Dear Boko Haram,
I should have started this letter by greeting you: Asalam Alekun,
meaning: peace be unto you. But how can anyone wish or offer you what
you have precisely denied others, in the almost four years of your
bloody reign? How can we ask the peace of the lord or God’s or Allah’s
blessings to be upon you, when all you have brought your compatriots are
blood, war, tears and fear? How can we wish you good, when you wish us
bad? How can we ever think well of you, when you display the worst form
of cruelty towards your people, our people?
So, I will simply begin by saying: wherever you are, and whatever you
are doing right now, I hope you find time out of your tight and deadly
and deathly schedule, to read this letter. It is a letter from a worried
Nigerian; one who, like other citizens, is deeply disturbed and
distraught at your activities. It is a letter to you, hoping someone
who knows someone in your organisation will deliver it straight to you
or bring it to your attention. I know you will get this letter because
as we have heard over and over again, many of your operatives, even
though they say ‘no to Western education’ are well-educated and quite
literate. So, while you read secretly, kindly digest the contents with
an open mind. Kindly read with a Godly mind, even though, you will
agree, you can’t be said to have been Godly in your actions. God would
never sanction the mindless killings of innocent citizens for whatever
reasons or grievances. God is a God of life, a life-giver, not
life-taker. God does not approve of the shedding of blood, especially
innocent blood, by anyone or group under any guise. I digress too soon.
So, while you read, read without anger; read without bias. Read with
the fear of God. Read with conscience. Read like human beings, with
human feelings. I can hear some people, turning their nostrils up and
wondering if I am not asking for the impossible: Boko Haram having fear
of God and conscience? Boko Haram having human feelings? You can’t blame
anyone for feeling this way or being cynical about you: Yours have
truly been unedifying tales of terror and bloodletting; a macabre dance
of blood; harvest of tragedies. You have engaged in horrendous
activities that have left the citizens terrified and horrified. You have
struck everywhere, that no one knows where and when next you will
strike. You have struck at motor parks (Nyanya), at schools (Buni Yadi,
Chibok, among others), at government offices and private residences;
shopping malls and just anywhere, leaving sorrow, tears and blood in
your trail. In your war without boundaries, you must have wasted over
2000 lives, and that is a conservative estimate, just as many of your
members have been killed in the crackdown on your members by security
agencies! Add that to the over 200 Chibok schoolgirls still in your
custody, and you get a frightening portrait of your deadly exploits. Are
the Chibok girls alive or dead? When will they regain freedom? No one
knows. Everyone is praying for the safe return of our girls, our sisters
and our daughters. Mrs. Oby Ezekwesili and the other campaigners are
asking the same questions without answer. Even President Jonathan can’t
tell us when the girls will return. We all seem to be at your mercy but
you remain merciless. Why? Why?
Now, Nigerians are asking: What does the Boko Haram want? When will
enough be enough? That is precisely the reason for this letter to you.
What do you want? When will enough be enough?
Some have said your actions are directed at the government of
President Jonathan? If that is so, you are targeting the wrong group:
The poor and the hapless. What has bombing bus stops and malls got to do
with this? How will bombing bus stops and malls patronised by the
common people help your cause?
It is difficult to comprehend how kidnapping innocent schoolgirls
will help your fight against government. You can only succeed in uniting
the people, as you have done, against what is seen as your deadly
activities. As Prof. Wole Soyinka says, such action can only bring
general resentment and collective angst against your group. So, you will
have to stop your bloody activities. Your bloody outing is a war
against the people, especially the common people of Nigeria, who have
done you no wrong. So, why lay siege on the people?
If your purpose is religious supremacy or fundamentalism, credible
Islamic pundits have dismissed your activities, as contradicting the
tenets of Islam. Islam, they say, is a religion of peace and peaceful
coexistence. So, what then is fueling the insurgency?
If your war against your people is foreign-induced, you are embarking
on the wrong kind of war, fighting a war against your people, for
whatever reasons. If you destroy your land and people or succeed in
maiming everybody, are you then going to live in a foreign country among
foreigners? What medal would you have won, as destroyers of your
country or, as agents of foreign destroyers?
What I am saying is simple: If politics is your driving factor, it is
politics taken too far. Hundreds of our people, poor, hapless people,
who know no politics or the power game, playing out have been caught in
the crossfire: Bloodied and buried in the rubble of the atrocious
battle.
If it is about religion, it just doesn’t add up: Christians and
Muslims are being slaughtered in the bombing spree, going on. Bombs
don’t discriminate on the basis of tribe or religion. Bombs bomb and
kill. So, these killings must stop.
Dear Boko Haram, what I have been trying to do is to see if we can
appeal to your sense of reasoning, to see how you can halt the tension
and fear in our country today, by stopping the spectre of blood.
Nigerians are weeping. Nigerians are dying. Nigerians are living in
fear. Because of you!
In Abuja and other major cities, everyone is looking over his or
shoulders, scared that a bomb could go off any moment. The gardens and
recreational centres are almost becoming empty because people are scared
of being caught in explosions. If your aim is to terrify the citizenry,
you have, we must sadly admit, largely succeeded. If killing was your
motive, you have killed enough. No further point is made in your
continuous bombings and killings. It’s time to pause and ponder. It’s
time to stop the killings. Please, stop. Enough is enough!
Last line: May God console those who have lost their dear and
loved ones in the Boko Haram war against their country. To the dead, may
they find peace and rest in the bossom of the Lord. May God Almighty
bring peace to our beleaguered nation. Amen
No comments:
Post a Comment