By Uzor Maxim Uzoatu
The recent news on the slashing of hajj fares in Nigeria soured my mood immensely.
In a statement from the National Hajj Commission of Nigeria (NAHCON),it was stated that pilgrims from the Maiduguri/Yola Zone, previously required to pay N8,118,033.67, will now pay N7,579,020.96, while those from other parts of the Northern Zone will now pay N7,696,769.76, down from N8,244,813.67 in 2025.
It was also stated that pilgrims from the Southern Zone will pay N7,991,141.76, compared to N8,561,013.67 last year.
According to the NAHCON release, “the revised fares were computed based on an exchange rate of N1,443 per US Dollar. Consequently, intending pilgrims from the respective zones will enjoy reductions of N539,013, N548,043.91, and N569,871.91 respectively.”
All this dabbling into hajj by the government is totally against my constitution.
Hajj or pilgrimage is now a political weapon in Nigeria.
Governors and even local government chairmen now make it a grand duty of nominating lackeys to make pilgrimages.
The religious aspect of pilgrimages is neither here nor there.
Some devil-may-care characters are even encouraged to emigrate in the name of undertaking the annual pilgrimages.
The country’s image is thus soiled and nobody is ever called to order for willfully arranging the fraudulent fares.
The organizational racket of the money-guzzling pilgrimages is a hard slap on the face of decency.
The pity is that the powers-that-be appear on the take, which explains why nothing is being done to redress the vexatious issue.
Pilgrimages by Muslims and Christians alike in Nigeria have been taken to the heights of an industry.
The huge allocation for pilgrimages every year needs to be looked into.
One understands religion to be a common human experience, happening within a socio-cultural milieu, but it is ultimately an individual matter.
In Islam, for instance, it is of essence that a person making the pilgrimage to Mecca ought to have the requisite wherewithal, and must be healthy to boot.
It ought not to be an all-comers affair.
Government involvement in pilgrimages has turned the matter into a blatant racket.
This way, the essence of the pilgrimage has been defeated.
If the pilgrims actually want to worship God or Allah then government should stay out of it.
A pilgrimage that requires personal sacrifice, at least once in one’s life, has been turned into a jamboree.
Constitutionally, Nigeria is a secular state to all intents and purposes, and definitely not a theocratic state.
The Constitution clearly states that the government should not be involved in religious matters.
If Nigeria as a country is truly following the spirit of the Constitution, a quango such as the NAHCON ought not to exist.
Whole States now take the laws into their hands by actually promoting the Sharia law as state policy.
It should not be lost on Nigerians that religion is a very emotive matter, especially with the recall of how the country was nearly thrown into a religious war when it was revealed back in 1986 that the then military president General Ibrahim Babangida had surreptitiously made the country a member of the Organization of Islamic Countries (OIC).
The pity is that the old Pilgrims Welfare Board was not initiated in the first instance with religious motives.
Many Nigerians do not know that the Pilgrims Welfare Board was set up at first in the old Western Region in the 1950s when there was fierce contest for power between the Action Group (AG) and the National Council of Nigerian Citizens (NCNC).
The AG felt that the way to counter the estimated 70 percent of the Muslim votes then going to the NCNC was to appease the Muslims through the setting-up of the Pilgrims Welfare Board.
There were actually five Christians in the seven-man committee that set up the board.
Contrary to what many Nigerians would have thought, the Pilgrims Welfare Board was not set up by the Sardauna of Sokoto and his party, the Northern People’s Congress (NPC).
The sponsorship of party men and women has since grown in leaps and bounds in the league of the political patronage system.
It therefore has to be understood that the promotion of the pilgrimage or hajj did not emanate through altruistic reasons.
The true adherents are hardly ever sponsored to the pilgrimages.
Party hacks and sundry privileged persons happen to be the so-called pilgrims.
It is akin to state-sponsored tourism.
These people are actually tourists, and there affairs should be transferred from NAHCON to the Nigerian Tourism Board.
There have been cases where persons from different states had been sponsored to impersonate persons from other states entirely.
It is akin to lying to God.
Must we bastardize everything in this country?
There is deceit everywhere.
Since religion is a very private matter, it is very crucial to scrap the slashing of hajj fares, whether for Christians or Muslims.
The fact remains that Israel happens not to be a Christian country.
The true Catholics, for instance, should make their private pilgrimages to the Vatican.
If we should take the promotion of pilgrimages much further, then allowance ought to be made for practitioners of traditional religion to make their own pilgrimages to, say, the Osun-Osogbo Grove or Okija Shrine.
It is indeed a great pity that we can’t develop our tourism, yet every year the country pays huge sums of money in transportation, air fares, hotel accommodation etc to Saudi Arabia and Israel in the name of Muslim and Christian pilgrimages that are actually tourist jamborees.
It’s by putting a stop to the deceit that the country can set itself free from people using religion to play bad politics.
The slashing of hajj fares is very bad news!
