....So much has been said about the December 12 confrontation between the Nigerian Army and members of the Islamic Movement in Nigeria led by Sheik Ibraheem El-Zakzaky, the leader of the Shia in Nigeria. I guess the point has been well-made that there are faults on both sides.
There seems to be a consensus, however, that the followers of Ali, better known as Shiites or the Shia, seem to enjoy confrontations with the state and seem determined to disregard dominant authority- Islamic and secular.
By the same token, the Nigerian security establishment has since the 1980s showed an equal determination to put el Zakzaky in his place. But in no way does this justify the extra-judicial killing of members of the Islamic Movement, or the use of the word, “Prisoners of War” (POW) to describe its detained members. The Nigerian Government since the 80s has set up a series of panels of inquiry and produced tomes on the subject of forging peaceful relations between the state and religion, and yet religion remains a key threat to amalgamation and the sanctity of the Nigerian state.
What we are dealing with is something deeper- it is the outflow of a deep schism within the Islamic faith on the questions of authenticity and legitimacy, in terms of what constitutes rules, doctrines, interpretations and values. This old battle for doctrinal supremacy is what has been responsible for the divisions within the faith since the First Fitna. It is the drama being played out in the Middle East. It is the story and politics of ISIS and ISIL. This is why it will be wrong to describe the Islamic Movement in Nigeria’s constant conflict with the Nigerian state as a confrontation between Nigerian Muslims and the state, to the extent that ISIS or ISIL does not speak for all Muslims just as the ISMIN does not speak for all Nigerian Muslims.
There are many Muslims in the North and across Nigeria who do not agree with El Zakzaky’s preaching and his mode of organization. Sectarian differences between Shiites and the Sunnis, who lay claim to a more authentic version of Islam, are often transported onto the platform of the open society. A Nigerian Sunni in uniform who is wielding a gun, confronted by a Shiite insisting on lack of regard for the state, will willingly open fire on that promoter of a branch of the religion, which he considers unacceptable. The state gets blamed, but the battle is in the hearts of the men on both sides: an ideological as well as indoctrination battle. This connection between the hearts of men, their beliefs, and the circumstances of power relations in which they find themselves significantly defines the outcomes in cases such as this. It explains the loud silences from critical quarters, including government.
For example, in a famous 2014 letter from Sheik Ahmad Gumi, a Nigerian Sunni Islamic leader, the former accused El-Zakzaky of bringing “a lot of bad innovations among Nigerian Muslims that rather than unite the Muslims are further entrenching the divide without any added value to the worldly development nor the hereafter...” These innovations include the blocking of roads, disregard for state authority and the rights of other Nigerians, incitement, resort to abuse and the deployment of hate speech. Gumi complained about “the delinquency of your followers and the disturbance of public peace.” He identified the root of the crisis when he said: “How can you be the good servants of Allah when you call other human beings beside him?” He refers to this as “path to perdition.”
The response by El Zakzaky signed by one Ibrahim Usman simply accused Dr. Gumi of hatred and of ordering the shooting of Shias by the Nigerian government. This argument between a Sunni Sheik and a Shia Sheik, would still have been just as emotional and ideological if it had been between either of them and a leader of the Sufi brotherhood: the Tijaniya, the Quadiriyya or the Ahmaddiya. This battle is fought at many levels within the Nigerian space, oftentimes with state apparatus as cover. The saving grace is that no one has said that the man who ordered the shooting or those who pulled the trigger against the Shiites in Zaria on December 12, are Christians.
The bigger responsibility of the state may well lie in preventing the spread of the radicalism that turns the likes of Sheik El-Zakzaky into such powerful figures that they command millions of radical men and women who do not recognize the state or are prepared to use every possible means to affirm the supremacy of their doctrine. El-Zakzaky practically grew into an institution before the very eyes of the Nigerian state. While freedom of religion and worship is in order, there must be stronger structures for promoting inter and intra-religious understanding. The existing platforms for such dialogue on peaceful co-existence are weak and almost ineffectual, and the political elite, seeking power, often compromises itself by promoting those whose doctrines pose a threat to peace and unity.
El-Zakzaky’s ding-dong battle with the Nigerian state, for example, has been on since the 80s. He has spent a total of nine years in nine prisons across the country. The polyglottal First Class Graduate of Economics from Ahmadu Bello University has in 35 years built a movement that started with just a few hundreds of youths, looking for answers to matters of faith, into a nationwide network that boasts of two million members or more. That is more than the population of many countries. “If we want a million people out on the streets on any issue, we can do that”, he once told the BBC.
This pro-Palestinian, anti-Israel, pro-Iran, pro-Iraq fiercely ideological religious leader emerged as the commander of an army of youths and adults who have bought into a branch of Islamic preaching that considers itself superior even within the faith. Each time in the past that el-Zakzaky was taken to court for the excesses of his members, he always came out of it even far more defiant than he had been. After a two-year trial in 1998, he not only walked free, the state acted as if it had indeed been defeated. El-Zakzaky became more powerful thereafter as the population of his followers grew.
He is not the first of his type. Before him, there was Mohammed Marwa, popularly known as Maitatsine whose confrontations with the Nigerian state resulted in bloodbath, of a scale similar to that of present-day Boko Haram. Maitatsine also questioned the authority of the state and caused divisions among Nigerian Muslims with his controversial interpretations of the Quoran. He rejected the Hadith and the Sunnah, and expressed lack of belief in Prophet Mohammed (SAW). He was opposed to Western modernization and the use of cars, wristwatches and bicycles. His young followers attacked other religious leaders and engaged the police in many battles. Between 1980 and 2004, more than 10, 000 lives were lost to Maitatsine riots, which spread across the North. Marwa himself was killed in 1980, but the radical Islamic Movement which he led known as Yan Tantsine, outlived him and survived for more than 20 years later under the leadership of Musa Makaniki, who succeeded him.
Ustaz Muhammad Yusuf is another re-incarnation of the radical wing of Islam: an offshoot of the Maitatsine. He is remembered as the leader and founder of Boko Haram, the Islamic sect whose members claim they are committed to the Propagation of the Prophet’s Teachings and Jihad. (Jama’atu Ahlis Sunna Lida’awati wal Jihad). Boko Haram was founded in 2002 and it took on the task of confronting government and the progressive world. In 2009, the police killed Yusuf; their excuse was that he was trying to escape from custody but Nigeria has not known peace since then. What began as an objection to Western education and Darwinism has turned into a protracted full-scale war against Nigeria, an attempt to carve an Islamic state out of the country and the conversion of parts of Nigeria into extensions of the sphere of global terror. Today, Nigeria is regarded as a leading theatre of terror, with more than 10, 000 lives lost in the last six months alone.
Religious conflict, sectarianism and the growth of radical religious movements and their problematic cult leaders have always posed a threat to Nigeria’s sovereignty and the capacity of the Nigerian state to maintain peace and security. The principal victims are ordinary Nigerians who get cut in the crossfire and who suffer the consequences of living in a state of fear. What makes it more frightening is the internationalization of the crisis. In the present case, the Shia Government of Iran has declared open support for El-Zakzaky. The Iranian Military also reportedly posted a statement referring to the Nigerian Government as a “puppet regime.” There was a street protest in Tehran on Friday, Dec. 18.
As if to balance these responses, the Government of Saudi Arabia has intervened in support of the Nigerian Government. This Middle Eastern extension of the matter should alert the Federal Government to the need to take every step to ensure that the ideological battles being fought in that region do not open new flanks on our shores as a proxy platform. We cannot afford a sectarian war, in addition to Boko Haram. In the meantime, the Federal Government must object very strongly to the insolence of the Iranian military. We don’t have a puppet regime in Nigeria. We have a duly elected government.
Radical religious leaders often seek martyrdom. The death of Muhammed Marwa and Muhammed Yusuf turned them into martyrs, and worsened the Nigerian condition. Wherever El-Zakzaky is being held, the Federal Government must ensure that nothing happens to him. A man who boasts of millions of followers across the country could become the catalyst for something worse than Boko Haram. He and many of his followers, like the Boko Haram leader, Yusuf, are university graduates. It is a pity that our education system has become a breeding ground for cultists, fanatics and anti-state elements. Whatever is responsible for this: social or economic needs to be addressed.
It should also be noted that radical religious movements from the Izala to the Maitatsine, to El-Zakzaky’s Islamic Movement to Boko Haram draw their membership from the ranks of young Nigerians, male and female, who find heroes and answers in wrong places and circumstances and who become victims of the Lucifer effect- that condition whereby people who should be or are otherwise good become evil. Young Nigerians need to be rescued and turned into good citizens in an open and happy society. Education? Economic empowerment?, Re-orientation? Family values? Distancing religion from politics? Yes… It won’t happen overnight, but we must begin to realize that our response so far is behind the curve in dealing with challenges of impunity and ideological extremism.
By
Reuben Abati
Hmmm! Too long
ReplyDeleteOlodo why can't you read? Is it longer than 50 Shades of Grey that you have?
DeleteOlodo why can't you read? Is it longer than 50 Shades of Grey that you have?
DeleteLearn to read, this has become the problem of the youth of now adays we don't take time to read, the article is very informative
DeleteFor the first time this man is writing without bias and politics.
DeleteYou've just said it all...Religious radicalism is a serious threat to the development of this country. I don't even want to believe this will be allowed to escalate at this crucial economic mess up.
Are both parties were faulty as you've rightly said and all the government needed to do now is to use diplomatic approach to solve the issue.
We are tired of war....boko boys are still there with their deadly idea, Biafrans are still roar for cede, unemployment, insecurity, fuel scarcity, corrupt officials in courts, naira at its lowest value and so many.
These people should fear God.
It's not the first time he has written without bias rather it's the first time you are reading without bias.
DeleteSpot on! @ anon 13:54
DeleteReuben Abati? Where have you been sir? Has your name been written on Buubu list? Yes I say so, all ministers/officers during GEJ have been tagged #Gate#.
ReplyDeleteAbati and his long epistle again?
ReplyDeletePunchline: the guy is a First class graduate.
ReplyDeleteOhh menh, not today again!
ReplyDeleteAnythg from these wailing wailers of pple (Etc and Abati) to the left!
Can't even bother myself reading this
Olodo. If na to open mouth like basin for money, you will rush and open. My friend read and get informed. This is an unbiased report.
DeleteU never had sense, u don't still have sense and u will never have sense. Retard!
DeleteWailing wailers... just like the way you wailed, screeched and croaked with your hello cover and made hell freeze over.
DeleteAnon 14:22
DeleteAbeg don't kill me with laugh
My dear Eeash learn to read it will help you. What Abati did here is called exposition on some of your country's fundamental issues. Yes our your needs reorientation or re-education starting from home, to schools and to religious palaces. God will so help us in this country, And love Abati is growing by the day.
DeletePunchline: the guy is a First class graduate.
ReplyDeleteEnough of this abeg.
ReplyDeletetoo long an epistle , i'm watching Dance with Peter on YouTube biko.
ReplyDeleteI watched the video of the Nigerian army begging those guys in Hausa. They insisted that the the road.They had swords and long sticks with them and they were shouting and screaming Allah wakuba. They were telling the military that if they want to kill them that they should go ahead that they will not leave the road. Now they are claiming that they were having a procession.
ReplyDeleteMy only problem with the military is just the fact that they would av avoided the trouble and take another route.
Epistle this sunday morning?
ReplyDeleteNo way!
Abati did you forget your pen and paper when you where working with good luck?
ReplyDeleteBad bad writing! Distorted and disjointed!!! Whoever wrote this long disjointed epistle should hire an English tutor!
ReplyDeleteLucinda
Just negodu this Kenyan she-goat.
DeleteIn the whole of Kenya with her sex-starved she-goats and weed-puffing he-goats, no one writes as well as Reuben Abati.
Respect yourself o
Get back into the rat. Hole from which you. Crawled out. Fried brain.
DeleteLucinda, you've just proven that you'd never recognize good English even if it stared u right in the face .
DeleteNairobi ode
Madam Lucinda you just said it long epistle which means you did not read it at all, it was too much for your little brain. I understand, this type of write up is not for people like you
DeleteJust chill Stella will soon post boyfriend and girlfriend gist, I know you will understand that. Olodo repete
Let's all go our seperate ways pls...Nigeria is fast becoming an Islamic state..cant deal abeg, stella I'm back and u must enjoy me
ReplyDeleteI was set to scroll past the article and shade the hell out of Rueben Abati but the first paragraph caught and immobilised me.
ReplyDeleteVery well written, it encapsulates the issues Nigeria faces in relation to the battle between State/Politics and Religion. It is indeed a shame that Nigerian universities produce cultists or fanatics, almost as if the options are get fucked or be fucked. Sad state of affairs indeed.
What ia the solution? Is there are lasting solution? Or should we continue to exist in a society where I watch from my high castle and jet out of the country when the kitchen begins to get hot? Have I become soft? Should the problems the larger number of people face not affect me? Am I over thinking it?
Dammit I'm still drunk from the excesses of last night! Going off to sleep off this hangover will come back to read other people's views.
*clapping* wow you are smart afterall
DeleteSame here. Wanted to scroll down too.
DeleteCelebrity girlfriend, I like you already. Nice one
@ Anon: scarily so!
Delete@ LaFRESH: thanks sugar.
Haba,this is too long.Interesting anyway.I was initially against the killing till I watched the video.Those shiites really went too far.Upon all the pleadings by the soldiers,they refused to bulge.i don't think they left the military much choice.Why would they hold the military to ransom like that?
ReplyDeleteI also saw the video clip too and I was like for real??!! Confronting Nigerian soldiers with primitive tools and so much stubbbornes and barbarism. The soldiers begged them for long to back off and leave the road but they were adamant and kept shouting Allahu Akbar!!!
DeleteOne of Nigeria's biggest problems, is chronic ignorance and religious fundamentalism.
GOD BLESS NIGERIA
Reuben, fantastic insightful write up the content of which l am hoping will be taken very seriously by all the relevant authorities. Religious sectarian violence is starting to pervade our spaces and we must learn from the growth patterns of the groups before this one.but the balancing of protecting our sovereignty,the rights of other citezens to live peacefully in their own country and the constitutional duty of government to provide security to its citezens can not be sacrificed at the alter of people who will do everything to distablise a country already desperately grasping with insecurity as a result of radicalist fundamentalism.May God help us
ReplyDeleteReligion has done more harm than good in this country nigeria and yet this country is still back ward i think the problem in nigeria now is not actually religion but our leaders. Since nigeria got her independent, the same set of people are still ruling this country, rotating it as if its their birth right. The youths are angry and already tired of the whole thing. And the funny thing is that u wont hear that any of them is dead or fall sick not wishing them death thou, but the youths keeps dieing everyday from one illness to the other. nigerian youths should wisen up because what ww re doing in this country is just suffering and smiling and that why they keep looting and looting because they know we cant do anything. Smhow
ReplyDeleteEnd time stories! Too long.
ReplyDeleteI get so upset when people say "too long a read"refuse to read ,wallow in their ignorance,refuse to try to understand the issues in the hope that they may just give themselves a chance to create some impact and justify their use of oxygen........but no! They think ignorance is cool , it's funky,No!!! It's not, it's ignorance.Mtcheeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeew.
ReplyDeleteWhat is this one sayin bikonu?
DeleteTotally agree with u as its becoming a mantra for people to come here and say too long can't deal. That's why the youth can not differentiate their left from right.
DeleteHonestly...I'm scared for Nigeria...with Iran on one side, Saudi on another meanwhile USA is feign 'help'...Pls Mr. President, look into all these with wisdom so as not to plunge this beautiful nation into unending Chaos and war.
DeleteGod bless my Nigeria
All this army eye deh shook this period because they don't know who is who, any barga deh take down.
ReplyDeleteProbably the best piece I have read of Abati.
ReplyDeletePlease let us go our separate ways,we are not Muslims and can never be forced into the prison of Islam. Fight from now till tomorrow only the infidels will perish amen.
ReplyDeleteAbati, too intelligent a man!
ReplyDeleteI've always heard of religious divisions in Islam but I never took it seriously until the recent events. Shittes, Sunnis, and the South western muslims called Ahmaddiyya... really interesting.
Meanwhile, I read Lagos State website has been hacked by Shittes and Iran changed their facebook profile picture in solidarity with the Shittes, saying they will pay Nigeria a visit.
Buhari should understand that two wrongs does not make a right. This govt may not survive another radical group, hence I think he should have a personal talk with Zakzaky, compensate him by way of cash and reach an understanding with him to call his followers to order. The question is, will Buhari be humble enough to do that?
Buhari and humble don't flow well in the same sentence. Buhari is totally condescending towards Nigerians as a whole but the alarming part is that his intelligence is quite sub ordinary for him to grasp what is going on in his country. The west once said Nigeria will divide in 2015, they sure know what they did by foisting Buhari the recalcitrant on us! Nigeria is disintegrating and crumbling right before him yet you don't hear anything from him? Nigeria is doomed...
DeleteOnPoint
The army were lenient IMO, just clear any potential terrorist out abeg! Muslims are too sensitive,too violent? Duuuh!
ReplyDeleteMuslims all over the world a rethink. They need to ask themselves if this image is good for a true follower of God. My people are right calling them "IMOLE"
ReplyDeleteWe need to understand the technicalities and multiple sectarianism in Islam, while they are fighting for power and world domination while the Christians are making money.
ReplyDeleteToo many religion crisis in Nigeria,they should just divide Nigeria already.
ReplyDeleteSo deep
ReplyDeleteThank you Abati(u too knw book), bt d truth is that sunni and shia can never coexist anywhere without constant altercations.After d death of Mohammed, Ali succeeded him as d leader as against d wishes of other members who blived he succeeded Mohammed bcos he was an inlaw to d prophet. Ali was murdered after 5yrs of his reign nd his previous contender Abubakar took-over d leadership. Hussein(Ali's son and grandson of mohammed) was furious bcos his father was murdered, he rebelled against the leadership of Abubakar, he decided to form another group ( shiite), nd he bcame d leader of dis new sect. After some years of preaching and constant battles with Abukakar's led group(sunni), he was later killed in a battle in baghdad, nd as result of dat both sects have nt been good in terms. Though the whole situation has been worsened bcos of d Europeans(British nd French), they divided d middle east in other to protect their own interests as against d wishes of d inhabitants after d fall of d Ottoman empire, with d French taking over Syria and Lebanon and British taking over Palestine and Tran-Jordan.
ReplyDeleteAnon u dnt knw what u'r saying atall,evn if u'r not a muslim,pls read history n it'l save u frm making a fool of urself.Ali was d last Khalifa out of d four caliphs after d prophet(SAW)
Delete@Jus. Sometimes as a human being u jst hav to mind d choice of words u use. I don't want to join issues wit u, nd u don't expect me to write everytin in detail. When Umar a prominent follower who blived in hierarchy nominated Abubakar as d prophet's successor(first caliph), some agreed while others disputed bcos they blived a successor ought to be nominated in a divine way, nd Ali( a cousin and son in-law to d prophet) had been divinely nominated(as d group claimed) after he was blessed by d prophet at Ghadir Khumm ought to be d successor. It created lots of controversies and tantrums, which even led to Ali's death... Pls I don't have to write a religious book here, tanx.
ReplyDelete