Christians not responsible for your woes – CAN Secretary, Asake blasts MURIC over ‘Friday for Muslims’ comment
The Secretary General of the Christian Association of Nigeria, CAN, Rev. Musa Asake, has lambasted the Director of Muslim Rights Concern, MURIC, Ishaq Akintola, who called for ‘fair treatment’ between Christians and Muslims in Nigeria.
The Reverend called out to Akintola for saying Nigeria was not a secular state as it did not recognize religion.
It would be recalled that in a chat with the Punch, Akintola had said “Christians are free to do whatever they like on Sundays but Muslims are chained to their workplaces on Fridays. That chain must break. Freedom is our cry. Nigerian Christians have been enjoying everything they need since the British took over the country and colonised it. They have the Christian common law while they object to Muslims having Shariah. They enjoy Christo-Western education while they restrict Muslim children’s access to Islamic education.
“I still insist Nigeria is not a secular state. It does not recognise any religion at all. An example is the Sallah holidays. Although Christians used to enjoy Christmas and other holidays, there was no Sallah holiday for Muslims on Eid el-Fitr and Eid el-Kabir days during the colonial days. We wrenched that from our oppressors’ hands after a long struggle.”
But reacting to the claim and opinion of the professor of Islamic Eschatology, the Secretary General, CAN told the Punch that he (Akintola) knows little or nothing about the constitution of Nigeria and as such, should not speak.
Asake said, “So, Akintola actually stated that there were discriminations against Muslims in Nigeria, that Christians are against the practice of Shariah and that Muslims are deprived of having Friday as a work-free day just as Christians enjoy Sunday. Did you say the man is a professor? May God have mercy on Nigeria, if that is the kind of professors that we produce. I have to question his professorship.
“Doesn’t he know the constitution of this country? It is the kind of elementary reasoning that slows us (Nigerians) down. I really don’t want to go into that now; that is not the issue facing the country at the moment. The issues facing us in this country are hunger, poverty, poor national economy, and insecurity. But here you have a professor talking about the government favouring only one religion – that is uncalled-for.
“Islamic groups should put their house in order; they are the ones that are imprisoning themselves. Christians aren’t responsible for their woes or marginalization. Nobody is stopping them from realizing their dreams,” Asake stated.
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