MAY THEY NOT REST IN PEACE
I hope that Adélékè Adéẹ̀kọ́ won’t mind my citing his recent “Give Them a
Dose of Pain!” in PM News, September 16, 2013, as my inspiration for
this article. In that piece, angered and
frustrated by the repeated losses and exasperations foisted on humanity by our
Bible-thumping televangelist hustlers and their physical emporia planted on
what are supposed to be thoroughfares, forget expressway, Adeeko had invoked
the same Bible-derived imprecations that our modern-day zealots love to direct
at their enemies, seen and unseen, witches and wizards, and so on, and asked
that they be the recipients of unabated evil and suffering.
As my title indicates, this article, too, wishes to invoke
imprecations. The difference, this time,
is that I do not take my cue from Christianity or even from that other
domesticated religion of alien origins, Islam.
I shall spell out the difference presently. First, let me outline what set me off on this
occasion.
For us Nigerians, wherever we are in the world, cannot be indifferent to
news of fresh atrocities committed by that band of Muslim fanatics, Boko
Haram. Simultaneously, it is difficult
to deny that the routinisation of death and mayhem in Nigerian life makes it
extremely difficult for one not to become blasé about yet another Boko Haram
massacre. It is one orientation one must
stoutly resist. First, it was the attack
on high school students with at least 40 young lives prematurely ended that
grabbed the headlines. Then came the
massacre of 95 at the School of Agriculture in a night raid. While I grieved, I was also mindful of the
Nigerian government’s basic inability to secure the lives of its citizens, even
in their poverty.
The carnage at the Westgate Mall in Nairobi was particularly devastating
for me. Its singularity—compared to the
routinisation I just alluded to—on one hand, and the that-could-have-been-me
characteristic of its many victims, on the other, make it particularly
harrowing. That it claimed the life,
too, of one of the world’s top poets, scholar, and statesman, Kofi Awoonor, who
was in Nairobi for another celebration of the life of the mind supplied an
added personal dimension; magnified by the fact that many of us, denizens of
the life of the mind, could well have been any of those victims.
I was still reeling from that when news broke that more than 300 African
migrants headed for Lampedusa were missing and feared dead when their barely
seaworthy vessel capsized in the treacherous waters of the Mediterranean. Again, this is not an isolated incident but
its frequency should not render us impervious to the tragedy that it
represents. And the numbers are simply
chilling.
Then came the news of the crash in Lagos shortly after take-off of a
plane that was carrying the remains of the former governor of Ondo State to
Akure for burial in his hometown. It got
personal when it was confirmed that one of the casualties was Deji Falae, the
Ondo State Commissioner for Tourism. He
was one of the principal hosts for a conference we recently held in Akure to
commemorate D.O. Fagunwa who, I hope, needs no introduction. That the late Deji Falae was present for the
entire duration of the conference, not out of a sense of duty, but as one
deeply interested in the life of the mind that was being marked endeared him to
all of us and that first impression—it was my only time ever meeting him—is one
that will now remain with me. The Yorùbá
are right: Igi tó tọ́ kìí pẹ́ nígbó.
Needless to say, as I wrote to my friends in Kenya during the massacre,
it is my hope that all who are affected by the losses that I have been
recounting are comforted and that their memories shall remain evergreen in the
hearts of those they left behind.
Notice that I have not prayed that their souls should rest in peace. The idea that departed souls should rest in
peace and our repeated, almost mindless, invocation of that prayer is a part of
received wisdom derived from Christianity and Islam. The idea that “the labourer’s task is o’er”
and she has earned eternal repose flows from the theology that sees our earthly
existence in a negative light and death, any death, however procured, is to be
viewed as a welcome release into the eternal peace of in the Lord’s or Allah’s
domain.
The recent deaths have forced me to take another look at this comforting
wish. All of them are needless, yes,
needless deaths. It may be easier to
persuade people of the needlessness of the deaths caused by religious zealotry
and political brigandage. But the same
is not true of the deaths in the Mediterranean or the untimely death of the
able commissioner and other casualties of the plane crash. Certainly, some might argue that the migrants
took the risk that they did and it is too bad that it ended badly. After all, life gives no guarantees to
anyone. And, for the victims of the
plane crash, accidents are a fact of life.
Unfortunate though it is, we cannot put them on the same pedestal as
those cut down just for being at the wrong place at the wrong time.
This is where the wisdom of Òrìsà, Yorùbá religion
properly understood, becomes compelling and incredibly insightful. In Yorùbá metaphysics there is a distinction
between good death and bad death. We cannot
go into any detailed explication of this distinction here. One key difference should suffice: a good
death is celebrated, worthy of emulation, and is what all desire to be
privileged to undergo when their time comes to exit the world. A bad death, on the other hand, is dreaded,
to be shunned, and those who exit by it barely rate a mention in subsequent
remembrances.
But this is what is most significant about this view
of death native to Yorùbá religion: the departed are not supposed to nor are
they expected to enter into eternal repose, however their death may have come
about. The dear departed who exit
through good death are asked to make a return to their families and even if
they do not return, they are tasked never to sleep in the world beyond. Rather they are charged to keep looking back
at and out for those they have left behind to ensure that no evil befalls the
latter and that their lives do prosper.
Nowhere is there any suggestion that they work of the departed on earth
is concluded by their passing or that their passing in the best of
circumstances is a ticket to eternal peace.
Those who exit by way of bad death are even more put
upon after their deaths. If their bad
death had been caused by their own acts of commission or omission, they are
banished from the memory of their survivors and every effort is made to knock
their GPS out of order to ensure that their spirits do not, repeat, do not,
find their way back to their families.
But if there is reason to believe that the death is needless, that it
has been brought about by malevolent forces or by the hands some enemy or
ill-wisher, the charge to the departed is more drastic and stark. Their task is spelt out: “do not rest until
you have avenged your death,” seems to be the charge to the dead. On occasion, the burial is delayed in order
to perform some rituals designed to fortify the corpse to execute the revenge
mission on those who may have had a hand in her death. The remains are interred only after this
mission is accomplished.
One does not have to subscribe to the beliefs just
iterated. What they tell us, and this is
why they are important, is that we have here a different attitude to death and
its aftermath. I am saying that there is
something to be said for re-engaging a piece of indigenous wisdom derived from
Yorùbá religion and metaphysics. On that
score, it is out of place to ask that the victims of the bad deaths we have
been considering rest in peace. Quite
the contrary, our demand\prayer, if it be that, should be: May they not rest in
peace!
It may indeed be the case that the quietude that has
been urged on our dear but needlessly departed in the aftermath of their demise
is the worst legacy of our embrace of Christianity and Islam. What if, instead of resting in peace, the
ghosts of all the slaves who were tossed into the Atlantic Ocean during the
Middle Passage were to continue to haunt the descendants of all humans involved
in the perpetration of and profit from that crime against humanity? What if our leaders were haunted by the angry
spirits of all our children who died needlessly in infancy for want of
appropriate and accessible medical care and adequate nutrition? Or those of victims of fake drugs? Poorly maintained road networks? Importation and distribution of fake
automobile parts? Of badly maintained
airlines and dubious owners and operators?
Of incompetent and corrupt government regulators whose lapses in their
oversight functions lead to aircraft that are disguised flying coffins? Or governments that run their countries into
the ground and make attractive, if not inevitable, for their young to brave the
desert or the seas for better prospects anywhere but the lands of their births?
It is time that we had our collective peace profoundly
disturbed by those we have dispatched to early and needless deaths by our lack
of heed. May the souls of the departed
not rest in peace; may we not find peace from their torment.
See published version at http://www.pmnewsnigeria.com/2013/10/09/may-they-not-rest-in-peace/
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