20/05/2026
Arsenalβs Victory, Nigeriaβs Elite Collective Celebration, and the Need for Similar Patriotism Toward National Challenges.
By Mohammed Kabir Badamasi
What happened after Arsenal F.C. Finally won the Premier League after 22 years was more than a football celebration in our nation. It quietly revealed something deeper about influence, emotion, loyalty, and collective identity.
Across social media, political figures, business leaders, celebrities, and some respected traditional institutions' leaders openly celebrated with passion and pride. This moment continued to amaze me. As some posted emotional messages, some joked publicly, and others celebrated like a long national struggle had finally ended. For me, that is what it looks like. Smiles π
Even prominent Nigerian political figures openly congratulated Arsenal and reflected on lessons of resilience, patience, and teamwork.
What makes this interesting is not merely the football itself.
It is the fact that people from completely different political ideologies, tribes, religions, regions, economic classes, and personal interests could still unite emotionally under one identity without suspicion, hostility, or division.
For a moment, there were no party lines,no regional camps,no ideological wars,only shared belief.That alone carries a powerful lesson for Nigeria.
Because if influential Nigerians can collectively defend a football institution with such emotional investment, strategic patience, and public solidarity of over a 22 year wait, then it proves that unity itself is not impossible in our society, it is achievable and I'm optimistic we will get there someday.
Perhaps our greatest national challenge is not the absence of intelligent people or powerful individuals. Perhaps it is the absence of a shared national emotional commitment strong enough to rise above individual interests.
Football unintentionally demonstrated what politics has struggled to achieve in Nigeria. I meant a common banner that is powerful enough to unite rivals without forcing uniformity.
Nigeria does not necessarily need everybody to think alike. Yeah, it doesn't.
But Nigeria urgently needs more collective patriotism beyond party loyalty, ethnic sentiment, and elite competition. Because no nation advances sustainably when support for personal camps becomes stronger than support for the country itself.
God bless Nigeria π³π¬

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