Professor Okello Oculi: Worthy teacher and true mentor- Amina Salihu

by Editor2
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Real enduring strength lies in the ability to do small but essential things consistently and for a long time. For then, they become tremendous things in their impact. Prof, with your vision of creating a mock summit of the Organisation of African Unity (OAU) in the 1970s/80s, you prepared me and many of my cohorts in the political science department of the Ahmadu Bello University for the world better than any textbook learning could have done. 

Before gender equity and social inclusion (GESI) was defined, you found a creative way to use research, drama and public speaking to push back on the shape of curriculum by bringing feminist pedagogy into a rigid and conservative space via the mock summit. Your friends and co-travellers supported your mission to re-imagine the classroom.ย ย  Professor A.D. Yahaya, our then Head of Department (HOD), was your hero-ally.ย ย 

The significance of what you did can best be understood against the ecosystem then and sadly even now.ย  When girls were told to only aspire for an assistant class captain position, you made us Presidents of African countries.ย  At a time in herstory when girls were told they could only be heard when spoken to and not seen, you made us media celebrities. Hauwa Yusuf, now a professor of criminologyย  andย  gender studies, was President of Zaire, Mobutu Sese Seko Kuku Ngbenduย  Waย  Zaย  Banda, with male studentsย  asย  โ€˜Herย  Excellencyโ€™sโ€™ security attache. Funke Adeleye (wearing a hat in the photo) wasย ย  Presidentย ย  Robertย ย  Mugabeย ย  of Zimbabwe. I was the voice of the renowned Pan African News Agency (PANA), reportingย  the presidential proceeding to the continent and the world via land phone.

If we had any public speaking confidence, to begin with, the Mock Summit horned it.ย  That was in the 1980s.ย  Fast track to the late 1990s, the OAU is now the African Union (AU), you had retired from ABU, and some of us your students were now teachers in the university and mentors to a new generation of AU Summit simulators. Your work and your spirit echoed through us. I had the most learning fun, teaching a 300 level public policy class from a feminist pedagogy, where voice,ย  ideas and participation were democratised. After all,ย  what is aย  public policy class without an awareness of the impact of decision making on communities? The students called me โ€˜genderโ€™, and the class swelled every week beyond the number that registered for the course. Many came from other faculties to listen to the POLS 304 Public Policy debates. It reminded me of how students were drawn to the Faculty of Arts and Socialย  Sciencesย  (FASS) fromย  Industrial Design, Law, Medicine, Sciences,ย  and more faculties because of the OAU Summit.ย  Professors R. Ayo Dunmoye, Ohwona, and Unobe, HODs and mentors, were my hero-Allies, enabling me to bring feminist innovation to my classes.ย  ABU 1989: Presidents, PANA and OAU Mock Summit Fansย 

Fast-forward to the 2000s, Prof, you founded Africa Vision 525 and showed us the university was not the only place we could or should learn to be leaders; it should start much earlier than that. Vision 525 works with secondary school girls to nurture their research, public speaking, and people skills as you did for us over 30 years earlier, without any funding or a fee.

I recall my first encounter with girls from the Anglican Girls Grammar School, 10 โ€“ 20 of whom came into the hall at the Nigeria Electoral Institute, Abuja, smartly dressed for the occasion in school uniform, watching the adult proceedings with doe-likeย  eyes, measuringย  everything, sizingย  upย  everyone.ย  You would thinkย  they wereย  feeling swallowed by the room until they took the stage and became giants speaking the words of African icons, some of whom they will never meet but whose ideals transformed them just the same.ย ย 

Remembering, ABUย  and the continuing blessings of the AUย  mockย  summitย  club throwsย ย  intoย ย  reliefย ย  theย ย  dangerย ย  of ย ย an unfinished curriculum, where students go through school, but the school does not goย  throughย  themย  becauseย  theyย  do not learnย  theย  essentials ofย  life; howย  toย  be innovative, strong, daring and to think on theย  ballsย  ofย  oneโ€™s feet.ย  Prof,ย  your ย work challengesย  usย  toย  thinkย  aboutย  gender equityย ย  andย ย  socialย ย  inclusionย ย  andย ย  life learningย  whereverย  weย  getย  theย  chanceย  to impartย  knowledge. Itย  neverย  ceasesย  to amaze me why the African Union has not adopted the Mock Summit as a means to communicate its values and work through a successor generation of young women and men, despite your efforts.ย ย  Professorย  Okelloย  Oculi, Iย  saluteย  youย  onย  this International Dayย  for Women.ย  Thankย  you, Teacher, Humanist, Ugandan, Nigerian and Friend of Women and Girls.ย  A Poet and Pan Africanist first and always.ย  May a thousand suns brighten your path and the many you have opened.ย ย 

-Amina Salihuย  March 8, 2021 @amina_Salihuย ย  #ChooseToChallenge Women in leadership: Achieving an equal future in a COVID world

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