SOS: some thoughts on Ƴar-Bokon Arewa

0

Share and Enjoy !

0Shares
0 0

By Hashim Muhammad Suleiman, PhD

 

You see, we may have our misgivings about many societal problems, we may even disagree on what causes what and what remedies what. However, our discursive agreements or disagreements do not put away a social malady. Rather, concerted and wilful decisions and actions chip away social problems and place acceptable practices in place of those identified problems. And, societal problems are not eroded by pulse actions, no, they need continously sustained actions.

It is with the above perspective that I write this piece to call our attention to a creeping but silent social problem among ‘yan-boko’ in Northern Nigeria. In times past, governments, NGOs, educational associations, institutions and even transnational organisations have set shops in many Northern Nigerian societies to promote girl-child education. Yes, there has been remarkable success in places, our girls now go to school. Many of them have graduated from various disciplines and many more are on the way… a wonderful development.

However, my concern is the growing negation of lady-gradautes by many people including graduate themselves. To many men and guys in Muslim Northern Nigeria, a lady who is a graduate is not a marriage material. Such men bring on flimsy excuses of why they can’t settle into matrimony with a lady who’s a graduate. Some of those excuses are mostly out of stereotypes and long held cultural negation of all things Boko.

My quest is this, if our society negates our ladies, simply because they happen to be graduates, who then is going to accept them? Is it acceptable to ask ladies to seek for knowledge and in turn use their knowledge as a reason for negating them? All the excuses we bring forth against lady-gradautes, are they true or out of our cultural biases?

Indeed, I am not positing that such ladies have no social issues that may warrant some of the reasons for such negation. What I take exception to, is to single out ladies for condemnation on what few of them may have done. What more, what we are accusing such ladies of, do they do it alone or with guys? Our tertiary institutions are microcosm of our societies. In our schools, just like in our societies, we have the good, the not so good and the bad. To lump all lady-gradautes as bad is a moral quagmire on who ever engages in such.

And, to our lady-gradautes, I have to talk to you in straight manner. First, let me ask you, is your education a means to an end or an end on itself? Is education meant to make you a better person on yourself, your family and your home or is meant to send you into self destruct motion? As a lady, you are an embodiment of societal expectations. In Muslim Northern Nigeria, whatever you do, will be perceived through the moral prism. After all, the same society sees moral decadence as a dent on you and as a scent on men. The society insist that “iskanci ga namiji kwalliya ne.” My sister, you have a burden which you are expected to carry. As such, do your best and see your education as a means to an end.

Now, you and I, the Northern Nigerian men, why do we engage in selective justice when it comes to lady-gradautes? Why do we always use stereotypes when analysing ladies who have acquired education? Why do we use one parameter on all of them? If I refuse to marry your sister and you refuse to marry my sister because they’re graduates, whom do we expect to marry them? The spirits? Moreover, the reasons we adduce in negating lady-gradautes, are they genuine? Have we cared to really know that some of the most morally high ladies are graduates?

This social problem of negating ladies, simply because they are graduates, is becoming pronounced among us. The right time to check it out is now, not later.

Hashim Muhammad Suleiman, PhD
mshashim@abu.edu.ng

1,418 Views

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Opinion

Adamu Danladi Gokaru’s 2027 Senatorial Bid: Era of Mediocrity is Over — Group

0

Share and Enjoy !

0Shares
0 0

    The Bauchi South Concern Vanguard, a socio-political advocacy group committed to promoting credible leadership and accountable representation, has officially launched a door-to-door awareness campaign across all seven Local Government Areas ofBauchi South Senatorial Zone.   The campaign seeks to sensitize the electorate on the importance of supporting capable and experienced individuals in the […]

Read More
Opinion

Nigeria at 65 and the Wunti factor

0

Share and Enjoy !

0Shares
0 0

By Usman Abdullahi Koli Every Independence Day is a double-edged ritual, celebration and self-examination. At 65, Nigeria cannot afford to merely wave flags and sing anthems. It must ask what it has done with its vast blessings and why so many burdens still remain. Few resources drive the nation’s economy apart from oil. Discovered in […]

Read More
Opinion Uncategorized

Unfounded Allegations: In Defense of Alh. Hamza Koshe Akuyam’s Integrity

0

Share and Enjoy !

0Shares
0 0

By Suleiman Musa Kwankiyel   The allegations by Economic and Financial Crime Commission (EFCC) have surfaced against Alh. Hamza Koshe Akuyam, the former PDP chairman in Bauchi State. However, these claims lack credible evidence and seem unfounded. It is crucial to approach such serious accusations with caution and objectivity, as they can significantly impact reputations […]

Read More