Let me begin with two
clarifications. Aso Villa is not my home, I am just passing through.
Even this world is nobody's home, we are just birds of passage. So, let
nobody turn up his nose in derision, and say; "he's writing like the
landlord of Aso Villa, defending a place where's he's just a tenant."
Yes, nobody is landlord
in the Villa, not even rational presidents. They can only live there for
maximum of eight years, if Nigerians so decide. And for me, my
treasures are laid up somewhere beyond the blue. The angels only need to
beckon me from Heaven's open door, and I wouldn't feel at home in this
world anymore.
The
second clarification. Let nobody, particularly on social media, begin to
insinuate that Femi Adesina is at war with Reuben Abati, his immediate
predecessor as presidential spokesman. This piece you are beginning to
read is not about Abati as a person, it is about his spiritual ideas and
convictions, which I think need some appraisal, as they are rather
unspiritual.
Abati
and myself have been professional colleagues for almost 30 years, we
have a lot of mutual friends, and know how to reach each other when
necessary. So, this is not a case of Muhammadu Buhari's spokesman being
at war with Goodluck Jonathan's spokesman. What for?
In his piece on October 14, 2016,
Abati wrote under the headline, 'The spiritual side of Aso Villa.' What
were his conclusions? For the benefit of those who did not read the
highly entertaining piece (in fact, there were moments I had my two legs
in the air, laughing, as I read), let me do a brief summary.
Call it
'gospel' according to Abati, and you would be right: There is some form
of witchcraft, which causes occupants of Aso Villa to take weird
decisions. Working in the Villa makes you susceptible to some sort of
evil influences, because there is something supernatural about power and
closeness to it. Some of those who lived or worked in the Villa had
something dying under their waists (for the men), while some of the
women became merchants of dildo, because they had suffered a special
kind of deaths in their homes.
"The
ones who did not have such misfortune had one ailment or the other that
they had to nurse. From cancer to brain and prostate surgery and
whatever, the Villa was a hospital full of agonizing patients," Abati
posited.
Reading
the piece through, you would think Aso Villa was nothing but what
Godfrey Chaucer called "a thoroughfare of woes." In fact, Abati
submitted that the Villa "should be converted into a spiritual
museum,and abandoned." Holy Moses! Jumping Jehoshaphat!
If Aso
Villa was such a haunted house, why then do most occupants like to stay
put, right from the first tenant, Ibrahim Babangida, who was virtually
forced to step aside in August 1993? And why did Goodluck Jonathan,
Abati's principal, spend money in trillions (in different currencies of
the world), just to perpetuate himself in a house that consumes its
occupants? Being a literary scholar, Abati would remember the doctor in
Macbeth, that work of William Shakespeare, who was detailed to cure Lady
Macbeth of the neurosis that afflicted her, after she had been party to
the deaths of King Duncan and Banquo, so that her husband would be the
king of Scotland.
A
spiritually troubled Lady Macbeth sleepwalked every night, trying to
wash her hands of the innocent blood that had been shed. The doctor was
so fed up with the terrifying atmosphere, that he said to himself:"Were I
from Dunsinane away and clear, profit should hardly again draw me
here." Did Abati ever say the same of the Villa, a place where men
became women "after something died below their waists?" We do not have
it on record that Abati showed a clean pair of heels, or that he would
not have stayed if Dr Jonathan had won reelection, and had asked him to
continue in his position as adviser on media. Or was it the case of
eternal fascination for the thing that repelled and terrified you?
Mysterium tremendum et fascinas, as it is called in Latin.
For me,
what Abati did in the October 14 piece was simply a glorification and
deification of superstition, something that attempted to elevate works
of darkness above the powers of God. The writer merely fed the cravings
and propensity of people for the supernatural, in a way that stoked and
kindled the kiln of fear, rather than that of faith.
Let's
take the issues one after the other, and look at them against true
spiritual principles. Christianity is the one I am most familiar with,
and that would be my benchmark.
In Aso
Villa, houses were haunted, people were oppressed into taking curious
decisions, they fell ill, died, or suffered the losses of loved ones, so
Abati claimed. Are such peculiar only to the presidential villa? Should
all those who live or work there automatically enjoy immunity from the
vicissitudes of life, simply because they walked the corridors of power?
Wasn't President Umaru Yar'Adua right inside the presidential villa,
when he told us on national television: "I am a human being. I can fall
sick. I can recover. And I can die." That was a practical man for you.
Abati
unwittingly wants his readers to believe that once you operated in or
around Aso Villa, you became a superman. No. You are as mortal as can
be. The Holy Bible does not even give us such leeway. "There hath no
temptation taken you but such as is common to man..."(1 Cor 10:13).
There are certain things common to man, and they can happen to you
wherever you are. At the White House. At 10, Downing Street. Buckingham
Palace, Aso Villa. Wherever. "But such as is common to man..." Let no
man feed us with the bogey that such things happen because of where you
live or operate from. There are some things that are just common to man,
and which may happen to you as long as you are on this side of
eternity.
I lost
my sister in a road crash last year. She was a professor of Dramatic
Arts at the Obafemi Awolowo University in Ile-Ife. Abati knew her well,
as they both did post-graduate studies at University of Ibadan in the
1980s. Abati was among those who called to condole with me. My sister
never visited the Villa in her lifetime. Even if she did, that could
never have had anything to do with her death on the Lagos-Ibadan
Expressway. To believe and teach otherwise is to carry superstition to
ridiculous level, and venerate the Devil, granting him omnipotence, an
attribute that belongs to God only. For the Devil, doing evil is
full-time business, and whether you had anything to do with Aso Villa or
not, he continued with his pernicious acts.
Does
that then suggest that mankind is helpless before evil? No. God still
has ultimate powers. He can spare you "as a father spares the son that
serves him." (Malachi 3:17). If you are under the pavilion of God,
sleep, wake and operate daily in Aso Villa, you are covered, no matter
the evil that lurks around, if any. There is a better covenant
established on greater promises, and that is the canopy under which you
should function. God can spare you from all evils, and if He permits any
other thing, it is "such as is common to man," and not because of Aso
Villa.
If
houses catch fire in the Villa, how many conflagrations occur in other
parts of the city? If some men in the Villa suffered erectile
dysfunction in Abati's time, doesn't the Journal of Sexual Medicine tell
us that about 20 million American men have something that has died
under their waists? It is one thing that became prevalent in the last
two to three decades, due to modern lifestyle.
Causes
range from age, to stress, depression, anxiety, alcohol, medication, and
several others. Even, a study showed that watching too much television
kills something under the waist. So why does Abati make it seem as if it
is a copyright of Aso Villa?
Now,
another clarification. Don't I believe in demonic infestation and
manifestation? I sure do. I wouldn't be a student of the Holy Bible if I
don't. Jesus talked of the man who got delivered from demonic
possession, and because that man did not yield himself to a better
influence, the evil spirit that inhabited him came back with seven more
powerful spirits, and the end of the man was worse than his beginning.
Abati wrote of persons in the Villa, "walking upside down, head to the
ground." Let me share this story I heard over 20 years ago.
There
was this young Christian who gave scant regards to demons and what they
could do. In fact, he almost didn't believe demons existed. One day, as
he walked along the ever busy Broad Street in Lagos, God opened his
spiritual eyes. Some people were walking on their heads! And not only
that, as they passed by other people, they slapped them with the soles
of their feet. If you got so slapped, you developed an affliction, which
you would nurse for the rest of your life. Yet, you never knew where it
came from.
As the
young man saw that vision and got its spiritual explanation, he began to
s-c-r-e-a-m. Was that in Aso Villa? "Such as is common to man..." Evil
exists everywhere. Trying to source and locate it in Aso Villa is
disingenuous. You need God everywhere. In Europe, Asia, America,
Oceania, Aso Villa. There is evil everywhere, and we need not make
fetish of any place as being more evil infested than other places. Since
Satan got thrown out of Heaven due to his inordinate ambition, evil had
resided in the world. "How art thou fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son
of the morning! How art thou cut down to the ground, which didst weaken
the nations!" (Isaiah 14:12). The Devil lives in the world, but God is
never helpless before evil. He will never be. Let the Devil commit
suicide if he is not happy about that fact. God rules!
If
every principal officer including the President and his wife suffered
series of tragedies as Abati claimed, and he himself had breathing
problems, and walked with the aid of crutches for months, it was " such
as is common to man" and not necessarily because they were in Aso Villa.
But of course, if such people put their hands in evil, possibly to gain
some things in power or perpetuate themselves beyond the time heaven
granted, then "he who rolls a stone, a stone shall be rolled back to
him. He that digs a pit, shall fall into it." That is what the Good Book
says. You can then hardly blame Aso Villa for such payback time, can
you?
To
avoid getting sucked into what Abati calls "the cloud of evil" that
hangs around power, what to do is to hold ephemeral things loosely. Know
that they are temporal, and will truly end. Power is one of such
things. Will anybody be a permanent landlord at Aso Villa? It would be
foolhardy to have such mindset. A couple of times I'd had some private
discussions with President Buhari, and he had lamented the state of the
nation, he invariably ended with the statement, "while we are here, we
will do our best." It shows a man who knows that he's not a permanent
landlord at Aso Villa, and can never be.
He
would use the opportunity he has to do his best for Nigeria, and then
move on. That is a good mindset, and a safety valve from getting sucked
into "the cloud of evil." Daily, I tell myself that I am just passing
through Aso Villa. And while there, just like my principal, I will do my
best. It could be long, it could be short, depending on God and the man
who appointed me, but one day, it would be over, and some other people
would come in to do their bit. It is inexorable. The real treasures are
laid somewhere beyond the blue.
Abati
says we should pray before people pack their things into Aso Villa. I
say not just Aso Villa, but everywhere. Pray before you pack into any
place, because there are some things "such as is common to man." It is
only God that keeps from such. And He is sovereign in terms of what He
prevents, and in what He allows. Ours is to pray, and believe. Prayer
works.
"Aso
Villa is in urgent need of redemption. I never slept in the apartment
they gave me in that Villa for an hour," wrote Abati. Well, different
strokes for different folks. Hear what the Good Book says: "It is vain
for you to rise up early, to sit up late, to eat the bread of sorrows;
for so he giveth his beloved sleep." Here am I. For over one year, I
have lived in the house allocated to me at the Villa. I sleep so
soundly, I even snore. In fact, I snore so loud that at times, I wake
myself up with the sound.
.Adesina is Special Adviser on Media and Publicity to President Muhammadu Buhari
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