Monday, May 27, 2013
Tuesday, May 7, 2013
Teaching Sexual Immorality In Nigerian Schools!
If anyone had told me a few years ago that a
time will come in Nigeria
when the authorities will approve the teaching of sexual immorality as a
subject in junior and secondary schools, I would have thought that the person
had lost his mind. But now, before our very eyes, it is happening, and I lack
words to describe the shock among many Nigerians!
Not too long ago, I
was shown the topics being treated under the subject called “Sexuality Education” or “Sex
Education” which tender
kids in both junior and secondary schools in Nigeria are now being forced to
learn. Mere kids, some as young as ten or even nine, are put in the hands
of teachers, who deploy every energy, talent and creativity to saturate their
tender minds with every detail about sexual immorality and the use of
contraceptives.
When I first raised
alarm on this issue in my weekly column not too long ago, a concerned parent
wrote me to say that the ‘Teacher’s Guide’ given to the Integrated Science
teachers (who handle this subject) mandates them “to teach the children that religious
teachings on issues like pre-marital sex, contraception, homosexuality,
abortion and gender relations are mere opinions and myths! They are also to teach the students
how to masturbate and use chemical contraceptives (designed for women in their
30s). The ‘Teachers Guide’ equally
lays a big emphasis on values clarification; this empowers teenage children to
decide which moral values to choose since the ones parents teach them at home
are mere options.”
It is difficult to
imagine that anyone outside a mental home could have the mind to design such a
subject even for the children of his worst enemy! In my view, this clearly
qualifies as child abuse, which, sadly, has been endorsed by the authorities.
I have reasons to suspect that what some of the teachers would be giving out
would be targeted more at titillating their tender victims than educating them!
I can imagine how easy it would now become for a teacher who has been
targeting a female student to use his creative elaboration of this subject, to
get the girl so overwhelmed she would become easy meat.
Saturday, May 4, 2013
Tribute To Chinua Achebe (Ikejimba; 1930-2013)
By Chike Momah
[This tribute is
a second revision of a piece (REFLECTIONS ON CHINUA ACHEBE) which I
wrote in 2000, and revised in 2007. His passing, in the third week of March
2013, has necessitated this revision.]
Chinua Achebe was a compelling figure, straight out of a Biblical saga. He was also, rather more prosaically, a friend who was so close, he was like a brother. A few hours after his death was blazed around the world, I received a condolence call from a member of our Dallas, TX Igbo community. This friend asked me if I was sure Chinua and I did not share an umbilical cord. Another person, this time a Reverend gentleman, expressed his condolences in rather more risqué language. “Your friendship with Chinua,” he said, “reminds me of the biblical story of David and Jonathan.”
I would be lying through my teeth if I said I was not flattered by the language in which the two condolences were couched. But while I gloried in the way my friendship with Chinua was perceived by these two gentlemen, two things struck me about the manner their perceptions were expressed.