Opinion - Olusola Saraki @80: Tribute to a Patriarch

Date: 2013-05-29

By Seyi Adigun

Early in the morning on November14, 2012 as the cool breeze of dawn ferried the prayers of the faithful to heaven for assent, a special soul returned to its creator.  He left on a Wednesday, the same day of the week His maker chose for him at birth, 79 years previously.

The son of Mouktar [an abundantly wealthy Ilorin merchant] and Humuani [a princess from Iseyin in present day Oyo state] was born into the world on Wednesday, May 17, 1933. At the time of his return to his maker he had expended 79 years, 5months on earth; roughly 29,036 days!

Olusola Saraki was an avatar of peace. He was passionate about all aspects of Nigeria's political emancipation and evolution. He detested military dictatorships, unconstitutional grandstanding and all forms of misrule. He believed that men and women with genuine socio-developmental cum political agenda should renounce violence,brigandage, armed revolts and militancy; that we must  necessarily embrace acceptable, civil and democratic methods in the pursuit and realization of genuinely positive dreams and aspirations. He had many detractors who were relentless in fanning furnaces of hatred against him throughout his lifetime. For each one of them however, he had hundreds of thousands of others who loved him legitimately and passionately for the true leader and gentleman that he was. Like all men, he was not without faults; but his imperfections pale into insignificance when weighed against his positive acts. He was a good man.

In the history of Nigeria's political theatrics, he ranked among the best. No other politician in our country's history achieved so much for so long. This was not an accident. Saraki was a keen and meticulous player who employed 3 core principles to build discipleship, nurture followership, elicit loyalty and broker amity with discordant camps. Dialogue, consultation and a political family sustained on the principle of equality of all men are the 3 strategies that helped to achieve his success. Consultation was a skill he used with his disciples and followers with ease; dialogue was the tactic he mastered especially for those on the 'other side'. Violence was never one of his methods, never.

Like the famed Ghandi and Jawaharlal Nehru, India's first Prime Minister [with whom he shared months of birth and death in reverse order [Nehru was born on November 14, died in the month of May] Saraki would not sit down to a table of dialogue with a man in a cloak of war and violence. The greatest weapon he depended on was the'goodwill' of the people and how he could champion it to achieve political success at the polls. He charted his journeys with consultations; he punctuated his travels with persuasive 'buy-in' discussions. Saraki never went to the field with machetes, never with guns. Never also did he go without his toga of dialogue.

The other part of the triad is the most remarkable. Oloye was egalitarian to the core. All those who knew him, worked with him, even his opponents who encountered him in the field, will attest to this. To him, with him and before him, equality (with equity) was the only strand that has the capacity to keep everybody in line; an assurance that whoever you are and irrespective of sentimental pedigree [religion, social status, education,family lineage etc], you can aspire and participate in political interactions,freely and without fear of prejudice or bias. Apart from several other unwritten ethos and virtues, egalitarianism stands out as the strongest code inside the Great Hall – the political nerve centre of the Saraki Political dynasty. Inside that Hall, elitism is subdued and the dignity of all men upheld, be they tall or short.

It was therefore commonplace to see Saraki mingle freely with the widest possible spectrum of personalities inside the warm chambers of the Great Hall and even in the open streets of Ilorin and rural townships across Kwara. As far as he was concerned there are no walls around humans; everyone is equal and climbing high horses is an art employed by the ignorant. Saraki may not have attained 'high office' like Awolowo, Azikwe, Tafawa Balewa and the rest of that ilk [he aspired and contested for the Presidency unsuccessfully a number of times: in 1979, during the failed IBB transition fiasco and in 1999 on Nigeria's return to democratic rule] but it is to his credit that the political family he founded, as symbolized in the Great Hall, remains the most successful and efficient political apparatus in Nigeria's history. No other individual, institution or entity,with so little has achieved so much in such sustained manner.

Today, the Great Hall is an enduring and lasting legacy of Olusola Saraki and the virtues and ethos upon which it was founded stand undisturbed. After 29, 036 days on earth, this rare man went back. From that moment in 1964 when, putting his feet into the murky waters of politics he was stung first with defeat, to the time of his passage,he never looked back. He was elected into the Senate in 1979 and served as Senate Leader from 1979 to 1983. His second tenure in the Senate was however cut short by the Buhari/Idiagbon coup d'etat that ended Nigeria's democratic chapter at that time. His daughter, Senator Gbemisola Rukayat Saraki was also elected twice into the Senate [2003 – 2011] after a term in the House of Representatives. His son, Sen. Dr Bukola Saraki is currently serving his first term in the Senate, after successfully completing 2 terms as Executive Governor of Kwara State [2003 – 2011].

All eyes are now on Senator(Dr.)Bukola Saraki, Turaki of Ilorin, the political leader of Kwara and de-facto head of the Great Hall; custodian of the egalitarian and populist traditions of the Saraki Political Family. Nigerians, the people of Kwara and political historians are watching him closely; some prayerfully in anticipation of more progress for the political family and Kwara under his leadership; others with unwarranted disdain for a political family they wish to vanquish at any cost. Whichever the eyes, the Great Hall in the tested and veritable hands of Senator Bukola Saraki is not faltering. He most assuredly is proceeding with the task of providing  needed leadership not only for the disciples of the Great Hall and the people of Kwara but  also for a teeming critical mass of Nigerians especially of the younger generation who are in desperate need of a role model in charting the course for political leadership in today's Nigeria.

With his departure, an important chapter in Nigeria's political history was closed and a new one opened. May divine breaths continue to comfort and console Morenike Saraki, his wife and earthly companion of many years; may divine hands uphold the beloved children of the Patriarch – Bukola, Gbemisola, Laolu, Tope.

"When the angels take the lives of the righteous, the angels say to them : 'Salaamun Alikum, enter paradise, because of the good deeds that you used to do (during your life)'  " (Quran6:32)

To the patriarch and founder of the Great Hall, the Waziri of Ilorin, Abubakar Olusola Saraki, I say Salaamum Alikum, may the Mercies of the Almighty God continue to abide with you and shower light into the place of your rest. Amen.

Seyi Adigun is medical doctor and author.

 


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