Letter to the intelligentsia

Men of letters wield tremendous influence in the society. They are in the classroom as teachers, lecturers and professors teaching the younger generation. They are in the media as writers, journalists, producers, presenters and anchors setting public agenda. They stand on the pulpit and the mimbars as imams, sheikhs, bishops, pastors and general overseers preaching godliness with scriptural exhortations. They are part of the larger civil society campaigning for freedoms and the defence of human rights.
They are in government, as occupants of executive offices and as the representatives of the electorate in the city councils or sitting in the hallowed chambers of the legislative assemblies. They hold high cabinet offices or function as influential technocrats in the public service. They are members of the Bar and the Bench as interpreters of the law or dispensers of justice in the courts of law. They are the ideologues, philosophers and the intellectuals of our age who are held in very high esteem and whose words and views are held sacrosanct.
From this lot, we expect our world to be well-ordered because they are the rulers of the society and rulers of the minds of the rulers. Through them, we expect life to be enhanced for the less privileged. But somehow, our world gets more chaotic and problematic in spite of them. Today, many of them are vanguards of perversion and apostles of apostasy. They no longer provide guidance but would rather corrupt wisdom. They are failing and disappointing in their discharge of public and godly trust, often justifying godlessness and compromising the spirituality of man.
It is not uncommon to find members of this class sanctifying immorality, confusing the younger generation and misleading the older ones, dehumanizing man through their sayings, writings and conduct, and further increasing the hopelessness, misfortune and desperation of the less fortunate. Some of them are rather advocates of destabilization, deifying Iblis and its hosts. Instead of reforming the world to make it a better place for all, they are guilty of mortgaging its future. In the media, what spews forth from them is hate and follies. Their pens drip with blood.
I am not exactly looking for a Utopia for this would be too fool-hardy to have. But within the generally acceptable norms and codes of conduct, the rules and regulations we make, the preaching on the altars and the prescriptions we give ourselves through the constitution, the international conventions and declarations we observe, one expects the Men of Letters, this privileged class to show some faith and fidelity, not hypocrisy. Now, there is a disconnection between the ideals they mouth, their deeds in privacy and their conduct in the public. So, the less educated found justification in their indiscipline, corruption and civil disobedience.
I think this class should be honorable enough to admit that they are failing the world and so, need to change and do more to sustain the world for the future generation whose curse they must avoid when they are gone because there is still an infinite future we will live.

Abdulwarees Solanke,
Lagos.

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