Now, it may
be difficult to explain it but it would seem that Governor Willie Obiano of
Anambra State has finally got the message of the time. It just might be that
Apkokuedike Ndigbo has risen to the call of history and begun to speak the
language of the ages. Donald Duke’s didactic comment above offers a ray of
light into Governor Obiano’s new awakening. Indeed, if Ndigbo have ever agreed
on anything, it is on the incontestable leadership of the Igbo nation by
Anambra State. No Igbo in his right mind would raise a voice in dispute against
this truism. However, many Igbo would deign to observe that in the recent past,
Anambra had struggled to produce a leader that could impose himself in a
comprehensive and awesome way as Nnamdi Azikiwe did, as Chukwuemeka Odumegwu
Ojukwu did and as his father, sir Louis did in commerce. Although Innocent
Chukwuma of Innoson Vehicle Manufacturing, Cosmas Maduka of Coscharis Group,
Prince Engineer Arthur Eze of Atlas Oronto Petroleum and a handful of other
entrepreneurs have shown a great deal of promise, the inconvenient truth is that,
as a geo-ethnic group, Ndigbo have had an impressive flowering of a thousand
success stories but not a single group triumph. And it all boils down to political
leadership and what we do with it.
It is
against this seeming void that we have started to see the beginnings of a
fascinating story of leadership; the story of someone who had all along looked
very unlikely to provide Ndigbo with a purposeful and focused leadership that
will finally herald their return to reckoning in Nigeria … the story of
Governor Willie Obiano, who at this moment in time, looks like the round peg we
have all been looking out for to fill the round hole in Igbo leadership. And
this is why…
History has
shown that leaders who leave a mark on human memory have always done two things
– they either create the circumstances that define them or define the
circumstances that create them. Willie Obiano, to my mind, belongs to the
latter. Thrown into the vortex of a leadership dilemma indexed by high
insecurity, plummeting morale and utter lack of group vision and aspiration,
Willie Obiano is increasingly beginning to show that his reading of the
socio-cultural temperature of Igboland is right. He is also gradually moving in
to fill this void. Apart from his already acclaimed handling of the security
challenge in Anambra, two things signpost his gradual ascension to the seat of
Igbo leadership.
The first
is Last Monday’s formal burial of Ndigbo who lost their lives in the Biafran
war, the two world wars and the countless gales of violence that have
repeatedly shaken the foundations of Nigerian unity. It was one event that nebulously
connected Ndigbo across diverse geographies with one frail hope of unity and a
rare sense of community. It was the first time in a long while that Ndigbo
would come together for the purpose of our shared experience. Sensing the call
of history, Obiano brilliantly rose to the occasion with a speech entitled Ozoemezina
– Memory and the Quest for Igbo Renaissance, in which he delivered the
following punch line to buttress the near lack of common grounds amongst the
Igbos unless there is a threat of imminent extinction facing them – “We shall
continue our bold efforts to ensure that we are not only united in times of
adversity and grief but in times of victories and peace.”
Interestingly,
unlike the Great Zik, Awo or even Nkrumah who overcame the challenge of leading
their peoples out of the iron grip of ignorance and colonialism or even Winston
Churchill who ensured that Britain never lost the psychological battle of the 2nd
World War, Willie Obiano is facing a totally different challenge – the battle
to return self-belief to his people, to invoke the once famous can-do spirit of
Ndigbo that says (onye kwe, chi ya ekwe) and ignite the fire for the pursuit of
group excellence. It is a known fact that since the smoke drifted off the last
weapon in the Biafran War, Ndigbo have demonstrated mastery of individual
success. Sadly, as an ethnic block in search of a vigorous voice in Nigerian
leadership, failure has stared us in the face. While some people have sought
explanation for this from the fierce struggle that ensued after every Igboman
was reduced to a miserly 20 Pounds note at the end of the war, others believe
that the famed Igbo unity that once saw town unions and associations awarding
scholarships to promising youngsters in the colonial times may have been
shattered with the lethal blasts of war cannons.
At the
moment, Obiano seems to have found the missing spark in the emerging post-war
Igbo storyline. Last Monday, he simply situated memory where it counted most
when he rallied Ndigbo from across the five South Eastern states to bury their
war dead. When his voice echoed in the valley of Alex Ekwueme Square on that
fateful day, it touched the raw emotions of Ndigbo; the living and the dead. He
strove determinedly to restore the long receded kindred spirit of his people
when he observed that “hardly is there a family in this gathering without a
story; a story of profound loss. But beside every story of loss sits a story of
success; of glory and of abundance.” Then, his voice rising to a crescendo, he
invoked the trope of the single story made famous by Chimamanda Adichie, proudly declaring that - “to the glory of God, we are not a people
with a SINGLE STORY…we are a proud, intensely driven, hardworking, innovative,
adventurous and forward-looking people with more gifts than the world can
take!” In one breath, he stolidly engaged the large themes of loss and victory,
pain and pleasure – giving his audience a rich rhetoric to chew on a pointedly
symbolic day.
Yes; leadership
should be able to strain against the deluge of contending issues of governance
to fish out some seemingly lost motifs, themes, ideas or leitmotif in the
narrative of a people which when carefully invoked can renew their sense of
worth and restore grace to a long history of wrongs. This was what Obiano has
done with the memory of the Igbo war dead.
The second
thing that signposts Obiano’s determined journey to Igbo leadership is a mesh
of symbolic activities that might be seen as the soft issues of governance. In
speeches and body language, Obiano has continued to announce himself as having
risen above the savage passions of the average Nigerian leader. His full
understanding of the concept of the leader as a symbol of the expressed and
silent wishes of the people, his sense of aesthetics and style, his deft grasp
of the little things that matter and his
uncanny ability to connect with just about anyone, mark him out as the unexpected
leader of a sophisticated people. He has shown a remarkable sensibility, a
keenness to establish telepathy with the people and a boldness to demystify
leadership and strip himself of the usual aloofness of many elected officers
who place themselves above the echo of our common humanity. His ability to
rally the people together for a common cause as he has shown with Ozoemezina as
well as the fundraising he held in Lagos and Abuja to boost his efforts for a
safer Anambra State also places Obiano in the front row of promising leaders. Indeed,
each time his voice rises to sing the powerfully melodious Anambra Anthem which
he gave to Ndi Anambra to mark his first 100 days in office, Obiano surrenders
his exalted office and melds into the audience in a manner that says, “Yes;
leaders are human. I am one with you!”
So, in
connecting with the passions of his people, in drawing attention to things that
ought to matter to them and in renewing their faith in their shared ability to
triumph over tragedies, Governor Willie Obiano is redrawing the map of Igbo
leadership and fixing the beacons where they should be.
Governor Obiano leading grief stricken former vice President Alex Ekwueme away
from the epitaph erected in memory of the heroes of the war
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Governor Obiano lighting the candle in memory of his beloved Ndigbo who died in
wars and numerous violence in Nigeria
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Governor Obiano unveiling the commemorative list of heroes of the Biafran War
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Governor Obiano delivering his powerful speech entitled, Ozoemezina- Memory and
the Quest for Igbo Renaissance
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James Eze writes from Ifite, Awka, Anambra State.
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