It is an eye opener
reading
“Exploding the Nigerian Myth” by Philip Golingai which appeared
in today's Star. He went to see Abiodun Musa Aibinu, the president of
the Nigerians in Diaspora Organisation (Malaysian Chapter) prepared
with some questions from his fellow tweeters. The main thrust is that
the bad hats among the Nigerian community in Malaysia is tiny, only
5% and they hog the main news.
Our newspapers do not highlight the
fact that the majority of Nigerians in Malaysia are pursuing
postgraduate studies lured by the lower school fees and exchange
rates. Doesn't this prove that the Malaysian government's efforts to
make this country an educational hub is now such a success to the
extent that it has managed to find acceptance on another continent?
According to Aibinu, the
5% are mostly in private institutions under the guise of learning and
he was puzzled on how they managed to get their visas. It seems
these “students” were approved to study English in Malaysia even
though the official language of Nigeria is English. Mind boggling to
say the least. I guess our English language teaching modules are of
such high standards that someone from a country that uses it
officially prefers to come here and study.
Should we be expecting
those from Britain, the USA and the rest with English as their
official language to come knocking on our doors soon? If that becomes
a reality, our aim to make this country an educational hub par
excellent would be chalking another success. We await with abated
breath for the hordes of British and American students making their
way to our shores to study English here.
Yes, perception influences
the way we see and acknowledge others. If we take that 5% figure as
an indicator of the percentage of bad hats in any society, we have to
be honest to ourselves that our image in others' eyes are also
coloured by this minority who monopolise the headlines. We cannot
swagger and brag that our society are devoid of bad hats. They are
part and parcel of our lives. We have always tried to minimise any
bad elements in our society.
Unfortunately the percentage might
remain the same or even reduced but the numbers do look menacing as
the total population itself has increased. 5% of 100,000 is just
5,000 but the same percentage applied to a population of one million
is 50,000. A big jump in numbers and we must be cognisant of this
fact.
Image from colette
1 comment:
I'm a Nigerian.
Thank you for writing this.
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