Tag: Ade Ajayi

  • Ekiti APC slams Fayose for supervising ‘decay’ of utilities

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Ekiti State has criticized former Governor Ayo Fayose for allegedly supervising over the decay of public infrastructures during his last tenure.

    Reacting to the latest revelation of neglect of many revenue generating public utilities under Fayose’s watch the party described the regime as a “disaster to Ekiti people.”

    In a statement on Thursday signed by its Publicity Secretary, Mr. Ade Ajayi, the Ekiti APC regretted that the PDP government was a waste that never added value to Ekiti People.

    Ajayi lamented that Fayose abandoned all the viable projects of Fayemi that could be boosting the economy of the State for his own white elephant projects which consumed billions of Naira.

    The APC spokesman also lampooned Fayose for allegedly running a “prodigal government” which destroyed the Ekiti heritage and Commonwealth.

    Read Also: Ekiti: Fayose sacked as PDP leader

    This, he said, rendered Ekiti poor and unrecognized in the comity of states and also impoverished its people.

    He lamented the poor and horrible condition of Ikogosi Warm Spring resort, Gossy Water Company, Fountain Hotels, Civic Centre, Ire Burnt Bricks Limited, among others.

    Ajayi wondered why the Fayose led administration could have abandoned projects that could have improved the Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) to assist the government in paying the salary of workers, improve the Infrastructural development of the state and better the lots of Ekiti people.

    Ajayi also condemned the alleged waste of scarce resources on what he described as white elephant projects that have no impact on the generality of Ekiti people.

    He explained further that Fayose had nothing on ground to show the ecological funds, Paris Club refund cash, Budget Support Fund and monthly allocations for four years.

    He added: “The PDP government constructed bridge that had no beginning and end,no water underneath it and just placed on dry land which has  turned the State and its people to laughing stock.

    “We want to assure Ekiti people that Governor Fayemi has come to give them succour to alleviate the hardship unleashed on them in the last four years.”

  • Fayose not wanted in our party, says Ekiti APC

    PDP GROUP: FAYOSE SHOULD NOT TRADE OLUSOLA’S ‘MANDATE’ WITH APC

     

    Less than twenty four hours after he threatened to leave the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Ekiti State has said Governor Ayo Fayose is not wanted in its fold.

    The state APC Chairman, Mr. Paul Omotoso and party chairmen in all wards in Irepodun/Ifelodun local government, where the governor hails from and all wards in Ado-Ekiti, where he lives and has businesses that he is not welcomed in the party.

    The party chieftains have told the governor to forget his plans to dump PDP to join APC “until he clears himself of several criminal cases hanging on his neck.”

    The warning came on the heels of reports that Fayose had concluded plans to dump PDP following the emergence of former Vice President Atiku Abubakar as the PDP presidential candidate as against Sokoto State Governor Aminu Tambuwal who was supported by Fayose.

    In a statement on Tuesday by the APC Publicity Secretary, Mr. Ade Ajayi, said the party leaders advised the outgoing governor to conclude his court cases bordering on sundry alleged crimes before contemplating to join APC.

    He said: “We want to prove to the world that APC will not provide sanctuary for criminal suspects, political prostitutes and lepers. We will never admit such character to this party and we advise Fayose to play his politics of destruction somewhere else.

    “Fayose’s criminal prosecution on 2005 poultry project fraud resumes on November 4, 2018. Fayose cannot turn Ekiti APC to a haven and sanctuary for criminal suspects and we advise him to forget any plan to smear Ekiti APC with criminal records.”

    In a statement, Omotoso told Fayose that APC “is a political party bounded by common ideals of integrity, openness, discipline and commitment to common goal of progressive governance, which Fayose does not possess or believe as can be seen from his style of politics and governance”.

    Read Also: Fayose threatens to leave PDP over Atiku’s emergence

    He added: “Fayose over the years abused, disrespected and openly denigrated President Muhammadu Buhari, the leader of our party who is also the President and Commander-in-Chief of the Nigerian Armed Forces.

    “Fayose is coming to destroy our party and ensure President Buhari does not get a second term in 2019 and we won’t allow Fayose’s evil plan to materialise”.

    Omotoso vowed that on no account would Fayose be admitted into the APC.

    He advised Fayose to look elsewhere for a political party that he will destroy after destroying three national political parties when he found it difficult to control the parties.

    “Fayose said many times that he would destroy APC. He destroyed Labour Party (LP), All Nigeria People’s Party (ANPP) People’s Progressive
    Alliance (PPA) and at a time he also destroyed PDP before his current activities that led to the present sorry state of PDP in Ekiti State.

    “APC is looking for builders and not destroyers in its fold. We will not accept this destroyer in our great party APC and we advise Fayose
    to look elsewhere towards his promoters outside the state so that he can destroy the cohesion of the party in the backyards of those promoters.”

    He warned all ward chairmen where Fayose lives and runs his businesses against accepting him to the party.

    He added: “Our party is not a sanctuary for criminal suspects, political lepers and serial destroyers of the parties they once belonged.

    “We hereby warn ward chairmen where Fayose lives or runs his business against admitting him to our great party.

    “We hereby state clearly that no ward chairman must open talks with Fayose until such ward chairman clears with the party leadership at the state level.”

    Meanwhile, an interest group in Ekiti PDP, Bring Back our Mandate (BBOM) has warned Fayose against negotiating what it called “the mandate given to Prof Kolapo Olusola by the Ekiti electorate with the ruling APC as a soft landing following his latest threat to leave the PDP.”

    BBOM in a statement on Tuesday by its Coordinator, Gbenga Ogedengbe, said that the mandate given to Olusola by Ekiti PDP in the last governorship election in the state is not for sales and that the mandate of the people which he claimed was stolen by the APC will be retrieved at the election petition tribunal.

    The statement read: “It is important to note that Fayose’s deputy, Prof. Kolapo Olusola Eleka, who doubled as the PDP candidate in July 18, 2018 Ekiti governorship election is currently seeking judicial redress at the Ekiti election petition tribunal holding in Abuja over series of alleged irregularities in the conduct of the poll which returned Dr Kayode Fayemi of the APC as the governor-elect.

    “We are not unaware of Governor Ayodele Fayose romance with the APC and his several unrealistic demands with the aim of paving way for a make believe excuse that would enable him save his face while he goes by the way of Akpabio.

    “Fayose is afraid of being persecuted by APC attack dogs after leaving office. While wishing the outgoing Ekiti governor a safe trip to APC we are warning APC to avoid being fooled by Fayose as any promise to stop or frustrate the ongoing tribunal by Fayose is simply an empty promise.

    “Fayose cannot give what he doesn’t have. The process of retrieving Eleka’s mandate from APC is beyond Fayose. Fayose can’t sell or negotiate with what does not belong to him.”

  • UNILAG  honours Ade Ajayi

    UNILAG honours Ade Ajayi

    The Senate of the University of Lagos (UNILAG) on Monday last week stood in honour of its third Vice-Chancellor, the late Prof Ade Ajayi,  fondly addressed by students as ‘Head of State’.

    Ade-Ajayi passed on on August 9 and was buried at the weekend in Ekiti State.

    The occasion did not only attract members of the university’s Senate, family members, friends, and dignitaries were also in attendance as they took turns to eulogise the late VC.

    As a professor of History, the nickname-head of state, stuck to the late professor like a leech during the military era of the former Head of State, Gen Yakubu Gowon (Rtd) because UNILAG was partly seen as the only university born by the Federal Government through the Act of Parliament. The school, again, was seen by the students as a nation state and the late Ajayi as the VC  automatically meant that he was the head of state.

    “Once his car was sighted, shouts of ‘Head of State’ would always rent the air. Ministers, governors, even other Heads of State did not count for much. Things usually came to a head during convocations. Students wanted to make it clear who was the ‘Head of State’ in UNILAG. The then military Head of State (HOS) and his representatives were usually ignored and our HOS was always hailed anytime he spoke,” said the Dean of Engineering, Prof Omotayo Fakinlede.

    Indeed, it was a moment of praises, honest retrospections and poetic rendition, laced with songs and applauses that reverberated the school’s Senate Chamber considered as Ajayi’s design  because it was during his tenure that almost all the university’s buildings were erected.

    “Apart from the main university library, formerly Yakubu Gowon Library, the main Engineering Complex, and the Mariere Hall, that were completed before he came, and the Senate Building after he left, it is no exaggeration to say that virtually every other significant building was delivered under his tenure,” Dean of Engineering, Fakinlede added.

    Fakinlede, who was an undergraduate between 1973 and 1977, when Ajayi was VC spoke on behalf of his colleagues.

    Fakinlede said because of students’ disdain for military rule then students never appreciated any gifts from the government to the university. He recalled a  convocation where the military announced a big donation to the school, the students rather than showed appreciation, condemned the gesture. “The gesture was greeted with a shout of ‘too small’ showing utter condemnation from the students.

    However, Fakilede said at the same event, some lecturers gave smaller gifts of books and artifacts to students which they appreciated so much.

    According to him, those times were not easy as they were the era of military coups and regimes. “It was also a time of student unrest. In my time, the university suffered closure due to student unrest at least once every year and the protest were always against the military rule,” he said.

    On his part, a Prof of History Tajudeen Gbadamosi, rendered an elegy titled: ‘Goodness rewards goodness,’ saying he grieved over the loss of his supervisor, mentor, motivator, benefactor, editor and co-author.

    “I sob in sadness for the loss of our champion of African History. I choke with sadness at the demise of our academic manager. I heave and heave on the departure of our captain of excellence; oh dear! I sigh in sadness for this irreparable loss,” he said while reading the poem.

    The VC, Prof Rahamon Bello, in his tribute, said: “Ajayi’s demise has robbed the intellectual community of one of its most effusive voices especially in the field of African history.”

    Rahamon said African history owes him an enormous debt of gratitude for pioneering with a few others a nationalist historiography, which aimed at giving pride and confidence not only to Africans but to scholars on the beauty and essence of their continent.

    “Prof Ade Ajayi was without doubt a transformational leader and change agent, who had very clear dreams of what public education should be.

    “Many attest that he had the gift of innovative thinking, visionary spirit and tenacious patience required to successfully lead meaningful educational reform. Such rare skills were brought to bear during his tenure as the vice-chancellor of the university,” he added.

  • COMMENT

    COMMENT

    For Segun Gbadegesin

    It pains that its often at death that the import and impact of most of the nation’s rare gems such as Prof Ade Ajayi and the likes are usually felt by Nigerians.We are so blessed with such icons of international repute but whose  contributions to the growth of the nation are never given chance to thrive beyond the confines of the Ivory Towers, basically because they never counted in billions of naira.Any wonder then that our political stage is so prolifrated with half-baked money-bags educated-illiterate politicians whose worrisome political jokering and corrupt lives have subjected the nation to this perpetual stagnation. How many Ajayis of the nation have we interred unconcerned about their contributions to the way forward for the country? How many of them have either been messed up or brutally assasinated because they dared to foray into our political scene to put their knowlege into use for our comon good? Nigeria! From Emmanuel Egwu     

    On your article of August 21, you wrote as if you didn’t know that Nigeria is an animal kingdom where some animals are more equal than others. President Jonathan being a zoologist is our leader and the “more than equal” corrupt animals are his anointed ones. From J.Peters

    Help me tell Governor Fashola that many non Lagosians love him because he just concentrates on governance and not talking like other APC members. Anonymous

    Prof your piece, “What does the North want” made an interesting reading. I am alarmed as to why we keep  deceiving ourselves that we are ONE NATION! Whatever has been keeping us together, with all due respect to the others is the “see it the way it should be and, say it as it should be” of the Southwest! I know that there are patriots all over, however, the consistency of the westerners about through federalism cannot be taking away.From Adebamowo yinka,Ibadan

     

    For Olatunji Dare

    Dear Prof. August 19 article in The Nation is quite insightful. They were not listening 35years ago and I can assure you, sir, that they are incapable of listening now. The worms in their stomach control their ears and brains.So sad.Anonymous

    Many thanks for your write-up on the erudite Professor of History, of course they are not listening otherwise 16,000 doctors wont be sacked! From Victor Oniyire, Lagos

    Dear Prof., Congratulations on your birthday recently. As one of my great teachers – I learn weekly from your column, I wish you more years of good health and greater accomplishments. I am highly impressed today by the honour done to Prof. Ade Ajayi in your column. Ade Ajayi is my great grandfather in the study of History apart from being a fellow Ekiti man. Honour shall never depart from your home. Sir, can you show me mercy of getting a copy of the book presented at your birthday.Thank you sir.From Pastor Femi Adebayo, Sagamu, Ogun State.

    Prof Jacob Festus Ade Ajayi is Nigerian historian per execellence, who came, saw and conquered as far as education sector is concerned. He left legacies that other historians should emulate. From Gordon Chika Nnorom

    The death of Professor J.F Ade-Ajayi at this time is quite painful and a sad loss. Notwithstanding we must give all the glory to God, for a life well spent. He is one of the very best and illustrious sons Nigeria and indeed Africa has produced. He has left his footprints in the sand of time, and when history beckons, his name will be written in gold. Nigerians should take a cue from the very good life he has spent, he is a humanist personified. From Ojo Anjorin Ayodele,Emure Ekiti

    Re-Jacob Festus Ade Ajayi (1929-2014). An erudite scholar and a Nationalist who believed in his country, Nigeria, also gave Nigeria every chance to make others believe in her. Did the situations warrant that people should make real, late  Professor Ajayi’s theory of ‘My Country’? The question could be answered by all! May late Professor Ade Ajayi’s soul rest and continue to rest in peace, ameen. From Lanre Oseni.

    Prof. Dare., Good day to you wherever you are. I buy The Nation on Tuesdays primarily because of your weekly column. There was a minor oversight on your part in the tribute to Prof. F. Ade Ajayi.  In the fourth paragraph, you described him as a man who was in the eighth decade of life. Actually he was in the ninth decade of his life when he died. You sir, entered the eighth decade of your life on July 17 and I also bridged that threshold in April this year. Thank you for hour insightful writings.From Funso Famuyiwa, Ibadan.

     

    For Tunji Adegboyega

    Re: Begging for bread (The Nation, Sunday August 24) refers. No one, no sane mind, no honest and fatherly/motherly Nigerian would read this write-up and his or her heart wouldn’t bleed. Again, should I believe all that you wrote? But with Lipede Olu’s comment, I believed. Have these boy-girl students at Volgograd –Russia visited Nigeria’s Embassy in Russia to find out what is happening? What was/is the Nigerian ambassador in Russia doing regarding information on the pains with the boy-girl students? Is it good luck to those who are crazy about such sponsorship? This article is a lesson to us all. Even here in Nigeria, my heart trembles. I can imagine the pain these young Nigerians are being tormented with over there in Russia. Whoever was or is behind their woes should remember God and remember the Day of Judgment. Release these innocent children-students from these excruciating pains, please. From Lanre Oseni.

    I have not seen a government that does not care for its citizens like this government headed by Dr Goodluck Jonathan. If the previous governments had not provided a good environment for students during his school years, would he have had the chance to become what he is today? Nigerian students are going through a very terrible situation under a government that does not care about the wellbeing of its citizens. It is sad that students on Federal Government scholarship have turned to a laughing stock outside the country. From Hamza Ozi Momoh, Apapa, Lagos.

    This is the country where a man stole billions of naira from pension funds and he is walking free; where a serving minister accused of using public funds to buy two bullet-proof cars told us to go to hell; where another said to have spent N10b on private jets is still sitting pretty in office at the expense of the taxpayer; where the son of a late rogue had charges running into billions of dollars dropped; where only God knows what the legislators are earning. Truth must be told, whoever dies for Nigeria has died for nothing; there is hardly anything noble about this country. From Simon Oladapo, Ogbomoso.

    Your write-up on the horrible plight of Nigerian students on Federal Government scholarship in Russia is a nice one. My desire is for the Minister of Education to listen and do something to end the sufferings of these our future leaders. Thanks. Anonymous.

    I just read your piece on “Begging for bread”. I like your sincerity of thoughts and the boldness to write them down for those concerned to read and act if they want to. God bless your writing prowess and give you the wisdom to keep telling our leaders the home truth. From Paul Adams, Nyanya, Abuja.

    Thank God for people like you. How do we expect these Nigerians to express patriotic zeal? This country is stupendously rich not to treat her students this way, when one considers the looting going on by political office holders. Anonymous.

     

  • After Ade Ajayi, will history end? (II)

    The publication of “Trade and Politics in the Niger Delta, 1830-1885” by the late Professor Kenneth Onwuka Dike, the first indigenous Vice Chancellor of University of Ibadan marked a watershed in Nigerian history. The book, which is fallout of the late professor’s doctoral thesis of the same title, cleared the path for Ade Ajayi and the other historians of the same disposition to follow the lead. But suffice it to say that in terms of what is described as African history for Africans and from the perspective of the African, few will question that the late Prof. Ade Ajayi has a greater part of that glory.

    Dike – who was the first African to achieve the completion of Western historical scholarship – brought his misgiving about the training he received to a positive use with the setting up of the University of Ibadan History department, the Historical Society of Nigeria and the Nigerian National Archives all of which served the evolution of the Ibadan School of History and the project of national transformation.

    Keith A. P. Sandiford, in his book “A Black Studies Primer: Heroes and Heroines of the African Diaspora,” wrote that Dike, as the head of the organizing committee of the First International Congress of Africanists in Ghana in 1963, sought for a strengthened meticulous non-colonial focused African research, and to introduce native speakers to history and for people to view African history through a common eye.

    In his essay “Kenneth Onwuka Dike, ‘Trade And Politics,’ and the Restoration of the African in History,” Ebere Nwaubani argued that Dike was the first modern scholarly proponent of Africanist history. His publications were a watershed in African historiography. “He studied Western history within an intellectual framework that was seriously racial, imperialistic and triumphal. Within the context of such scholarship, it requires nothing less than a radical turn of mind for him to reject Western history and its methodology for a regional one in the service of Nigerian identity.”

    For the benefit of those who might not know, Historiography – simply put – is the scholar’s device for interrogating issues. It refers to a scholarly attempt to recapture or reinvent history as a discipline. In this regard, what is at stake is the necessity of recapturing the history of Nigeria decimated by the colonial ideology and strategy of Eurocentricism.

    What is also needed then was the urgency of recalibrating the methodology for writing that history that would sufficiently serve the purpose of progressive completion of the process of political freedom and independence in order to make the living together of different nationalities to have true meaning.

    To this end, the challenge of rewriting history becomes a critical one since the past of any nation or culture serves as the spectacle for reappraising the possibilities of the future. This is why I quite agree with the words of German politician, Karl-Heinz Hansen: “A people not prepared to face its own history cannot manage to face its own future.”

    As each generation must necessarily write its own history, Dike set the foundation for Ade Ajayi and other prominent historians of that era to build upon. It is thus in this context that one can appreciate the profundity that informed the inauguration of the Ibadan School of History. This school of history was born out of necessity, not only for the reconstruction of a past that lay in ruin under dubious colonial strategy, but also more important because of the exigencies of a postcolonial/post independent present already compromised in all ramifications.

    The Ibadan School evolved essentially as a historiographical challenge to the manner in which Nigerian history had been written by the colonialists. In this sense, we can say that historiography itself commences from the desire to reinterpret the past. According to the American historian Edward W. Bennett; “History, too, has its uses, such as the provision of a ‘usable’ past.” The Ibadan School was therefore motivated by the urgent need to wrest the interpretation of the Nigerian historical past from the intellectual clutch of the premeditated British colonialists.

    As one of Dike’s foot-soldiers that deployed intellectual resources, J. F. Ade-Ajayi alongside historians like, Saburi Biobaku, Adiele Afigbo, Emmanuel A. Ayandele, Tekena Tamuno, Obaro Ikime and foreign historians like Michael Crowder, J. B. Webster, Robert (Abdullahi) Smith and others gave Nigerian and African history meaning. The significance of the Ibadan School of History to the reclamation of a usable past towards charting a smooth path for Nigerian postcolonial development cannot be overemphasized.

    The school echoed a nationalistic historical programme around which history can be reinvented for the sake of Nigeria. In this sense, history would not just be an attempt at an objective agglomeration of facts. It is precisely this tenacity that recommends the Ibadan School of History as a commendable forerunner of the national project in Nigeria.

    With over 60 publications, Ade Ajayi’s scholarly output is formidable by any standard in a country where a scholar has to contend with bureaucratic/political distractions and material deprivations which has grown in the last couple of years. This great scholar’s point of departure always is that history is not just a narrow specialisation or prism to be studied and written for its own glory and sake.

    He believed strongly that the discipline should not even be seen from the prism of merely a search for truth, but that the truths history reveals must be spoken to power, not in the spirit of confrontation, or to make the writer popular for a moment, but to make society better. This was why he approached former President Olusegun Obasanjo on the need for the reintroduction of history to primary and secondary schools. Unfortunately that has not been done to date.

    It is in this spirit that he turned his prodigious scholarship on the processes and problems of national integration, education, public policy and administration, analysing, clarifying and illuminating issues and pointing the way forward for Nigeria.

    Perhaps the best tribute to pay him is to assert that he de-colonised the African narrative by his writings. His area of research focused on Yorubaland, where his intellectual interrogation, curiosity and discoveries were more pronounced. As a historian, he adopted a dialectic approach by not looking at events in isolation, but as parts of bigger historical forces. His dialectical approach equally x-rays societies in broader and deeper perspectives, including the dynamics of cultures, religion, work activities and other ways of life.

    Anyone who goes through his works will find these embedded in such works as “Yoruba Warfare in the Nineteenth Century” and “Christian Missions in Nigeria, 1841-1891.” He was also a collaborationist and an editor.  He co-edited “A thousand Years of West African History,” as well as “History of West Africa” with Michael Crowther.

    The true goals of history are understanding and interpreting the past. Historians have made repeated calls for a new history or a close study of the recent past of the Nigerian history; a past which will be made more germane to the problems and issues confronting us today. For example, one of the problems facing our rulers today is that of ethnic and religious tension all of which resulted from the fact that colonial rule brought people together in new ways and for new purposes as the colonial rulers sought to forge new administrative structures.

    Our nation is among that part of the world now generally referred to as emerging economies or societies in transition. Without a clear sense of identity based on sound historical education, we are in danger of merely drifting along with others. Although we are in the age of globalization; but we must not fail to appreciate that international community is an aggregate of nations, each with its own distinctive character. We failed here because we did not start with a national character; we developed one under stress of circumstances, but with good leadership we can arrive at a common ground.

    In closing out, it will appropriate to reemphasise that we need a clear national ideology that will define a common future for the citizens. A clear example is from Italian history. Their leader provided a clear focus for their effort at unification by interpreting the history of their society and prospecting from it the ideology of Risorpemento (resurgence), the political and social movement that agglomerated different states of the Italian peninsula into the single state of the Kingdom of Italy in the 19th century. The British also have their ideology of unity in diversity which we seem to have copied without actually believing in it.

  • After Ade Ajayi, will history end? (1)

    The notion or postulation of the end of history as a dialectical process was first coined by the great 19th century German philosopher Friedrich Hegel. He believed that history follows progression through a constant dialectical struggle of ideas: between thesis and antithesis which form a synthesis which become a thesis for the next stage of dialectics with a newly created antithesis. It was later used by Karl Marx who believed that the direction of historical development was a purposeful one determined by the interplay of material forces, and would come to an end only with the achievement of communism.

    In 1992, American political scientist, Francis Fukuyama published his very popular book, “The End of History and the Last Man.” The book is an expansion on his 1989 essay “The End of History?” published in the international affairs journal The National Interest. In the book, Fukuyama argues that the advent of Western liberal democracy may signal the endpoint of humanity’s sociocultural evolution and the final form of human government. He became an unlikely star of political science, dubbed the “court philosopher of global capitalism” by John Gray.

    The “end of history” thesis has been repeated enough to acquire the ring of truth – though, as with other academic endeavours, it has also been challenged. Some critics have cited 9/11 as a major counterexample. Others have pointed to the rise of Islamic fundamentalism, the Arab spring, the rise of the Islamic State and other global developments as proof that ideological contests remain.

    But Fukuyama was careful to stress that he was not saying that nothing significant would happen anymore, or that there would be no countries left in the world that did not conform to the liberal democratic model. “At the end of history,” he wrote, “it is not necessary that all societies become successful liberal societies merely that they end their ideological pretensions of representing different and higher forms of human society.”

    My intention today is to honour a man who gave the discipline of history in Nigeria and Africa “respect” and charted a course which African history has followed ever since. Emeritus Professor of history, Jacob Adeniyi Ajayi passed on last Sunday at the University College Hospital (UCH) Ibadan, Oyo State at the ripe age of 85.

    Only a few months ago I wrote a three part series on the dearth of historical consciousness in Nigeria which was fallout from his 85th birthday celebration. Without fear of contradiction, I make bold to say the late Prof J.F Ade Ajayi was one of the best historian to come out of our shores.

    I started the article with this quote from the eminent scholar: “The nation suffers with no sense of history. Its values remain superficial and ephemeral unless imbued with a deep sense of continuity and a perception of success and achievement that transcends acquisition of temporary power or transient wealth. Such a nation cannot achieve a sense of purpose or direction or stability, and without them the future is bleak.”

    It was the late professor who in 1999 pointed out to former President Olusegun Obasanjo that the challenges he faced when he came to power are historical in nature. Recall that in the east, there was a visible resurgence of the Biafra cause championed by Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB). In the West and North, The O’odua Peoples’ Congress (OPC) and the Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF) were pushing for an Oduduwa and Arewa republics respectively. There were also agitations for “self-determination” and “resource control” in other parts of the country.

    In his wisdom, Ade Ajayi approached Obasanjo and pointed out that Nigerians suffer from lack of historical consciousness which was why the event of that time seemed “strange.” He advised the president to think seriously about reintroducing the teaching of history to primary and secondary schools’ in the country so as to always put things in proper perspective. It was reported that Obasanjo issued a presidential directive to that effect. But sadly that directive has not been acted upon to date.

    The reason, according to Prof Akinjide Osuntokun; another distinguished emeritus professor of history is not farfetched. He said Ade Ajayi did everything in his power to return the learning of History to schools, unfortunately without success. It is not for lack of trying but perhaps because Nigeria is now dogged with the primitive acquisition of resources by members of the governing elite and their surrogates to the denigration of the larger good of society.

    As we mourn this eminent scholar and historian of repute, few can doubt there is a need to insist on preserving the collective memory of the nation. We must encourage an objective pursuit of historical truth by looking back once in a while, especially when confronted with challenges. The present security challenge is a case in point. We should be bold to research how we lived in pre-colonial times, for instance. Was there a link between the groups the British eventually brought together to form Nigeria? How were they relating with each other? Do they have things in common? Do they have a history? Etc.

    Among scholars of his age and beyond, Ajayi was particularly respected for the thoroughness of his researches and the fact that he gave character to the study of African history. As an early writer of Nigerian and African history, he brought considerable respect to what later came to be known as the ‘Ibadan School of History’ and African research. He was known for the arduous research and rigorous effort he put into his work.

    The Ibadan School of History is a group of scholars interested in introducing African perspectives and historiography to African history and focusing on the internal historical forces and dynamics that shaped African lives. Ade Ajayi favours the use of historical continuity more often than focusing on events only as powerful agents of change that can move the basic foundations of cultures and mold them into new ones. Previous forms of history – especially colonial history – focuses largely on events that specifically excludes Africans from historical developments.

    Ade Ajayi – following the trail of great scholars of same orientation and disposition like late Prof Kenneth Onwuka Dike – was able to change this perception. He employs a less passionate style in his works, especially in his early writings, utilising subtle criticism of controversial issues of the times. By extensive use of oral sources in some of his works – such as pre-20th century Yoruba history – he was able to weigh, balance and reconcile each and all of his sources, uncovering a pathway towards facts in the period which was scarce in written and non-prejudiced forms.

    This position radically challenged and altered the postulation by the late British historian; Prof Hugh Trevor Roper who in 1963 said: “perhaps in the future there will be some African history to teach. But at present there is none, or very little: there is only the history of Europe in Africa. The rest is largely darkness and darkness is not a subject of history.” He added that African history is “the unedifying gyrations of barbarous tribes in picturesque but irrelevant corners of the globe.” These comments were broadened and captured in a later article which called Africa “unhistoric.” This spurred intense debate between historians, anthropologists, sociologists, in the emerging fields of postcolonial and cultural studies about the definition of “history” itself.

    By extensive use of oral sources in some of his works he brought recognition to a source most western scholars term as being “unscientific.” oral tradition has thus become a veritable tool for historical reconstruction, particularly in places like Africa where written sources in the western mode were lacking. Ajayi also tries to be dispassionate in his writings, especially when writing about controversial or passionate subjects in African history.

    His style of rigorous research presented new pathways in African historiography and augmented awareness among scholarly circles outside the continent to African methodologies and perceptions. By weighing sources both written and oral, he was able to find new issues of interest that formed the basis of British colonisation of Nigeria, balancing official British documentation of the event with additional material. Through his writings, African history gradually became “accepted” in the history profession.

  • Fayemi, Ajimobi, Daniel, Ikuforiji eulogise Ade Ajayi

    Fayemi, Ajimobi, Daniel, Ikuforiji eulogise Ade Ajayi

    Ekiti State Governor Kayode Fayemi has described the late Professor Emeritus Ade Ajayi as “an Ekiti ambassador, who is worthy of emulation”.

    Speaking yesterday during a condolence visit to the late historian’s family in Ibadan, Oyo State, Fayemi said the late professor promoted honour and integrity as a scholar.

    The governor, who was represented by his deputy, Prof. Modupe Adelabu, commiserated with the bereaved family and urged them to celebrate the deceased.

    In the condolence register, he wrote: “On behalf of the Ekiti State government, I have come to say Rest in Peace, Dear Daddy, our pride and great national icon.”

    Fayemi was received by the late Ajayi’s first son, Niyi.

    Oyo State Governor Abiola Ajimobi also commiserated with the family of the late former Vice-Chancellor of the University of Lagos (UNILAG).

    In a statement, Ajimobi said: “We can rightly claim that the late Ajayi was our son because he lived a great part of his life here in Ibadan. Many of his profound theses in history were conceived right here and he found the peace and tranquility, which contributed to his long life and peace of mind, in Ibadan.

    “Prof. Ajayi does not belong to the realm of those who can die or have died. Whenever or wherever African history is discussed, the emeritus professor would live. Wherever his seminal thoughts are being cited, he would appear to them. So he cannot be said to have died.”

    Former Ogun State Governor Gbenga Daniel said: “Prof. Ajayi’s role in the documentation of African history was respected beyond the shores of the continent, especially as he was instrumental to making African history a branch of academic discipline.

    “From a humble, but noble background, Prof.  Ajayi’s rise to the exalted academic position of UNILAG VC was that of a silent achiever, with his touch in nearly all landmark achievements in the nation’s foremost ivory tower.

    “Although saddened by the passage of such a great man, we are consoled that he left an indelible mark on the cultural life of Africans. The only way to honour him is to preserve his legacies by passing the historical past of our society, nation and the continent to coming generations.”

    Lagos State House of Assembly Speaker Adeyemi Ikuforriji said: “The late emeritus professor of History was among the group of Nigerian academics, who laid a solid foundation for the Nigerian university system. Although his loss is painful, we thank the Almighty God for enabling him to attain the matured age of 85 before his demise.

    “On behalf of my family, fellow legislators and the entire management and staff of the Lagos Assembly, I commiserate with the family of the late don, the government and people of Ekiti State, the VC, staff and entire UNILAG community on this sad and irreparable loss.

    “May the Almighty God grant his soul eternal rest and his family and loved ones the fortitude to bear the loss.”

     

     

     

     

     

  • Ekiti lawmaker loses wife

    Ekiti lawmaker loses wife

    The wife of Ade Ajayi, a member in Ekiti State House of Assembly, Mrs. Ajayi, died yesterday in an accident  at Ayegbaju-Ekiti in Oye Local Government.

    Although details of her death were sketchy at press time, The Nation learnt that the accident occurred about 4 pm when her Toyotal Sienna car which she drove collided with a truck coming in the opposite direction. She was said to have died immediately.

    Police spokesman Victor Babayemi confirmed the accident. He said the body had been deposited at the mortuary of the Federal Medical Centre in Ido Ekiti. Babayemi added that investigations  has begun.

    Ajayi represents Oye Constituency I.

     

  • Eminent journalist Dare advocates restructuring to save Nigeria

    Eminent journalist Dare advocates restructuring to save Nigeria

    •Dignitaries celebrate ex-UNILAG VC Ajayi at 85

    Yesterday was a day of honour for former University of Lagos (UNILAG) Vice-Chancellor Prof. Ade Ajayi, as he celebrated his 85th birthday.

    Eminent Nigerians showered encomiums on him, noting his life of virtues and excellence.

    The event was held at the International Conference Centre of the University of Ibadan (U.I.).

    Renowned journalism teacher and Editorial Consultant of The Nation, Prof. Olatunji Dare, who was the guest lecturer, called for substantive re-structuring of Nigeria to save the country from collapse.

    Speaking on “100 years after amalgamation: The Nigerian condition”, the frontline columnist described as “sorrowful” the nation’s socio-economic condition.

    Bemoaning the nation’s challenges, especially the violence being perpetrated by Boko Haram, Dare said the ongoing National Conference, which is expected to correct many of the ills, might not achieve the objective because of the discordant tunes being sung by many of the delegates.

    Dare said: “A re-structured federation, based on a new constitution truly warranted by the preface ‘We the People’, has been the recurrent demand in recent times. There was much hope that the on-going National Conference may bring that about. But judging by the hazy status of the conference and by the reports on the deliberations, the hope could turn out to be misplaced.”

    He listed other problems facing the nation as infrastructural decay, over concentration of power at the centre, epileptic power supply despite billions of naira spent on building new plants, dispiriting health sector, mass unemployment, fallen educational standards, ethnic animosity, religious crises and corruption, among others.

    Dare warned of the inherent danger in the failure of restructuring, saying: “As the centre faces growing challenge from Boko Haram and other forces, its legitimacy and authority will weaken to the point that those nationalities strong enough or determined enough to break away will do so. Without substantive re-structuring, the Nigerian state will wither away.”

    He urged President Goodluck Jonathan to show that he is in charge and assert legitimacy.

    Criticising the centenary celebrations, Dare said: “This is hardly an inspiring note on which to celebrate the first centenary or to inaugurate the second centenary of what President Jonathan, in a prefatory broadcast to the milestone, described as ‘a unique country’, one ‘brought together in a union like no other by providence’.”

    At the event were Ajayi’s wife, Christiana; Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola, represented by Commissioner for Physical Planning Muyiwa Ige; Ekiti State Governor Kayode Fayemi, represented by his deputy, Prof. Modupe Adelabu; U.I. Vice-Chancellor Prof. Isaac Adewole; Prof. Oladipo Akinkugbe; Prof. Akin Mabogunje and Prof. Niyi Osundare.

    The Ooni of Ife, Oba Okunade Sijuwade, was represented by Oba Kole Ojutalayo. The Elekole of Ikole-Ekiti, Oba Ajibade Fasiku, was there, among others.