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How I Made It Through Studying Law At Baze University By Osita Chidoka

October 24, 2021

School was not without distraction. I left to run for Governor, came back. I left to manage the Atiku (Abubakar) campaign election centre, came back.

Yes, I have graduated with an LLB Second-Class Upper from Baze University. Tough journey. Imagine moving from the Federal Executive Council to the classroom with under-20s. I wore black trousers and a white shirt daily. I made an effort to enter the class before the lecturers, submitted assignments as and due dates.

 

It was humbling, but it brought order to my life. After eight years of high-octane service, from the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) to the Ministry of Aviation, Baze University was therapeutic.

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School was not without distraction. I left to run for Governor, came back. I left to manage the Atiku (Abubakar) campaign election centre, came back.

 

School was not without its setbacks. On the campaign trail for the 2019 elections, I struggled with school work but thought I could wing it. Alas, I failed Evidence 1 taught by my friend, Prof. Ojukwu. He refused to give me makeup midterm tests that I missed. Whenever I approached him, he would cheerfully ‘gist’ and analyse the elections with me.

 

After each discussion, I went away confident he would reconsider. He did not. I went into the examination with 0/30. It was humbling, as I had not experienced examination failure before then. I nearly withdrew.

 

I persevered. I re-registered Evidence 1 and attended Prof Ojukwu's lectures, participated in all class assignments and followed his teaching style. I passed very well. Setbacks and failures are part of life. Face them squarely.

 

At Baze, I got no preferential treatment, and the school enforced rules. I highly recommend the university to aspiring students.

 

My wife can't wait to form a law partnership with me, Chidoka and Chidoka, where she would be the senior partner. Chidinma daalu (thank you), for all the support and tutorials, I hope your seniority ends at the bar and not near our bedroom.

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To my children, thank you for all the support and be reminded that I will not accept a degree less than a second-class upper. If I can do it at old age, you have no excuse.

 

Today, I attended the convocation with pride. Hopeful about the future, proud that I applied Uche in learning and Uchu in Perseverance and commitment to earn a law degree.

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Chidoka is a former Chief Executive of the Federal Road Safety Corps and Minister of Aviation.