04/12/2025
WHY NIGERIA NEEDS AWOISM MORE THAN EVER
_Olusegun Ogundipe_
Across Nigeria's restless social and political landscape, few names are uttered with as much reverence as that of Chief Obafemi Awolowo. In Yorubaland and among progressive circles nationwide, he is the "sage," the "architect of modern Western Nigeria", "the best president Nigeria never had", a figure draped in glowing adjectives. Yet, this profound admiration presents a striking paradox. While his name is eulogized, the core ideas he championed—collectively known as Awoism—often seem relegated to history books and ceremonial speeches, lacking the passionate continuity his legacy deserves. Awoism is more than a personality cult; it is a coherent political philosophy centered on a progressive, welfare-based state, true federalism, and multicultural cohesion. It is not in the wearing of "Awo" cap and eye glasses. The pressing question for today’s discourse is: Why do we celebrate the man but hesitate to implement his blueprint for national development?
*_Progressivism: The State as an Engine of Renewal_*
At the heart of *Awoism* is an active, interventionist concept of Progressivism. For Awolowo, governance was not a passive exercise but a deliberate, constant mission to renew societal infrastructure and expand human possibilities. He viewed the nation-state’s fundamental purpose as making life “easy and meaningful” for its people. This was not abstract theory. As Premier of the Western Region, he operationalized this through massive investments in infrastructure—the first television station in Africa, stadiums, housing estates, and industrial projects. But his most revolutionary progressive act was the investment in human capital: free primary education and subsidized healthcare.
In today’s context, discussing Awoist progressivism moves beyond simply building roads. It challenges us to ask: Where is our deliberate, state-driven push for 21st-century infrastructure—reliable power, digital connectivity, and sustainable transport? More critically, where is the unwavering commitment to renewing the Nigerian mind through accessible, quality education at all levels? The discourse shifts from praising Awo’s past schools to demanding a modern, progressive state that sees public investment in technology and education not as expense, but as the very "essence" of its existence. On social media, we debate banditry and poverty; Awoism would insist we debate the systemic lack of progressive state action that creates the conditions for them.
*_The Welfare-Based State: Dignity as a Right_*
Closely linked to this is the principle of the Welfare-Based State. Awoism posits that the state has a solemn duty to protect the health and well-being of its citizens, providing a social safety net through grants, pensions, and benefits. This was radical in a colonial and post-colonial context that prioritized extraction over care. Awolowo’s free education scheme was the ultimate welfare policy, a grant of knowledge and opportunity that lifted millions from potential destitution. His health policies aimed to make basic care a public good. The concept of Afenifere clearly defines the welfare component of Awoism.
Today, as we scroll through timelines filled with heartbreaking calls for crowd-funded medical bills and school fees, the absence of a functional welfare state is glaring. Discussing Awoism now means confronting our collective acceptance of a system where individual citizens bear crushing, often fatal, financial burdens for essentials. It forces a debate: Can Nigeria truly be great when its citizens live in perpetual anxiety over health, education, and old age? Championing Awo today means advocating for institutionalized social security, universal basic healthcare, and substantive support for the vulnerable—moving from charitable hashtags to demanding systemic, state-backed dignity.
*_True Federalism: The Architecture of Unity in Diversity_*
Perhaps the most critical and currently relevant pillar is True Federalism. Awolowo’s model was based on organizing federating units around distinct ethnic and cultural identities, granting them "complete control" over local affairs: education, policing, agriculture, resources, and culture. The central government would handle truly national matters like defense and foreign policy. This was not a call for division, but for a pragmatic structure where governance is closer to the people, leveraging local knowledge and priorities. It rested on the idea of equal partnership, where no unit dominates another.
This is the frontier of Nigeria’s most heated social media debates. The calls for "restructuring" are, in essence, calls for Awoist true federalism. We argue over regional security outfits like Amotekun, over resource control, and over marginalization because the overbearing, centralized system is failing. Awoism provides a clear framework: let each state or region develop at its own pace, harness its own resources, and manage its own police force. The passionate online advocate for state police is, often unknowingly, advocating for Awoism. The discourse needs to evolve from merely identifying the problem of centralization to concretely discussing the Awoist model—a federation of strong, autonomous, and competitive regions united by a lean, efficient central authority.
*_From Eulogy to Action_*
The disconnect between the verbal deification of Awolowo and the neglect of his ideas is a metaphor for Nigeria’s struggle with legacy and implementation. We love the hero but abandon his manual. Awoism offers a timeless, yet urgently modern, framework to tackle Nigeria’s foundational crises: a weak social contract, infrastructural decay, and a suffocating unitary system disguised as federalism.
Therefore, the challenge for this generation, especially in the vibrant agora of social media, is to shift the discussion. Let’s move beyond simply posting Awo’s quotes or pictures. Let’s dissect, adapt, and demand the principles of Progressivism, the Welfare State, and True Federalism. Let’s tag our discourse with and use these ideas as a litmus test for policies and politicians. The true tribute to the sage is not in the adjectives we use, but in the courage to revive and pursue the transformative ideas that made him worthy of praise in the first place. The blueprint exists. The question is, do we have the will to build from it?