BY: AZUKA ONWUKA
When Nkem Nwankwo published his novel, My Mercedes Is Bigger than Yours, in 1975, he must have thought that in
Nigeria, Mercedes was the height of ostentation. If he were alive today, he
would have noticed with sadness how anachronistic his novel had been rendered,
for the competition is no longer on who owns the biggest Mercedes Benz, but who
owns the biggest private jet and the largest fleet of jets. We are indeed making
progress! We are indeed going places!
What is fuelling Nigerians’ obsession with
flamboyance and ostentation? Why do we love to flaunt wealth to the point of
disgust?
Given the ostentatious lifestyle of Nigerians, it
is difficult to believe the report that about 70 per cent of Nigerians live
below the poverty line of one dollar per day. A dollar exchanges for about
N160, which about the price of one of the lowest available telephone recharge
cards. This ostentatious lifestyle cuts across all sectors of the economy and
cadres of Nigerians in the urban and rural areas: politicians, civil servants,
clergy, professionals, traders, lecturers, students, the unemployed, men,
women, youths, adults, etc.
Modesty has become abominable in our land, even
among the clergy, which used to be known for modesty, humility, simplicity and
selflessness. On the contrary, the fashionable thrust of religious preaching
these days is financial success and a life without problems, while the
I-am-not-serving-a-poor-God lifestyle reigns among the faithful.
In the political class, it used to be against the
Federal Government policy for a civil servant or political office holder to use
an SUV as an official car. The official car in the 1980s, when the ruling
political party, the National Party of Nigerians, was accused of profligacy was
Peugeot 504 saloon. Later, it was upgraded to 505 saloon, especially for some
senior officials. Except perhaps for the office of the head of state/president,
Mercedes Benz saloon was not allowed as an official car, even if the holder of
that office was using a Mercedes before his election or appointment, because a
Mercedes was seen as a sign of opulence and ostentation.
Today, however, the regular official car for
political office holders is an SUV of a special class. From that Olympian
height, the official can literally look down on the people he or she is meant
to serve. This cuts across the federal, state or local government levels. An
elected or appointed political office holder is the boss of the people, not
their steward. He is privileged and favoured. He has been exalted. Others pray
and hope that one day their time will come to be like such a political office
holder. If a political office holder uses a saloon car, it must be such whose
price will put fear into the hearts of the common people.
For example, last week, the Ministry of Aviation
confirmed that indeed two bulletproof cars worth N255m were purchased for the
Minister of Aviation by the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority. Not only that,
it was alleged that the NCAA used the amount that should be enough to buy about
five cars of such class to buy two. If other ministers are investigated, it
will be found out that all of them or most of them have such outrageously
expensive cars in a country that cannot provide good health care for its
citizens. The same goes for the Senate President, the Speaker of the House of
Representatives and the state governors, most of whom have private jets and
fleet of luxurious cars. These days, every government official uses insecurity
to justify this unacceptable lifestyle.
In the corporate world, religious and private
circles, it is seen as demeaning for a top executive of a company, the pastor
of a church (unless the church is very poor), or a well-to-do individual in
private business to be using a saloon car, unless it is a top-of-the-range
saloon car that is more expensive and more prestigious than most SUVs. Even
regular individuals, in employment or self-employment, ensure that they have an
SUV in their fleet of cars, no matter how old the SUV is. The fact that it is
an SUV, which elevates him literally and figuratively above other drivers and
road users, has an irresistible feel-good sensation in it.
Consequently, in the home of a regular Nigerian who
does his private business or receives a salary, you will see about three or
four cars: one an SUV that is used for special events like church services,
weddings, parties, Christmas-New Year travels to hometowns; a saloon car like a
Toyota Camry, Toyota Avalon, or a Mercedes to be alternated with the SUV once
in a while; a regular car like a Toyota Corolla or Honda Civic for daily usage;
and maybe, another regular car for school runs and other matters.
Even the unemployed and students are not left out
of this show-off. Your unemployed relative who asks you for financial support
uses a smartphone and a BlackBerry, which are more expensive than your phones.
His shoes and shirts are more expensive than yours. Yet, he needs your help.
You then wonder: Who should assist the other financially?
Then, there are the different types of parties
(birthdays, weddings, burials, child-naming, house-warming, graduation,
“freedom,” (by apprentices), thanksgiving, etc), used to make a statement of
success and affluence. Many borrow money to host these parties and ensure that
they are memorable for the community or nation to talk about for a long time.
Add to that the myriad of overseas holidays,
conferences and parties, and you get a good picture of the new Nigerian.
The danger in our ever-rising materialism and
flamboyance is that it encourages crime and erodes our social values. The rise
in embezzlement of public funds, bribery, drug-trafficking, armed robbery,
kidnapping and internet fraud is a sign that more people desperately want to get
their own wealth, show it off and be seen to have “arrived”. Questions are no
longer asked about the source of wealth, even within the family circles or
religious circles, both of which used to be the bastions of moral values. As
long as money flows, the person making it happen is celebrated and honoured for
his “philanthropy”, and becomes a reference point. The young man who sees this
everyday wants also to be celebrated, respected and honoured with titles and
awards in his community – social, religious, or national. Having seen that
nobody asked questions or cared about the source of wealth of the “big man”,
the young man strives to make his own money by any means possible, knowing that
nobody will bother to ask questions of him too.
That becomes a vicious cycle that runs ceaselessly
and eats into the soul of our nation, destroying the essence of the nation and
making it lag behind in all human indexes.
Wealth is good. Money can save life. Money provides
food, water, shelter, education, roads and the good things of life. Without
money, it is almost impossible to build anything. But placing too much emphasis
on wealth is dangerous to any society. Even many of the richest men on earth
are not flamboyant or ostentatious.
Our political leaders and religious leaders have
the critical task of pulling us back from this precipice with a change of
focus, message and lifestyle. We cannot continue to flaunt products made by
other nations when we produce nothing. Those who make these products we flaunt
don’t even flaunt them the way we do.
Let’s start flaunting our ideas, skills, self-made
products and services, as well as our contributions to nation-building rather
than our private jets, cars and jewelry. That is what will advance our nation
and make other nations respect us.
4 comments:
Many Nigerians are "posers".Little achievements intoxicates them
his is very good write up that shows picture of what is going on in our society.
This person has written an article that touches on the very issue that is gradually moving Nigeria into a failed state status and all you can surmise about the issue is that it is a tribal thing.
This article is totally right in a number of ways because a higher percentile of Africans are generally selfish and they think only about their own pocket rather than being patriotic.
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