Friday, 29 July 2016

The Fajuyi Spirit - By Femi Fani-Kayode


Read his piece below...

Fifty years ago today, on July 29th 1966, a man by the name of Lt. Col. Francis
Adekunle Fajuyi gave his life in defence of our country and the then Head of
State, General Johnson Thomas Aguiyi-Ironsi. His killers were a group of northern
army officers who participated in the so-called northern "revenge coup" of July
29th 1966. No less than 300 Igbo army officers were slaughtered that night
together with a handful of yoruba soldiers, including Fajuyi.

Major General Fajuyi was a yoruba man who opted to die in defence of an igbo Head of
State. This was not only honorable and courageous but it was also unique and
unprecedented. He was a selfless hero and a man that we shall honor and immortalise
in the new Nigeria that is to come.

Those that murdered him, General Aguiyi-Ironsi and the famous 300 in cold blood that
night are still running the affairs of our country till today. They determine who is who
and who gets what. They decide who our President will be and how long he will remain
in power. As a matter of fact their hateful hegemony and evil intentions are even more
pronounced and frightful today than they were in 1966 and their grip on the levers of
power in our country is even stronger.

Today they are fully in charge and some of those that actually shot Fajuyi are fully
behind them. Yet despite their intention to dominate, silence, break and destroy the rest
of us one thing remains clear: the Fajuyi spirit of courage, unity, selflesness and
sacrifice has been imbued by millions in the southern and Middle Belt regions of our
country.

These are men and women that are prepared to stand shoulder to shoulder with the
oppressed of our nation, whether they be Niger Deltans, Igbos, Yorubas? Middle Belters
or anything else. These are men and women that are prepared to resist the perfidious
religious and ethnic agenda of the "born to rule" in our midst and that recognise the fact
that they regard the rest of us as nothing but slaves. When it comes to southern rights
and interests we the Yoruba particularly must learn a lesson from our own son Fajuyi
and emulate his example.

Like him, if necessary, we must be ready to sacrifice our lives and liberty in defence of
any or all of our southern and Middle Belt bretheren that are facing persecution,
genocide and injustice at the hands of our collective slave masters. It is also time for
us to appreciate the fact that if we truly want to be free we must extend our hand of
friendship across the River Niger to the Igbo and we must see their bitter travails as
being ours as well.

We must also feel the pain when an Igbo or Niger-Deltan youth is slaughtered by
President Buhari's army in the name of "crushing all opposition and dissent" and
"keeping Nigeria one". We must also feel the pain when an Igbo or Niger-Deltan youth is
slaughtered by President Buhari's army in the name of "crushing all opposition and
dissent" and "keeping Nigeria one".

We must acknowledge the fact that Nigeria cannot remain one as long as there is
ethnic and religious bigotry, oppression and injustice. We must appreciate the fact that
there can never be southern, or indeed Middle Belt, emancipation without southern unity.
Fajuyi understood that point 50 years ago. Consequently he opted to resist the evil in
the and and die for it. He was indeed a true martyr. He paid the supreme price for his
fellow southerner and he stood against northern adventurism, oppression, domination
and hegemony. 50 years later it is time for the rest of us to do the same.

It is time for us to acknowledge and honor his sacrifice and come together as one. It is
time for us to stand up, look at our collective oppressors in the eye and say "no more".
No longer should we bow our heads in submission, servility and shame. It is time for us
to rise up, invoke the power of the Living God and be men. May the gallant and
beautiful soul of Major General Fajuyi continue to rest in eternal peace and may those
that murdered him 50 years ago be brought to justice.

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