Last year in grad school, I was opportune to join a group, Thinking Globally.
 It involved international students going to high schools to give 
presentations about their countries.

In one of the sessions, while I was 
showing them pictures of my typical day at work in KPMG Lagos, a student
 was like ‘wow! Is that building in Nigeria?’ Ah! So is it mud house I 
will be working in? A professor invited me to speak to college students 
and it was just great being an Ambassador – as we were called. I danced 
in one of the sessions as some of them were crazy about Nigerian music, 
so I played some music and showed them a few of our signature dance 
steps.
I showed them the map of Nigeria and 
spotted the places that have suffered from Boko Haram’s attacks. I 
explained to them that it is not as if we all walk on bombs and I feel 
very safe in Nigeria. Overall, I must have spoken to almost two hundred 
students and it felt good when someone stopped me on the way to say ‘I 
remember you, I loved your presentation on Nigeria’.
Every country has its own challenges and
 even through ours is of a special breed, it doesn’t mean we should go 
about fueling the negative hearsays and stereotypes. I used to have this
 course mate that we talked about Nigeria often, my ‘bobo’ skills were 
so great that he kept on talking about how he would love to visit 
someday. Fortunately, he was sent on an official assignment to Nigeria 
this year and he talked more on his positive experience over there. How 
much more we the citizens?
I am more appalled that a top government
 official will fly a private jet from Nigeria to ‘the abroad’ and tell 
them how corrupt we are further fueling all the negative perceptions. 
It’s sad enough that Mark Zuckaberg came to Nigeria and another top 
government official went online to proudly talk about how Mark said he 
will look into the several false accounts carrying her name on Facebook 
based on her request. Of all the things to ask about and then she 
happily tweets about it. The President told him that we are not used to 
seeing successful people like him jogging on the streets and how he is 
better than his Nigerian counterparts.
In my opinion, those were not the right 
impressions to make. What about asking about his Chan Zuckerberg 
Initiative and asking intellectual questions about them than taking 
those forced selfies that surfaced online? More so, the senators that 
left the shores of Nigeria and became involved in a messy allegation of 
sexual misconduct is enough for one to just give up on being good 
ambassadors of our great country. But really, the true change that we 
desire in this country may just begin without these crop of government 
officials.
We all are ambassadors in our own little
 way. How do you behave when in a foreign country? Are you the type that
 will jump the queue and try to act ‘smart’? Do you get to work on time 
as you are required to? Please, have this little consciousness that you 
may be the only Nigerian a foreigner may get to meet; and making a first
 or last good impression is the least that can be done.
Photo Credit: Carlosphotos | Dreamstime.com
 
 
 
 
 
 




 
 
 
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