Politicians Need to Sit Up, Make Nigeria Work, Youths Are More Enlightened Now—Rev Sam Adeyemi

Adeyemi
Adeyemi

Daystar Christian Center’s Senior Pastor, Sam Adeyemi, has articulated the imperative for older generations in Nigeria to unite and contribute to the country’s progress.

Stressing the significance of political and religious leaders revisiting their strategies, Adeyemi emphasized the necessity of ensuring the nation’s functionality, as the younger generation is poised to inquire about the state of affairs.

During an interview on Channels Television’s Sunrise Daily, Adeyemi asserted that guiding the younger generation would become more challenging without essential developmental groundwork.

Adeyemi also underscored the importance of a collective agreement among Nigerians on the nation’s direction and the steps required to achieve transformative change and development.

The elite class—those of us who belong to this class—needs to begin to discuss among ourselves, and honestly, we need to act with urgency, and I need to plead with those of us in the elite class and I am talking about everyone who has been able to walk their way to the top and fairly comfortable and I am talking about people of the highest level in the political class at the National Assembly, the governors, state house assembly and so on. I am talking of those of us in the business sector and those who are heads of religious institution

“It will be in our self-interest to get Nigeria to work now because the younger generation is more enlightened and have access to more information and they are not going to keep silent for long. It will get rougher and rougher to lead because they will demand accountability and good leadership.

“Secondly, the level of suffering is increasing exponentially. So, we don’t need to sit down until the country runs into crisis and many things can create a serious crisis for us as a nation and when we watch and maybe war breaks out in the country, the elite class is the first to take flight and run away but then everything you’ve been building can go off in smoke.

“We need to act in urgency and to pull together and push for a discussion to ask ourselves where is Nigeria going to; what value will get us there; what system of government and what structure will take us there.”

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On August 11, 2023, The PUNCH highlighted Adeyemi’s concern about the substantial divide between leaders and the masses, emphasizing it as a distinctive issue in Africa.

Adeyemi expressed that African nations grapple with an entrenched leadership culture, where leaders wield significant power, rendering the followers almost akin to slaves across various sectors.

“We are dealing with a deeply rooted leadership culture that makes the leader very powerful and the led practically a slave, across almost all sectors. The issue with culture, like habits, is that though people desire change, they will default to their old ways, consciously or unconsciously, when they have to make choices, and they will ultimately produce the same results.

“The only way out is to intentionally replace old beliefs and behaviours with new ones. Only those with the sophistication to shift beliefs, values and culture on a mass scale can lay the foundation for meaningful change, especially for a country. The platforms would be high-quality education, the example of leaders, economic empowerment, infrastructure, and so on.

“Truth be told: democracy has thrived best in countries that value life and equality. The power gap has collapsed and being a leader does not make you superior to the people you lead. In fact, being a leader is understood to be a call to serve the led and leaders don’t consume most of the resources meant for the commonwealth,” he had said.