Tag: National Anthem

  • [Video] President Salva urinates on his pant in public

    [Video] President Salva urinates on his pant in public

    President Salva Kiir Mayardit of South Sudan has wet his pant in a public function.

    In a video making rounds, the 71-year-old president stood still, as the country’s national anthem was sung. The president who seems surprised stirred down at himself, only to see urine dripping down his trouser.

    See video below:

     

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    A post shared by Media/News Company (@thenewsgurung)

  • Scariest moment of my life was when I forgot national anthem on stage-Waje

    Scariest moment of my life was when I forgot national anthem on stage-Waje

    Waje, Nigerian R&B singer, has stated that the scariest moment of her life was when she forgot the national anthem on stage.

    The gifted singer, real name Aituaje Iruobe, spoke of the experience during a chat with Pulseng.

    In her words: ”The scariest moment of my life was when I forgot the national anthem. I went on stage to sing the national anthem and I forgot it.I had bad dreams for a long time because of what blogs and newspapers did to me. I was afraid to come out of my house.I was in the green room and the late Nomoreloss who was the anchor of the event, introduced me and told me not to forget the national anthem.That was how I forgot when I got on stage. Nigerians ‘murdered’ me because I ‘murdered’ the national anthem”.

    Asked what her biggest fear is, she answered:”Failure is my biggest fear”.

    Waje also opened up on her favourite spots in Nigeria.

    “I think that will be Jos or Enugu but not outside Nigeria.This is where we make money”.

     

  • Power Couple, Jay-Z, Beyonce face backlash for sitting during national anthem

    Power Couple, Jay-Z, Beyonce face backlash for sitting during national anthem

    Power couple, Jay-Z and Beyonce have been tagged as ‘disrespectful’ after drawing attention on Sunday while attending Super Bowl LIV for staying seated during the performance of the national anthem.

    The Carters along with their daughter, Blue Ivy, were photographed sitting during Demi Lovato’s anthem performance ahead of Sunday’s big game at the Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida, and Twitter users were not having it.

    Demi Lovato’s anthem rendition amazed everyone but it looks like the Carters either didn’t care enough to support Lovato or were trying to make a political statement.

    This is coming after Jay Z the announced his partnership with the NFL to focus on consulting on the Super Bowl halftime show and helping with the league’s social initiative efforts,

  • My cover of the national anthem  will inspire Nigerians; restore national pride- Gogo Majin

    My cover of the national anthem will inspire Nigerians; restore national pride- Gogo Majin

    At a time where Nigerian artistes are opting for groovy tracks to excite their fan-base, Gogo Majin decided to do a cover of the Nigerian national anthem.

     

    The soft spoken voice coach, singer and leading fashion designer in a chat with TheNewsGuru revealed the inspiration behind her cover of the nation’s anthem.

     

    https://www.instagram.com/p/ByldMbUgbpZ/

     

    Hear her: “I was invited to sing the National Anthem at an event and that was the first time anyone had asked me to sing the national anthem. So I had to sit down with the lyrics, internalize the lyrics and then think about what it meant to me and how I could transfer that emotion to the people who would listen to it.

     

    “After I sang it the reaction was great and that’s when I began to think about recording my version of the anthem. I felt that it could be a way to inspire Nigerians and restore National pride where lost in spite of the things that ache our hearts about our country”, she said.

     

    Speaking further, the creator of the ‘GM4FM’ fashion label said Nigerians give her hope about Nigeria. She added that whenever she is dejected, seeing a Nigerian achieve something great lifts her spirit.

     

     

    “It’s people. And I know that may sound funny but some of the most incredible people I know are Nigerian, just in terms of their intelligence, resilience and accomplishments. Now not all of these people live in Nigeria, but that gives me hope. And at times when I get discouraged, seeing a Nigerian accomplish something great, at home or abroad it gives me a good sense of hope and National pride.

     

     

     

     

  • [Video]: Freed Dapchi girls recite National Anthem as they meet Buhari in Aso Rock

    President Muhammadu Buhari has on Friday received the Dapchi schoolgirls freed by Boko Haram at the Presidential Villa in Abuja.

    The meeting, which also has the girls’ parents, top government officials and security chiefs in attendance, is holding inside the Press Gallery of the Presidential Villa’s Council Chambers.

    One of the highlight of the day, was the moment the schoolgirls recited the Nigeria’s national anthem.

    Details soon:

  • Independence: 57 years after, some Nigerians can’t recite nation’s anthem

    As Nigeria celebrates her 57th independence anniversary, TheNewsGuru visits the streets to ask Nigerians to recite the nation national anthem.

    Watch video:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SoGlX7WwM40

  • The National Anthem and the Paradox of Patriotism

    The National Anthem and the Paradox of Patriotism

    By Rev. Fr. John Segun Odeyemi

    It is the end of another year for the current administration, its political foundation and the man at the helms of affairs; Mr. President. Reading and reflecting on issues facing our nation has led me deeper down the rabbit’s hole into a bottomless conundrum. While I refuse to throw epithets around either in support or opposition of the present government, I realistically insist that we are still very much uncertain and disillusioned by the absurdities we encounter and endure on daily basis as a nation. The promise of change made maybe under construction and execution, but what I see and sense is that this government hit the ground running, unfortunately, it seems in the wrong direction. Only time will tell if, GMB and his cabinet pursued the much touted promise of change or not. On our part, the regular folks, the question we ought to pursue is whether we know for sure what we need to change? Most Nigerians will conclude that we need to change our “fantastically corrupt” system. I beg to differ. I am a realist; I do not see either a half empty cup or a half full cup. What I see is simply a cup with content. Whether one perceives corruption simply as graft or understand it as an umbrella for all the malaise that has almost crippled the country, as a people, if we truly grasp the areas in which we need change, it should shame us all. To the point that I propose a temporary ban on the national pledge and anthem.

    I have noticed in several countries that while the ritual of national anthems singing was performed, the body language and attitudes of citizens is one of pride. A good number of countries sing their national anthems with fervor, passion and a positive enthusiasm. I recently realized that my own country’s anthem and pledge, its guiding creed is an antithesis of our reality and to my utmost surprise, was shocked to realize I had become uncomfortable singing and expressing it. For the very first time in my adult life, I was confronted by a problem, pure epistemological in nature but graphically damning to the psyche. I realized that the words of my nation’s anthem confronted me, as a citizen to see a country’s shame, nakedness, lies and even apostasy! Perhaps on the individual level, we might find a handful of persons who actually make an effort to eschew the virtues and moral values professed in the national creed, but collectively, we have failed, woefully too, as a people. Patriotism, the call to serve ‘our Father land, the labors of our heroes past now lies in ruins; to guide our leaders right, help our youths the truth to know, living just and true; all of these moral codes extolled, in the Nigerian context have become mere dialectic and mouthing a rhetoric of absurdity. These virtues in reality in the present day Nigeria have become ideals of a historical past consigned to the pages of anachronism, political rhetoric and a metaphor for a lost ideology. The entire nation is the exact opposite of its creed and anthem!

    What then does one do if one’s professed creed has been emptied of its natural quiddity? How are we supposed to react as a people when every time we mouth the lyrics of our own national anthem, they accuse us of impropriety and lack of patriotism? In our pledge to the Father land, we make the promise to be “faithful, loyal and honest” and turn to God for help.

    Right there is the malaise of a nation’s persistent and unrepentant intransigencies to be pathological liars and unrepentant duplicists. Not merely are we dishonest with our selves, whereby corruption is entrenched as a way of life, and as the way of life. We are hypocrites in the way we use religion and the name of God, to mask the real problems staring us in the face. Our religiosity as a people bemoans the lack of the required altruism that true religious faith requires of a truly godly people.

    The climate of uncertainty of our continuous united survival as one nation is based on a multiplicity of social problems that government and people have created and entrenched over the years. There no longer exist the subjective responsibility of individuals, because the system gives no room for it. It is for this same reason that a culture that denies ‘solidarity’ has collapsed. Rising from the heap of its ruins, to replace it is a structure of sin and a culture of death. Here, the powerful take at will and the political and economic system continues to encourage and support repaying hardworking, honest civil servants with nothing while political anarchists smile off to their foreign bank accounts. Whoever came up with the idea of quota system is an ingenious anarchist. Unfortunately, excellence of capability no longer matter but nepotism and ethnocentricism reigns.

    I am of the opinion that we should suspend the singing of our national anthem, and forbid anyone to make any pledge to the country. It may shame us and help us to refocus and re-reflect on our national identity. Until a few of the following issues are resolved, let the entire country remain in deep thoughtful silence:

    Do we see a truly common destiny binding all of the citizens of Nigeria? Do we have possible, patriots, technocrats and architects willing to sacrifice themselves to mend the fragmentation that exists? Do we have the courage to overturn the problems of ethnic and religious divide that we have fostered and allowed to thrive for so long? Can we possibly erase the endemic problems of nepotism, corruption, ‘above the law’ practices of some of our leaders now etched and ingrained in the psyche of our nation as the norm?

    We need to agree that our national constitution is binding for all citizens and not make laws to protect anyone from prosecution. [This is possible only if we have a functional judicial system, which holds in sacred trust, its duties, to arbitrate distributive and equal justice to all, not minding class or status.] As a nation, we must realize that no one single religion can trump our common good and all religions, including our traditional religions be given equal rights and respect. To lead the country should no longer be a question of what part of the country you come from, nor can we afford to continue to support ignorant practices like the ‘quota system.’ Our leaders should be elected based on a proven track record of honesty, public service and ability. Let the nation emerge from the years of wandering in circles, chasing our own tails, where we elect people into office based on political balancing of the scales between the North and the South, between who is Muslim or Christian. We need to create a new country without ‘cabals’, ‘vested interest groups’ or the so called ‘elder statesmen.’

    We need now the courage to look the truth in the eye and to call things by their proper names. We have, for far too long, as a nation, yielded to convenient but enslaving compromises with those who are hell bent on ruining the nation for their own selfish gains. Our self-delusion that things will be okay is a fathom that can clear up quite quickly like an early morning mist. Our inaction today is complicity in the crimes against our Father land, our heroes and heroines past, the flag, anthem, pledge and the future of our children. And until we remove our endorsement of injustice and the support for a structure of sin which we have erected and worshipped, let no one sing the national anthem, let no one mock the nation by making a pledge we do not intend to keep.

    Every Nigerian, social and political analysts around the globe know what is wrong with Nigeria. Many are not sure of what the remedies might be. In my own experience, sometimes, to prepare for peace, we must first prepare for war. But this is not a war to be fought with bullets, armored tanks and soldiers. It is an ideological warfare where a few must be willing to confront the established status quo by the sheer force of intellect, dedication and truth. The problems maybe numerous and seem insurmountable, but the solutions are simple and possible. One such solution, as simple as it might sound, is to boycott, and abandon the national pledge and anthem!

    “Woe to those who call evil good and good evil, who put darkness for light and light for darkness” (Is. 5:20)

    Rev. Fr. John Segun Odeyemi. PhD writes from Pittsburgh, USA