Dr. Yakubu Sani Wudil @yakubwudil is a Nigerian scientist and researcher from Kano State.
He was recently recognized among the world’s top 2% scientists in a global ranking compiled by Stanford/Elsevier.
This ranking is a well-known list that identifies scientists whose
I want to start by thanking the Sister who spoke up. It isn't easy to be the one to point out a wrong when everyone else is profiting from it.
We have to be clear: Islam does not support cheating and malpractice. It doesn't matter if the whole society is doing it; wrong is still wrong. You don't build a future on a foundation of theft and expect it to be blessed.
They will call you wicked for this. They will say you are the reason they failed or that you are blocking their progress. Do not mind them at all. You are standing on the goodness God has put in your heart, and that is what matters.
Those who are comfortable with cheating today are the ones who will destroy the country tomorrow. You are doing the hard work of being a real human being with character.
To the @JAMBHQ JAMB management, we need to talk about these leaks. How are confidential questions getting out onto WhatsApp channels like this? It shows a total failure of security and it is a slap in the face to every honest candidate.
The truth is that your staff are compromised. There is no way this happens without someone on the inside opening the door for these "JAMBbites" groups. You need to do some serious in-house cleaning and stop pretending like everything is under control.
Allowing people to cheat gives an unfair advantage to those who have no integrity. This is the root of the academic decline we see in this country. You are rewarding the shortcuts and punishing the students who actually sat down to study.
Dear Prof. Oloyede, it is time to look at these centers and the people leaking these documents. We are building a society on corruption if we let this slide. We are watching how you handle this.
God bless you for this, Sister.
In Northern Ghana, hundreds of women accused of witchcraft live in exile.
Their voices are at the center of the exhibition 'Ghana: Branded for Life'. As many of them say: “I’m not a witch.”
Explore their stories and experiences through this virtual exhibition.
Really Ayo? And she bears my acronym o.
The first part of your question is true. I agree, and I know you don’t, that’s why you framed the second. But let me help you understand and unravel the wisdom behind your assertions.
First of all, native doctors are poor because juju is a parasitic scam that tries to shortcut the natural laws of provision. If they could command the unseen for profit, they would be sitting on boards of directors, not waiting in a corner for someone to drop a few notes.
Their poverty is the physical evidence that they have no power over the Rizq (provision) of anyone, not even their own. They are selling a key that does not fit any lock. It is a psychological trap for the desperate. So, they are a scam.
On the other hand, I see that you need to understand the wisdom behind why some people are poor while some are rich.
In our tradition, there is a concept called Iradah Al-Kawniyyah Al-Qadriyyah. This is the Universal Will that relates to Decree.
It is the divine blueprint of how the world functions. God in His Supreme Wisdom designed a world of contrast. There is light because there is dark, and there is wealth because there is poverty.
If every single person were rich, the entire social fabric of the world would fall apart immediately. No one would harvest the food, no one would clean the streets, and no one would serve their neighbor.
Interdependence is what makes us human and how we connect with each other. The rich need the poor, and the poor need the rich.
Again, poverty and wealth are just different sets of exam questions. One tests your patience while the other tests your gratitude and your charity.
Ayo, the suffering you see today is the friction that is required to refine the soul. A world without pain is a world where your character has no way to grow. You would just be a person in a story without a point.
The presence of poverty is not a sign that God is weak. He is allowing the struggle so that the gold in your soul can be separated from the dirt. He is the one who balances the scales with a wisdom that goes way beyond our bank accounts.
And remember, this life is just the first act of the play. The real justice and the payout for the struggle happen in the next life.
So Ayo, permit me to say:
Me: If the world had no struggle/poverty, we would be static objects instead of human beings with a purpose.
Allah knows best.
The most important quality for a smart person is courage because without it their intellect will be leveraged to rationalize their fears and concoct the most convincing excuses not to act.