• Former Abia gov delivers institution’s 2nd Distinguished
Lecture, says leaders must emphasise culture
The students of the Faculty of Arts, University of Nigeria,
Nsukka (UNN) were in high spirits last Friday. And even among the academics in
the prestigious citadel of learning, the excitement was palpable.
They were all waiting for the former governor of Abia State
and Chairman of the Slok Group, Dr Orji Uzor Kalu, who was billed to deliver
the Distinguished Lecture of the Faculty of Arts of the institution. The
lecture was the second in the series.
So, before the 10:00a.m scheduled time for the commencement
of the lecture, students from Abia State had joined their colleagues in the
faculty to roll out drums to welcome their august visitor. The air was rapturous
when Dr Kalu arrived at the university by 9:30 a.m.
Upon arrival, Kalu was ushered into the Vice Chancellor’s
Chambers, where he was officially received by the principal officers of the
university led by the Deputy Vice Chancellor, Administration, Prof Charles
Arinzechukwu Igwe. He stood in for the Vice Chancellor, Prof Benjamin Ozumba,
who later breezed into the Princess Alexandria Auditorium venue of the lecture.
In the VC’s Chambers were eminent professors, members of the
newly constituted Governing Council, deans of faculties, heads of departments
and the widow of the late Zik of Africa, Dame Prof Uche Azikiwe, who was the
chairman of the Distinguished Lecture.
The academicians did not hide their excitement at having
Kalu in their midst. The DVC Administration, Prof Igwe noted: “Kalu is one of
us. He behaves like us; we said the lecture will begin by 10:00a.m and he was
here by 9:30a.m.”
Prof Igwe described Kalu as a brave politician and Nigerian
who has been useful to the country and the Igbo nation.
Responding at the Chambers, Kalu said he was happy to be
back at the institution a few years after his last visit. “I’m proud of the UNN
because it is a university in our heart,” he noted.
Before leaving the VC’s conference room for the venue of the
lecture, Kalu challenged the authorities of the UNN to fabricate machines that
could be used to process cassava and palm oil, promising to deploy them for use
in his farms, as well as help in their export.
His lead host, Prof Igwe, assured him that the university
would rise to the occasion, pointing out that the university had already
launched the Roar Nigeria Hub, which is a scientific incubator centre that
could help to meet the request of the former Abia governor.
Done with the reception, the principal officers of the
university rose to lead Kalu to the Princess Alexandria Auditorium, where an
army of students and academicians were seated, waiting for the lecture to kick
off.
The sign that the lecture would be rich in content came when
the visiting professor of Mass Communication, Dr Ike S. Ndolo, stepped out to
read the citation of Dr Kalu.
“Today showcases the second in the Distinguished Lecture
series of the Faculty of Arts of the University of Nigeria as we continue to
restore the dignity of man. It is a special day: momentous, gratifying,
delightful, and of utmost joy to me as I present to you His Excellency, Orji
Uzor Kalu.”
Ndolo described Kalu as “the quintessential, ebullient and
enterprising business mogul of superlative brilliance, merit and repute; a
prodigious, debonair and profound politician, a business developer of tenacity
and endurance, of honesty and courage, of singleness of purpose and
steadfastness of conduct, of zest and activity,” as the students and members of
the academic community raised a loud applause.
Ndolo noted that Kalu has abundant talent, which he has used
successfully across various aspects of life, especially in business.
The visiting professor was not alone in the encomium for
Kalu. The Dean, Faculty of Arts, Prof Christian Onyeji in his welcome address,
described the politician-cum-business mogul as “a world-class entrepreneur, a
great leader and former governor. Words cannot fully express our joy and
gratitude that you accepted to deliver our second Distinguished Lecture with
the title “Culture, Leadership and Higher Education in Nigeria”.
Then it was time for Dr Kalu to mount the rostrum to deliver
the Distinguished Lecture. “I consider my being here today a rare privilege,”
he began. “This is my second coming in less than three years. It shows the love
that exists between students of this great university and myself on one hand
and the authorities of this institution and I on the other.”
He told his audience that he had carried out some researches
to enrich his presentation.
“I stumbled on the website of Texas A&M University,
otherwise known as TAMU. I became attracted to the website and sought to learn
more about what they said culture is and its manifestations. By the way, TAMU
was founded in 1876 as the state’s first public institution of higher learning.
My inquisition into what they say culture is turned out the following:
“Culture refers to the cumulative deposit of knowledge,
experience, beliefs, values, attitudes, meanings, hierarchies, religion,
notions of time, roles, spatial relations, concepts of the universe, and
material objects and possessions acquired by a group of people in the course of
generations through individual and group striving.
“They also gave other meanings to culture which include that
‘Culture is the systems of knowledge shared by a relatively large group of
people,’ and that ‘Culture in its broadest sense is cultivated behaviour; that
is the totality of a person’s learned, accumulated experience which is socially
transmitted, or more briefly, behaviour through social learning.’
“The university also sees culture as ‘a way of life of a
group of people – the behaviours, beliefs, values, and symbols that they
accept, generally without thinking about them, and that are passed along by
communication and imitation from one generation to the next…”
Besides what TAMU had developed on culture, he went deeper
to dig out what an anthropologist, E.B. Tylor, did in an article published on
Wikipedia, which said that culture is “that complex whole which includes
knowledge, belief, art, morals, law, custom and any other capabilities and
habits acquired by man as a member of society.”
He added: “The Cambridge English Dictionary simplifies it
and tells us that it is simply ‘the way of life, especially the general customs
and beliefs, of a particular group of people at a particular time’”.
He, therefore, summed up that culture relates to the very
essence of man, his true self, his worldviews and his mode of operation as a
person.
“This would include his dress sense, his mannerisms, his
language, his appreciation of nature and beauty, his love for others, his
respect for the human society and its norms, his outward presentation of the
beauty that is inside, and above all, his leadership traits.
“All these put together, lead us to a connection which the
developers of this topic may have had in mind when they sought to find a nexus
between culture and leadership,” he noted.
Quoting an online dictionary, he said that leadership is
“the action of leading a group of people or an organization, or the ability to
do this,” pointing out that this definition ties the people directly to culture
because the ‘group of people’ to be led exists in a particular time and space
and must have all the manifestations and characteristics espoused above as
constituting what culture is all about.”
After citing several examples of what leadership is all
about, Kalu said he, however, has a personal view of leadership.
“For me, it is what you do with the powers that you have
when you are empowered to lead a people towards a desirable outcome. In my days
as executive governor of Abia State, I did my best to pull the state from the
backwaters of development and placed it on a pedestal where it would no longer
be ignored. I moved the people to action without as much as forcing them to do
so. I motivated the people to realign themselves to their culture and begin to
undo those things that they were doing that brought them and the state poor
image and name.”
According to him, his strategy paid off positively as could
be seen in the achievements he recorded in the eight years he held sway as
governor in Abia.
Above all, he said that he adopted a free education policy
by declaring free education from primary to secondary schools across the state.
“We made sure the free education did not stop at their
tuition fees and educational materials; we sponsored their First School Leaving
Certificate (FSLC) and West African Examination Council (WAEC).
“We also saw the need to give free education to adults who
were not privileged to acquire education in their early growth stage. This we
did by embarking on a programme called ‘work to learn’.
“This state sponsored programme saw the artisans, traders,
market men and women coming to evening classes to learn and increase their
stock of knowledge,” he said.
Kalu said his government also gave exclusive attention to
education, “not because we had the abundant resources to do so, but because we
understood that a stable and democratic society is impossible without
widespread acceptance of some common set of values.”
He, therefore, gave a charge: “I call on all leaders,
especially those involved in education and formation of the minds of those who
will become our successors tomorrow, to lay more emphasis on teaching of
cultures and those aspects that would help to restore the dignity of man. If we
fail to do that, we would have created opportunity for the erosion of the
dignity of man by man himself.”
Kalu and his entourage were subsequently treated to a lunch
by the vice chancellor, Prof Ozumba at the VC’s Lodge before they departed.
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