In 1844, the Revd Samuel Ajayi Crowther returned home to
Yorubaland (now part of modern-day Nigeria). Twenty years earlier, he had been
kidnapped and sold to European slave traders who were bound for the Americas.
He was freed by an abolitionist naval patrol, and received by the Church
Missionary Society. There, he found his calling.
Crowther made his voyage home to establish the first
Anglican mission in Yorubaland. He came with the first Bibles translated into
Yoruba and Hausa languages. He opened dialogue and discussion with those of
other faiths. And his mission was a success: Crowther later became the first
African Anglican bishop in Africa.
Today, Nigeria has the largest Christian population on the
continent. The messages and teachings of Christianity are part of the fabric of
each person’s life.
Along with the millions of Christians in Nigeria today, I
believe in peace, tolerance, and reconciliation; in the institution of the
family, the sanctity of marriage, and the honour of fidelity; in hope, compassion,
and divine revelation.
Like Bishop Crowther, I am a descendant of Abraham; unlike
him, I am a Muslim. I believe our two great religions can not only peacefully
co-exist but also flourish together. But Muslims and Christians must first turn
to one another in compassion. For, as it says in Amos 3.3: “Do two walk
together, unless they have agreed to meet?”
As they are People of the Book, I believe that there is far
more that unites Muslims and Christians than divides them. In fact, I believe
that the messages of the Bible are universal: available for anyone to exercise,
and instructive to all.
We must resist the temptation to retreat into our
communities, because, if we do, we can only look inwards. It is only when we
mix that we can reach new and greater possibilities.
Whichever religion or religious denomination they choose to
follow, Nigerians are devout. Anything that Nigerians believe will place
impositions on their practice, and belief is therefore sure to cause widespread
alarm.
And, unfortunately, there are those who seek to divide
Nigerians — and our two great religions — and to do so for their own advantage.
I stand accused — paradoxically — of trying to Islamise
Nigeria while also being accused by Boko Haram terrorists of being against Islam.
My Vice-President is a devout man, a Christian pastor. He, too, is accused of
selling out his religion, because of his support for me.
This is not the first time that I — nor, indeed, my
Christian-Muslim evenly split cabinet — have been the subject of such nonsense.
Fortunately, the facts speak differently from the words of those who seek to
divide us from one another.
Since my administration has been in power, Boko Haram has
been significantly and fatally degraded; I have befriended church leaders and church
groups both within and outside our country; my Vice-President has addressed and
opened dialogue with Muslims up and down our land.
In all things, we seek that which all well-meaning
Christians and well-meaning Muslims must seek: to unite, respect, and never to
divide. Does it not say “There is no compulsion in religion” (Qur’an 2.256)?
Does it not say, “Forbid him not: for he that is not against us is for us”
(Luke 9.50)? This, surely, is the path that followers of both our two great
religions must walk.
Unfortunately, those who wish us all to walk apart have
recently found another focus for their efforts: the tragic clashes between
nomadic herdsmen and settled farmers in the central regions of Nigeria.
For generations, herders have driven their cattle from the
north to the centre of our country; they tend to be predominantly Muslim,
although not exclusively. The farmers, in certain areas of central Nigeria, are
predominantly Christian.
The causes of this conflict are not religious or
theological, but temporal. At the heart of this discord is access to rural
land, exacerbated both by climate change and population growth.
Sadly, there are some who seek to play fast and loose and so
make others believe that these are not the facts. When religion is claimed as
the cause — and by those who know that it is not — it only makes finding a
resolution more difficult.
The government has taken action to mediate, to bring the two
groups together in peace and unity. But we also need all parties to follow the
teachings of the scriptures, and encourage reconciliation rather than cause
division. As it is said: “Having eyes do you not see, and having ears do you
not hear?” (Mark 8.18).
As our constitution codifies, politicising religion has no
place in Nigeria; for it makes us turn away from one another; it makes us
retreat into our communities and walk different paths.
I believe that there is a better way. To those who seek to
divide, I still hold my hand out in brotherhood and forgiveness. I ask only
that they stop, and instead encourage us to turn towards one another in love
and compassion. Nigeria belongs to all of us. This is what I believe.
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