Yes, It Is Valentine’s Day But The Devil Rules The Heart Of Many- Reuben Abati

     It is that time of
    the year again in the month of February, when there is so much talk and
    excitement about romance and love, all in preparation for that special day
    dedicated to love, romance and dalliance, this very day, Valentine’s Day.  The romantic propaganda can be really
    oppressive. In the past few days for example, GSM service providers have
    insisted that the only ring tone that fits this season is the one that forces
    you to think of romance, just in case you may have forgotten. I didn’t solicit
    for the ringtone, but I got it all the same and I have had to listen to it, on
    other people’s lines, and I guess it doesn’t come free.
           
    The GSM companies are making money selling Valentine
    messages. And that is the point: the frenzy over Valentine’s Day is commercial,
    capitalistic, and it is of course, global. 
    In the United States, even the White House is not left out, with the First
    Lady composing a poem for President Barack Obama on this special occasion. It
    is all mushy, lovey-dovey stuff. The eventual beneficiaries are the business
    outfits that produce printing cards, shirts, chocolates, cakes, the restaurants
    that will probably remain open till Feb. 15, not to talk of the companies that
    will benefit from the many phone calls, e-mails and text messages.

           
    Sometimes, I find Valentine’s Day a bit suffocating,
    feminist, and discriminatory. This year’s celebration falls on a Sunday,
    otherwise it would also have been observed in schools including nursery and
    kindergarten schools. On a school day, all the pupils would have been
    instructed to dress up in red colour and to bring gifts for their friends.  The children are innocent but their teachers,
    especially in the private schools, initiate them into this annual ritual. Last
    year, there was so much red colour blinding the eyes on the streets. I also saw
    old men and women, even widows, joining the celebration, refusing to be left
    out of their share of the love in the air. 
    And later in the day of course, the restaurants usually take over and
    the ultimate show of chivalry is for a man to be seen taking his Valentine for
    candle-lit dinner, or to go on his knees and pop the question, or to exchange
    wedding vows on this special day.
          
    It is as if this is the only day meant for love, and the
    flow of affection is generally understood around here to be from man to woman.
    The emphasis is not even on pure, unadulterated love; but physical romance. In
    everything there is a suggestion among the younger generation that a
    Valentine’s Day expression of love is the truest form of affection, which it is
    not.  The overwhelming focus on
    purchasing power as a measure of love and affection makes it worse.  This has resulted in some commentators
    lamenting that given the economic austerity in the land, Valentine’s Day this
    year may not be as exciting, because as the common saying goes, “there can be
    no romance without finance!”. In the past, a poem or a letter or a bouquet of
    flowers would do, but I hear, not anymore.
    Our new age Nigerian ladies no longer read love letters, nor
    are they interested in poetry- those forced rhymes and sweet nothings meant to
    make the heart flutter don’t seem to work anymore.  
         
    These days, I have heard such comments as: “we have not
    received salary, how man go take do Valentine?” and I have seen a cartoon in
    which a husband tells his wife that they will be better off spending the whole
    day in church! It is perhaps more advisable to celebrate Agape, church love
    than to dig a hole in the pocket and tell stories that touch the heart later.
    I am not against anyone celebrating love, but the
    desperation, the heartache and the sheer anxiety that now attends Valentine’s
    Day is a bit over the top. People should not have to borrow or rob a bank to
    prove that they love a woman. And this whole thing about romantic love is
    curious. In any relationship at all, physical love is not enough. It takes a
    lot more to build relationships.
          
    It should be possible to spend Valentine’s Day with family
    members, friends, and other members of the community. And you shouldn’t have to
    wear red as if you are going to a Sango shrine, or appear like a masquerade,
    before anyone knows that you want to celebrate love.  How about a visit to the motherless babies’
    home, or the prisons, hospitals, or a visit to the cemetery to remember your
    departed loved ones. Or quality time spent at home with the children or phone
    calls to old time friends to wish them well. Love should not be measured in
    loud decibels of a one-day excitement; it should be a value, extended in all
    kinds of relationships.
        
    This is one lesson the excitable young crowd, that is going
    to troop out to the clubs and restaurants today, must learn, and which they
    will learn. They should ask the older generation. I doubt if there are many
    married men and women out there who are still having butterflies in their
    stomachs as they did many years ago, over a certain unknown St. Valentine. Real
    life teaches hard lessons.  The older
    generation would have learnt that love grows, and it fades, and it is better as
    a life-long experience, while romantic love is just one of many other kinds of
    love, including self-love, and this thing called love is not necessarily in
    real life, exactly as the Holy Book says it should be.
          
    It is only in the Bible that love exists in such fantasy
    form as described in 1 Corinthians 13: 4-8: “Love is patient, love is kind. It
    does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. It does not dishonour
    others, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of
    wrongs. Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. It always
    protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres. Love never fails. But
    where there are prophecies, they will cease, where there are tongues, they will
    be stilled; where there is knowledge, it will pass away.”   In real life, love is proud, boastful,
    easily angered, expensive, self-seeking, vengeful…imagine the kind of
    atrocities that have been committed in the name of love!
           
    As we mark this year’s Valentine’s Day, I think of the
    quality of love in our community, and it is sad that there is a damning
    scarcity of it.  Those who will observe
    the Valentine ritual, and may forget the subject of love by tomorrow morning,
    are in the majority: they claim to be good men and women, but they are not
    their brother’s keepers. They include young girls who will never be allowed to
    marry young men from other ethnic groups because of the deep-seated suspicions
    that have divided Nigerian communities into primordial camps of hate. We have
    parents, teachers, leaders and priests, who promote division rather than unity.
    We are a community of broken dreams and shattered hopes.  Hypocrisy has become a virtue.  Some of the young people change their
    partners every Valentine season, collecting Valentine gifts like they are
    striving to build a museum of romantic encounters. Many of those who will profess
    love today do not even know what it means.
           
    And yet we are a religious society and all the religions
    teach love as an important virtue and value. But I doubt if anyone listens.
    Even the religious leaders are guilty. 
    One so-called 50-year old Pastor Amakiri has just been accused of raping
    a 12-year old child. He saw a vision that he needed a “holy massage” to be
    administered by a young girl between the ages of 12-15, on his “badly aching
    waist.”  He has children at home between
    the ages of 6 and 14, and he could have sought medical help. Only God knows how
    many other lives this particular Pastor has damaged with false visions and
    cruel opportunism. Our schools should teach love, but was it not in a Nigerian
    school that a student once slaughtered a teacher in broad daylight?
        
     And was it not from a
    school that innocent young girls were carted away and abducted? Parents should
    help teach love too, but many parents are too busy monitoring that bank alert
    that will make them breathe easier. Marriage should nurture love, but was it not
    in Ibadan the other day that a young, married lady, drove a knife into her
    husband’s neck wounding him mortally because he had a child outside wedlock.
    And elsewhere in this same country, another married woman reportedly butchered
    her husband’s manhood, into two, because he was caught with another woman.
          
    Yes, it is Valentine’s Day but it is the Devil that rules
    the heart of many. Pastor Amakiri has been quoted saying “Don’t blame the
    Devil, I did it.”  Of course, you did it,
    and are we supposed to clap for you?  The
    Devil has never been convicted in any court of law for committing a crime.  Think also of the usual stories about the
    shenanigans of governance and the oddities of public life. The list is endless,
    providing a sobering backdrop to all the ebb and flow of Valentine spirit.  People are taught the idea of love by the
    ritual of Valentine’s Day, but that is never enough for building relationships
    and a strong community of citizens. We need a society built on much deeper
    friendships and values.
        

    This is perhaps partly why there have been anti-Valentine’s
    Day protests in India and Pakistan, where its celebration is said to be
    “against religious and cultural norms.” I don’t think a day will ever come when
    the Nigerian authorities will ban anyone from having a day of fun, even
    licentious fun, for those who are so predisposed. But if you must indulge in
    ribaldry, remember it is nonetheless a day for loving not dying, and that
    promoting love, friendship, good citizenship, and unity as shared communal
    values is important.  And if you are
    pro-Valentine and nobody remembers to send you a cake, a message, or a card,
    since there is this general expectation that everyone should celebrate
    Valentine, don’t despair, it is better to be loved everyday, than once.  As for me, I’ll spend the day with family and
    friends. 

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