By Ade Iyamoye
Nigeria’s top faith and thought leaders have issued a powerful joint call for a nationwide revival of trust to avert deeper national crisis and restore unity across religious, ethnic, and political lines.
At the opening of the Nigeria Inter-Religious Council’s (NIREC) first triannual meeting for 2025 in Owerri, the President of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), Archbishop Daniel Okoh, declared that Nigeria’s very survival rests on dismantling suspicion and embracing shared humanity.
“Without mutual trust, unity becomes an illusion,” Archbishop Okoh warned, decrying a legacy of prejudice, stereotypes, and social wounds that have torn the nation’s fabric.
He urged Nigerians to begin seeing one another “not through the distorted lens of prejudice, but through the dignified lens of shared humanity under one God.”
Themed Building Mutual Trust for National Unity, the high-level dialogue drew key religious figures, traditional rulers, and policy influencers, including the President of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Nigeria, Most Rev. Lucius Ugorji, and notable statesman Nze Ozichukwu Fidelis Chukwu.
Archbishop Ugorji rallied Christians and Muslims to stand together against hate, division, and violence, stressing that religious leaders must raise their voices against those who exploit faith for terror and political gain.
“Silence in the face of evil is complicity,” he said.
Delivering a stirring keynote, Chukwu lamented the rise of hate speech, ethnic profiling, and declining national pride.
“The average Nigerian is confused, disenchanted, and distrustful,” he said. “We now live in a country where loyalty to tribe trumps patriotism.”
He described NIREC as a moral compass and tasked it with championing reforms that include restoring peace in flashpoints like Rivers State, resolving farmer-herder clashes, releasing prisoners of conscience, and tackling unemployment.
Archbishop Okoh also inaugurated interreligious councils in the five South East states, describing them as “sacred spaces for sincere dialogue,” not stages for fame or politics.
He charged families, schools, faith communities, and the media to become “laboratories of trust, tolerance, and truth.”
Backing the spiritual leaders’ sentiments, Dr. Alatare Sulyman Musa, a university scholar, described Nigeria’s unity as “fragile and artificial” without deliberate trust-building.
He cited persistent injustice, electoral fraud, and institutional failure as culprits, and urged leaders to lead with fairness, sincerity, and equity.
“If Nigeria is to survive and thrive as one nation,” Musa concluded, “we must build a country where all citizens feel heard, included, and protected.”
As the meeting ended, a strong message echoed: Nigeria cannot move forward divided. Trust is not just a moral ideal—it is now a national emergency.