Dad
Broda Sola (my late first cousin) once told me about a visiting Italian scientist who took a long hard look at our landscape and soil, shook his head slowly but intermittently, and wondered what was wrong with Nigeria! He was visibly emotional about the sheer madness in abandoning the huge opportunities and guaranteed wealth in solid minerals, while we underutilised our oil & gas assets, and stayed proudly in the league of pathetic nations!!
Leadership, leadership, leadership.
I have met bankers in Europe who wondered why we under-invested our oil earnings in crude and unimaginative ways! Then, we, in the same breath, went a-borrowing!! That was amazing to them, even mesmerising. They pointed to the loads of well-educated and well-travelled leaders and citizens this country had, and shook their heads in disbelief.
Leadership, leadership, leadership.
Give the devil his due, President Obasanjo finally paid off our foreign debts - at huge costs - to somewhat redeem that stigma. But we still are doing nothing concrete about value added and creative exploitation of our natural resources! And Nigerians are perplexed.
Leadership, leadership, leadership.
Me, I worry little now. Thank goodness they didn't fully extract these resources before now! Why? Dem for don chop am finish well well!! The shameless lot have no scruples about looting. They can steal their mom's chain and pendant without batting an eyelid!
Corruption, corruption, corruption.
So, I call it Postponed Riches...in...Deferred Wealth. We will claim it ALL soon, pretty soon.
Nigeria is set. Our Diaspora is awesome. Our friends are growing. Our people are primed and yearning. And the tide is turning. The time be NOW.
Papa, believe.
I am...
Your upbeat son
Dayo
In the business of life and living, and the way we grow up, there is a compelling conversation which binds us for aye...with our parents and siblings. Here or beyond, we sort of keep the link, the bond. And we refer or report visibly or invisibly, known or unknown...to them. I should be sharing my thoughts and notes in this regard, as well as speaking to your own dads and moms by mutual solidarity.
Sunday, September 16, 2007
Monday, September 03, 2007
ICT Wonders
Dear Mom
Before you left us I was unable to get a telephone. I wonder what you and all our "Elders Gone" would say or do today when you see and use and hear and behold what we now enjoy! It is called Information and Computing or Communications Technology, ICT. By the way, this revolution happened upon us with inputs - believe it or not - from several geniuses, including our very own Phillip Emeagwali. He is your son too o!, because he and I are age-mates: for, while you had me in Warri, his mother soon did in Onitsha side - down the road, from River Niger!! This very great Nigerian has been described as one of the "Fathers of the Internet" - that network of powerful super-computers which makes it easy and breezy, secure and obscure, tricky and prickly, snazzy and sleazy for the whole wide world to interact, trade, invent, fight and commune in a web!!!
Before I forget, ma, I got my first telephone line sometime in 1980/1 - not too long after your 1979 departure. That happened by a combination of time & place: I was transfered to Falomo in Ikoyi as a lending officer, in what was then our "elite" branch at the United Bank for Africa. That was where several top expatriates, powerful Nigerians, diplomats & their missions, as well as the new wave politicians, especially the federal legislators, banked. Not to put too fine a point on it, I must affirm that I made some of my best and life-changing contacts and friendships, including some career-threatening envy and "bad-belle", from that strategic posting. Because of the good values you planted in us, painfully and dutifully from after Papa's translation in 1963, and my good fortune in being identified early for special grooming by my bosses (both whites & blacks!), Falomo was where to be!
Customers and colleagues saw through my innocence and innovativeness. They trusted and taunted me. They loved me. This was the era of forex deals, crowded banking halls, TV stars and the first political transition...from Obasanjo to Shagari, etc. Bankers were powerful, and some got particularly "prosperous"! But, Mama, I stayed with my pay, with staff official loans, with my faith, and what some of you called my "charm" - I say, my humanity! No magomago, no wuruwuru!!! And it forever paid off. It still does....
To cut the long story short, I got my Post Office Box 51389 and eventually my first telephone 524936. These two "blessings" - as they were, then - came to be because of my being in Ikoyi. First, by location, and by motivation, and by my status/contacts. Things were pretty tough those days, and these "post & telecommunications" assets became real ASSETS to me and my siblings: Like when Ibukun (Arthur Onoviran) was involved in the oil workers and civil rights battles against the brutal Abacha dictatorship, and the June 12 struggles, or Funmi (Phoebe Onoviran, now Molokwu) as a student traded in "essential/scare commodities! The telephone was a hot line for local and international media at the height of the workers revolt - the Days of the Trenches! Mama, you should be proud of the courage and commitment of your son, Arthur in those annals. He was with the Kokoris, Tinubus, Adeniji-Adeles, Gani Fawehinmis, Falanas, Agbakobas, the Ojos, the Utomis, the toughest Nigerian journalists, et al. He also ended up in exile! That story is for another day.
Today however, the story be different. In just six years of doing the right thing (okay, of almost doing the right things), almost anyone can now own or have access to a phone. Yes, mostly cell or mobile...but that will change: The next wave will be land-lines, on optic fibre and satellite networks. How times change!
But the most exciting part of the ICT Wonders is how we now communicate, educate and even entertain "globally & instantly" - warts and all. We gain and pain at once! For example, there is so much good stuff on the internet you want to stay online forever! And, pray, there is so much OTHER stuff there too you want to shut it down (hahaha!), or at least police da super-highway: CyberCop!!! Recently I was forced to outline my thoughts on the growing content and contempt of the so-called "Adult" sites. They are heavy audacious, Mama, I dare not tell you what be on! I am still struggling to continue/conclude my piece on it. Tough. We must praise ALL the cops and crusaders that try to sensitize the world to the huge and heinous dangers that bad guys/bad stuff pose to our kids and the vulnerable...on da world wide web! Kudos.
I like to say, however, that the good overwhelms the bad. Besides, the internet is HERE! Let's make it swell.
Love
Dayo
Before you left us I was unable to get a telephone. I wonder what you and all our "Elders Gone" would say or do today when you see and use and hear and behold what we now enjoy! It is called Information and Computing or Communications Technology, ICT. By the way, this revolution happened upon us with inputs - believe it or not - from several geniuses, including our very own Phillip Emeagwali. He is your son too o!, because he and I are age-mates: for, while you had me in Warri, his mother soon did in Onitsha side - down the road, from River Niger!! This very great Nigerian has been described as one of the "Fathers of the Internet" - that network of powerful super-computers which makes it easy and breezy, secure and obscure, tricky and prickly, snazzy and sleazy for the whole wide world to interact, trade, invent, fight and commune in a web!!!
Before I forget, ma, I got my first telephone line sometime in 1980/1 - not too long after your 1979 departure. That happened by a combination of time & place: I was transfered to Falomo in Ikoyi as a lending officer, in what was then our "elite" branch at the United Bank for Africa. That was where several top expatriates, powerful Nigerians, diplomats & their missions, as well as the new wave politicians, especially the federal legislators, banked. Not to put too fine a point on it, I must affirm that I made some of my best and life-changing contacts and friendships, including some career-threatening envy and "bad-belle", from that strategic posting. Because of the good values you planted in us, painfully and dutifully from after Papa's translation in 1963, and my good fortune in being identified early for special grooming by my bosses (both whites & blacks!), Falomo was where to be!
Customers and colleagues saw through my innocence and innovativeness. They trusted and taunted me. They loved me. This was the era of forex deals, crowded banking halls, TV stars and the first political transition...from Obasanjo to Shagari, etc. Bankers were powerful, and some got particularly "prosperous"! But, Mama, I stayed with my pay, with staff official loans, with my faith, and what some of you called my "charm" - I say, my humanity! No magomago, no wuruwuru!!! And it forever paid off. It still does....
To cut the long story short, I got my Post Office Box 51389 and eventually my first telephone 524936. These two "blessings" - as they were, then - came to be because of my being in Ikoyi. First, by location, and by motivation, and by my status/contacts. Things were pretty tough those days, and these "post & telecommunications" assets became real ASSETS to me and my siblings: Like when Ibukun (Arthur Onoviran) was involved in the oil workers and civil rights battles against the brutal Abacha dictatorship, and the June 12 struggles, or Funmi (Phoebe Onoviran, now Molokwu) as a student traded in "essential/scare commodities! The telephone was a hot line for local and international media at the height of the workers revolt - the Days of the Trenches! Mama, you should be proud of the courage and commitment of your son, Arthur in those annals. He was with the Kokoris, Tinubus, Adeniji-Adeles, Gani Fawehinmis, Falanas, Agbakobas, the Ojos, the Utomis, the toughest Nigerian journalists, et al. He also ended up in exile! That story is for another day.
Today however, the story be different. In just six years of doing the right thing (okay, of almost doing the right things), almost anyone can now own or have access to a phone. Yes, mostly cell or mobile...but that will change: The next wave will be land-lines, on optic fibre and satellite networks. How times change!
But the most exciting part of the ICT Wonders is how we now communicate, educate and even entertain "globally & instantly" - warts and all. We gain and pain at once! For example, there is so much good stuff on the internet you want to stay online forever! And, pray, there is so much OTHER stuff there too you want to shut it down (hahaha!), or at least police da super-highway: CyberCop!!! Recently I was forced to outline my thoughts on the growing content and contempt of the so-called "Adult" sites. They are heavy audacious, Mama, I dare not tell you what be on! I am still struggling to continue/conclude my piece on it. Tough. We must praise ALL the cops and crusaders that try to sensitize the world to the huge and heinous dangers that bad guys/bad stuff pose to our kids and the vulnerable...on da world wide web! Kudos.
I like to say, however, that the good overwhelms the bad. Besides, the internet is HERE! Let's make it swell.
Love
Dayo
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