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Africa’s Urgent Need For Leaders With Big Ideas: A Tribute To Sam Nda-Isaiah And The Burden Of Visionary Leadership

by Prof Lere Baale
4 months ago
in Opinion
Sam Nda-Isaiah
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In the annals of global development, one enduring truth emerges: the world is not transformed by administrators of the present but by architects of the future. Africa, rich in talent and resources, is plagued not by a lack of potential but by a shortage of leaders who possess the courage, foresight, and patience to dream boldly and act sacrificially. In a continent yearning for progress, we must learn urgently and collectively to recognise, support, and work with leaders of big ideas.

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One such figure was the late Sam Nda-Isaiah—a publisher, politician, thinker, and patriot who embodied what it meant to dream beyond the moment. He was driven not by the politics of expediency but by the burden of vision. He believed that ideas—not just sentiments—shape societies, and that bold thinking is the only way Africa can compete on the global stage. I recollect that Sam, as a corporate career man, advised that companies could hedge against devaluation of the local currency in 1986 by buying important assets ahead of 1987. He had not just foresight but farsight.

Like Chief Obafemi Awolowo, Lee Kuan Yew, and President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, Sam Nda-Isaiah knew that big ideas are rarely convenient. They are often ridiculed, misunderstood, and fiercely resisted because of myopia. But these ideas are the seeds of transformation. The road to greatness is seldom paved by those who yield to the noise of short-term dissatisfaction. It is paved by those who plan, persist, and plant for futures they may never see. Some of the present bold, challenging, and painful economic and infrastructural decisions will be more appreciated and celebrated in the future.

A reflection on Kay Lord’s “When Vision Looks Like Madness: The Burden of Big Ideas & Leadership” reveals the tragic irony of visionary leadership: the better the vision, the more likely it is to be mocked in its infancy. People hunger for instant relief, not long-term reformation. They ask, “Why build a 700-kilometre highway when there is no food on the table?” But without that highway, future generations will inherit poverty layered with stagnation. Without those bridges, schools, refineries, and ports, they inherit a land trapped in cyclical deprivation.

Big ideas demand more than intellect—they require moral courage. They demand a kind of stubborn hope that sees potential where others see impossibility. Awolowo built a television station and the tallest building in Nigeria, while many in his region lived without light. Tinubu began reclaiming swamplands that would one day host megacities, even as critics screamed about poverty and timing. Lee Kuan Yew cleaned Singapore’s slums and restructured its civil service in the face of overwhelming odds—and now Singapore is the model for post-colonial excellence.

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Africa’s story must change, and it will not change through small, reactive thinking. It will change when we nurture and protect the leaders with big ideas. Leaders who look beyond headlines and hashtags. Leaders who can withstand criticism and build anyway. Leaders who understand that poverty is not simply a lack of money, but a lack of infrastructure, strategy, education, and discipline. Sam Nda-Isaiah was such a leader. He believed in the power of ideas to remake Africa. He challenged conventional thinking. He saw possibilities even when others saw pain. He believed Nigeria could rise, not by copying others, but by becoming its best self through bold reforms and intelligent nation-building.

Yet too often, Africa discards such leaders. We mock their vision, reject their reforms, and demand immediate comfort, ignoring that no nation was ever built by meeting only immediate needs. Visionary leadership is not a luxury—it is a lifeline. And visionary leaders are not entertainers—they are builders.

As Africa wrestles with economic instability, political dysfunction, and social unrest, we must ask ourselves: Are we choosing leaders who can solve today’s problems only, or leaders who can build tomorrow’s greatness? Are we rejecting visionaries because their ideas feel too distant, or are we nurturing them, even when their timelines seem uncomfortable?

It is time for Africa to embrace the burden of big ideas. To build highways before the traffic becomes unmanageable. To invest in education before the ignorance becomes irreversible. To nurture industries before the youth become unemployable. To support leaders like Sam Nda-Isaiah, not only in death but in legacy.

History does not honour caretakers of decay—it remembers the builders of destiny. It remembers those who planted trees whose shade they may never sit under. The world remembers those who turned swamps into cities, doubts into dreams, and pain into platforms.

Africa’s future belongs to such men and women. Let us be wise enough to walk with them, no matter how difficult the journey. That is the Big Idea: happy posthumous birthday, Sam, the man with the BIG IDEAS.

 

–Prof Baale writes from Lagos

 

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