Tag: sacrifice

  • Ambode preaches sacrifice, tolerance

    As Christians in Nigeria join their counterparts across the world to celebrate Easter, Lagos State Governor, Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode, has called on Nigerians to imbibe the spirit of tolerance, peaceful co-existence and sacrifice for one another, which Jesus Christ demonstrated throughout his period on earth.

    The governor, in his Easter message, signed by his Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Habib Aruna, said the celebration of the resurrection of Christ which the season represents, should be a constant reminder for everyone to extend the virtues of selflessness, love, sacrifice and tolerance.

    Ambode also commended Lagosians for the sustained peaceful co-existence that the State has experienced since the commencement of his administration despite being home to multi ethnic, cultural and religious diversities.

  • Easter: Ambode preaches tolerance, sacrifice

    Governor Akinwunmi Ambode of Lagos State has called on Nigerians to imbibe the spirit of tolerance, peaceful co-existence and sacrifice for one another, stating that development and growth can only occur in the nation when all tribes and tongue unite and speak with one voice. He said this in his Easter message made available to reporters yesterday.

    The governor said such fundamental values would go a long way in promoting and strengthening the foundation of love, peace and harmony in the country, adding that the season should serve as a reminder to the selflessness, love, sacrifice and tolerance of Jesus Christ throughout His earthly sojourn, his death and his resurrection.

    He said there was no better time for the country to unite together and eschew bitterness along ethnic and religious lines, as no challenge is insurmountable where unity of purpose thrives. “We must therefore see this period as a time that presents us the viable opportunity to think about how we can help to steer our nation back on the road to peace, stability and prosperity, by working in the spirit of togetherness,” the governor said.

    Governor Ambode commended Lagosians for their continued demonstration and promotion of mutual understanding and peaceful co-existence in spite of existing ethnic, cultural and religious diversities. “No doubt, Nigeria will surely make faster progress towards the achievement of the peaceful, united, strong, progressive and prosperous country that we all desire if, as a nation, we eschew all divisive, parochial, ethnic and religious sentiments and rivalries, and begin to live more harmoniously with one another.”

    While wishing all Lagosians a happy Easter celebration, Governor Ambode enjoined them to continue to support his administration to deliver more developmental projects that would make life more comfortable for them. He stated that the cooperation of residents for government programmes and policies was responsible for the massive development across the state in the last 34 months.

     

  • Imbibe spirit of tolerance, sacrifice exhibited by Christ, say APC, SDP

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Social Democratic Party (SDP) have asked Christians in the country to imbibe the spirit of tolerance and sacrifice as exhibited by Jesus Christ as a way of building a peaceful nation.

    In separate Easter messages to Christians, both parties said Nigerians should set aside religious affiliation and work towards building a peaceful and united nation in order to achieve the collective dream of the people.

    The National Publicity Secretary of APC, Mallam Bolaji Abdullahi, asked Christians to use the period to pray for the safe return of the school children abducted by Boko Haram and who have remained in their custody.

    He said, “As we gather around family, friends and loved ones for the festivities, we also urge Nigerians to remember in our thoughts and prayers the abducted school children who remain in the captivity of terrorists. We assure of the federal government’s solid commitment to ensure their safe release and bring lasting peace to the country’s Northeast.”

    Also, the SDP said Nigerians should use the period to reflect more on the things that bind us together as brothers and sisters, not those that divide us.

    While wishing Christians joyful and rewarding season, National Secretary of the party, Alhaji Shehu Musa Gabam congratulated Christians for completing the Lenten period that preceded the Easter festivity, and urged them to ruminate on the life and times of Jesus Christ.

  • Governors preach sacrifice, love, unity, tolerance, others

    Governors preach sacrifice, love, unity, tolerance, others

    Governors have urged Muslims to imbibe the values of sacrifice, love and keep  fostering unity as they join their counterparts globally to celebrate this year’s Eid-el-Kabir festival.

    Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode, in his message signed by his Chief Press Secretary, Habib Aruna, said the period of the celebration was a clarion call for Nigerians to imbibe the lessons of the season such as selfless service to God and humanity, sacrifice and sincere commitment to righteous conducts in their private and public life.

    He explained that the significance of the season should be beyond the festivities, adding that as Muslims prepare to offer animal sacrifice in the prescribed days of the festival, the real essence was not in the meat or the blood of the animal but to encourage piety, self-discipline and sacrifice.

    Ambode, therefore, called on all Nigerians to exhibit these values for the good of the country and shun any act capable of heating up the polity or causing distrust among various ethnic groups in the country.

     

    Akeredolu, Ahmed, Ugwuanyi greet Muslims

    Ondo State Governor Oluwarotimi Akeredolu (SAN) yesterday felicitated with Muslims over this year’s Sallah celebration.

    Akeredolu advised them that even as they wine and dine during this period, they should not forget to extend their hands of love to the downtrodden in the society.

    The governor asked the Muslim community to also use the celebration to pray for the prosperity of the Sunshine State and the country.

    Kwara State Governor Dr. Abdulfatah Ahmed has congratulated Muslims on the celebration, urging them to be peaceful, generous, law-abiding and prayerful.

    In a statement signed by his Chief Press Secretary, Abdulwahab Oba, Ahmed said the opportunity by Allah “to enable us witness yet another celebration should be used to pray for peace and unity in the country”.

    Ahmed, who urged Muslims to pray for safe return of pilgrims from the holy land, said Nigerians should be ambassadors of a united and prosperous Nigeria rather than engaging in hate and inciting speeches or fanning embers of disunity.

    Enugu State Governor Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi felicitated with Muslims on the celebration, urging them to use the period to continue to promote and abide by the core values of Islam for the sustenance of peace, progress and unity.

    Ugwuanyi, in a message, noted that there is every reason for the country to celebrate the goodness of God, pointing out that the continuous engagement of both Christians and Muslims in prayers for the sustainability of the peace, unity and development of the country, has ultimately proved that with God all things are possible.

    Rivers State Governor Nyesom Ezenwo Wike has felicitated with Muslims on the celebration.

    In a yesterday, Wike urged Muslims to pray for the unity and peace of the nation as they celebrate.

    The governor called on the Muslim faithful to use the celebration  to re-dedicate themselves  to the ideals of peace, security  and  friendship.

     

    Ajimobi cautions against hate speeches

    Oyo State Governor Abiola Ajimobi admonished Nigerians to shun acts capable of disrupting the unity, togetherness and peaceful co-existence of the country.

    In his message to Islamic faithful, he said it was only in an atmosphere of peace and unity that the country could achieve the desired greatness.

    Ajimobi, who spoke through his Special Adviser on Communication and Strategy, Mr. Yomi layinka, condemned what he called hate speeches and the ember of discord being stoked by ethnic agitators in some parts of the country.

     

    Time to fix Nigeria, says Bello

    Niger State Governor Abubakar Sani Bello said the All Progressives Congress (APC)-led administration is working hard towards fixing the nation after years of decay and mismanagement.

    Bello urged Nigerians not to allow the zeal and commitment of the present administration to slip away.

    In a message signed by his Senior Special Assistant, Media and Publicity, Mr. Jide Orintunsin, the governor stated that the administration will not allow the present opportunities to slip off, adding that all is being put in place towards ensuring that the future generations do not meet a nation of decay and mismanagement.

     

    Umahi seeks unity

    The Chairman of the South East Governors Forum and Ebonyi State Governor David Umahi felicitated with Muslim faithful. He urged them to identify unity and religious tolerance as panacea to achieving peace and growth.

    Umahi, in a statement signed by his Chief Press Secretary, Emmanuel Uzor, described unity and religious tolerance as sine qua non to achieving cohesion and peace in any country.

    He called on Muslim faithful to preach peace as they celebrate.

     

    Fayose urges sacrifice

     Ekiti State Governor Ayo Fayose yesterday advised Nigerians to be ready to make the necessary sacrifices for the country’s progress.

    In his message through his Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Idowu Adelusi, the governor urged the people to imbibe the spirit of love, obedience, sacrifices and sharing that the festival teaches.

    “We must appreciate God for sparing our lives and giving us good health to be part of the celebration of this year’s festival. As we celebrate, we must not forget the lessons we need to learn from the event.

     

    Amosun Ogun State Governor Ibikunle Amosun advised Muslim faithful to demonstrate the virtue of selfless sacrifice as they celebrate this year’s  Eid-el-Kabir festival.

    Amosun urged Muslims to live a life that mirror selflessness, love and peace.

    In a statement by the Commissioner for Information, Otunba Dayo Adeneye, the governor said Muslim brothers and sisters should reflect on the essence of the festival as they celebrate it.

     

    Lalong: pray for Buhari, economy

    Plateau State Governor Simon Bako Lalong urged Muslim faithful to use the Sallah period for continuous prayers for improve health for President Muhammadu Buhari as well as for the faster recovery of the nation’s economy from recession.

    A message signed by his Director of Press Emmanuel Nanle said: “The governor also expressed delight that with the deepening of the gains of democracy and the consolidation of peace and security by the APC led government, the nation was surely on the threshold of progress.

    “He noted that, as people of faith, Moslem faithful should continue to demonstrate the virtue of love, good neighbourliness and peaceful co-existence always.”

  • Season of sacrifice

    •Nigerians should seize the spirit of Sallah to reembrace national sacrifice and goodwill to all

    The Muslim season of Eid-el-Kabir is quite a spectacle in many parts of the country. An especial subject of adoration are the rams, live or slaughtered, that come with the season. Then, there are the great celebratory durbar in the North.

    The rams offer excellent fare for festival jollifications, as Muslim families and even friends of other faiths, go merry-ing and party-ing, in an atmosphere suffused with warmth and universal brotherhood, under the rubrics of one humanity powered by love.

    Pre-festival, youths, especially in Lagos and surrounding areas, have converted the rams to some frenetic sports, where an excited and hollering audience gather to see the rams matched in a fighting challenge, with the winner ram, in some cases, carting off a trophy! Such revelry — even if some animal rights campaigners have said such sports is sheer cruelty to those poor, soon to be slaughtered, animals!

    Still, the ram is an unfailing symbol of Prophet Ibrahim’s unflinching faith and total submission to the will of Allah, the Supreme Deity.

    Going by the Quran, the Muslim Holy Book, Ibrahim got divine instruction to sacrifice, to Allah, his only son. Painful as that might have been, Ibrahim was at the point of doing so, when a ram came from virtual nowhere, and Allah told him to slaughter the ram in lieu of his son. That was an extreme manifestation of ardent faith and total submission to God’s will; and also God’s mercy to man. Can you imagine a festival where adherents slaughter one of their offspring?

    These are the ethos Nigerians should imbibe, all through this joyous period — deep faith in country, belief in selves even if the present situation is tough, belief in fellow compatriots, and mutual love, as one family under God, even if adherents to different faiths.

    For too long now, the country has been a hot bed of hate, threats and scorn, with Nigerians all but arrayed along hate camps. Some say, it is because of the biting economic situations. Others insist there is too much injustice in the land for hate not to sprout.

    Yet love, like the placid water which swallows the hottest of roaring flames, trumps all hate, no matter how deep. Nigerians, across differing faiths, while rejoicing with Muslims, should seize the occasion of the Sallah to rededicate themselves to deep faith in their country and in its future, as a land of love, equal opportunities and fairness.

    But much as these traits are desirable, they don’t happen by accident. We all have to work towards them.

    That starts with the government. While the government tells people to adhere to these virtues, crucial for nation-building, it should be the first to show the way. Therefore, the government should not only be fair and just to all, it must be seen to be so.

    Nigeria, a country of 140 million people, spread across different ethnic groups, religious faiths and cultural orientations, is a vast country. Since these people are no zombies, there are bound to be differences and some acceptable passion, used to express them. That should be taken as healthy dissent, not to be mistaken for rebellion to be crushed. It is this all-inclusive temper that the government must embrace to give everyone a sense of belonging.

    In return, the people themselves must realise that a quarrel among kith-and-kin, no matter how outwardly severe, cannot be more than skin-deep. Being Nigerian should, after all, count for something. So, as much as people should express their differences as frankly as they possibly can, they should be wary of crossing the line into uncouthness, barbarity or even savagery.

    As Nigerian Muslims troop to the Eid grounds today, they should remember our country in prayers. But even as they pray and their Christian compatriots rejoice with them, all must use the spirit of the Eid-el-Kabir to rededicate themselves to the spirit of sacrifice today, so that tomorrow may be better.

    We wish our Muslim compatriots a happy and fun-filled Sallah celebrations. Barka da Sallah!

  • Osinbajo to Nigerians:Let’s stop blame game, make sacrifice

    Osinbajo to Nigerians:Let’s stop blame game, make sacrifice

    Acting President Yemi Osinbajo on Sunday charged Nigerians to be ready to sacrifice for Nigeria towards achieving greatness.

     

    Osinbajo specifically urged them to stop the present blame game.

    The Acting President spoke at the Interdenominational church service at the National Christian Centre, Abuja as part of activities marking the 2017 Democracy Day.
    The theme of the service was: ‘The Dry Bones Shall Live Again’ Ezekiel 37:11.
    Recalling the story of the Good Samaritan in Luke 10:30-37, the Osinbajo said Nigerians must not be like the politician and cleric in the story that looked the other way when they saw the man that was attacked by thieves.
    He urged them to emulate the Good Samaritan, a nobody that took compassion on him, poured oil on his wounds, bandage him and took him to the hospital.
    He said “When we look on our country it is not the state that fell that is the story but the story is how the people reacted when you see the nation that needs to be helped.
    “While the politician and cleric look the other way when they saw the man that was half dead, the Good Samaritan had compassion on him, bandage him and took him to the hospital.
    “Who truly loves the nation, is it the priest that said a prayer walked past, or the politician that looked and walked past or the Samaritan that took the wounded to the hospital, paid some money and said treat him, on my return I will upset the bill.
    “The nation requires those that can make the sacrifices to make it great, they are those whom Jesus spoke about, people that may not be of note but prepared to make the nation great again. Some are doctors, teachers, young graduates.
    “There is sacrifice of integrity against corruption, when you speak against corruption it fights back so you must be ready to make sacrifice no matter how highly placed or small you are. Teachers who are prepared to teach, doctors who are prepared to provide health services no matter what.
    “Make the sacrifices required to make our nation great whether you are a leader or a follower,”he stated
    Before concluding his speech, the Acting President prayed to God to speedily heal President Muhammadu Buhari and bring him back safely.
    He also prayed for grace on those willing to make sacrifices to make the nation great again.

  • Leadership is about sacrifice, service  -Osinbajo

    Leadership is about sacrifice, service -Osinbajo

    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo has enjoined Nigerians who find themselves in positions of authorities to remember leadership is all about sacrifices and selfless service to humanity and God.
    He urged them to imbibe the spirits of love, unity and forgiveness in the interest of national peace and development.
    Nations built on such values, he said, are bound to prosper beyond expectations.
    Osinbajo spoke at the 50th anniversary of St. Augustine Major Seminary, Katako, Jos yesterday.
    He enjoined Nigerians to avoid repaying evils with evils.
    Plateau State governor, Simon Lalong, said: “For a school that has produced 20 Bishops and scores of Priests, Religious and Laity in the service of the Lord at home and abroad, it is indeed worthy of our attention and support.
    “This Seminary remains a real asset to the universal Church because as a spiritual hub for the training of ministers of the gospel, it is a vehicle through which ministers are thoroughly prepared to holistically address the spiritual and physical wellbeing of Nigerians in the Catholic Church, and by extension all those who through marriages, work, social interaction and other means of association, have a relationship with the Catholic.”

  • Atiku stresses  sacrifice

    Atiku stresses sacrifice

    Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar has called for love and sacrifice among Nigerians as exemplified by Christ at Easter.
    In his Easter message by his Media Office, the APC chieftain urged Nigerians to consider the sacrifice and deprivation of the period preceding Easter as necessary for the current economic difficulties imposed on them.
    The former vice president advised all Nigerians to learn from the pain, joy, love and caring, which characterised the period of Lent and the Easter celebration.
    A national attitude built on selflessness and sacrifice, he assured, would go a long way in laying the foundation of true patriotism and greatness of the nation.
    The Turakin Adamawa urged those in positions of authority to encourage citizens to make sacrifices and show love especially when the country is facing challenges by being transparent publicly and privately.

  • Ambode preaches  love, sacrifice at Easter

    Ambode preaches love, sacrifice at Easter

    As Christians in the country join their counterparts across the world to celebrate Easter, Lagos State Governor, Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode, has called on Nigerians to collectively imbibe the spirit of love, sacrifice and peaceful co-existence, saying that it is only when such virtues exist that the nation can make meaningful progress.
    Ambode, in his Easter message signed by his Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Habib Aruna, said such fundamental values would go a long way in promoting and strengthening the foundation of love, peace and harmony in the country, adding that the season should serve as a reminder to all of the selflessness, love, sacrifice and tolerance of Jesus Christ throughout His earthly sojourn, his death and his resurrection.
    Noting that this season calls to mind the selflessness, love and tolerance which were the hallmark of Jesus Christ during His earthly life, Governor Ambode said, “It is a season when we should pause and reflect on our individual and collective roles towards promoting and sustaining that foundation of love, peace and harmony in our society.”
    “Therefore, we must see this period as a time that affords us to think about how we can each help to steer our nation back on the road to prosperity, by working in the spirit of togetherness.”
    He said there was no better time for the country to unite together and eschew resentment along ethnic and religious lines, adding that no challenge is insurmountable where there is unity of purpose.

  • On military sacrifice and collateral damage

    Dateline Abuja, June 25, 2014: There was no hint that the phone call I received from Suleiman Bisallah, my very close friend and professional colleague of many years standing, was the last time we would speak, until three hours later when another colleague broke the devastating news that the same Bisallah was one of the victims of the bomb-blast that took place at Emab Plaza in the heart of Abuja.

    Bisallah was the Managing Editor of the New Telegraph newspaper and had gone to Emab Plaza to pick his phone that he had earlier taken there for repairs. He told me on phone that he was rushing to the plaza and that he was going to meet me at home, as he often did, later in the evening. Barely 30 minutes after we spoke, Bisallah met his untimely death, in the most devastating of ways. His sad demise has been counted as a big achievement by Boko Haram.

    This was the death that transformed me from an editor that was just reporting insurgency, from the comfort of my office, with little understanding of its impact, to one who knows what the Boko Haram war and its devastating effect really means. It automatically changed the way I report the insurgency.

    Two years earlier, on a sponsored trip to Turkey, alongside nine title editors of the then leading newspapers in the country, the President of that country’s Journalists and Writers Foundation (the equivalent of the Nigerian Guild of Editors), had told us that even though the leading newspapers in that country belonged to the opposition, the editors have made themselves a firm promise to help the government by stopping  any prominent publication of the dastardly activities of the PKK terrorist group. That decision had gone a long way in alienating the terrorists, and they are only regrouping now that the Turkish government has unjustly seized the same newspapers that were helping it to win the war against terror.

    It was after the Emab Plaza bombing I realised that by helping our armed forces and prominently projecting their victories and denying the enemy the same luxury, we are in reality not helping just the government of the day, but basically ourselves. Terrorists in all parts of the globe thrive in publicity, and seeing their acts of destruction prominently in the press goes a long way to encourage them to do more. Sadly, the same Boko Haram insurgents that we were inadvertently helping did not spare us. They bombed the offices of THISDAY in Abuja and some other newspapers in Kaduna and killed scores of our colleagues. Boko Haram leaders threatened to wipe all journalists out of existence until they realise that will ultimately deny them the cheap publicity they were getting. More than ever before, I saw the need to help our soldiers whose call of duty demands that they leave behind members of their beloved families and stake their lives to ensure you and I live in peace.

    While we complain bitterly each time NEPA switches off electricity supply to our homes or offices, perhaps only because we were watching a television drama or some news, those soldiers are facing – and even expecting – death every minute or second, as they face the enemy in such dreaded places as the Sambisa Forest that we the perennial critics could not even imagine treading on, not with all the money in the world.

    Four types of individuals or groups are not likely to appreciate the deep sacrifice the Nigerian military is making in quelling the Boko Haram insurgency: they include those who have never lost anyone that is dear to them, to the insurgency, as well as those who have never witnessed first-hand, the scale of damage occasioned by insurgency. Others include those who only saw war on television and therefore don’t know what it means in real life, and those who benefit, in whatever way, from war. This probably informs why some of us mistakenly regard the military as our enemies that we must do everything to bring down, forgetting that without them, we will be forced by agents of darkness to abandon these homes and offices from which we comfortably operate. If in doubt, ask the IDPs.

    All over the world, the most senior war commanders largely only design how to win the war and command their troops to execute the plan. They hardly venture to the warfront. But apart from the unprecedented commitment of the Buhari administration in seeing to the end of the Boko Haram insurgency, one of the key reasons the war has been won is the quality of the people appointed by the government to lead the armed forces.

    For example, Lieutenant General Tukur Yusufu Buratai, the Chief of Army Staff whose troops do most of the dangerous work, has since made a habit of spending lots of time with soldiers in the trenches. The very day he was appointed to his current post in July 2015, Buratai moved out of Abuja to the war front in the North-east, a move that helped change the course of the war and marked the beginning of the end of Boko Haram terrorists group’s insurgency. The troops reasoned that if their Chief of Army Staff, who can choose to remain and operate from his air conditioned office, can leave it all, abandoning his family as they all did, and stake his life to be with them,  they have every reason to do more and win the war.

    In other words, the acts of unprecedented bravery and selflessness by Buratai helped reduce a complex theory into practical steps. Whereas the perennial critics were rushing to their towns and choice capitals of the world to spend their Sallah and Christmas breaks with their beloved families, he chose to spend it in the trenches with the troops, eating the same food and drinking the same water as them. Now every senior army officer has taken a cue from their Chief of Army Staff and are all on their toes in the bid to give their best to Nigeria.

    Those troops that have staked everything to rid Nigeria of a nagging insurgency which had claimed lives of tens of thousands of civilians will be the last persons to deliberately target the same people they have toiled so much to defend and protect. Perhaps the best way to understand the operational error that led to the Nigerian Air Force pilot mistaking an IDP camp for a Boko Haram congregation is a Hausa proverb which roughly translates to something like mistakes are often made in the frenzy of winning a difficult war.

    The Boko Haram terrorists are like the drowning man who will cling to anything to keep afloat. They go for soft-targets in desperation to appear to be in business, just as Al-Qaeda, Taliban and other international terrorist groups that have been defeated by the strongest military in the world still go for similar targets to appear to be relevant. Perhaps it is their way of attracting continuous funding from their sponsors.

    It says a lot about the expertise and professionalism of the Nigerian armed forces that until now, very little or no collateral damage was witnessed, fighting a group of people that have no clear identity; who are also members of the society that look no different from you and I. If the military was bereft of conscience, they could deny responsibility for the error that unfortunately cost tens of innocent people their dear lives. It is reassuring that we now have an armed forces which  believe that much as it strives for the best, it cannot be perfect, just as no human institution has ever been.

    And it comes as a huge additional relief that President Buhari has expressed deep regret with the terrible incident and consoled the families that lost the very people the government spares nothing to protect.

     

    • Gaya is the Vice President of the Nigerian Guild of Editors.