My Last Encounter With Saraki - Kperogi

Date: 2012-11-25

I was distraught with shock and grief when I read of the death of Dr. Olusola Saraki who was known to the nation as the unquestionable patriarch of Kwara State's politics, as the quintessential bridge builder whose distinctive multicultural identity bestowed him with the symbolic capital to bring northern and southern Nigeria into a productive cultural conversation.

For those of us from Kwara State, the late Saraki was all that--and more. He was also this ever-present, larger-than-life fixture not just in our politics but also in our everyday lives. Not everybody agreed with his politics, but not many would dispute that he was a genuinely compassionate and freehearted individual who uplifted the people he came in contact with.

I first met the late Saraki in the early 1980s when he came to my hometown to campaign for Chief Cornelius Olatunji Adebayo who ran for governor of Kwara State as a candidate of the defunct Unity Party of Nigeria. He visited my family house during his campaign tour; my late uncle, Mr. J.B. Kperogi, was his close political associate and point man in what was then Borgu Local Government Area of Kwara State. So, as a youngster in primary school, I had the distinct honor of seeing the legendary, staggeringly magnanimous "Oloye" at close quarters. Even as a child, he struck me as humble, jovial, kindhearted, and down-to-earth.

My last encounter with him was in early 2002 when I was news editor of the Weekly Trust. My editor, Alhaji GarbaDeen Muhammad, had arranged for us to interview him in Abuja. We wanted to know, among other things, if it was true that his troubles with the late Mohammed Lawal, Kwara State's governor between 1999 and 2003, was because he had designs to make his first son the next governor of the state. That was the reigning rumor in Kwara State then. I will come back to this point shortly.

Garba and I sent our business cards to his personal assistant and requested that he inform the "Oloye" that we were waiting for him in his living room. I was pleasantly surprised when he remembered my late uncle after he saw the last name on my business card. "Are you by any chance related to someone called J.B. Kperogi from Borgu?" he asked me. I answered in the affirmative and told him the man was, in fact, my dad's immediate younger brother. "Where is he now? I've been looking for him for years!"

When I told Saraki that my uncle had died on November 17, 2001, he was noticeably shaken. His face fell and he became infectiously downcast and crestfallen. He asked for the contact details of my uncle's wife and children, which I gave him. When he returned to Ilorin the following week, he looked for them and gave them a large sum of money. I was touched.

This personal encounter exposed me to the other side of Saraki that tended to get concealed by the divisiveness and rancor of partisan politics. I saw a man who had a deep reverence for old friendships and alliances; a man who had an admirably tenacious memory; a man who was thoroughly charitable, compassionate, and empathetic; a man who had a genuinely deep passion to elevate people who were less fortunate than he was; in short, a man with a deeper, richer, more ennobling humanity than many people could be persuaded to believe.

During our interview, Garba asked him to respond to the rumors circulating in Ilorin at the time that his intense political battle with the late Governor Lawal was inspired in part by his desire to make his son the governor of the state. He passionately and persuasively denied the rumors. He said it was intentional propaganda by Governor Lawal and his spin doctors to make him seem like a nepotistic despot.

Two weeks after the encounter, he called to ask if the interview had been published. I said it was slated for publication the following week. "My son," he said in his soothingly paternal voice, "I'm glad it hasn't been published yet. Please step it down." He told me in confidence that forces beyond his control had decided against his wishes that his son, Dr. Bukola Saraki, be not fielded as PDP's candidate for the governorship election, not because his son was unqualified but because he didn't want to play into the propaganda of political enemies who had alleged that his whole project all along had been to make his son governor. He said he cried like a baby when party officials and Ilorin elders overruled him and insisted on fielding Bukola Saraki as governorship candidate. I have no reason to doubt his story. He was genuine and earnest.

So Bukola Saraki became governor of Kwara State not because of his father, but in spite of his father. But as the late Saraki himself told me, few people would believe that, especially because the Lawal camp had preemptively orchestrated the rumors that he had always wanted to make his son governor from day one. But that is now history.

The late Saraki told me his desire was to have my part of Kwara State produce the next governor after Mohammed Lawal. It is the only part of Kwara State that has never produced a governor. He said part of the reasons my uncle's death depressed him so much was that he thought my uncle was anincredibly brilliant, farsighted, and dedicated politician who"would make a great governor."

I lost touch with Saraki after I left active journalism in September 2002, but I still cherished fond memories of my last encounter with him. Saraki had his foibles--like all of us do--but he was certainly far and away one of the most tenderhearted and public-spirited human beings to ever walk the surface of this earth. May his soul rest in peace.

Source

 

Cloud Tag: What's trending

Click on a word/phrase to read more about it.

Ahman Pategi University     Tescom.kwarastate.gov.ng     Aminat Ahmed     Adesoye College     Jaigbade Alao     Ibraheem Adeola Katibi     Kwara Basketball Association     Nurudeen Muhammed     Yeketi     IDPU     AbdulQowiy Olododo     Iyabo Adewuyi     Elewu     Oro Grammar School     Iyaloja-General     Onilorin     Unilorin FM     Allocation     IHS Towers     Odogun Olushola Gabriel     Chartered Institute Of Personnel Management Of Nigeria     Muslim Media Watch Group Of Nigeria     Ilorin Talaka Parapo     Adekunle David Dunmade     Shuaibu Yaman     Tunji Arosanyin     Amina Susa\'a De Ahmed     08001000100     Tope Daramola     Sanusi Abubakar     Oba Sulaiman Asude     Erubu Oba Zubair     Muhammadu Gobir     Olawuyi     Sabitiyu Grillo     Sobi     Babatunde Idiagbon     Jaiz Bank     Nurudeen Mohammed     Summit University     Ishola Moses Abiodun     Ibrahim Abduquadri Abikan     Kupchi Hosea Maxwell     Unicontinental Construction Company     Issa Memunat Moyosore     Sa\'adu Salau     Umar Yakubu Jaja     Bello Abubakar     GAMA     Ibrahim Bio     Labour Party     Abdullahi Atanda     CCB     Wahab Agbaje     Kannike     Kayode Alabi     Olukotun Of Ikotun     Afin Descendants Union Of Odo-Owa     Alapansapa     Emir Of Ilorin     Suwa-Arabs     Bahago     Saadu Gbogbo Iwe     Sulyman Abdulkareem     Marufat Oladosu     Moshood Kashimawo Abiola     COVID-19 Palliatives     Jelili Yusuf     Kwara Coalition Of Business And Professional Associations     Kwara State Branch Of The National Library     Lanre Badmas     Shonga     Kazeem Adekanye     Isau     Col. Ibrahim Taiwo     Ilorin Metro Park     Oko-Olowo    

Cloud Tag: What's trending

Click on a word/phrase to read more about it.

Ibrahim Orire     Abubakar Abdulraheem     Kwara State Television     Sa\'adu Salahu     Tafidan Kaiama     Ajibike Katibi     Raheem Adaramaja     Busari Alabi Alausa     IDPU     Ibrahim Taiwo     Muhammed Aliyu     Olaitan Adefila     Adedipe     Local Government Pension Board     Bilikisu Gambari     Ayinde Oki     Bamidele Adegoke     KwaraLearn     Tricycle Owners Association Of Nigeria     Oloruntoyosi Thomas     Aminat Omodara     Old Oyo     General Tunde Idiagbon International Airport     Doyin Group     Aishat Sulu-Gambari     Adaramaja     Sulu Babaita Isiaka     Kehinde Baale     Idris Garba     Ahmad Lawan     Baba Issa Awoye     New Model Police Station     Ope Saraki     JMK Construction Company Limited     Sherif Shagaya     Abdulquowiyu Olododo     Abdulraheem Olesin     Ibraheem Adeola Katibi     Niyi Ogundiran     Idofin     Kwara Poly     Nagode     Olatunji Ibrahim     Tunji Folami     11th Galadima     Fatai Olodo     Rafiu Ajakaye     Guber Aspirant     Abdulrahman Abdulrazak     Opolo Global Innovation Limited     Abdulmalik Bashir Mopelola Risikatullahi     Wahab Abayawo     Wahab Femi Agbaje     Omotoso     Dar-Al-Handasah Consultants     Alumni Association Of The Federal Polytechnic Offa     Ilofa     Oya State     Olosi Of Osi     Malete     Aisha Ahman-Pategi     Eruku     Khadijat Ayoola Yusuf     Share/Tsaragi     Teachers Specific Allowance     Michael Nzekwe     Sa\'ad Alanamu     Arinola Fatimoh Lawal     Salary     Tsado Manman     Junior Secondary School Certificate Examinations     Mahfouz Adedimeji     Suleiman Abubakar     Bola Shagaya     Moronfoye     Mumini Ishola Hanafi     Emir Of Ilorin