With his reported stiff-necked disposition against Ambode’s second term, Asiwaju’s strange fish friend has apparently taken him to a colossal height of earthly conquests where he sees himself as God’s deputy in Lagos. Like Mrs. Ap’ejalodo, on this Ambode issue, Asiwaju cannot understand the diffidence of a mere mortal like Ambode…
There is this story that helped to tame the greed of pre- and post-colonial Yoruba society, as well as any tendency within it to play God. Set in an African village, the story is that of a young wretched fisherman (Ap’ejalodo) who was ravaged by failure. He was unable to catch enough fish over the years to rescue him from the pangs of lack. One day however, as he thrust his fishing hook into the river, it caught one of the largest fish he had ever seen. Excited, Ap’ejalodo pulled his awesome catch up to the river bank and proceeded to yank it off the hook. As he attempted to carry it to the basket however, the fish began to speak like a human being. Ap’ejalodo was at first afraid but he eventually pulled himself together and listened to the sermon of the strange fish. Singing ap’ejalodo, mo de, ja lo lo, ja lo lo… (Fisherman, here I come…), the fish pleaded to be rescued by the fisherman. It promised that if he spared its life, in lieu of this rescue, he should ask for whatever he has wanted in life. Excited, Ap’ejalodo lets it off the hook, having asked for wealth. Truly, by the time he got home, the ragged clothes on him and his wife had become a very big damask agbada and aran respectively, with their wretched hut transformed into a big mansion, and both subsequently living the life of unimaginable splendour.
After a few years, and the couple however being barren, the wife entreated Ap’ejalodo to go fishing again and ask his fish friend to rescue them from the social shame. As he thrusted his hook into the river, it caught the strange fish again and the earlier process was repeated. This time, he asked for a child and the strange fish granted it. Over the years, he magisterially summoned the fish through the same process and the fish kept bailing the couple out. Then one day, as Ap’ejalodo and wife were waking up from their magnificent bed, a blinding and intruding ray of the sun meandered into their bedroom. Enraged, Mrs. Ap’ejalodo couldn’t understand the diffidence of the Sun. Couldn’t it respect the privacy and majesty of the richest couple in the land? She angrily asked Ap’ejalodo to go meet his fish friend and ask that they be given the power to control the temerity of the Sun and other impertinent celestial forces.
Off Ap’ejalodo went to the river bank, thrust his fishing hook into the river and again invoked the strange fish. And Ap’ejalodo made his plea. The fish was peeved by the fisherman’s greed and audacity: “You were nobody; I made you somebody and you now have everything at your beck and call. Yet, you want to compete with God in majesty and you will not allow even a common Sun to shine and perform the illuminative assignment God brought it to perform on earth!” The fish angrily stormed back into the river and as Ap’ejalodo, downcast, walked back home, his old torn and wretched dress suddenly came back on him, his mansion transformed back into the hut of the past and the couple’s latter wretchedness was more striking than the one of yore.
Suchlike stories helped to shape the moral man in Africa. His cosmology was governed by anecdotes, lores and mores, which prescribed moral codes. For centuries, these sustained the associational and moral forte of Africa. Anecdotes that restrained a potential emperor from treading the path of ruination were told to children, even in their infancy; the same about petty thieves who came to ghastly ends. For instance, the destructive end of greed was foretold in pre-colonial Yoruba society in the emblematic story of Tortoise and the scalding hot porridge on the fire he stole and covertly put on his head, which burnt his scalp. At the end of the story, the story teller would ask the children what moral the narrative has taught them.
I have heard stories from acquaintances who knew the Leader at the Ososami area of Ibadan’s Oke-Ado in the 1970s, which are not too dissimilar from the Ap’ejalodo’s earlier circumstance. A strange fish thereafter took the Leader’s plea and transmogrified him, through Mobil Producing, becoming the second civilian governor of Lagos State, through the typhoon of impeachment…
At first, the cosmos was inexplicable to the pre-historical African man. He could not understand or explain how the rain fell from the heavens; how fruits sprouted from the tree and how the rivers, when they overfilled their brims, flooded and killed residents by the river bank. For Egyptians living by the Nile, it was explained as the anger of the river goddess. So the African explained the cosmos using himself. No wonder some atheist philosophers like Soren Kiekergaard the hunchback and Voltaire the sickly said that man created God in his own image.
When I saw the trending video on the social media with the sound bite, Kabiyesi, ee (Osun State) l’owo mi! (Your Majesty, Osun doesn’t have my money!) allegedly made by the Leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and former governor of Lagos State, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu at the palace of the Ataoja of Osogbo, during the campaign tour for the candidature of his nephew, Gboyega Oyetola, who he wants to take over from Rauf Aregbesola of Osun State, the first thought that came to my mind was the ancient and evergreen Ap’ejalodo story. Why is Asiwaju trying to best Ap’ejalodo in the lack of gratitude to his fish god, and making an avaricious reach for the sky, while also attempting to play the majesty of God?
I have heard stories from acquaintances who knew the Leader at the Ososami area of Ibadan’s Oke-Ado in the 1970s, which are not too dissimilar from the Ap’ejalodo’s earlier circumstance. A strange fish thereafter took the Leader’s plea and transmogrified him, through Mobil Producing, becoming the second civilian governor of Lagos State, through the typhoon of impeachment for perjury and certificate forgery that swept away his colleagues of the Class of 1999 like Evan Enwerem and Salisu Buhari, the turbulence of re-election and Olusegun Obasanjo’s opposition to his continuous governorship. The Leader is now a governor of governors and installer of Nigeria’s president. The Leader’s wealth is rumoured to be akin only to that of Ap’ejalodo, as some mischievous commentators say he owns almost half of Lagos. Kabiyesi, ee l’owo mi! sounds like the audacious conceit of Ap’ejalodo against the Sun. The questions that come with that palace boast are, how rich is our own Ap’ejalodo? What job has he done since leaving Mobil other than being governor? At what point did he acquire the rumoured humongous wealth, enough to make him richer than a whole state? As Americans ask, yes we have seen the bucks, where is the Leader’s shop? What is the usability of these huge bucks for the Nigerian collective? How many times did anyone hear Bill Gates make similar boasts?
Today, the Yoruba have no identifiable leader because Ap’ejalodo, in the pursuit of his ambition to conquer the galaxy, splintered the immortal Obafemi Awolowo’s succession ladder which then had Abraham Adesanya as leader, by sponsoring a divisive group called the Afenifere Renewal Group. For the sons of Oduduwa, things fell horribly apart at that intersection and the centre has refused to hold.
Ambode’s predecessor, Babatunde Fashola was a recipient of the same deadly and thorny play of power by Ap’ejalodo. Remember Fashola’s iconic “may our loyalty not be tested” statement at the National Assembly while being screened for his ministerial position, a cursory reference to the dilemma he faced between bowing before the Mammonic appetite of Ap’ejalodo…
Perhaps the story that grossly approximates the Ap’ejalodo example of a mere mortal trying to oust the jurisdiction of the Sun is the Leader’s rumoured attempt to stop Akinwunmi Ambode, the current governor of Lagos State whom he installed, from seeking a second term in office. As it is now, only Ambode’s mother’s head – as the Yoruba would say, drawing largely from their philosophical understanding of the spiritual importance of the head – can save him. Ap’ejalodo is said to have ordered the removal of his Persian rug from the governor’s feet. Already, the 57 local government chairpersons and the party structure which he uses for such jobs, have put forward, with his abetment, two sidekicks of his – Jide Sanwo-Olu and Femi Hamzat, two former commissioners, to battle the direct primary slated for about two weeks’ time with Ambode.
But why would the Leader swim against the current of the mood of Lagos and indeed Nigeria as a whole, which has seen or been told the massive infrastructural strides of the few-words-but-huge-action governor? Is performance subservient to the esophagus in Ap’ejalodo’s dictionary? Many prognoses have been given for the Leader’s wrath. First is that Ambode is allegedly elitist, arrogant, aloof, penny-pinching and refuses to spread the illicit largesse associated with governance to politicians in Lagos. Second is that he allegedly blocked Ap’ejalodo’s conduit of sleaze and dared to be master of his own game in the Cleaner Lagos Initiative. Third is that Ambode dared to run against method in the Land Use Act of Lagos, which hurt the Leader and other entrenched land vultures in Lagos. Aregbesola is also alleged to be stoking the fire as Ambode was said to have refused to deploy Lagos’ cash to the election of Tinubu’s nephew in Osun State and vehemently opposed the incongruity of Aregbesola picking a senatorial ticket in Lagos after his lacklustre governance. And as everyone knows, the Ap’ejalodo has such a vice grip on Lagos that Alausa, the seat of government, is just a euphemism, as the real power seat is in Bourdillon where the Lion resides. Strangely coincidental is the allegation that the Leader’s own Mrs. Ap’ejalodo owns the patency of Sanwo-Olu’s gubernatorial initiative. Just like in the original Ap’ejalodo story.
Ambode’s predecessor, Babatunde Fashola was a recipient of the same deadly and thorny play of power by Ap’ejalodo. Remember Fashola’s iconic “may our loyalty not be tested” statement at the National Assembly while being screened for his ministerial position, a cursory reference to the dilemma he faced between bowing before the Mammonic appetite of Ap’ejalodo and the development of Lagos? Fashola was reputed then to be the best that Nigeria paraded (until Ambode’s infrastructure works turned Fashola’s into a dwarf). In spite of this, the Leader began the process of throwing spanners into his 2011 re-election bid, allegedly because Fashola dared block the roots to his esophagus. At his exit in 2015, Fashola was excluded from the Nigerian political calculi of governors whose successors were birthed by them. His attempt at nominating his attorney general as successor backfired like an old Morris Minor.
With his reported stiff-necked disposition against Ambode’s second term, Asiwaju’s strange fish friend has apparently taken him to a colossal height of earthly conquests where he sees himself as God’s deputy in Lagos. Like Mrs. Ap’ejalodo, on this Ambode issue, Asiwaju cannot understand the diffidence of a mere mortal like Ambode who cannot respect the majesty of a political god who single-handedly enthroned a Nigerian president and whose wealth outweighs that of a Nigerian state. Paraphrasing the words of the strange fish, Asiwaju will not allow Ambode, a man widely seen as the Lagos sun, to shine and do the illuminative assignment God brought him to perform on earth. Right now, the Leader is by the river bank to meet his fish friend and ask that he be given the power to control the temerity of the Sun and other obdurate celestial forces. What will the strange fish tell Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu?
Politicians’ Season To Play The Fool
…the comic act began. President Buhari told the whole world that he couldn’t afford the huge amount. Pronto, as the Americans say, some funny characters sprung up from nowhere and claimed they had soaped out the fee from nowhere. And Buhari’s Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) is laughing.
Nigerians’ elastic sense of humour was severally patronised in the last few weeks. Even though the people know that whenever electioneering is afoot, all manners of queer occurrences happen in the polity, never did it occur to them that politicians would turn themselves into some kind of Charlie Chaplain, entertaining the people with ribald acts that could make anyone choke on laughter.
Many will recall that a few months ago when the Ekiti State election was being conducted, a number of instances of such ribaldry became the opera on display. Ayodele Fayose entertained the people with his vain boasts, while pepping the film with his vacuous photo-ops at amala joints. His predecessor, who was also vying to become his successor, apparently convinced that that was the way to go, also pulled off his doctoral academic robe and sat very close to Fayose at the pig-sty. Fayose was to take his to the zenith when, on the eve of the election, he paid the suffering people of the state whom he was owing months of unpaid salaries, pittances of three thousand naira which they received as payment alerts from their banks. Comical Fayose was also said to have deducted the payment when his deputy governor protégé waffled into defeat.
A few days ago, President Muhammadu Buhari launched his own comic opera. The All Progressives Congress (APC) had stunned the world when it pegged its presidential nomination form at N40 million and Expression of Interest form at N5 million, both totaling N45m. For governorship, the nomination form was also pegged by the party at N22.5 million, while the expression of interest form went for N2.5 million. The argument of the people was, why would a government that preaches probity and return to sanity of governance ask its aspirants to go looking for the whole world as symptomised by that humongous amount? If the aspirants eventually clinch the seats, wouldn’t their investments be the first to be recouped?
…Osun State also struggled not to be left out of the ribaldry. A Rauf Aregbesola who had subjected the state’s civil servants to the ingenuously callous novelty of paying workers half salaries for years now, suddenly fanned out August salaries to the workers. Election is this coming Saturday in the hapless State.
Now, the comic act began. President Buhari told the whole world that he couldn’t afford the huge amount. Pronto, as the Americans say, some funny characters sprung up from nowhere and claimed they had soaped out the fee from nowhere. And Buhari’s Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) is laughing. Photographs of the president giving out a leaf of one thousand naira note to each of his grandchildren thereafter surfaced on the social media. As if to best his boss in this ludicrous opera, the Kaduna State governor, Nasir el-Rufai, a renowned bootlicker, also announced to the world that he too couldn’t afford the N25 million demanded for his gubernatorial contest form. Like Buhari’s, some equally funny folks emerged from nowhere claiming they had el-Rufai’s fee.
As if it was a season to play the fool in an opera that was meant to amuse the public, Osun State also struggled not to be left out of the ribaldry. A Rauf Aregbesola who had subjected the state’s civil servants to the ingenuously callous novelty of paying workers half salaries for years now, suddenly fanned out August salaries to the workers. Election is this coming Saturday in the hapless State.
It is in this same State that someone who had F9 Parralel – pardon the lingo of secondary school leavers of yore – had the audacity to attack same Aregbesola, claiming that the governor had lowered the standard of education in the State.
Yes, we know that it is a season to play the fool but can’t this cast forewarn us that the film director had shouted ‘Action!’?
Festus Adedayo is an Ibadan-based journalist.
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