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The Good, the Very Good and the Best Nigerians -By Prince Charles Dickson PhD

To be a good Nigerian in bad times is no small thing. It is a form of rebellion. It is to declare that the country has not fully succeeded in corrupting the soul. It is to say that even if institutions are weak, the inner court of conscience need not collapse. It is to stand in the wreckage and refuse to become part of it.

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“Apart from the known and the unknown, what else is there?” Harold Pinter asked. In Nigeria, that question lingers like harmattan dust over memory, over hope, over citizenship itself. For beyond the known rogues and the unknown saboteurs, beyond the loud thieves and the quiet accomplices, there is another country hidden inside this one. It is not on any official map. It does not trend. It does not dominate headlines. It does not throw money in public or spray arrogance like perfume. But it exists. It breathes. It endures. It is made up of the good, the very good, and the best Nigerians.

They are there in their millions.

They are the Nigerians who still want to be Nigerians for the right reasons. Not because there is profit in it. Not because patriotism pays. Not because the state rewards decency. But because something in them still bows before the idea of a nation that can be honorable. They have refused to become cynical professionals in a republic that often seems to subsidize vice. They still queue. They still refuse bribes. They still sign where they should sign and not where money tells them to sign. They still believe that truth should count for something. In a country where many have learned to game the system, they still choose not to become its gamblers.

These people are not always easy to understand. In fact, to many Nigerians today, they appear almost foolish. Why would a man refuse free money? Why would a woman in public office insist on due process when everybody else is “sorting” things out? Why would anyone remain honest in a dishonest market? Why would a citizen continue to obey traffic laws, pay taxes, keep promises, and believe in public good in a place where the crooked are often chauffeured and the upright trek home?

Yet they exist, and that is Nigeria’s miracle.

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Many of them are old now. Their faces are folded with time, their palms rough with labor, their speech slower, their hopes quieter. They live in villages where dignity still has a name and shame has not completely died. Some are in small towns. A few remain in the cities, surviving like candles in a storm, refusing to let the wind teach them darkness. They are retired teachers who taught generations to read without stealing school chalk. They are civil servants who left offices with their names intact. They are farmers who still believe that sweat is wealth. They are traders who measure honestly even when dishonesty brings quicker profit. They are drivers who return forgotten wallets. They are nurses who care without contempt. They are clerks who do not “lose” your file because you did not grease their palm.

They are not saints. They are something rarer in our time: disciplined human beings.

The tragedy is that these Nigerians are often ordinary in the eyes of the nation and extraordinary only in the eyes of God. They are rarely decorated. No convoys announce them. No praise singers orbit them. They are too clean to be dramatic, too dutiful to be famous. They do not usually arrive with noise because character has no siren. And because corruption is theatrical while decency is often quiet, the country keeps mistaking volume for value.

But if Nigeria has not yet entirely collapsed into moral rubble, it is because of these people.

They are the invisible scaffolding of the republic.

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They are the reason a hospital still functions somewhere. They are the reason exam scripts are still honestly marked by someone. They are the reason one local government file still moves without extortion. They are the reason a widow somewhere receives her pension. They are the reason a child somewhere is taught the anthem and not only the hustle. They are the reason the nation, despite its wounds, still wakes up each morning with some faint claim to legitimacy.

There are the good Nigerians. These are citizens who, despite hardship, still try to do right in the everyday things. They may not be heroic, but they are decent. They do not cheat when they can avoid it. They do not prey on the weak. They still carry conscience like a private lamp.

Then there are the very good Nigerians. These ones do not merely avoid evil; they actively serve the common good. They build where others break. They mentor where others manipulate. They speak up in meetings where silence would have been safer. They defend the stranger. They resist tribal poison. They insist that merit should matter. They are detribalized not because they have forgotten who they are, but because they have remembered what humanity requires.

And then there are the best Nigerians.

These are the ones who remain steadfast in systems designed to punish steadfastness. They are incorruptible in corrupt institutions. They are patriotic without propaganda. They do not need flags on their lapels because the country is stitched into their conduct. They live the anthem. They embody the pledge. Their creed is service, whether to fatherland or motherland, whether in public office or private toil. They understand that citizenship is not a slogan but a moral vocation.

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And yet the question persists: what has Nigeria done for them?

Too often, very little.

They watch lesser men prosper through fraud. They see disciplined lives overtaken by flamboyant mediocrity. They endure the humiliation of being called naive because they would not steal. They grow old in a land that rewards shortcuts and ridicules patience. They know the bitter joke that the patient dog may wait all day and still find no bone left. Still, they remain. Still, they labor. Still, they hope against the evidence.

That hope is not stupidity. It is resistance.

To be a good Nigerian in bad times is no small thing. It is a form of rebellion. It is to declare that the country has not fully succeeded in corrupting the soul. It is to say that even if institutions are weak, the inner court of conscience need not collapse. It is to stand in the wreckage and refuse to become part of it.

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This, then, is an ode to them. To the men and women who do right when wrongdoing is easier. To those who keep faith with a nation that has often broken faith with them. To those who still believe that Nigeria can be more than a giant with tired feet and a wounded heart.

They are the good, the very good, and the best Nigerians.

And perhaps the most important national question is no longer what is wrong with Nigeria.

Perhaps it is this:

Are you one of them? May Nigeria win!

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