“The Almajiri has become a scapegoat for the multiple sins of the Nigerian state in general and the Muslim Umma in particular,” Mr Kukah said in a paper shared with PREMIUM TIMES on Monday. “As usual, as of now, the northern elite will do what they do best: hide in the sands of self-deception, knowing that this will blow over and soon, no one will remember again.”
The almajiri system
(or almajirci) is the over a century-old practice of poor rural parents who
send their children to live with mallams in pursuit of Islamic knowledge, which
the children now receive under violent and torrid conditions. It is seen as
providing an environment for recruits into violence in the north, apart from
the system’s socio-economic implications.
Governors in the
region have announced steps to end or reform the practice, with Kaduna State
Governor Nasir El-Rufai saying “it has not worked for the children, it has not
worked for northern Nigeria, it has not worked for Nigeria. It has to end.”
“The Governors
indicted themselves when they said that it is time to act now because the
Almajiri has outlived his usefulness,” said Mr Kukah. “At least they have
admitted their complicity and the fact that the Almajiri system had always been
a tool for political and economic forms of transaction.”
“Here is my thesis:
With regards to his condition today, the Almajiri is an object, not a subject,
is a victim, not a perpetrator, sinned against rather than a sinner.”
Mr Kukah is the
Bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Kaduna, and has made blistering remarks
aiming at northern Muslims whom he accuses of perpetrating the “domination” and
“persecution” Christians in the region.
Stating further in
his paper, he said, the almajirai (plural for almajiri) and their mallams
(teachers) are blamed for “being dirty and unkempt, miscreants, delinquents,
nuisances to the society, petty thieves, prospective Boko Haram recruits, a
stigma, an assault on our collective social sense of decency.”
“Their Mallam is
charged with many sins including child abuse, abduction, human trafficking,
exploitation, physical abuse, hard labour, enslavement, etc. So, we identify
the Mallam and his Almajiri more by their crimes than their names. They are spoken
about and not spoken to.
“In the media
reports, no one bothers to give them a voice of their own. They do not speak
for themselves. If they had a chance, for example, they might say: Everyone
calls me, Almajiri. No one has asked me my name. We are in the millions but
have only one name. I have no name. I have no father. I have no mother. I have
no home. I have no town. I have no tribe. I have no address. The streets are my
home. I do not know if I have brothers or sisters. I am an Almajiri. No one knows
if I have feelings. No one has ever asked me what I want to be in life. I live
for today and for the sake of Allah. I have no tomorrow except Allah gives me.
Tomorrow is in the hands of Allah,” he added.
He said the almajiri
system was ordinarily good and “much treasured” part of Islamic history and
found similarity with it in Christianity, giving an example of the role of
catechists in the Catholic Church.
He said, “The
challenge for the Muslim Umma in northern Nigeria is to answer the question,
where did all this go wrong? Where was the Almajiri supposed to go at the
completion of his studies? Was there a career path? How and why did the Mallam
and his Almajiri, a much-treasured part of Islamic history, deteriorate to the
status of the scum of the earth? I do not have the answers to these questions,
but I wish to raise a few issues for the attention of the northern Muslim
Ummah.
“First, the northern
Muslim ummah must accept full responsibility and see the Almajiri as part of
the huge baggage of their failure to prepare for a future for their people.
“They left their
people in the lurch as the modern state emerged, providing no further rung on
the ladder of progress for the Almajiri as part of the future for their
children.
“With both he and
his Mallam left behind in the cave of ignorance about the modern state, they
grew to fear life outside the cave. They have remained trapped in time. The new
world of modernity was presented as a contaminant to the purity of Islamic
knowledge.
“So, while the
modern elite equipped themselves and their children with the armour of western
education, the Mallam and his Almajiri were left behind in the twilight zone of
ignorance, fear, anxiety, disorientation and discomfiture, treating those
outside with veiled contempt.”
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