‘Execution of Public Trust’: The Ali-Agan’s Example
Over the last three eventful decades, Prof. Abubakr Imam Ali-Agan, the immediate past Head of the Department of Religions, University of Ilorin, has made a great name for himself within and around Ilorin and even beyond. This gentleman is widely respected and acknowledged as an erudite scholar, a seasoned academic and an uncompromising preacher.
Prof. Ali-Agan started out as a prolific Islamic broadcaster in the employ of the Kwara State Broadcasting Corporation (Radio Kwara), Ilorin. While serving as a media professional, Prof. Ali-Agan succeeded in cultivating tremendous listernership for his thought-provoking and spiritually stimulating programmes on Radio Kwara. This admiration followed him to everywhere he went, including the University of Ilorin, at the end of his exciting career at the oldest radio station in Kwara State.
While many love his unique style of presentation, quite a number are often left disgusted with his characteristic rigid and consistently uncompromising tendencies as an on-air personality and public speaker. He is a man who believes in saying it as it is, no matter whose ox is gored.
But the fascinating way he is handling the distribution of the rice palliative entrusted to him by the Governor of Kwara State, Mallam AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq, CON, would certainly endear him to the hearts of more of the ordinary people of the community who are the target beneficiaries of the scheme.
I think he has been handling the assignment in a very fantastic and transparent manner, which justifies his calling. He is trying his best towards ensuring that only the truly deserving people benefit from the scheme, which is meant to alleviate the suffering of the ordinary people.
How did I know? It was a senior friend of mine who sent me five bags of 5kg of rice to help him share to the less privileged around me. I did as he requested.
Since I knew that, that friend of mine does not have the capacity to render such a help, I enquired from him where, how and from whom he got the bags of rice given to me for onward distribution.
My elderly friend explained to me that it was the seasoned cleric-don who gave him several bags of the commodity to help him distribute to the less privileged ones. And that he felt that I, as a community person, could also help him to discharge the responsibility.
Having explained the source, my friend appealed to me to also place a call to Prof. Ali-Agan for him to be convinced “beyond reasonable doubt” that he did as charged.
I wasted no time in calling the Professor of Islamic Studies on phone as pleaded. Prof. Ali-Agan was impressed that I was involved. He asked me to see him.
When I got to him, he explained how the Governor enlisted his assistance in ensuring that the palliatives get to those who truly deserve it.
He pointed out that when the Governor first called him, he rejected the assignment. The Hadith specialist, however, explained that he later accepted the task when the Governor “threatened” that he (the Professor) should be prepared for blame if the target (ordinary) people did not get the palliatives as intended.
On how he carried out the distribution, the Professor said that he would not explain to me in detail but I should try to make myself available at his residence on any date of my choice in the course of the last ten days of Ramadan.
Without the Professor’s knowledge, I decided to pick Monday, April 1, 2024, which was a public holiday. I got there about 10 a.m and I met a multitude of people representing different traditional mosques and groups from across Ilorin.
I instantly became a “participant observer” as I listened to his pre-distribution exultation or address to the people who had converged on the premises of his An-Nur Group of Schools, Shehu Shagari Estate, Oloje, Ilorin, on how he came about the task and how the palliative s should be shared.
Prof. Ali-Agan was emphatic on who deserves it. He insisted that it is meant for the widows, the poor, the orphans, the unemployed and the aged, among other categories of the less privileged members of the society. He made it abundantly clear that it was not meant to serve as political patronage or any form of “showmanship”.
The prolific orator added that Christians and other categories of non-Muslims who are poor should also be given. He nevertheless said that the distributors could also take a proportional fraction of the item as he supported his position with a Quranic verse.
After doing what he knows how to do best, the distribution of the palliative began. He asked the representatives of the different communities present to come in with their vehicles in order to take delivery of the item. He would thereafter ask such individuals to sign for the item before departing. I was impressed that he supervised the entire processes by himself.
In my presence, he placed telephone calls to many of those who had previously registered with him. I later understand that it was the second time that he would be shouldering the responsibility.
I must add that yours sincerely was also given 20 bags of the 5kg of rice, which he has since distributed to those he was convinced deserve it by virtue of their socioeconomic status. He was also sent to two distinguished community leaders with the same number of the commodity for onward distribution to the needy in their vicinities as well.
He bade each of the groups of “collectors” with his characteristic “Iwonu Olohun nun”(I leave you with your conscience) mannerism.
Prof. Ali-Agan, a son of the legendary Sarkin Malamai of Ilorin, Shaykh Yac’qoob Muhammad Busary Ali-Agan, attended the famous Ansarul Islam Primary School, Okekere, Ilorin. He was also educated at the School of Arabic Studies, Kano.
He, thereafter, proceeded to the prestigious Bayero University, Kano, from where he earned his first degree in Islamic Studies. It was, however, from the University of Ilorin that Prof. Ali-Agan received his Master’s and doctorate degrees in the same field.
Prof. Ali-Agan joined the services of the Better By Far University as a Lecturer at the Islamic Studies Unit of its Department of Religions. In appreciation of his consistently positive efforts in the realms of teaching, research and community service, this outspoken social critic and religious leader was deservedly elevated to the exalted rank of Professor by the authorities of the nation’s most sought-after University in 2020.
All said and done, one thing that impressed me most and which pushed me into deep thought was when the influential academic concluded by swearing with the Holy Quran that not even a grain of the rice was and would be consumed either by any member of his family or pupil of his increasingly popular school. I sincerely regard his declaration as a perfect exemplification of the motto of the University of Ilorin, which is character and learning.
What a great instance of leadership by example!