The Wall and the Brigde :Chukwumerije Dike


If a white man turned and called  me “nigger”,
My blood will boil in righteous anger.
For the evil of discrimination is clearly established,
When a white man tries to treat me like rubbish.

But if Hausas say Igbos are greedy and crude
And Igbos say Hausa are haughty and rude
And the Ijaws say Itsekiri must die today
And Ezza tells  Ezilo, there is no other way

If Yorubas declare it is Awo or nothing
And we use “Federal character” to share everything
So before you can even smile and tell me “Welcome”,
You must first ask me where my father is from.

If those who were settlers but now indigenes,
Say those who are settlers can’t become indigenes,
And the constitution says we are all citizens
Local government keeps issuing certificates of origin

If my brother pass Jamb but can’t go to Uni,
Because he is Tiv and he is not Kanuri
And Unimed has a quota for his catchment area
So he must go back to Benue or wait one more year.

If it’s ok to say it’s not ok to marry someone
Just because they are Kalabari
That every tribe should have its own tide
Are we not then practicing …Apartheid?

If you cannot buy land unless you are native,
And cannot find work unless you are native,
And cannot feel safe unless you are native,
How can we then say we are not primitive?

Yet, you go to London and get their passport,
Then settle wherever and however you want,
You stand there and fight for equality
But come back and start to use ethnicity.

I don’t get the logic of thinking of it is different
to be tribalistic and then to be racist,
If you are happy to judge him just hearing his name,
Whatever you call it my friend, it’s the same.

When there is no courage to cross this divide,
When there is no faith to look deep inside
And stop judging accents and surnames and dressing
This fire we are quenching would only keep burning.

Which nation can stand dividing its people?
How can one build on foundation so brittle?
If we cannot see ourselves in each other
This journey ends here we are going no further.

For when God made man, he gave him no facial marks
He did not make “Gbagi”, “Okun” or “Angas”
As sure as a black man is just like a white man,
No culture is older than being human

This is the truth until we accept it,
Our nation would stumble on its broken feet.
For the same things that can bind us that drives us apart,
For the wall and the bridge are both in the heart.

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