• LOGIN
  • WEBMAIL
  • CONTACT US
Thursday, June 11, 2026
21st CENTURY CHRONICLE
  • HOME
  • NEWS
    • BREAKING NEWS
    • LEAD OF THE DAY
    • NATIONAL NEWS
    • AROUND NIGERIA
    • INTERVIEWS
    • INTERNATIONAL
  • INVESTIGATIONS
    • EXCLUSIVE
    • INFOGRAPHICS
    • SPECIAL REPORT
    • FACT CHECK
  • BUSINESS
    • AVIATION
    • BANKING
    • CAPITAL MARKET
    • FINANCE
    • MANUFACTURING
    • MARITIME
    • OIL AND GAS
    • POWER
    • TELECOMMUNICATION
  • POLITICS
  • CHRONICLE ROUNDTABLE
  • OUR STAND
  • COLUMNS
  • OTHERS
    • BLAST FROM THE PAST
    • ON THE HOT BURNER
    • FEATURES
    • SPORTS
    • ENTERTAINMENT
      • KANNYWOOD
      • NOLLYWOOD
    • BAZOOKA JOE
    • THIS QUEER WORLD
    • FIGURE OF THE DAY
    • QUOTE OF THE DAY
    • INSURGENCY
    • CRIME
No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • NEWS
    • BREAKING NEWS
    • LEAD OF THE DAY
    • NATIONAL NEWS
    • AROUND NIGERIA
    • INTERVIEWS
    • INTERNATIONAL
  • INVESTIGATIONS
    • EXCLUSIVE
    • INFOGRAPHICS
    • SPECIAL REPORT
    • FACT CHECK
  • BUSINESS
    • AVIATION
    • BANKING
    • CAPITAL MARKET
    • FINANCE
    • MANUFACTURING
    • MARITIME
    • OIL AND GAS
    • POWER
    • TELECOMMUNICATION
  • POLITICS
  • CHRONICLE ROUNDTABLE
  • OUR STAND
  • COLUMNS
  • OTHERS
    • BLAST FROM THE PAST
    • ON THE HOT BURNER
    • FEATURES
    • SPORTS
    • ENTERTAINMENT
      • KANNYWOOD
      • NOLLYWOOD
    • BAZOOKA JOE
    • THIS QUEER WORLD
    • FIGURE OF THE DAY
    • QUOTE OF THE DAY
    • INSURGENCY
    • CRIME
No Result
View All Result
21st Century Chronicle
No Result
View All Result
Your ads here Your ads here Your ads here
ADVERTISEMENT

May 2021 not be so rough

by Mahmud Jega
February 1, 2021
in Column, View from the gallery
0
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on TelegramShare on WhatsApp

In one of our secondary school English textbooks in the 1970s, we read about a New Year message that the old schoolmaster Tai Solarin wrote on January 1, 1964. He wrote, “I am not cursing you… May you have a hard time this year. May there be plenty of troubles for you this year! If you are not sure what you should say back, why not just say, ‘Same to you’?

Tai’s wish for a rough New Year was not as cruel as it seemed. His belief was that life is not a bed of roses and overcoming tough situations was needed for success. I have no personal knowledge of what conditions in Nigeria were like in 1964. I however feel that if Tai Solarin had lived through this outgoing year 2020, he would have thought twice before wishing for his countrymen to have a rough New Year.

READ ALSO

Shadows over the beautiful game: A World Cup of chaos 

What will you vote for? 

A year rougher than 2020 would be hard to imagine. There have been epidemics in the past, but the world’s last pandemic was 100 years ago in 1918. There have never been lockdowns in most parts of the world, with wholesale closure of offices, factories and markets, grounding of airlines and trains, empty hotels and restaurants, collapse of tourism, suspension of major football leagues, closure of schools and overwhelmed hospital spaces. The last time that our schools in Nigeria closed for this long was in 1936, when they closed for a year due to a CSM epidemic.

It is not beyond the human mind to imagine and carry out the most senseless atrocity, but we do not expect any rough New Year package to exceed Zabarmari in sheer cruelty and senselessness.  The heads of 67 beheaded farmers placed on their bodies; it is enough to melt every heart except perhaps Adolf Hitler’s and Pol Pot’s. No Tai Solarian rough New Year package should include Kankara, the largest mass abduction in Nigerian history, surpassing even the record of Chibok and Dapchi. Kankara however had a happier ending. Still, it was a national trauma that even Tai will not envisage in his rough New Year package.

A second economic recession in five years. Nigerians were still struggling to shake off the effects of the last recession when we plunged into this new one. Ok, it was precipitated by pandemic and lockdown but since a new pandemic wave hit as 2020 drew to a close, must it be part of a 2021 rough New Year package?  Instead of coming out tougher and wiser from rough patches, as Tai Solarin hoped, Nigerians actually emerge from them weaker and less wise, as the EndSARS protests’ aftermath showed. The Yola man who drove away a tractor in the name of palliative; the Lagos youth who ran away with the Oba of Lagos’ staff of office; Ibadan youths that ran away with motorcycles from a senator’s house; the Abuja policeman who joined looters and carried a bag of rice through a garden, were those the lessons that Tai expected us to learn from rough patches?

I don’t think Tai Solarin, who was a stickler for quality education through his Mayflower School, envisaged a university lecturers’ strike lasting nine months, continuing even after the lockdown ended. The rumour in 1979 was that had Chief Obafemi Awolowo won the presidential election, he would have made Tai the Minister of Education. That was why Archbishop Olubunmi Okogie rose in arms against Awo because Tai did not believe in mission schools or religious education. Could he have believed in a nine months’ strike, and paying people their salaries for all the months that they refused to work, whatever their reasons were?

I do not wish Nigerians a rough New Year. My wish is for a New Year without pandemic, lockdown, recession, kidnapping, insurgency, banditry, Zabarmari, Kankara or prolonged strikes.

A boarding pass for 9 years

Just when I thought that there had been enough painful deaths in 2020, two more persons who had an impact on my childhood departed recently. One was Alhaji Usman Faruk, former Military Governor of the old North Western State. I was in primary and early secondary school when Faruk governed our state. My family lived just across the road from Government House in Sokoto. On many occasions we went into his Government House to retrieve our peafowls which flew into it to join Faruk’s large flock of fowls, geese and guinea fowls. When another military governor arrived in 1975, soldiers stopped us from retrieving them.

My younger siblings were also regularly invited to Faruk’s family residence on Saturdays to watch film shows staged by a Ministry of Information Landrover. There was no television in Sokoto in those days. Luckily, Alhaji Usman Faruk wrote several books, including his autobiography, From Farmhouse to Government House. In it he told the story of how he was nearly eaten by a hyena when he was left in a farmhouse overnight to guard the farm from monkeys that often dug up the planted seeds in the rocky Pindiga area.

Five years ago, I received a phone call for the first time from Alhaji Usman Faruk. He never knew the impact it had on me. I who, as a primary school kid, lined up the road and waved flags in 1971 as Usman Faruk passed through Jega on his way to present a first class staff of office to the Emir of Yauri. Days before he arrived, folks from all over the district took chicken and eggs to the Sarkin Kabin Jega’s palace to feed the Military Governor. Here I am, now talking to him on phone!

In 1975, we used to cross the road from our secondary school to an old Health Centre, venue of the sittings of the Justice Usman Mohammed commission of inquiry that probed Usman Faruk’s tenure. The most sensational corruption allegation then was that a Ministry of Works drilling rig bought by the North Western State government to drill boreholes across the vast state was sent to Gombe, where it drilled a borehole in the governor’s farm. The rig was not stolen; it returned to Sokoto. Compare that to what happens these days.

A week after Alhaji Usman Faruk, former Grand Khadi of Niger State Sheikh Ahmed Lemu passed on in Minna. I first knew Malam Ahmed Lemu in Sokoto in 1970. My siblings and I had arrived in Sokoto for the holidays from Jega, only for our father to immediately send us to attend the Islamic Education Vacation Course that Lemu and his British wife, Bridget Aisha, organized at the Arabic Teachers’ College. There was one class for primary school pupils and another for secondary school students. After only two days in the primary section, Malam Ahmed Lemu personally promoted me to the secondary section, perhaps because I had memorized his entire book, The Young Muslim. We were taught in the secondary section by Lemu and Sheikh Sulaiman, a Saudi Arabian.

Around the same time, I used to accompany my father to the Islamic Education Trust [IET] office along Kalambaina Road in Sokoto. Sheikh Lemu founded it; my father was the Treasurer. They used meet on Saturdays, perhaps once a month. Mrs. Bridget Lemu later became principal of Government Girls College, Sokoto and was famous for her disciplinarian ways. They relocated to Niger State after its creation in 1976 but both of them had made such a big impact in Sokoto.

In 2011 when President Goodluck Jonathan appointed him to head the presidential panel that probed the post-election violence, some people insinuated that it will do the president’s bidding. Sheikh Lemu replied that at 82, he had already collected his boarding pass and was waiting for his flight [to the hereafter]. The flight was delayed for nine years. May Allah grant Faruk and Lemu Aljannat Firdaus.

Tags: Mahmud JegaNew Year messageYear 2021

Related Posts

Everything to play for as night becomes day

Shadows over the beautiful game: A World Cup of chaos 

June 11, 2026

What will you vote for? 

June 8, 2026
21st Century Chronicle

Good News and Bad

June 7, 2026
Prof. M. U. Ndagi

As we keep beckoning desertification

June 7, 2026
Everything to play for as night becomes day

Heralding a 2026 mundial: World’s biggest football showpiece

June 4, 2026

Eleven risks of election faith

June 1, 2026
No Result
View All Result

Recent Posts

  • 270 Nigerians evacuated from South Africa
  • Court grants indigeneship to Hausa in Plateau
  • Nigeria targets 209,000MW, $11 billion solar power projects
  • Schistosomiasis: Kogi targets 240,000 children for treatment
  • Dangote Refinery valued at $39.1 billion

Archives

  • June 2026
  • May 2026
  • April 2026
  • March 2026
  • February 2026
  • January 2026
  • December 2025
  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • September 2025
  • August 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • December 2024
  • November 2024
  • October 2024
  • September 2024
  • August 2024
  • July 2024
  • June 2024
  • May 2024
  • April 2024
  • March 2024
  • February 2024
  • January 2024
  • December 2023
  • November 2023
  • October 2023
  • September 2023
  • August 2023
  • July 2023
  • June 2023
  • May 2023
  • April 2023
  • March 2023
  • February 2023
  • January 2023
  • December 2022
  • November 2022
  • October 2022
  • September 2022
  • August 2022
  • July 2022
  • June 2022
  • May 2022
  • April 2022
  • March 2022
  • February 2022
  • January 2022
  • December 2021
  • November 2021
  • October 2021
  • September 2021
  • August 2021
  • July 2021
  • June 2021
  • May 2021
  • April 2021
  • March 2021
  • February 2021
  • January 2021

Categories

  • A Nigerian elder reflects
  • Agriculture
  • Analysis
  • Around Nigeria
  • Arts
  • Automobile
  • Aviation
  • Banking
  • Bazooka Joe
  • Blast from the past
  • Bollywood
  • Books
  • Breaking News
  • Business Scene
  • Capital Market
  • Cartoons
  • Chronicle Roundtable
  • Column
  • Crime
  • Culture
  • Defence
  • Development
  • Diplomacy
  • Economy
  • Education
  • Entertainment
  • Environment
  • Exclusive
  • Extra
  • Fact Check
  • Features
  • Figure of the day
  • Finance
  • For the record
  • Fragments
  • Gender
  • Health
  • Housing
  • Human rights
  • Humanitarian
  • ICT
  • Infographics
  • Insecurity
  • Insurance
  • Insurgency
  • Interesting
  • Interviews
  • Investigations
  • Judiciary
  • Kannywood
  • Labour
  • Lead of the Day
  • Legal
  • Letters
  • Lifestyle
  • Literature
  • Live Updates
  • Manufacturing
  • Maritime
  • Media
  • Metro News
  • Mining
  • My honest feeling
  • National News
  • National news
  • News
  • News International
  • Nollywood
  • Obituaries
  • Oil and Gas
  • On the hot burner
  • On the one hand
  • On The One Hand
  • Opinion
  • Our Stand
  • Pension
  • People, Politics & Policy
  • Philosofaith
  • Photos of the day
  • Politics
  • Power
  • Press
  • Profile
  • Property
  • Quote of the day
  • Railway
  • Religion
  • Rights
  • Science
  • Security
  • Special Report
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Telecommunication
  • The Plumb Line
  • The way I see it
  • The write might
  • This queer world
  • Tourism
  • Transport
  • Tributes
  • Uncategorized
  • Video
  • View from the gallery
  • Women

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org
  • PRIVACY POLICY
  • CONTACT US
  • ABOUT US

© 2020 21st Century Chronicle

No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • NEWS
    • BREAKING NEWS
    • LEAD OF THE DAY
    • NATIONAL NEWS
    • AROUND NIGERIA
    • INTERVIEWS
    • INTERNATIONAL
  • INVESTIGATIONS
    • EXCLUSIVE
    • INFOGRAPHICS
    • SPECIAL REPORT
    • FACT CHECK
  • BUSINESS
    • AVIATION
    • BANKING
    • CAPITAL MARKET
    • FINANCE
    • MANUFACTURING
    • MARITIME
    • OIL AND GAS
    • POWER
    • TELECOMMUNICATION
  • POLITICS
  • CHRONICLE ROUNDTABLE
  • OUR STAND
  • COLUMNS
  • OTHERS
    • BLAST FROM THE PAST
    • ON THE HOT BURNER
    • FEATURES
    • SPORTS
    • ENTERTAINMENT
      • KANNYWOOD
      • NOLLYWOOD
    • BAZOOKA JOE
    • THIS QUEER WORLD
    • FIGURE OF THE DAY
    • QUOTE OF THE DAY
    • INSURGENCY
    • CRIME

© 2020 21st Century Chronicle

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.