Tag: Christmas

  • What about an African Christmas?

    What about an African Christmas?

    Cookery is not chemistry, it is an art. For those with culinary skills, this Christmas is the best time to make the household eat, drink and be merry. Yetunde Oladeinde explores the options that would make this year’s cuisine delicious and make them ask for more like Oliver Twist.

    FOR lots of women, the most important part of the preparation is the menu. From the classics to the exotic option there are so many ideas to explore from. It is important to excite the taste bud with menus that leaves a lasting impression. To do a wonderful job, you must select the right ingredients, cook it properly and do not get burnt out in the process.

    You can plan it in such a way that the first things are done first and then you would have ample time to present the menu in a colourful and exciting way. Have you also thought of having African delicacies on the Christmas table? Why not! You can make it memorable with vegetable soups and stews with pounded yam, eba, fufu or wheat meal..

    If you chose to go for classics the stuff turkey would do the magic. In the United Kingdom and some parts of Europe this is regarded as the traditional meal served with roast potatoes and other vegetables. If the turkey bones are getting in the way of you carving perfect slices for the Christmas feast, try roasting a boneless turkey. Not only is deboning easy, your boneless turkey cooks faster and this can be a bonus when you need the oven to finish up with the other items on your menu lists.

    A simple cornbread stuffing can often be the most loved side on the Christmas table. Moist, fluffy and flavorful, this recipe is a comfort food all by itself. This can be followed by the Christmas pudding, , a heavy steamed pudding made with dried fruits suet, and very little flour, Cakes, Cookies and more .

    .One area that you need to play up is the Christmas table setting. The table cloth, napkins and cutleries should be colorful and exciting. You can celebrate the season with a bold holiday table with the fresh silver-and-sage color palette is sure to dazzle your dinner guests. For a great start trendy napkin rings are a treasure you cannot afford to miss in your planning. You can also get a wide-nib calligraphy pen for printing guests’ names on place cards. Or print them from your computer using a fancy font.

  • Christmas Frenzy

    Christmas Frenzy

    Barely three weeks to Christmas preparations for the season has begun. It is that time of the year when houses, streets, roads, offices wear new look.

    Hampers, artificial trees, lights, cards, flowers are some of the numerous items that adorns various houses, shops and offices. Green, Red and White turns out to be the official colours of the season.

    Institutions outdo each other to maintain a positive outlook. These institutions engage in painting and decorating of their corporate offices. Various houses also in the spirit of Christmas engage in decorating of their houses.

    This is the season of the year where market prizes sky rocket, transport fares heightens. All these are synonymous with the yuletide period.

    For Cynthia Dike, this is the period of the year she loves the most. “I love Christmas season because that is the time I felt relaxed.

    “I can walk round some part of the city to watch fireworks and have a view of different decorations being put up which add colour and glamour to the season,” Dike stated.

    “Christmas is the best thing that ever happens to me because it is the time I feel relieved from the year’s stress,” Aremu Oluwafunmilola said.

    “Most importantly, anytime I’m down, the Christmas decorations in my house and around the ones I can see around the state, lights up my spirit and they make me feel worthy and grateful to be alive,”  Mrs. Aderemi Olushola said.

    Apart from the good intellectual designs portrayed in different houses, business companies, gas stations, e.t.c, the Lagos State Government has also imbibed the culture of decorating its planted trees and gardens to match the season.

    Regular Christmas decorations by the Lagos State Government have gradually become a spot to look out for.

    The yearly Christmas decoration by the State Government tells the story of the birth of Christ with many pictorial representations of major biblical events which are being designed with a colourful lighting installation.

    These fabulous decorations can be seen in major spots like the Old Toll gate along the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway, Lekki-Falomo Road, Maryland Roundabout, Palmgrove, Alausa, etc. A simple glance of Marina at night will never stop you from falling in love with Lagos City.

    Some corporate organizations, eateries and commercial banks have also emulated the good example of the government by designing their buildings with exquisite Christmas lighting.

    During this season, some of these organizations embark on beautification of some roundabout and motor parks in different part of the city.

    Moreover, some religious organization have made Christmas decoration a must-do as they also decorate the premises of their churches with adorable beautifications which makes the environment friendlier.

    Many residents are seriously shopping for Christmas decoration as all malls and decorations stores are lately displaying different fabulous interior and exterior Christmas designs ranging from different prices, shapes, colours and various art work.

     

     

  • Shoppers embrace ‘Before Christmas sales offer’

    More shoppers are visiting retail stores, supermarkets and malls – thanks to the seasonal price slash. This month, the rush has become intense as many go for the ‘Before- Christmas sales offer’.  TONIA ‘DIYAN reports.

    Shoppers in Lagos are taking advantage of the ‘Before-Christmas sales offer’ at malls, supermarkets, retail and even online stores. They are seen more in these places at weekends and after working hours during week days.

    Last Saturday, while stores were yet to open by 8.45am, shoppers in large numbers were already hanging around the Ikeja City Mall. Immediately, it opened for business, they thronged into the mall.

    At a houseware store, Mrs Romoke Adebayo, a marriage counsellor, bought a 12-piece Martha Stewart silver cooking set at 20 per cent less the price. “I’ve been planning to get something like this for a long time. But I just couldn’t afford it because, it wass very expensive. But with the ongoing offer, I finally have it!. Coming here early was definitely worth it; someone else would have picked it before my arrival. The sales person said it is the only one left.”

    While sales appeared brisk in malls, retail stores, supermarkets and online, household and electronics outlets which are either stand-alone stores or tenants in complexes and plazas, are not left out. They all have something to give away.

    However, it’s been observed that there more sales this year since the advent of shopping malls in 2006, when The Palms in Lekki opened shop. Same with online stores, which have been thriving for close to two years.

    Some retailers told The Nation Shopping that sales of electronics, clothing, jewellery and house hold items  in the last two months, have increased following the offers which have been on since September.

    According to them, this year is witnessing the strongest sales not only of clothes and electronics, but also food and building supplies.

    The crowd at the Ikeja City Mall in Lagos was was a testimony.

    “It is, indeed, really crowded; the queue is discouraging and making payment after shopping is hell. People are already shopping for Christmas and prices heve been slashed everywhere,’’ a teacher, Mr Folorunsho Bashorun, said.

    Mrs Cordelia and her husband, Mr Caleb Otoide, both military personnels, took their daughters for shopping at The Palms in Lekki last weekend. “There are some combat/military-style boots that I’ve been wanting to buy,”Mrs Cordelia said.”

    We knew the crowd would be crazy, so we decided to visit the mall this early when there would be fewer people. But we were wrong, you know! We could hardly find a parking space,” she added.

    Ms Helen Thompson, South African-trained nurse, was among the early shoppers, took advantage of the discounts they would get on whatever they buy at The Omisson Emporium, a new mall in Lekki, Lagos. She went home with a 20-piece glassware set for N25,000 and a foot-long Santa Claus ornament she bought for her son  at 15 per cent discount.

    “Some of these items, such as the ornaments, are not cheap, when it is not sales period,” she said.

    Her sister, Ms Natasha, bought two large bags of goodies, paper holders, a few children’s bake sets and other house wares. “I’ve been able to save about N15,200 after my shopping, it is definitely worth being here at this time,” she said.

    Also, last Saturday, vehicular and pedestrian traffic at Alade Market, and other high street stores on Allen Avenue, in Ikeja, were high by mid-day.

    The market is the second destination for one of its residents, Mr Wale Bankole, who had stopped by the Ikeja City Mall to buy a Swatch wrist watch, a Daniel Ray handbag and a Nine West pair of shoes for his wife, Mrs Gloria Bankole. He testified of how he was able to save some money. “It seems to be a general offer. I have saved N38,000 altogether; ordinarily, I would have spent N38,000 more buying these many items from different places,“ he said.

    The Centre Manager, Ikeja City Mall, Mr Sander Norman, said sales increased in the last two months and customers have been very patient getting their vehicles into the mall. “We have experienced very massive sales because of the number of people who visit the mall daily. We meet very understanding customers who agree to work with the space we have.

    “Over the past week, stores have stocked more styles that were flying off the shelves quickly, said Mrs Modupe Shopeju of Delightsome Gifts Concepts. Alhaja Ganiyat Rilwan, who was shoe shopping at the store  with her six-year-old daughter Mila, said she decided to take advantage of the ‘Before Christmas sales offer’ to meet her immediate needs. “The fact that I am a Muslim and don’t celebrate Christmas doesn’t mean I can’t partake of the offer. I am only making use of the opportunity available to everyone,” she added.

    While Mila got the blue sneakers and a wedge sandal she wanted, her mother bought a pair of sandals and a black office shoe for herself. “The sales will continue till the end of December.’’ Said Mr Samuel Ejeh, managing director, Grocery Bazaar, Lagos.

  • Why not Hijrah holiday?

    It never rained but poured in November last year when Nigerian Press stirred up brouhaha over the declaration of one day Hijrah holiday in the State of Osun by Governor Rauf Aregbesola. A particular Southwest newspaper went completely off the track over the issue and exhibited untold ignorance in a manner of a king dancing naked in a market place by writing an editorial on the matter thereby subjecting itself to public ridicule. It was a display of blatant ignorance shamelessly celebrated by some other newspapers of the like.

    Shortly after that episode, another Governor of a Southeast state (Imo) declared six weeks holiday for Christmas against the constitutional tradition of two days that Nigerians are familiar with. And the same newspapers that earlier sparked brouhaha kept mute in what confirmed unbridled sectarian hypocrisy typical of shamelessness in Nigerian professional journalism. The connotation of their silence in the second case cited above is that the declaration of one day Hijrah holiday was wrong because it was not inherited from the colonialists whilst the six week Christmas holiday was right because it tallied with their religious interest even if it was unjust and contradicted the norm of conscience. That is the extent of slave mentality in Nigeria as often exhibited in the name of religious chauvinism.

    Succinct assessment

    Taking a retrospective assessment of the two above-mentioned scenarios after six months (last May), a well known Professor of Medical Biochemistry, Abdul Kareem Hussain, decided to chronicle the historical background of all the known calendars in the world as a way of tutoring some ignorant, self-arrogated Nigerian journalists on the essence of Hijrah holiday for mankind. Though a Medical Biochemist, Prof Hussain’s intellectual wellbeing has never restricted him to any straight jacket enclave of literacy because he knows the difference between literacy and knowledge. To him, literacy is merely a means of documentation of events and occurrences while knowledge is like a farm where all necessary crops must be planted and harvested for the assured survival of the farmer.

    Yours sincerely first had an encounter with this intellectual colossus in 1984 when he delivered a public lecture on Hijrah calendar at the Yoruba Tennis Club, Onikan, Lagos, where many Nigerians first got the idea of Hijrah calendar. In that lecture, he did such a thorough analysis of the subject that he thereafter became a reference point for most researchers on Hijrah and the use of calendar. The summary of what he said on that occasion, according to my records is as follows:

    Experienced narration

    After many millennia of incessant wandering in search of sanity and reason man was able to sight the crescent of civilisation. While he advanced along with his new crescent, he reflected on his past wanderings and thought of sharing the experience of this with his successors in order to leave a mark of guidance on the threshold of life. Civilisation, therefore, taught man to chronicle the experiences of his peregrination on earth by the means of calendar. And today, the chronology of events and the human evolutionary development are traceable only to the beginning of the use of calendar.

    By definition calendar is a system of reckoning time in which the beginning, the length and divisions of a year are arbitrarily defined. It is a table that shows the months, the weeks and the days available in one specific year. It is a schedule especially one arranged in chronological order as of the case on a court docket.

    Types of calendar

    Since the discovery and the use of calendar as an aid to historical records the world has journeyed through various stages of reckoning events through time and space. The use of calendar itself is a pointer to the earlier civilisation of the races or communities which made use of it. One of the earliest calendars which have helped in piloting human history through the millennia is the Chinese calendar which is supposed to have begun in 2379 B.C. In this Calendar, years are reckoned in cycles of 60, each year having a particular name that is a combination of two characters derived schematically from two series of signs, the celestial and the terrestrial. Months are also reckoned in cycles of 60 that are renewed every five years and each month consists of 28 to 30 days.

    There is also the Jewish calendar used by the Hebrews which engaged in the reckoning of time from the year of creation as based on a periodic cycle of 19 years with the 3rd, 6th, 8th, 11th, 14th, 17th and 19th year of each cycle designated leap years.

    This is followed by the Hindu calendar which began in about 400 CE. It is Lunar-solar in nature and the Hindus believe so much in it even till date. In this calendar, the solar year is divided into 12 months in accordance with the successive entrances of the sun into the signs of the Zodiac, the months varying from 29 to 32 days.

    Another calendar is the one called Roman calendar which is an ancient lunar calendar designating the days of the new moon as the ‘calends’ and the days of the full moon as the ‘ides’ while the 19th day before the ‘ides’ are designated as the ‘nones’. The original Roman calendar, introduced about the 7th century bc had 10 months with 304 days in a year that began with March. Two more months, January and February, were added later in the 7th century bc but because the months were only 29 or 30 days long, an extra month had to be intercalated approximately every second year. Thus, the days of the month were designated by the awkward method of counting backward from three dates: the calends, or first of the month; the ides, or middle of the month, falling on the 13th of some months and the 15th of others; and the nones, or 9th day before the ides. This rendered the Roman calendar hopelessly confused especially when officials to whom the addition of days and months was entrusted abused their authority to prolong their terms of office or to hasten or delay elections.

    Pagan origin of Roman calendar

    Most of the months in the Roman calendar were dedicated to various gods of the Romans. The calendar, though got the blessing of the Christian leadership and was refined by Pope Gregory XIII in 1582 CE, as polytheistic token. For instance, January from ’Janus’ is the Roman god of doorways and beginnings. February from ‘Februs’ is the Roman god of purification. March from ‘Mars’ is the Roman god of war. May from ‘Maia’ is the Roman goddess of growth and spring season. April from ‘Aprilis’ is the month of the goddess of love and beauty. June from ‘Juno’ is the sister, the wife and coequal of Jupiter, the supreme Roman god. July named after Julius Caesar and August after Augustus Caesar. The months of September, October, November and December indicate 7th, 8th, 9th and 10th respectively in the old Roman calendar. These last four months are a misnomer in the order of numerals within the calendar. For 7th, 8th, 9th and 10th in numerals to represent 9th, 10th, 11th and 12th months in the calendar are incomprehensible. But they were retained for sectarian sentiment.

    The Julian calendar

    Also in 45 BC, Julius Caesar decided to use purely solar calendar on the advice of Sosigenes who flourished in the 1st century. This calendar, known as the Julian calendar, fixed the normal year at 365 days, and the leap year, every fourth year, at 366 days. Leap year is so named because the extra day causes any date after February in a leap year to “leap” over one day in the week and to occur two days later in the week than it did in the previous year, rather than just one day later as in a normal year. The Julian calendar also established the order of the months and the days of the week as they exist in present-day calendars. In 44 BC, Julius Caesar changed the name of the month Quintilis to Julius (July), after himself. The month Sextilis was renamed Augustus (August) in honour of the Roman emperor Caesar Augustus, who succeeded Julius Caesar. However, some authorities maintain that Augustus established the length of the months we use today. The Gregorian calendar which puts January as the first month of the year was adopted by England and America in 1752. It is the calendar now commonly used throughout most parts of the world.

    Other calendars

    Yet, there are other known calendars which include the Roman ecclesiastical calendar used by the Catholic sect, the French revolutionary calendar introduced by Napoleon Bonaparte in 1793, the Gregorian calendar introduced by Pope Gregory XIII in 1582 CE. But by far the most authentic of them all is Hijrah calendar because of its uniqueness and eventfulness as authenticated by its clear historical background. The idea of putting this calendar into use was suggested by Caliph Umar Bn Khattab in Madinah as a historic landmark for Islamic religion. And it has since been in use throughout the Muslim world especially in determining the beginnings and ends of every lunar month as well as Muslim festivals.

    Qur’anic source of Hijrah calendar

    Of all the calendars mentioned above, Hijrah alone, which is the Muslim divine calendar, is unique for its eventfulness and clear historical background. Its dating began on the 16th of July 622 CE a day after the migration of Prophet Muhammad (SAW) from Makkah to Yathrib (Al Madinah). After a non-such persecution and threats to his life by the Makkah pagans, the messiah of mankind had to migrate for the safety of his life and, by implication, for the rescue of humanity from the wildness of inchoation.

    Whereas every month of Hijrah calendar has spiritual importance apart from the universality of its blessings for mankind, its effect from 622 CE is only symbolic of modernity as it actually came into existence over 5,000,000 years ago when it was decreed and its months were christened by Allah Himself. The Qur‘an testifies to this as follows: “Surely, the number of months with Allah is twelve months in one year in Allah’s decree since the day when Allah created the Heavens and earth. Of these months four are sacred (Muharram, Rajab, Dhul- Qa‘dah and Dhul-Hijjah). This is the only straight and righteous path”. (Q. 9: 36). No other calendar can be so referenced in any revealed Book other than the Qur’an. The twelve months mentioned are Muharram, Safar, Rabi‘ul Awwal, Rabi‘uth-Thani, Jumadal ’Ula, Jumadath-Thaniyah, Rajab, Sha‘ban, Ramadan, Shawwal, Dhul Qa‘dah and Dhul Hijjah. Thus, the significance of Hijrah calendar is manifest not only in the eventfulness of its historical background but also in the divinity of its months. Unlike other calendars which were imposed for the purpose of worshipping material gods or to subject people to psychological subservience, Hijrah calendar is an evidential indication of human salvation. And besides, it has divine sanction. Nigeria is for us all and no one should think of creating an environment of subservience for a major chunk of the populace.

    Conclusive tutorial

    In his conclusive submission, Professor Abdul Kareem aims at educating Nigerian media to the effect that Hijrah was not peculiar to Prophet Muhammad (SAW) as some other Prophets had preceded him in emigration. For instance Prophets like Nuh, Ibrahim, Lut, Ismail, Ishaq, Ya‘qub, Yusuf, Shu‘ayb and Musa, all emigrated from place to place before finally settling down. Of all these, only Prophet Muhammad’s Hijrah has a direct bearing on the practice of Islam. And since no Muslim has ever objected to the declaration of any public holiday for the adherents of other religions in Nigeria, it will be foolhardy for any responsible person to constitute himself into a cog in the wheel of Islam in any part of the country by opposing a declaration of Hijrah holiday constitutionally for Islam. In a sane society whatever is considered good for the goose must equally be good for the gander. But those who take their hatred for Islam as a hobby should know that no amount of barking even by millions of dogs can ever halt a surging train.

    Watch out

    As traditional of ‘The Message’ column, a daily column to be called RAMADAN GUIDE will be published for 30 or 29 days during the coming sacred month of Ramadan. It will contain a thorough exposition of some verses of the Qur’an as well as analyses of some Hadith of Prophet Muhammad (SAW) plus jurisprudential explanation of some hitherto ambiguous areas in all possible ramifications. Watch out! This may be your greatest means of becoming authentically familiar with Islam. And besides, it may provide an opportunity for pious Muslims to trade with Allah by sponsoring the 3×2 space earmarked for that purpose.

    Muslims hold conference on democracy

    The popular Premier Hotel, Ibadan, will be playing host to a conglomerate of Muslim clerics and laity from all parts of Nigeria between July 6 and 7, 2013. The conference will afford such people the opportunity to discuss Nigerian democracy as it affects them and their faith. The objective is to further examine the compatibility of democracy with Islam and be better informed about it. The conference will create a good avenue for participants to know the role expected of Muslims in it to enable them disseminate same to others. This is the first time a conference of this nature is being held in Ibadan. Abuja was its venue in the previous years. Attendance is strictly by invitation.

     

  • Stop celebrating vanity during Christmas, bishop charges Christians

    The Anglican Bishop of Amichi Diocese, Nnewi South Local Government Area, Right Reverend Ephraim O. Ikeakor, has advised Christians to stop using the period of Christmas to celebrate vanity but Jesus Christ.

    Ikeakor tasked Christians to always use the period for genuine spiritual revival, share gifts with loved ones and reconcile with people around them in the manner Jesus admonished in the scriptures.

    He asked, “The question is, are we still celebrating Christmas? It is now seen as a social event for fund raising and various other engagements by Christians who are supposed to know better.

    “Christmas should be celebrated with Christ at the center, because if you remove Jesus Christ, there is no Christmas and what you are celebrating is vanity, nothingness, emptiness. There is no value in Christmas without Christ. It is a time of special genuine spiritual reflections. Christmas is a time of sharing gifts and reconciliation with people and visiting people for them to have a sense of belonging.

    “I  implore our people not to see Christmas as a period of engaging in vainglory , wasteful celebration , engaging in crimes and criminality and not a time to hike prices, but a time to celebrate Christmas in righteousness , Godliness , simplicity of life and time for making peace , reconciling with people and making amends with our enemy.

    Meanwhile, Bishop Ikeakor has ordained six priests with a charge for them to cultivate in the vine ard of God at all situations.

    Performing the 4th advent ordination of two priests and four deacons at the Cathedral Church of St Andrews, Amichi on Saturday, Bishop Ikeakor insisted that the tribulations against Christians, including the attacks from Moslem fundamentalists will not diminish Christianity but improve and strengthen it.

    Those ordained as priests were Reverend Godson Chinedu Ugochukwu and Reverend Nelson Chukwunonso Chijindu, while those ordained as Deacons were Promise Mbanefo Alor, Chuka Nnaemeka Emenike Nwosu, Kennedy Ifeanyi Chukwuka and James Mbonu.

  • Christmas, the morning after

    Christmas, the morning after

    The celebration of the birth of Jesus Christ, the progenitor of the Christian faith, was held worldwide yesterday. Christian faithful, in their millions, trooped to various worship centres to commemorate the day, which is obviously the biggest festival in Christendom.

    But there was a build-up to the day. All over the place, the streets were jam-packed with people – old and young – all engaged in one thing or another in preparation for the day. In Britain, not even the ravaging flood that has changed the landscape for several weeks could dissuade people from going out for the usual Christmas shopping. Elsewhere in Europe, the chilling winter was no obstacle to people who braved the odds and moved round in their winter jackets. With some of the temperature falling below 4 degree Celsius, this year’s Christmas will surely go down as one of the coldest ever.

    In Nigeria, it was celebration galore. Street carnivals were held everywhere. The popular Calabar Street Carnival midwifed by Donald Duke, former governor of Cross River State, has assumed a life of its own. So also is the Port Harcourt Carnival introduced by Governor Rotimi Amaechi.

    In many homes, churches, corporate organisations and some government houses, Christmas carols were held in anticipation of the Christmas Day celebration. In Akwa Ibom State, a 9,999-man orchestra was put together to celebrate the state’s Christmas Carol. In attendance were dignitaries, including religious leaders, foreign envoys and a host of other very important personalities.

    The period also witnessed a regime of bonanzas unleashed on the populace by various corporate bodies and other manufacturing companies who enticed their customers with mouth-watering promos. Market men and women were not left out. They all made brisk business and smiled to the banks as Christmas presented an opportunity for them to do good business and make huge profit. And the governors were not left out in all of these. Though there were no salary increases, many palliatives were approved for state government workers to celebrate the Christmas.

    In Imo State, a two-week holiday was declared for the state government workers in addition to some stipends approved for them to enable them celebrate Christmas with their families. The governor of the state, Rochas Okorocha, known widely for his unconventional style of leadership and, sometimes, erratic decisions, also approved money running into millions of naira for the security agencies in the state. His calculation was that the least paid security agent in the state would go home with at least N10,000 for Christmas. This gesture was replicated in other states of the federation in one form or another. It all borders on merriment during the Christmas as if all Christmas stands for is eating and drinking.

    Notwithstanding the avalanche of mouth-watering offers and merriment associated with the festival, various religious leaders across the country, political leaders and public office holders were quick to remind the populace of the need to embrace peace in the country. The appeals come on the heels of threat of violence which have characterised the season in the past. Last year, on Christmas Day, worshippers at St. Theresa Catholic Church in Madalla, on the outskirts of Suleja, Niger State, were callously mowed down by a suicide bomber who had targeted the worshippers as they closed from church. It was a horrible sight as many of the worshippers died in the blast while others lost their limbs and sustained varying degree of injuries. The church building and other adjoining buildings were not spared in the orgy of destruction. The attack drew wide condemnation from people all over the world. But such condemnations were not enough to deter the bombers who still exploded their lethal wares in other parts of the country, especially in the crisis-ridden northern part of Nigeria.

    As Christmas drew near this year, residents of Madalla were gripped with fear and trepidation. Last year’s incident was obviously still fresh in their memories. This resulted in many people moving out of the area to avoid any unpleasant situation. This is the extent of the psychological torture and trauma terrorism has inflicted on the people.

    The thought of a re-enactment of the Madalla episode elsewhere in the country had stretched the security agencies in Nigeria to the limit this year. To avoid a repeat occurrence, security, therefore, took centre-stage in the affairs of the nation during the Christmas festivities. While the focus of the agencies in the North was to avert any strike by misguided extremists masquerading under the veil of religion, those in other parts of the country were battling kidnappers and armed robbers who have been on the prowl for some time now. The roads, too, were heavily monitored by officers and men of the Federal Road Safety Commission. But because of the generally deplorable situation of the roads, many people either stayed back or risked travelling on the roads. I am quite sure that the increase in traffic during this period must have also recorded its own fatalities. This is because of the nightmare travelling on Nigerian roads has become. It is no longer a pleasure but a horrendous experience moving from one part of the country to another.

    On Friday, December 21, Chukwuemeka Ekweremadu, the elder brother to Ike Ekweremadu, Deputy President of the Senate, lost his life in a road crash on the Enugu-Port Harcourt Expressway. Until his death, Chukwuemeka, 52, was a Director in the Enugu State Civil Service and a member, Board of Trustees, Tertiary Education Trust Fund. His sudden death on one of the nation’s appalling roads has put an abrupt end to an otherwise glorious career.

    Not even the alternative – air transportation – is safe in the country anymore. With far too many air crashes in the recent past, there is virtually no place to hide. The latest involved a naval helicopter that crashed in the mangrove forest of Bayelsa State on December 15. The crash claimed the lives of six Nigerians – former Governor Patrick Yakowa of Kaduna State and his friend, Dauda Tsoho; immediate past National Security Adviser, General Andrew Owoye Azazi (retd.) and his orderly, Warrant Officer Karmal; and the two pilots of the ill-fated aircraft, Commander Daba and Lieutenant Sowole. Daba’s wfe is said to have newly put to bed, while Sowole’s wife is pregnant. The Sowoles were married for less than two years before tragedy struck. This disaster took the shine off the Christmas celebration in the affected families.

    By and large, this year’s Christmas festival has come and gone but what remains is the lessons to be learnt from it. One of these is that Christmas is not about merriment alone. It is about humility, which Jesus epitomised in his lifetime. It is about service. It is about love and care for the less privileged in the society. It should not be misconstrued to mean extravagance or ostentatious display of ill-gotten wealth.

    And now that the carnivals and merriment are over, shall we have good governance and accountability in all facets of our national life? That is the only way this country can move forward. That is the only way we can make progress as a people. So, as we move ahead into another year, let us have a rethink. Let us devote our energy to those things that will make life meaningful to all of us. This should not be a one-sided sacrifice. It is for both the leaders and the led. Together, we must make the world worth living through our actions and utterances. Already, the Presidency is promising Nigerians an El Dorado come 2013. But that refrain is familiar. We have heard such promises over and over again, such that it has almost become meaningless to the average Nigerian. But who knows if God will hear Nigerians’ prayers for a better life in 2013? We are all waiting for that miracle.

     

  • Christmas celebrated around the world

    Christmas celebrated around the world

    Christians around the world are celebrating Christmas, which marks the birth of Jesus Christ in Bethlehem.

    In the city itself, Christmas Eve Mass was celebrated at the 1,700-year-old Church of the Nativity, on the spot where it is believed Jesus was born, The BBC reports.

    Meanwhile in the Vatican, Pope Benedict XVI held the traditional Mass at St Peter’s Basilica.

    He urged Christians to “find time and room for God in their fast-paced lives.”

    The Pope prayed that Israelis and Palestinians would be able to live their lives in peace. He also prayed for peace in Lebanon, Syria and Iraq.

    The Mass, usually celebrated at midnight, was brought forward by two hours to avoid tiring the 85-year-old pontiff unduly.

    Later on Tuesday, the Pope will deliver his traditional Christmas message – Urbi et Orbi – to the city of Rome and to the world.

    In Bethlehem, the head of the Roman Catholic Church in Jerusalem voiced his support for a Palestinian state.

    Latin Patriarch Fouad Twal said this Christmas would be a celebration of “the birth of Christ our lord and the birth of the state of Palestine.”

    “The path [to statehood] remains long, and will require a united effort,” he said.

    The patriarch, who was born in Jordan, led a symbolic procession from Jerusalem’s Old City to the West Bank city, passing through the separation barrier and checkpoint built by the Israelis.

    He was met at the church in Manger Square by thousands of tourists, pilgrims and clergy.

     

  • In the spirit of Christmas

    In the spirit of Christmas

    One of the core principles of Christianity is the concept of giving. Indeed, giving is the bedrock of Christianity, as exemplified by the incomparable sacrifice of himself Jesus Christ made for salvation. Somehow, over the centuries, giving has become an integral part of Christmas celebration, with many Christmases incomplete without the exchange of gifts. In many parts of Nigeria, the concept of giving has been transmuted from exchange of exotic gift items, like jewellery, gadgets and toys, into exchange of food items, often cooked delicacies, like fried rice and jollof rice. Who is anybody to say gourmet delicacies are not acceptable? This transmutation – indeed some say transmogrification – is perhaps a reflection of the worsening hard times Nigerians have been facing over the decades. The worse the economy, the more food-oriented the Christmas gifts. In these parts too, even the concept of hampers is largely food-oriented, with items like corn flakes, corned beef, sugar, milk etc. enclosed in baskets.

    In the spirit of Christmas, however, Hardball would like to draw Christians into a re-examination of the concept of giving. What gifts are doctrinally sound? Is there indeed anything that circumscribes the kind of gifts to exchange? Would a hungry man or family not appreciate food more than gadgets in their hour of need? These questions lead to a polemical minefield that will not be resolved with a wave of a list of permissible gifts. There will probably never be such a list. Christians will from time to time, often within the ambit of their countries’ cultures and the shifting values of the times, determine what gifts to exchange. But more critically, they must now have to determine whether the exchange of gifts has not moved unwholesomely from the personal to the impersonal, from a reflection of sacrificial love that comes from the depth of the soul to a mere external expression of perfunctory love.

    Christians recognise Jesus Christ as God’s gift to mankind; the Canonical gospels indicate that three Wise Men came from the East bearing gifts of gold, frankincense and myrrh; and Pentecostals have had all sorts of troubles stressing tithes, regular offerings and prophet offerings, particularly because of the attendant abuses. Given the general decline in morals everywhere, it does seem as if the exchange of gifts has a bearing only on the conviviality of the festive period itself, not on the essential doctrine of Christmas. Perhaps it is time Christians took a fresh look at what should drive their giving, not what their giving should consist of. If love is not at the heart of it, it is hard to defend it. If love is not given copiously, it is never given at all.

    Givers, it is said, never lack. Many foreign countries have accepted this lesson, and have given copiously and received unquantifiable benefits in return. It is not clear whether, in spite of our economic stress, Nigeria has made a habit of giving and giving and giving. As the table in this piece shows, none of the countries listed in Official Development Assistance (ODA) donors is African. If we are going to wait until we are economically prosperous and stable, we will have to wait for much longer. The time to climb that table is now, when we do not have enough to spare. Individuals have imbibed the culture of giving, and have had great stories to tell. Let Nigeria begin to tell great stories too, even as Christians are invited in a Nigeria festering with hate and bloodshed to recognise that love is at the core of their faith and they must give it uncomplainingly in order to help build a stable nation.

    Aid Statistics by Region (2012)

    1 United States $7 763bn 16%

    2 EU institutions $5 443bn 11%

    3 IDA $5 196bn 11%

    4 France $4 187bn 9%

    5 United Kingdom $3 075bn 6%

    6 Germany $1 948bn 4%

    7 Global Fund $1 914bn 4%

    8 Japan $1 888bn 4%

    9 AfDF $1 760bn 4%

    10 Canada $1 532bn 3%

    Other donors $13 226bn 28%

    Total $47 932bn 100%

     

    Source: OECD (2012)

     

  • Aregbesola urges reflections on essence of Christmas

    Governor Rauf Aregbesola of Osun State has appealed to Christians to reflect on the essence of Christmas.

    He urged them to remember the humility associated with the birth of Jesus Christ.

    Governor Aregbesola restated his earlier position that the country’s security, political and economic challenges can only be surmounted in an atmosphere of peaceful co-existence.

    The governor, in a statement issued by the Director, Bureau of Communications and Strategy, Office of the Governor, Mr. Semiu Okanlawon, to commemorate the birth of Jesus Christ, said Christians must love all, including non-Christians, for a better society.

    Governor Aregbesola admonished Christians and other Nigerians to live in peace and harmony, saying his commitment to the ideals that promote peace, prosperity, and the total well-being of the populace through good governance remains unwavering.

    He enjoined religious leaders to pray for Nigerian leaders and called on the government at all levels to deliver their campaign promises and put smiles on the faces of the people.

    “We must imbibe the spirit of humility and love for one another, which are exemplified in the birth and teachings of Jesus Christ. I also want to use the occasion of the birth of Christ to urged leaders at all levels of governance to know that leadership is a trust. The position you hold is justifiable only if it contributes to the welfare of the people,” the governor said.

    Aregbesola called for a renewal of faith in democracy among Nigerians, saying there is no alternative to freedom.

    He said there is a challenge for Nigeria to advance the cause of justice, democracy, rule of law, freedom and respect for human dignity through efforts to demolish structures of oppression and injustice.

    Said he: “We need to be admonished to remember that God’s design is a world that is free of hatred, recrimination and injustice. If we are God’s people, we owe Him and ourselves a duty to honour His injunctions, chief among which is the sanctity of life, respect for others and tolerance.

    “The acute overlay of acrimony, tension and now sectarian violence calls for us to invoke the will and mercy of God on our country.”

  • Christmas with celebrities

    In just two days, it will be Christmas. A season celebrated all over the world. Almost everyone is painting the town in Christmas colours. Apart from splashing colours, sending gifts, showering money on friends and relatives, many are travelling.
    It is indeed a time to wine and dine; a time to love and be loved. Yetunde Oladeinde, Adetutu Audu and Segun Akanbi went to town to find out how celebrities are going to celebrate the season.

    Wunmi Aboderin

    My plans concerning this Christmas is to celebrate it indoors with my family. I have promised not to go out this time around. Instead I am going to make everything fun with my family. In addition to this, I am also planning to go to the orphanage to celebrate with them. I have not decided which one I would be visiting but I have a couple of them on my mind.

    Oby Edozien

    Christmas is a wonderful season, a time to show love to others. I am going to spend my Christmas with my husband and my family. I have made a lot of cool arrangements and I am going to make it a lot of fun, filled with unique memories.

    Okunore twins

    First we will attend a morning service in the church. After this we will be spending Christmas with friends and family.

    Lara George, Musician

    Personally, I would say that it is a season of love and a time to reach out to other people. Christmas time is going to be fun with my family. For me, it is going to be a peaceful and quiet time too because I just had a baby girl. So you can see that unlike other Christmas, I can’t afford to stress myself at all.

    Caleb Olumese, Gov’nor Coliseum

    Compliments of the season to all our friends and Nigerians. Presently, I am not in Lagos but I will be coming back to make sure that I spend the yuletide with my family.

    Oluwatoyin Alausa

    It is a season packed with a lot of activities. I have a couple of events that I will be attending but my family comes first in all of these arrangements. I use this opportunity to say happy Christmas to all my fans out there.

    Gloria Ogwu, Nollywood Costumier

    Well, Christmas is in the air already. I will spend it with the one and only man in my life, Kola.

    Azeezat Allen,

    musician

    Waoh! That is interesting. Well, I will be spending it at work, I have a lot to do in my studio and it is going to take a lot of time. I have a lot of planning and activities and I have drawn up my schedule already. I am working on some of my tracks and I want my fans to get the best when it finally comes out.