Nigerian leaders, he said, were in the habit of sacrificing animals in order to remain in power.
Soyinka
spoke in Port Harcourt on Monday at a two-day education summit.
He observed
that the situation was encouraging students to join cultism, adding that the
rot in the nation’s education system was trickling down to secondary and
primary schools.
The renowned
author, who chaired the occasion, noted that normal university cultures like
fraternities had been misconstrued to mean cultism.
He said,
“Give me the name of any head of state who has not been consulting marabouts and
prophets and so on, sacrificing goats, animals in the dead of night to receive
a third term in office and so on and then you start blaming students, they are
imitating the same thing the infirmity society itself has become.
“So, they
can no longer distinguish between a genuine fraternity and a secret cult of
which society is riddled all the way from the top.
“The rot in
our education system is trickling all the way down to secondary schools, into
some primary schools. Normal university cultures like fraternities have been
misconstrued.”
On the
activities of Boko Haram in the North, Soyinka explained that members of the
sect were not sufficiently educated about their religion.
Soyinka, who
noted that Islamic fundamentalist needed to be re-educated about their history
and culture, also canvassed support for the creation of almajiri schools.
He added,
“Those who call themselves Boko Haram, for instance, claim to be educated;
educated to mean books. But they are not sufficiently educated, even about
their religion to know that some of the greatest philosophers came from that
religion, some of the greatest mathematicians were the pioneers.
“So, these
killers roaming around, saying that they hate western education; they are
uneducated; but they think they are educated.
“They (Boko
Haram members) have been taught on a monorail, one-track lane. They need to be
re-educated, even about their own history, their own culture.”
Soyinka
described the situation as desperate and called for a proper supervision of the
content and method of teaching in almajiri schools.
Rivers State
Governor Rotimi Amaechi, decried the attitude of school heads and teachers, who
collect illegal levies from their pupils and students against his
administration’s free education policy.
Amaechi also
ordered the issuance of employment letters to 13,000 teachers to make up for
the shortage of personnel in the state’s model schools.
Prof, na true you talk o.
ReplyDeleteThey sacrifice human beings not just animal, all for power and money.
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