LAGOS, 3 January 2003 — I am sitting here, my laptop open on my knee, sheltered from the baking sun by a great shade tree in this upcountry village, twelve hours drive inland from Lagos, determined to find an answer to that elusive question that has pursued mankind down the ages: What makes for human happiness? There is a good and sensible reason to believe I might uncover the answer here — or at least some of it.
The World Values Survey, an inter-university study, recently issued a report in which it found that Nigerians are the happiest people in the world. (The Americans are 16th on their list, the British 24th and the Russians the unhappiest. The survey, which has studied happiness since 1945, finds that it has not increased in Europe and North America even though the societies have become wealthier. The desire for material goods, it concludes, is “a happiness suppressant”.)
Buy why Nigeria? Everyone I pass in this village of approximately 5,000 says hello to me often with a smile, and yet I know many of them barely have enough to eat. I have just been given lunch by the headmaster of the local technical school, Peter Ikani, cooked by his 28-year-old daughter, Ele. It is simple fare but a rather delicious hot peppered goat stew served with yams. Peter apologizes for receiving me in his “hovel” (which it is, even by the standards of this village) and explains that teachers are badly paid and often paid late. Peter is well read, thoughtful and religious. Ele is highly articulate and perceptive yet, unable to find the finance to go to university, has a low level job in the Social Insurance Trust Fund in the capital, Abuja, five hours away. Yes, they both say earnestly, Nigerians are a happy people. Peter puts it down to God and music. “We have a great religious faith. Whether we are Christians like us or Muslims as in the north, we all believe ardently that God is looking after us. We believe in being our brother’s keeper”.
Eli is perhaps more perceptive, “people smile at you because that is the way they deal with the awful stress in their poverty— stricken life.”
A few days earlier I was in Abuja eating in a local open air fish restaurant with the daughter of an Ibo king, together with an engineer and a successful business woman. All of them believe Nigerians are unusually happy. Princess Gloria said, “You see it in how we move. It’s a movement inside us and in society. We feel full of music and love of God. Her friend, the business woman, added, “We Nigerians look after each other. If I know you and you are hungry or ill I will try and help”.
I walked the streets. I stopped the young men selling newspapers and phone cards and at one point was accosted by a talkative beggar. None said they were happy. “We are too hot and have no money”. I quizzed them on how many cell phone cards they sell a day — “three or four”, which I calculate gives them a daily income of less than $3 a day.
At the Nigerian newspaper editors’ forum where I had been invited to speak, the previous speaker, a freedom of information advocate, said, “ If you look at our problems it is unimaginable to say we are happy. But then Nigerians appear to have developed a very thick skin. Fela, the great singer of the 1970s, had a song, ‘We suffer and we smile’”.
I can see all the ifs and buts and have heard all the caveats, but “yes” I conclude, Nigeria has tasted happiness, and more than most.
