Kemi’s Nigerian
baggage
Once again, Kemi
Badenoch, the Leader of His Majesty's Most Loyal Opposition, is in the
news, not for policy ideas on how she intends to lead His Majesty’s government,
if she becomes the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and
Northern Ireland, but by defining herself against her Nigerian ancestry.
Her new tirade is
about how she no longer sees herself as Nigerian, while how you identify is
quite left to the individual. One can only wonder if our principal is suffering
an identity crisis in trying to situate herself comfortably in the minds of the
electorate she desperately needs to appeal to. [The Guardian: Kemi Badenoch says she no longer sees herself as
Nigerian despite upbringing]
Gosh! A baby girl
The difference
between her and me? I did have a childhood I vividly remember in the UK, born
of parents who were students and residents rather than of a mother gaming the
system for pecuniary advantage, the likes of whom forced the government of
Margaret Thatcher to change the rules of birthright citizenship.
Kemi might protest
until she is blue in the face that her mother was not engaged in birth tourism
and consequently she herself was not an accidental anchor baby, but let us
speculate on how having a medical doctor father in Nigeria, it was expedient
for her mother to travel to the UK for medical treatment, and then she pops out
in a maternity hospital, how convenient.
On the other hand, my
mother was heavily pregnant with my sister, as anyone would have noticed in the
last picture we took before boarding the plane on our departure from the UK.
How things might have been different if someone had counselled my mother about
the need to anticipate the opportunities Kemi now has for her then-unborn
daughter.
Embracing all
influences
I identify with
Nigeria by heritage and influence through some of my formative years, but now,
I have spent about 40 years living in Europe, and I do not define myself
through the denigration of Nigeria as she does. When I was in primary school,
most of us Black kids had foreign accents, and our schoolmate children of
immigrants or expatriates in Nigeria mostly had Nigerian accents.
I am broadly
European, even though I have a mastery of Yoruba and an understanding of Hausa.
I do not pretend to know Nigeria that well, and I spent more time than Kemi in
Nigeria, but left 35 years ago.
I'm affected daily by
Nigeria because I have family and relations there, and a thriving and
prosperous Nigeria is a comfort for all of us of Nigerian heritage in the
diaspora. Yes, there are bad memories as there are fond memories, but it is in
the UK that I have experienced muggings, racism, prejudice, and all sorts of
attacks on the person.
I didn't live in the
Netherlands for 13 years, trying to please the Dutch by putting down England or
Nigeria, I embraced all influences that make up my third
culture kid identity.
She needs a better
narrative
In Kemi’s case, it is
both political and personal, the need to constantly redefine herself in the
context of Nigeria. If we set aside the circumstances of her birth through her
mother for some unforeseen benefit as the story gets told, her pronouncements
framed in a negative mindset about Nigeria are becoming unfortunate.
Eventually, someone
is going to ask her what she intends to do in government and whether she can
drop the Nigerian baggage she lugs around as a chip on her shoulder and see
herself as just a black English girl who happens to have Nigerian parents.
I have no problems
saying I am an Englishman with a Nigerian heritage and European influences,
accent and all. More importantly, I am comfortable in my own skin; I dare say,
she exhibits a form of self-loathing with an eagerness to belong and please.
Nigerians getting
agitated by each outburst by Kemi are missing the point. The issue is not
Nigeria; Kemi is still struggling with who she thinks she is, and well into
midlife, she has not found a clearly positive narrative to embrace all the
influences that make up her multifaceted identity.
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