Monday, 17 April 2017

Opinion I A Signal of Hope For the Physically Challenged


A SIGNAL OF HOPE FOR THE PHYSICALLY CHALLENGED
         
The last time I checked, the overall physically challenged persons in Imo State had released a sigh of relieve. The gesture was not unconnected with the pronouncement made by the Governor, Chief Rochas Okorocha penultimate week during his parley with the state chapter of the Joint National Association of Persons Living with Disabilities. In his words, the governor disclosed that there was an ongoing construction of a befitting secretariat for the physically challenged otherwise known as ‘special citizens’ in the state.
        
The physically challenged whom in most quarters are addressed as ‘disabled persons’ have over the decades been treated as second-class individuals by their fellow citizens, particularly in this part of the world. I stand to be corrected, but the truth remains that this set of people is often regarded as irrelevant and inconsequential when issues concerning the polity are discussed. This uncalled attitude of most Nigerians has made most of them to see themselves as rejected citizens, thereby leading them to a state of mental degradation.
         
The most saddening aspect of the absurd discrimination or mentality is that a majority of the physically challenged persons is conspicuously, exemplarily brilliant and wise. The time I have spent with some of them, so far, in various parts of the country disclosed that they were specially created. For instance, since I have been coming across albinos, I am sincerely yet to see one that possesses a dull brain; the ones I have come across were very sound in reasoning, both academically and mentally.
        
We will start getting it right the moment we realized that those whom had been relegated to the background, with the derailed notion that their contributions aren’t needed, are actually the set of individuals required to salvage the society from its numerous challenges; when we acknowledge that the rejected stones are, on the contrary, meant to serve as the house’s pillars; when we truly concur that ‘not all that glitters is gold’.
        
It’s indeed high time we began believing without any element of doubt, that physical challenges are not sign of empty/docile brains; that deafness, for example, does not indicate that the bearer is daft; that a cripple can do far more than what an ‘athlete’ does; that a blind man can really lead any society to the promised land, which suffices to say that leadership is never by sight nor might, but the person’s reasoning prowess.
         
Thus, I want to disabuse us in our entirety that societal uplift can be actualized by involving only individuals who are physically sound. Away from our presumption, actualization of societal growth, which we all anticipate, requires only those who are mentally and socially sound, therefore has nothing to do with physical ability. Physical soundness is only required in a physical race. But mind you, nowadays, he who runs most might not be sure of receiving the trophy, but he who thinks most. This implies that everything is now controlled by thoughts, or one’s ability to think or initiate ideas.
        
It’s very appalling that in Nigeria today, Imo in particular, the physically challenged are nowhere to be found in the area of governance, with the view that they have nothing to offer. It is arguably time to change this mindset for the good of the country at large. This could be what informed Governor Okorocha’s decision to build a befitting secretariat for the set of citizens in question that have apparently been forgotten by successive governments.
        
The Igbo adage would invariably say ‘Osita di nma, ekele Chukwu’ meaning literally, if things eventually start today to turn around for our good, we have to thank God without minding the amount of time we have spent in agony. In other words, if truly that the government has finally remembered the seeming forgotten physically challenged persons in our midst, they are expected to give thunderous glory to the Almighty for the eventual blessing.
        
Like I have always said, pronouncement of a proposed policy or programme is a good step, whilst its thorough implementation is a totally different ballgame. It is on this note that I urge the Rescue Mission Administration not to take the onward completion of the lofty initiative for granted, for posterity sake. It must take into cognizance that by dishing out such a commendable pronouncement, the entire Imolites – both home and abroad – can’t wait to embrace the completion phase of the project.
        
Similarly, the initiative shouldn’t stop at constructing a secretariat. After building the awaited edifice, a reputable ministry ought to be created for the sake of the physically challenged. And afterwards, a reliable and competent individual among the prospective beneficiaries should be appointed to man the said ministry. This will no doubt go a very long way to alleviate the various plights of the physically challenged resident in the state.
        
These ‘special citizens’ must on their part, equally be helpful to themselves by ensuring that they rephrase their union’s name to Joint Association for Physically Challenged Persons, by expunging the ‘Persons living with Disabilities’ from the already existing name. They are physically challenged, not disabled or ‘persons living with disabilities’ as being presumed by them, or in most quarters. We must change the ongoing impression that a physical challenge is a disability.
        
This move by Gov. Okorocha is undoubtedly a signal of hope, but the concerned authorities must stick to the needful as the odyssey progresses; so that at the end, nothing would stop everyone from grinning. Think about it!
     
Comrade FDN Nwaozor
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