Money-Seeking Ritual Killings from Yesteryears; Mind-Sagging Religious Failings for Donkey’s Years
It wasn’t an April fool report in the second week of March, 2023, that Ogun State police command arrested five suspected “ritualists who had been exhuming corpses from their graves and removing parts of their bodies for ritual purposes”. Be it as rituals or rites, the religious undertone of these barbaric and bizarre beliefs of spewing money from mysterious doings justifies turning the heat on religion in Nigeria, during these dark days, in an urgent effort of “recovering our social architecture”. We need to analyze the theory of long spoons constantly dining with the devil for metaphysical liberation from poverty.
Has
it ever occurred to Nigerians that there’s no nation of the world without some
degree of economic downturn at least at one period of their national lives?
Afterall, many African countries have, and continue to experience famine, wars,
political instability and so forth with socioeconomic backlash. Yet, how many
of their citizens have embraced ritual killings as a way out of their economic challenges?
May I not be misunderstood; vices such as petty stealing, armed robberies,
illegal arms proliferation, banditry, kidnapping, terrorism etc. of
unimaginable proportions have resulted from the life-threatening conditions facing
most of these troubled countries too. But in ‘choosing’ our resultant
immoralities in response to our tough times, why add the infamous ritual
killings of fellow Nigerians to Nigeria’s cart of vices, unlike other troubled
nations? Something is fundamentally fishy and extreme about our supernatural
beliefs and it fuels this written inquisition.
Hence,
before we hurriedly and frivolously blame Nigeria’s multi-factorial economic woes
for the alarming trend of prowlers seeking whom to devour for supernatural
survival and breakthrough, let’s ponder on one of the greatest influencers of
our thoughts and actions in Nigeria. Let’s assess the prevalent doctrines in a
country whose people are quicker to flaunt their religious profiles – a private
affair, than their civic commitments – a public matter. Let’s x-ray the
apparent brainwash of Nigerians about supernatural short-cuts to fortunes,
feigned by the three dominant religions in the country. Given
that poverty, unemployment, population explosion, political misadventures and poor
education have prevented majority of Nigerians from critical thinking, can some
of us yet intelligently query how religion has fed fat on our mental
foibles over centuries and sunk many Nigerians into the lowest abyss of high
expectations of mysterious wealth?
Permit
I ask; Do people really get rich through these evil means? Since I haven’t patronized
that malevolent route in my lifetime, I may not be able to categorically and
impartially state that ritual killings for money scam their clients. However, I
can draw knowledge from exploratory minds. Abimbola Adelakun, an awfully frank
columnist & research-drawn writer for Punch Newspaper, stated in her column
on 2nd December, 2021 that “if it were possible to conjure money
as our people believe, Africans would be the wealthiest people in the world. We
are the poorest and the perennially backward continent partly because we seek
supernatural solutions to issues that can be resolved through logic.” Imagine
the exasperating list of deceased individuals whose lives were allegedly cut
short for wealth-seeking ritual purposes; my colleague’s brother killed in Kogi
State, a daughter of my father’s associates murdered in Ondo State, the late
Bamise who died mysteriously after boarding a Bus Rapid Transport (BRT) vehicle
in Lagos State, a female job-seeker in Akwa Ibom State, and so forth. How many
of the human parts dealers involved in the wicked chain of mindless killings
have become multimillionaires? If some have, like I asked rhetorically in
Chapter two of Wealth without Work (titled Work: Can you tell
yours on CNN?), how many have been bold to go on CNN to tell their
maim-to-fame stories as celebration-worthy rags-to-riches narratives? Will the
regulatory bodies ever recognize ritual killers and human parts sellers as ‘innovative’
professions within Nigeria’s informal sector? How is the mystical brainwash of
callousness then worth it?
God
– the immortal being - doesn’t’ deceive and is unfailing. Religion, on the
other hand, championed by mere mortals, daily deceives and fails. Without
ambiguity, religion “is the belief in and worship of a supernatural being” and
one profound area of its shortcoming, particularly in Nigeria, is that its
champions create a distressing belief in the minds of worshippers that God is a
shortcut to success. They also create a misconception that God would readily bypass
the indispensable conduit of ‘work’ to make them rich and add no sorrow.
Without equivocation, fear or favour, I disagree with those indoctrinations in
their entirety!
In
one of my yet-to-be-released books, Religion without Sacrifice (in
continuation of my series called “7 Demoters of Nigeria’s Destiny” which
is an adaptation of Mahatma Gandhi’s Seven Deadly Public Sins), I shall
be spilling more “hard truths”. The book will try to disabuse Nigerans’ minds
from these notions and support my opinion that religion has destroyed our
mentalities than it has developed it and then, “ye shall know the truth, and
the truth shall make you free”. I’ll save that for the anticipated book. The
relevance of my 301-page book released in 2015 and titled Wealth without
Work (Series 3 of the 7 Demoters of Nigeria’s Destiny”) is for sure
brought to bear in these bloodthirsty times confronting the citizens of a
failing Nigeria. The book boldly encapsulates the world-acknowledged order of
“hard work and smart work” for survival and wealth while brazenly engorging the
condemnations for mysterious fortune.
When
citizens are left with the shorter end of the stick under an ensuing social
contract in other climes, ritual killings for money are not their go-to.
However, in similar situations, Nigerians have been taught to invoke miracles,
from different supernatural kingdoms. For instance, digging into the Yoruba
ancestry, it is instructive that oogun owo (money-seeking traditional
rites) sagas were not far-fetched in the olden days. I recollect with
nostalgia, the ease with which some older neighbours accused certain famous and
well-off people within the community of concealing the fetish sources of their
‘mysterious’ wealth.
Similarly,
the tales of awure (metaphysical means of enhancing huge returns/profits
on sales of goods & services) among business proprietors date back to the
days of my Yoruba forefathers, irrespective of their religious type. Again,
yesteryear accounts described aajo (a closely related variant of awure)
as a highly patronized product in the ‘spiritual’ market. Traders who were
Christians, Muslims and Traditional worshippers were reported as regular
customers of these latter two supernatural fortune-enhancers for their
individual trades. Future-seers and destiny-manipulators also formed part of the
recognized vendors in our antique history. Whether the outcomes of these
practices truly yielded strange monies or not, such beliefs of supernatural
incomes aren’t the exclusive preserve of today’s believers. Although those were
days when Nigeria’s economic outlook had an exchange rate of one naira to one
United States dollar, yesterday’s religious congregations in Nigeria yet
invented and transmitted the work-shunting mindset of wealth-creation to this
generation. We are however more worried in present-day Nigeria because of the
rampancy of ritual killings for ‘alleged’ financial breakthroughs.
Truth
be told! A few deaths in the mid-20th century were subjectively
classified as mysterious and consequently catalogued as ritual killings for
monetary purposes on the suspicion of manslaughter. Unverified accounts existed
in those old times of supposed victims coughing out blood and getting lean
while their assumed culprits mysteriously picked huge sums of money from a
secret wardrobe (as depicted by several Nollywood scripts on our television
screens) in the perpetrator’s bedroom. If the Nigerian Police Force ever had a
viable Planning, Research & Statistics (PRS) department that collated and
analyzed some of those homicidal happenings, its published findings would have
helped. We would have known both the dark killers and the veracity of their
claims of riches from those killings. Till convincing evidence is provided, the
mindset of money-seeking ritual killings from yesteryears would remain
mind-sagging religious failings for donkey’s years.
Of
course, ritual killings (oogun owo) were culturally considered
unacceptable extremes of awure and aajo in the pre-colonial and
immediate post-colonial eras. My argument is however that they’ve existed as a
religion-spurred belief among Nigerians. From Western Nigeria to the East and
North, varieties of these mystical practices abound in our history, thereby
lending credence to the unfortunate acceptance of such spiritual money-spinners
from yesteryears, contrary to what was obtained in other cultures abroad. As the Nigerian socioeconomic indices
collapsed, so did the latent belief in, love for, and practice of “religious
fertilizers” as individual solutions to the existing challenges irresponsibly
and gradually gain prominence among the common man. Consequently, and down the
line, religion became the major culprit of not only the docility of most
Nigerians (the common man; the victims) towards the largely irresponsible
ruling elite (the hostage-takers), but also some of the reigning illicit
strategies to handle the mired situation. This prevalent national behaviour,
tantamount to that seen in Stockholm syndrome, finds a paradox in Nigerians
because the victims of oppression are not merely being enticed with peanuts by
their oppressors during elections but have now found solace in killing fellow
victims in the hope of survival and wealth.
How
did we eventually arrive at the gory gutters here and now? It was a gradual
descent as our national wellness steadily plunged. In worship places, offerings’
orations became heightened; sacrificial sermons were amplified; and tithing
talks suddenly increased. Furthermore, the sale of mysterious prosperity-enhancing
objects (water, oil, handkerchiefs, clothes etc.) and compulsive clergy-care
took center stage, with little or no accentuation of the compelling need to
match these spiritual ordinances with the ethos of work. As our developmental
indices nosedived, more forms of the aforementioned spiritual coping mechanisms
skyrocketed and drew closer to the insane end of the spectrum till we berthed
at the dockyard of ritual killings.
Finally,
I know that Nigerians hate their religious (not necessarily godly) ways to be subjected
to public scrutiny. Not minding whose ox is gored, this article advocates that
the doctrines of “little seeds, large harvests” begin to take back seats in the
corridors of worship. Let clergymen obey the second stanza of our national
anthem to “guide our leaders right; help our youths the truth to know”. This can
be achieved by fervently preaching about the works of our hands and brains that
are in conformity with the values of godliness, morality and humanity. That I,
like many believers, understand and accept the inalienable place of grace and
favour neither makes my (or our) God a magician or money-multiplier. For those
who may not like the assertions therein, beware, lest you get caught conforming
with George Orwell’s long-stated fact that “the further a society drifts from
the truth, the more it will hate those who speak it.”
Dr.
Adetolu Ademujimi is a Medical Doctor, Health finance Specialist, Author, Reformer, Coach, Public Policy
expert and Social entrepreneur who can be reached via email: ademujimi@yahoo.co.uk; Twitter: @toluademujimi; Instagram:
@adetoluademujimi; Linkedin: @adetolu ademujimi
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