but government no
longer cares. Reading is anathema to the populace. Nigerians read to pass
examinations, thereafter reading is abandoned. We are in the age of
goggle-it-intellectuals.
Ideas drive and build nations. A
country without a positive and deep current of thought is bound to run into
crisis. So it is with Nigeria where the leaders only become animated when
they want to share money or play partisan politics. The root of the crisis lies
in the recruitment of wrong persons into power. Try and compare the
cabinet list in Singapore with that of Nigeria, for example. The difference is
clear. The message is clear. The answer lies in a re-configuration of the
leadership recruitment process and the vigilance of civil society insisting on
higher values.
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