Sunday, February 3, 2013
Dr. Ahmad Abubakar Mahmud Gumi: The making of a “Nigerian Anwar al-Awlaki.”
An English writer, Mary Ann or Marian, better known by her pen name George Eliot, once wrote in one of her epic novel Daniel Deronda that, ““No evil dooms us hopelessly except the evil we love, and desire to continue in, and make no effort to escape from. ”
That classically describes aptly a nemesis and cancer slowly creeping into the Nigerian society and quietly breeding up messengers and soldiers that would one day stand up and cause a chaos and doom that would be very disastrous in magnitude.
This particular problem is personified, lives within us, has found a voice and is very efficient in using the modern multimedia tools including social networking sites and the internet and slowly, it is gaining popularity; the movement is getting to the subconscious of most Nigerians especially in the predominantly Muslim north.
This character is educated and versed in the scriptures, studies the politics of the day and makes inciting messages that would one day snowball into an inferno that would shed blood and send thousands of people to an early grave.
For some time now, Sheik Abubakar Mahmud Gumi who leads the Nigerian Muslim Shura Assembly (NIMSA), a movement he describes as being committed to the unity of Nigeria Muslims in a manner that is voluntary, non-government, non-sectarian, non-ethnic, non-regional and non-partisan; it does not clearly define if it is non-violent but time will definitely tell unless the Nigeria security agencies do the needful.
Since the Boko Haram took a turn for the worse and introduced terrorism in a manner never experienced in Nigeria before, only few northern elites have stood up to challenge or talk against the insurgents. Only a few did and some paid the supreme price of being assassinated in brutal manners by unknown gunmen riding on commercial motorcycles, a hit style that has become a signature of the dreaded terrorist group, Boko Haram.
In among the elites and elderly statesmen and scholars and a few good men, Abubakar, Sheriff, Danjuma, Buhari and so on, who kept quiet and did nothing thereby allowing evil to triumph like Edmund Burke predicted, maybe only Gumi has been very brave enough to speak bluntly to Boko Haram was Sheik Gumi.
But with the sermons and teaching the Islamic scholar has been dishing out now, one would start wondering what the motive for his teachings which are very inciting and laced with gun powdery substances waiting for ignition is.
Having been following his teaching on the internet of which he makes judicious use of, subtly charges are given to his followers and his students in a manner that is infectious, mind captivating and psychologically infuriating to an extent that the person is challenged and put in mood of hatred for the Christians and the people from the South especially the South-South and the South-East in Nigeria.
This is may be exactly the kind of teachings the failed underwear bomber, Umar Farouk Abdumutallab, was exposed to before he went extreme with his decision to fight the Jihad against Christians.
What Sheik Gumi is doing may have some resemblance to what the Anwar al-Awlaki; the US born Yemeni imam who the U.S. government officials alleged was a senior talent recruiter and motivator who was involved with planning operations for the Islamist militant groups.
Gumi has a Facebook account which he makes use of, his messages are uploaded on YouTube and he even enjoys large followers and friends on social media websites; he has generated 29, 637 likes with an average of 2,000 people talking about him and he is still recruiting members to his movement. You only need to send an SMS to 08168361885.
The Sheik is blunt in his messages and calls a spade a spade, he says it without minding whose ox is gored that President Goodluck Jonathan is evil and has practically said by inference that Christians are the problem Nigeria has because of their hidden agenda.
When the governor of Kaduna State, Patrick Yakowa and Gen. Azazi dies in a helicopter crash,Gumi said openly that the two were discussing about an evil agenda against Muslims; he never gives facts or reveals sources of his information but he has a huge followership of Musilims in the Sheik Gumi’s mosque. According to some reports, Gumi who is the son of the late famous Sheik Abubakar Mahmud Gumi is based in Saudi Arabia where he lives with his family until recently and he did not care about the tension in Kaduna State following the death of the governor considering the fact that there were jubilation in some parts of Kaduna when news of the death of the first governor that had a Christian background got to the city.
Gumi’s messages these days have targeted the President; a Christian from the minority South-South. Inone of his messages against Jonathan, Gumi said Jonathan is definitely marred in Evil.
“The conviction of Okah to me is the conviction of MEND as the first terrorist Bomb attack the nation witnessed, which Jonathan hastily using the SSS to exonerate and implicate innocent people. Was he misled into that? Anyhow, this was exactly the dilemma Jesus Christ went through - the persecution of an innocent man of God in the hands of people that claim piety and speak on behalf of God. This is an anti-Christ activity. It is shameful. This incidence has made me not see Jonathan on the right of the spectrum. He can still be good but he is definitely marred in Evil. Evil that either directly kill innocent people or Evil that mask killers or Evil that takes advantage from the murder of the innocents for political gains.
If Jonathan should be a true man of God, let him repent and step down. That will shade the evil that permeated his regime and committed so much sin against humanity. An amnesty International report has affirmed to that. That will also stale any pretext of Boko Haram, the Evil that permeated Islam - that ravening grievous wolves in sheep's clothing. Boko Haram, either genuinely a northern political ploy as claimed or a smear from the clandestine Security agents for his political advantage or strategic metamorphosis of MEND and their agenda, his resignation will save lives and the nation. His resignation will promote peaceful coexistence between Muslims and Christians. It will bring back glory to the nation Nigeria. He will then probably be a ‘Christ’ of Nigeria or the last Evil that wrecked the nation.”
That not being able to raise flags led him to post on his wall on Facebook the message that is vile enough to cause a great divide in the country’s military.
In a message posted Saturday, 2nd February, 2013 on the Facebook page, entitled, A Dangerous Trend,” the Islamic cleric alerted Muslims on an alleged dominance of Igbos in the army. As at the time of writing this report, the message had generated 1,190 comments, shared by 530 persons and gotten 658 likes on the Gumi’s group page on Facebook.
The message read, “Brothers and sisters, countrymen and fellow citizens.There is a letter circulating in the internet which depicts the current situation in the Nigerian Army. It says: “There is a new dangerous trend in promotions and recruitment in the Nigerian Army, which should be firmly and promptly checked before it destroys the military and the country.
This trend is clearly visible in the manner in which the current Chief of Army Staff, Lieutenant General Azubuike Ihejirika is handling these two important aspects of running an effective army institution, which is very critical to the survival of any state. It appears that the Chief of Army Staff is on a specific mission, most probably, sponsored by some sinister dark forces bent on destroying the army and setting the country on the path of serious conflagration. From all indication General Ihejirika is deliberately and recklessly pursuing a plan to destroy the career of senior non Igbo officers while at the same time embarking on a massive recruitment of soldiers of Igbo stock in order to eclipse all other ethnic groups in the Nigerian Army.
This is raising serious concern within the army. Let us, first, examine the promotion exercises carried out in all the formations since the elevation of Lieutenant General Azubuike Ihejirika to the office of Chief of Army Staff.” Then it follows with chilling details and specifics which if true the source must be from some senior cadre of the officer corps in the army. This is alarming indeed. The circular charged that “Lieutenant General Azubuike Ihejirika is on a specific mission, most probably, sponsored by some sinister dark forces bent on destroying the army and setting the country on the path of serious conflagration.”If we remember that this man was long overdue for retirement but was retained by the GEJ.If we remember that GEJ tried to cover up for MEND 1st October Abuja terrorist attack.
If we remember the Azazi has extended Nigerian Army weapons to secessionist, was retired then later picked by GEJ as his NSA.If we remember that the incessant bombings that followed the ascension of GEJ to power in Northern states in the name of Boko Haram, despite the fact it was Yar’aduwa that order the killing of its leader, and the sudden cessations with sudden death of Azazi.
If we remember that the activities of the secessionists in still on and covert; If I remember that the two people who planted an explosive device on my way five minutes before I pass and went victims of their own machination, were taken off by the Army, the two BBC (Hausa and English) reporters had their cameras and voice recorder ceased by the Army at the site so that they don’t record the incidence precisely. If we remember all these things we should thank Allah that we lived to hear the true story as it is unfolding. The worst could have happened. And in-sha Allah the worst is over.
It is said, the correct diagnosis is half of the cure. The problem is now identified. As for the solution. There is absolutely no need for any military intervention. That will be criminal. You don’t correct criminality with crimes. Let every Nigerian knows the truth. It is the most potent weapon against evil. Moreover the system is self-regulatory, so let us wait and see. Their plan to secession comes only through disorder and the spill of innocent blood, therefore no chance should be given to that. May Allah guide us to the straight path and protect our nation from evil people!”
While some critics from northern Nigeria and mostly Muslims are commending the Shiek who has lately been preaching inciting messages along religious and ethnic divide, critics from the South especially, South East are accusing the Islamic scholar of having some hidden intentions to drag the country into chaos.
Gumi had also attempted to condemn Christians tactically by using an attack on the coup plotters of Jan 15th, 1966. Though he systematically tried to put tag killers of innocent persons as categories of people he abhors, he made a poor job of hiding the woven thread of hatred and evil wish for Christians in the piece.
It read thus: “Brothers and Sisters, fellow Nigerians, No human has the monopoly of sentiments or emotional outburst, therefore whoever abuses me for not understanding me I have forgiven it. I hold no qualms against anybody. My only concern is over the Evil people that kill innocent people for prejudice, malice, religious sentiments and share malevolence.
In this category of people is Maj. Nzeogwu & co who assassinated the premier Sardauna the main target of the 1966 coup. Others argue that some Christians also were killed, yes, but they were also killed by Christians too. The common denominator is that all these murderers that kill innocent people are Christians. What I am saying is that among the Christian are Evil people that kill people. These evil killers can also be imbedded in our security apparatus. In fact they are more dangerous that the true Boko Haram who are mainly peasants, poor and untactful. However these are highly trained individuals that can manipulate, strategize, camouflage and coordinate their terror in such a way that they cannot be recognized.
They are also the Dimkas and most recently the Azazis and many more still active in service. So today if there is any terror attack, depending on the magnitude, the coordination and sophistication in its execution and target selection, you can see the finger print of these agents of evil.
The draconian military occupation of the Muslim northern regions is a clear sign of such a plan. The Mali intervention is also not far from the plan. Why sending troops to Mali when our borders are porous?
Spending millions that could be of benefit educational, health and agricultural sectors that are starving; Youth unemployment that is declared by an ex-president as very volatile. We negotiated peace between the warring Sudanese factions until they decided to divide in a plebiscite, why not also in Mali? Is it not ‘what is good for the goose is also good for the gander’? Nigerian involvement is Mali against the northern Tawarik , is taking sides based on foreign colonial interest, and the hate of Islamists forming a government in the region. The difference between Islamist and Terrorist is that the former are fighters that are seeking independence and the rule of Islamic law through legal and accepted norms. Part of it breaking away from a country which there is anarchy or dictatorship. The army took power in Mali, and a section of the country wanted to break way.
They usually bring religion for two reasons, one to mobilize fighters since a mujahid fights fearlessly, and secondly attract the sympathy of other Muslims. While terrorist, kill anybody Muslim or non-Muslim that does not concur to their ideology. Such ‘Islamic terrorism’ is condemned in unequivocal terms in the hadith of the prophet – alaihis Salam- and the Muslim leaders and scholars were the first victims of their evil.
It is known fact that Christians in Nigeria are anti-Islam in everything even if it is beneficial to all. That explains the clamor against OIC membership at a time when we have representatives in the Vatican. That was where the clamor against Sharia law which has nothing to do with Christians.
The Sharia checks crimes effectively yet, the Christian clergy prefer a state of lewdness, robbery, adultery, alcoholism than otherwise if such crimes can only be stopped by Islam. They prefer a harlot than a woman wearing Hijab or niqab.
If therefore, the Christian leadership of Nigeria is plunging us into Mali for this same reason of hatred and prejudice against Islamist, this is the warning they should heed to, because Islam is unconquerable. But if they want peace to reign then we should not take sides but be peace negotiators.
Imagine, Nigerian troops killing Touareg in their own country, what moral ground do we have when later they influx into our country and cause havoc? May Allah guide us all and protect us from all evil.”
The misnomers Gumi made in these two messages are enormous and very transparent to anyone desiring truth.
Was there not a retaliatory coup of in July 1966 which led to a northern being given the infamous sobriquet, the Butcher of Agodi? Did what happen to the over 300,000 innocent Igbo civilians killed in the pogrom in the north not enough to be categorized into Gumi’s standards of innocent people killed by evil persons?
Since the north had been in power militarily for over 30 years and all the whole crop of soldiers in the army were from the northern Nigeria courtesy of the quota system, did a younger Gumi raise an alert on the injustice being done to the federal character?
These are some questions that Gumi naturally looks away from but instead, send messages cooked in hatred and blood as water to be served on willing members of his movement waiting for a day that the great command will come; the Jihad.
While the country’s security agencies may be casting a blind eye to his activities and instead focus on the Jamā'atu Ahlis Sunnah Lādda'awatih wal-Jihad otherwise known as Boko Haram and its insincere attempt at ceasefire, slowly building up in strength and number across the northern states, across Nigeria and across the world are soldiers that have been bred on hatred and prepped psychologically to fight a holy war are these thousands of young people that are sending text messages to 08168361885.
Nigerian Named School Chief In Georgia
Fela: Promises of the Kalakuta Museum.
“When trouble sleep, Iyanga go wake am, na wetin him dey find. Palaver, he dey find Plalaver ego get-e o, Palaver, he go get-e o…”
That was the song blasting through my Smartphone’s earpiece as I started the journey to the Kalakuta Museum; it used to be known as the Kalakuta Republic but was now a relic that showcases the life and times of the Nigerian music legend, activist and philosopher known to the world as Fela.
To many Nigerians, he is one of the greatest singer, activist, philosopher and an inspiration that saw beyond his time; little wonder he was known to them as the Egbami Eda, the great one.
After attending the year’s edition of the annual Felabration; a music festival that celebrates the embodiment called Fela, I made up my mind to visit the Kalakuta Museum which had been commissioned by the Lagos State governor, Babatunde Raji Fashola on the 15th of October, 2012 to his many followers, fans, admirers and students from the school of thought he left behind 15 years after he passed on.
With so many events and celebrations held across the world to immortalize the man described by the Herald Sun as Che Guevara and Bob Marley rolled into one person, the Kalakuta Museum, which used to be the home of the multitalented musician before his demise, had promises of becoming an additional tourist attraction to the cosmopolitan centre of excellence called Lagos.
Born in October 1938 as Fela Anikulapo Ransome-Kuti, the Nigerian musician, composer, instrumentalist, traditionalist, activist and pioneer of the Afrobeat genre of music, his 59 years sojourn on earth was so eventful, inspiring and appreciative that even world superstars like Jay-Z, Beyoncé, Alicia Keys, Christine Amanpour, Charlize Theron and many others have been part of the Tony award winning critically acclaimed musical FELA which tells the story of the legendary singer and has been staged across the world.
The Kalakuta Museum was located at Gbemisola Street in Ikeja, Lagos State and was very close to the very popular Allen Avenue; a highbrow area of the city. On getting to the two storey white edifice which had an orange coloured inscription announcing the museum, the gates were locked. I gently knocked on the black gates and surveyed the exterior of the place; it was different from what it used to be. Noticeable structural works ahd really gone into the building to transform it from being the home of Fela to becoming a tourist site. A gateman appears and asked who I was looking for.
“I want to get into the museum,” I explained.
“Nobody dey,” came his response from inside. While trying to explain my mission, some people drove in and stepped out from the vehicle. After some brief introductions, a gentleman wearing an African print shirt extends his hands and said, “I am Theo Lawson and I am the architect of the museum. Welcome to Kalakuta.” I shook his hands and stepped forward to begin the tour of the home of Fela.
The first thing you noticed by the left on entering the premises is the tomb of Fela designed in the form of a pyramid sitting on a square base; it was made of marble and had abstract mosaic patterns with the inscription Fela 1938-1997. The shape of the grave was obviously symbolic and Mr. Lawson who would act as my curator offered some explanations.
“Fela was very Afrocentric and was into a lot of spiritualism. His band was called Egypt 80 and his thinking of Black Africa and Egypt was synonymous.”
The pyramid tomb was about pure geometry and symbolisms with the original design meant to have four columns representing all the elements that embody Fela.
“The first is Stone which depicts Fela’s orgin from Abeokuta; the second being wood which shows his naturalness then iron, representing his strength and the last, glass which radiates his transparency,” the curator explained.
Fela hailed from Abeokuta in Ogun State known for the famous Olumo Rock and was born into a middle class family of Rev. Israel Ransome-Kuti and Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti; a feminist activist in the anti-colonial era. He was to be influenced by his mother to become an activist but chose music to send his messages to the military governments in Nigeria; this got him into trouble with several occasions with several regimes in power. One of the songs he released in 1977 entitled Zombie was perceived as a direct attack on the military administration at that time. Soldiers from a nearby barracks destroyed his home at the Kalakuta Republic in Surelere leading Fela being viciously brutalized while his mother was thrown down from a window in the one storey building. The whole Kalakuta Republic was later acquired by the government.
We moved inside the entrance and came to the ground floor; it was a hall which I was told would serve as the coffee shop. Despite having been officially opened, the museum was still work in progress the curator informed. An elevator compartment was at the right with an abstract painting of a younger Fela on both sides of the elevator door with one of his many Pidgin English slogans, “Who no know go know,” written on the wall. The roof also had artistic expressions of Fela holding a microphone with his fists clenched and some of his messages boldly written there, one of which was prominent read; “If a man wants to enslave you forever, he will never tell you the truth about your forefathers.”
The tour of the museum, as the curator explained, is supposed to start at the reception where you get a ticket, go up the elevator to the top floor and walk through the stairs downwards.
“Fela always wanted to have an elevator so we designed the museum according to his wishes. It takes you to the top floor so you walk you way down,” Lawson said.
After viewing some of the singers enlarged album sleeves hanging on the wall, I was shown what would be the souvenir shop.
“This is where you can get his memorabilia, records, T-shirts and gift items associated with Fela,” the curator explained. The shop was locked but visible from the standpoint.
Since the elevator was not yet fully installed, I had the privilege of making my tour by stairs. The stairways were in a square form leading upstairs through a staircase elevation. Hanging on the stairs while making the way up were pictures of Fela’s family; you see his children and grandchildren. The picture of a much younger Seun, one of his sons who took over his father’s Egypt 80 band, is conspicuously visible. Other framed pictures showed some of his extended family members the curator explained. After two flights of stairs, we came to a room.
“This is Fela’s room,” the curator introduces as we got to the first floor, “this is the place he slept in until his death.”
The room had a transparent glass wall and looked quite colourful. I noticed a guitar hanging on the wall close to the see-through glass and was informed it was among the instruments Fela played with. But my interest was more on the room; it was very simple and looked very much African. His mattress, covered by a pink bedspread, lay on the right with four pillows or more positioned on the foam and on the floor. The curtain was made of a white Adire textile with abstract pattern designs.
Two wall hangers held his many colourful shirts above the mattress. On the floor, close to the glass wall, was his saxophone; the instrument with which he invented the Afrobeat jazz that has today become universal. On the left side of the room stood a small deep freezer, some few small tables held his books, a small table fan and leather wrap-around small bed seats and a bag popularly known in the Nigeria parlance as Ghana-Must-Go. Another wall hanger had some more colourful shirts with some clothes folded on top.
For a man that inspired a nation with his prophetic songs which were smash hits across Africa; was signed on to big music labels like Barclay/Polygram, Universal, EMI, JVC and others, his room was so interestingly humble in a simple way; it was not even a master bedroom. Not too flashy as would have been expected of a singer who had successful tours of the United States, Europe and even performed at the Giants Stadium in New Jersey with the likes of Carlos Santana, Bono and the Neville brothers.
“A lot of people say he is a philosopher, a prophet, son of a witch and all sorts but this will show you the humanity in him. He is a man of the people and was not after affluence even when he could have afforded that,” the curator tells me when he saw the confusing look on my face.
We continued.
Close to the room was his bathroom which looked very much ordinary; a bath tub, a toilet and some buckets with a brush on top of the sink. There was no gold plated taps or a shower. Adjacent to his room, towards the right was another room that showcased his clothes and foot wears. I counted 38 pairs of different colours; there were all performance shoes and it was immediately obvious Fela was a lover of shoes. Three mannequins wore his clothes which included his pants, his designer shirt and trousers as well as his winter coat. All the clothes displayed had accompanying pictures on the walls showing where a jovial Fela wore them; his smiling face on one of the pictures where he wore the winter coat in England showed that indeed Fela had swagger.
But Fela in his lifetime was known to wear only pants in his house which was now the Kalakuta museum and as I turned to make the enquiry, I saw them; three pants of different colours were displayed on the wall on three iron hangers. I made a quick imagination of him on one of the pants and smiled, it was the outfit I grew up to know him by in the newspapers.
The next room showed the activism side of the legend and contained newspaper covers dating back to the late 70s and early 80s announcing the many troubles and clashes Fela had with the military authorities in Nigeria.
Some of the covers, mostly from Daily Times, had headlines that read; “Where will she be buried? Govt. urged to compensate Fela; Govt. acquires Fela’s house; Fela Charged; Fela detention order lifted,” and others, showed he never had it easy with the government. During his lifetime, he was arrested severally, detained, brutalized and was jailed in 1984 by the General Muhamadu Buhari’s regime for a charge of smuggling currency where he was declared a Prisoner of Conscience by Amnesty International.
The next room I was ushered into showed his political ideology and exploits. In 1978 when the military regime headed by the then General Olusegun Obasanjo lifted a ban on political parties as part of the regime’s plan to transit power to civilians, Fela formed a political party called Movement of the People (M.O.P) and became the presidential candidate of the party in the 1979 elections. Though his exploits was refused, the room I was standing in was alive with M.O.P.
The manifesto of his party was spread across wooden wall boards and gave an insight into the vision Fela had for the country. Part of the manifesto which was planned to be a four year developmental plan for economic, cultural, social, political, technological and ideology reconstruction of Nigeria in particular and Africa in general were divided into two schematic phases from 1st November 1979-1st November 1981 and then 1st November 1981-1st November1983 read;
During the first phase, all educational projects and recommendations for speedy cultural and ideological re-orientation will be implemented through the importation of relevant books on authentic African history and the maximum use of the mass media. In line with the provisions of the FESTAC Colloquium, all agricultural, cultural, transport, industrial and architectural projects which require the construction of various structures shall have been implemented.
Reading those lines opened another side of the man to me; he wanted government to be truly for the people.
“Fela is a legend and this shows that anybody can be a legend any day if you are strong and true to yourself. He was a man of the people, he harboured people who were homeless and they at times put him into trouble,” the curator told me when he noticed me shaking my head in awe of the political thinking of the man. A manual typewriter sits on the middle of the documents being exhibited and I wondered if he used that to type his political views.
“It was donated by the family,” Lawson informed me.
On the other rooms hung black and white pictures of Fela on the piano, smiling inside one of his cars and also presenting a gift to a Caucasian lady; he wore just his pants. On the floor were also pictures taken from the film, Black Presidents as well as pictures of his famous dancers.
In order to make the museum self sustaining, five rooms were designed for lodging. When I asked the curator what kind of visitors could lodge in the rooms, he smiled and said, “It is for tourist, visitors and researchers. It would definitely not be short time.” We laughed at the joke and moved to the last floor of the building.
More pictures of his family hung on the wall showing Fela with his brothers, Prof. Olikoye Ransome Kuti who was once a Health minister in Nigeria and also of Dr. Beko Ransome-Kuti. All are deceased now. Knowing Fela’s love for women and his wives, I wondered if the museum would be silent on that and before I could ask, it appeared on the top floor. Grinning mischievously while holding his sax, Fela and his record 27 wives came alive smiling at me; it was a black and white photograph taken up-close on a six foot by-four frame. You could get a rush of that moment in history when Fela took 27 of his dancers as wives. The curator needed not to tell me about that aspect of his life because it was legendary and made him the Abami Eda.
Lawson shows me the top floor where there would be a kitchenette and also a live band that would be playing for visitors to the museum. This is actually the floor the elevator brings you to start the tour.
As we made to go down, I asked the curator how soon the museum would start operating.
“It all depends on the funding. The initial fund for this museum was put at N60 million and the Lagos State Government gave us N40 million to commence but we are talking to other corporate organizations and sponsors and I believe by next year it would become operational,” he said. He made me know that since the museum was opened, the response has been phenomenal and several visitors both from Nigeria, Africa and other parts of the world have been visiting.
As I walked out of the Kalakuta Musuem, I was going with a feeling of the essence of the man called Fela; I saw how he lived, dressed, sang and also defended human rights through his songs. The visit took me into a spiritual understanding of who the legend Fela was.
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