2023 General Election: LASU Centre for Yoruba Studies holds Round-table discussion on Language, identity, and Governance
Centre for Yoruba Studies, Lagos
State University (LASU) has held a Roundtable Discussion on Language, identity
and governance.
The event which was held on
Thursday, March 23, 2023, at the Central Language Laboratory, Faculty of Arts,
Main Campus, Ojo, Lagos has the topic: Language, identity, and governance: A
critical Discourse on Gbadebo Rhodes-Vivour’s Statement ‘I Don’t Think in
Yoruba’.
Gbadebo Rhodes-Vivour was
the Labour Party candidate in the just concluded Governorship election in Lagos
State, he was caught on a television interview during his campaigns saying ‘I don’t
think in Yoruba and that statement has generated discussions across the state.
Addressing the media, one of
the conveners, Dr Ahmed Adesanya, Acting Director, Centre for Yoruba Studies
said the essence of the Roundtable was to discuss a major issue arising from the
political situation in Nigeria, especially during the Governorship Election in
Lagos State whereby one of the candidates, in answering questions in a
broadcast media said ‘I don’t think in Yoruba.’ “We are here to discuss a major
issue arising from the political situation in Nigeria, especially during the
Governorship Election in Lagos State. One of the candidates, in answering
questions in a broadcast media said ‘I don’t think in Yoruba’. So we have
brought that in the public space, so that the people can talk about it, they
will give us their various views, so that it can help us and it can help the
masses, it is just a matter of connection between the town and gown, whatever
happens here will be brought to the public domain.”
He said the Roundtable was
to raise consciousness in the people to understand their culture, language, and
understand their identity. He said, “Language as a medium of identity has been
pushed to the background, but with this roundtable, we want to raise
consciousness in our people to understand their culture, language, understand
their identity, and of course, all these things should be interconnected.”
Speaking on the mother
tongue policy of Lagos State which stressed the need to teach the child with
Yoruba from Primary to Junior Secondary School Level, he disclosed that the language
policy is clear, adding that what the policy targeted was the local language of
the child, “The policy is not saying Yoruba or Hausa, the policy says the child’s
local language should be used to teach that child especially at the primary school
education. So it is clear.”
A linguistic expert, Prof.
Harrison Adeniyi, Department of Linguistics, LASU, (Immediate National
President, Linguistics Association of Nigeria) spoke on what he titled ‘Language,
Thought and Identity: A Reflection on Gbadebo Rhodes-Vivour’s Statement; “I
don’t think in Yoruba.”
Analysing Gbádébò͕
Rhodes-Vivours's Statement; 'I don't think in Yorùbá’ Adeniyi said such
response showed that Vivour sees Lagos as a cosmopolitan State and possibly
that there is no need for him or the people to speak Yoruba in Lagos State. “From
the above statement, we can deduce the following: The language is primordial,
hence archaic; Lagos is a cosmopolitan state with no need to speak Yoruba; attending
schools at MIT, Nottingham and the University in France should exclude him from
speaking Yoruba; He will not give the Yoruba language any attention if and when
elected̀; it is apparent that he is enmeshed mentally in the English language
and possibly other European languages too; Yoruba is not part of his identity, and
finally, he doesn’t know whom he is.
“Given the avalanche of
resources that have been committed to the development of Yoruba language by the
State Government and by extension the culture, which also include John Randle
Centre for Yoruba Culture and History, among many others, everything would likely go down the drain
if Mr. Gbádébò͕ Rhodes-Vivors gets to
the position of authority.
While speaking on the linguistic
profile of Lagos State, he emphasized that Yorùbá is a major language of Lagos
State, adding that apart from being Yorùbá settlements and though, cosmopolitan
in nature, there are more speakers of Yorùbá in Lagos and every day, even as non-speakers
aspire to learn the language. He also stated that Lagos has three major
dialects, Àwórì, Íjébú and Èkó.
He called for a Law to provide
for the preservation and promotion of the use of Yorùbá language and for
connected purposes including teaching of Yorùbá Language as a core subject at
all levels of primary and secondary schools in the state; ensuring that all the
laws in the state would be translated into Yorùbá Language; that all state-owned
tertiary institutions should incorporate the use of Yorùbá language in the
General Studies (GNS) courses, the use of Yorùbá Language should be an
acceptable means of communication between individuals, establishment, corporate
entities and government in the state if so desired by the concerned, and it
should not be an offence for a person to speak Yorùbá language by the state
government.
Another Discussant, Henry J.
Hunjo, PhD, Department of English, Faculty of Arts, delivered a paper he titled
‘Rhodes-Vivour’s Members’ Resources and the Dilemma of Acceptability’.
Hunjo stated that the confession
by Vivour has generated a lot of reactions: some negative, others positive, and
concluded that his paper would dwell on implication of Vivour’s statement.
He replayed what transpired
between Gbadebo-Rhodes Vivour, and the Channels Television’s interviewer
wherein Vivour was asked “But if you plan to unify, you know, Lagos, do you
feel conflicted or do you feel that you'll be unable to since you don't speak
the language?” and Vivour responded “Not at all. Lagos is a cosmopolitan state
and the fact of the matter is not as though I don't understand Yoruba or I
cannot speak it. My intonations are funny, people laugh at me and I don't think
in Yoruba. Right? I went to school at MIT, I went to school in Nottingham, I
went to school in France, I went to school…“
Analysing the interaction between
Vivour and Channels, the linguistic expert deduced that the implication of Vivour’s
explanation was that Lagos is a cosmopolitan state, he is a product of the
cosmopolitan culture; he knows there is a language called Yoruba; he is unable
to speak because he feels excluded for the fact that people mock him, adding
that when he said ‘I don't think in Yoruba’ it means his sociocultural
development does not include social practice of the Yoruba and that he views
the world with other languages.
According to Hunjo the Political
implications include Challenges of Acceptability by the people of Lagos, Difficulty
in being included in the sociocultural practices of the indigenous people of
Lagos e.g. traditional religion, Exclusion from activities that require
integration, Combating feelings of exclusion dealing with peers that are
proficient in the use of Yoruba.
Hunjo in the end called for Adherence
to the recommendation of the NPE that children should be taught in their mother
tongue from primary one to three; Ensuring that children acquire their mother
tongue before they are sent to formal school at the age of six; The use of
indigenous languages at home should be encouraged, adding that to school in
overseas countries could rob one of knowledge of indigenous cultures.
Speaking on the objectives of
the Roundtable, he said “We have learnt that language aids self-disclosure; we
now know that meaning of utterances are derived from speaker’s Members’
Resources. Using Rhodes-Vivour’s Members’ Resources we discovered the silences
in his utterance, the need to develop mother tongues from indigenous languages
in places of one’s dwelling has been emphasized.
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