A statement like that should have made you feel important, but
you didn’t budge. You simply ignored and looked ahead resolutely, much to the
little boy’s disappointment.
You refused to accept his offer even when it was evident
that you were struggling to hold on to the ‘gbogbo ero’ you bought. You didn’t
trust the market boy or cart pusher, fearing they could take off with your
stuff. Most of us are often guilty of this.
Does it ever occur to you that by denying that little market
boy or the cart pusher your luggage, you may have denied someone their daily
bread? Does it occur to you that if that market boy doesn’t make enough to
survive on, he might be forced to go into armed robbery or kidnapping? Who
knows if the guys that kidnapped Olu Falae were once market boys and cart
pushers who couldn’t make enough to survive daily?
Many of us fail to understand how privileged we are that we
can comfortably afford both our needs and wants, and that those at the bottom
of the economic pyramid look upon us to make their lives better.
We fail to fathom the responsibility bestowed on us by the
society to make impact on the less-privileged. Why then should we complain when
the rate of crime among the youth is ever on the rise?
Why do we always put the blame solely on the government when
the ‘agberos’ and the jobless among us make our neighbourhoods unsafe to live
in? With our selfishness, we are daily churning out criminals borne out of
poverty and who are engrossed in their current trade because we care little
about them.
No society that is borne out of selfishness can rid itself
of poverty, disease, and uncivil people by wholly relying on their government
to do so. No society!
We all bear the responsibility of creating the society we
wish for. I am not supporting kidnapping or lazy people, but it is appalling to
see the huge economic disparities that characterise our society.
The capitalist mind that has built the modern Nigerian
society is unprecedented.
Those who reside in urban loftiness do not care whether
their neighbours can afford basic needs such as food. Even churches amassing
bountiful offerings and tithes don’t care if members of their congregation have
anything to eat when they get home after church services.
We would rather create a dependency syndrome. Most people
with domestic help rarely want their domestic help to develop beyond that
status. We want our lowly-endowed friends and relatives to always look upon us
when they need help.
Don’t you wonder how some entertainers drive the latest
Porsche or Range Rover SUVs, yet their parents or siblings can hardly afford
food? This has become the definition of civilisation for us. We don’t realise
that we only need to help out just a little to make someone’s life better.
How many of us have been committed to ensuring that the poor
but bright child in our neighbourhood goes to school, or helping a dutiful
house help to learn a skill that will help them become independent, or simply
creating a job for a hard working and disciplined jobless person?
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