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Analysis

Silence of the sage and reordering of Bauchi politics

In every generation, societies approaching renewal are rarely transformed by agitation alone. More often, change begins with a certain depth of discipline: the arrival of a figure who understands that leadership is not merely the acquisition of power, but the ordering of purpose.

This is the deeper current unfolding in Bauchi politics currently.
Mai Nasaran Bauchi, Chigarin Misau, Muhammad Ali Pate’s political trajectory cannot be read only through the ordinary language of alignments, contests, rivalries, or ambition. Beneath the visible movement is a more ancient discipline rooted in restraint, moral clarity, intellectual preparation, and an unusual freedom from the compulsions that often consume public life.
The scholars taught us that the first victory of the leader is victory over one’s self. A man governed by ego becomes captive to impulse, provocation, vanity, and the endless need for validation. But the one who has undergone inward refinement moves differently. He is not hurried by hostility. He does not feel compelled to answer every accusation or descend into every contest of bitterness. He understands proportion.

Jalaluddin Rumi observed that many truths lose their depth once reduced to constant speech. Within that philosophy lies an important political ethic. There are moments when composure reveals greater confidence than reaction. There are times when measured restraint allows events themselves to expose the limitations of those driven by insecurity, resentment, or appetite for domination.

This is not withdrawal. It is control.

Imam al-Ghazali warned repeatedly that the corruption of public life begins first with the corruption of intention. Where leadership becomes consumed by personal appetite, institutions eventually become instruments of private preservation rather than public trust. But where leadership is anchored in amanah, the sacred responsibility of stewardship, governance acquires moral weight.

That distinction matters profoundly in understanding what is now taking shape in the Bauchi political landscape.

The emerging vision is not simply about prevailing over political adversaries. It is about reconstructing the moral architecture of governance itself so that competence is no longer secondary to patronage, and public resources no longer revolve around narrow circles of entitlement. It is about establishing a culture where merit, preparation, fairness, and generational responsibility become foundational principles of statecraft.

The great sages of the path often taught that disorder in society reflects disorder in leadership. A leadership culture shaped by envy, excess, and insecurity eventually reproduces those same tendencies within institutions. But leadership grounded in wisdom, discipline, justice, and self-restraint creates the conditions for stability, productivity, and public trust.
Ibn Arabi described the complete leader as one who embodies balance: firmness without cruelty, authority without arrogance, and influence without vanity. In political terms, this means possessing the capacity to navigate competing interests without surrendering justice. It means understanding when intervention is necessary and when patience itself becomes strategic.
This explains much of what observers are beginning to witness in Bauchi.
Many still interpret politics exclusively through confrontation and spectacle. Yet the older traditions of wisdom understood something deeper: endurance often outlasts aggression. Discipline frequently defeats impulsiveness. History tends to favor those who build patiently over those who merely seek immediate domination.

The Sufi path speaks often of sabr, not as passive waiting, but as disciplined endurance under pressure. It speaks of hikmah, wisdom that prevents reckless action. It speaks of tawakkul, the confidence that allows a leader to move without desperation. It speaks of adl, justice that resists favouritism. And it speaks of ihsan, excellence pursued not for applause, but because accountability ultimately belongs to God.

Taken together, these principles form more than spiritual teachings. They become a philosophy of governance. And that philosophy appears increasingly connected to the unfolding aspirations around Bauchi’s future.
At the centre of this vision is the belief that the State must no longer remain trapped within repetitive cycles of extraction, factional preservation, and inherited political exhaustion. A different order is being contemplated: one in which young people are cultivated for responsibility rather than merely mobilised for elections; public institutions reward preparation and competence; development is planned with seriousness; and the allocation of state resources reflects equity, productivity, and long-term stability, rather than temporary advantage.
The older political culture often survives by pulling opponents into endless distraction. But the disciplined reformer understands that not every provocation deserves engagement. Some battles diminish the very seriousness required for transformation. Some arguments are best answered through performance, structure, and endurance over time.
This is why composure has become such a powerful instrument within the present political atmosphere.
Not because it signals indifference.
But because it reflects a larger preoccupation with building, rather than reacting.
In many spiritual traditions, the masters taught that those who are most certain of their direction rarely feel compelled to constantly announce themselves. Their confidence comes not from spectacle, but from conviction. Their energy is invested not in perpetual combat, but in preparation, institution-building, and the patient accumulation of moral legitimacy.
That is the deeper significance of what is now emerging.
Not the pursuit of personal triumph.
But the attempt to elevate governance itself beyond grievance, transactional politics, and the anxieties of small ambition.
In the end, societies are not transformed merely by those who seek office. They are transformed by those who approach power with sufficient discipline to remain larger than it.
And perhaps that is why the unfolding movement in Bauchi carries an unusual sense of inevitability.
It is being shaped not only by political calculation, but by a philosophy of restraint, stewardship, justice, and generational purpose long understood by the sages of the path.
Jaafar Ibrahim Dass, is an academic, veteran activist, political analyst and public affairs commentator.

المصدر: Daily Trust (NG)

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