ROME, MAY 28, 2013 in the
Philosophy Department of Pontifical Urban University Rome, Prof. Godfrey
Igwebuike Onah and a group of African students in the Licentiate class bid one
another farewell as they rounded up his course “FL1041: Kwasi Wiredu, Cultural
Universals and Particulars (a Seminar in English Language on African Philosophy).
Prof. Onah introduced the course this academic year (the only course taught in English
language in the faculty). It was a project aimed at teaching African
Philosophy, alternating between English and French languages every academic
year. But like he said in a lighter mood in one of his classes, the appointment
has terminated a dream when it just started getting sweeter. However, he told
his students that as a servant, one needs always to be ready and docile to
respond to duty calls.
Speaking to his students,
Prof. Onah admitted that he habitually handles his students, lay and clergy, as
adults and fellow priests respectively, and not just as mere students. He
believes that every priest and lay student in the university is an adult, and
should be treated as such. He also expressed his age-long disapproval for the
title “My Lord” being used for Bishops. According to him, he prefers the title
‘Father Bishop’ (‘Nna-anyi Bishop’) to ‘My Lord Bishop’ (‘Onyenwe m/Dinwenu m
Bishop’), and expressed his intention to prudently continue to insist on the former
as much as he would be able to.
Responding to a question from
one of his students on whether homosexuality has a moral or social consequence,
he reasoned that it is a problem of human nature. As such, that it is an
anthropological issue with moral, social, economic and political consequences.
Nature he said, made no mistakes in fashioning beings as male and female. That someone
enjoys or prefers eating through the nose and not the mouth, or walking on the
hands and not the legs does not remove the fact that what is abnormal is
abnormal. The same people who are propagating artificial birth control are the
same people championing homosexuality. And their major aim, he suspects, is to
reduce nature’s control over the issue of procreation and limit it within the
confines of science, so that it would be monopolized by scientists, and made
affordable to those who can afford it, when and how it would be affordable, he
argued. And he expressed fear that his suspicion is gradually becoming a
reality.
Prof Onah called on his
students to dismiss their fears about Nigeria which is based on the media
reports about Boko Haram and the ugly pictures painted by the movies about
Nigeria. Now that they have a friend like him in Nigeria, he expressed the hope
to see each and every one of them in Nsukka at one time or the other in the
future. In a vote of thanks, the class representative for the course, Rev. Fr.
Hyuwa Y. Everest from Nigeria, thanked him on behalf of the class for his
fatherly and selfless efforts towards the academic growth of his students, and for
his contributions towards the growth of the mother Church in general. Prof Onah
and his students wished one another the best in their future endeavors.
The following day, May 29,
the entire Philosophy Faculty gathered in his honour to bid him farewell in
gratitude for his immense contributions to the faculty, and wish him well in
his new assignment. Present at the occasion were Rev. Fr. Prof. G. Mazzotta (Dean of the Faculty), Prof. (Mrs.) L. Congiunti (successor to
Prof. Onah as Vice Rector), Rev. Fr. Prof. L. Sileo (director of Licentiate Program in Philosophy), Prof. P. Miccoli (one-time lecturer to Prof. Onah), Prof. L.
Tuninetti, and many other lecturers. In a brief remark, Prof Onah thanked his
fellow professors, some of whom were his own teachers in the past, and at least
one of them who was his own student. He also thanked the entire students for
the fraternity he enjoyed in the faculty. He recalled that he has spent about twenty
five years learning to be a professor. And now that he should start rendering
account of what he has learnt, he has been called for another responsibility which
he has not learnt about. Finally, he expressed his wish to host anyone who
would be able to make it to Nsukka any day.
Deede
Uche’s World wishes Msgr. Onah all the best in his future endeavors, both in
the priestly ministry and in his personal life. May God who has begun this good
work in him bring it to fulfillment, Amen.