The Emergence of BAOism By Wale Ojo-Lanre Esq

“Great philosophical movements are never created by chance; they arise when a society, weary of conflict and confusion, finds in one man a mirror of its ideals and a compass for its destiny.”

From Gandhism in India to Nkrumahism in Ghana, from Awolowo’s welfarism in Western Nigeria to Mandela’s reconciliatory humanism in South Africa, history is replete with leaders whose thoughts, actions, and personal character transcended politics and crystallized into enduring doctrines. These philosophies were not borne of vanity but of necessity; they arose when nations or communities, threatened by disunity and decline, found in one leader a higher way of life and a new grammar of governance. Today, Ekiti State is witnessing the quiet but powerful birth of another such philosophy: BAOism, the ideological mantra of Governor Biodun Abayomi Oyebanji.

To grasp the essence of BAOism, one must first understand the man behind it. Biodun Abayomi Oyebanji is no accidental leader. As Secretary to the Committee for the Creation of Ekiti State, he helped midwife the very identity of the state he now governs. That historical duty etched into his heart an unshakable conviction: that Ekiti must never be reduced to a battleground of egos but must rise as a united homeland for its people. This conviction has shaped every step of his public life and now defines his tenure as governor.

His personality is one of reconciled opposites. He is gentle yet firm, humble yet courageous, simple yet profound. Unlike many leaders who see office as a throne, BAO wears power lightly, carrying it as a trust. He is the governor who is accessible to all, the leader who listens, the politician who embraces rather than excludes. This rare humility, fused with quiet determination, is the foundation upon which BAOism stands.

His ways and deeds are practical manifestations of his creed. In the past three years, Ekiti has witnessed what once seemed impossible: a political atmosphere free from violence, killings, or intimidation. Under Oyebanji, politics is no longer a theatre of war but a forum of consensus. Political gladiators who once treated the state as a battlefield now sit at one table, bound not by coercion but by persuasion, not by fear but by trust. Ekiti’s notorious culture of factionalism has given way to harmony, and peace has become the new political currency.

This is the political drift of BAOism: a conscious rise above partisan boundaries. Where others exploit division, BAO builds consensus. Where others stoke fear, he inspires calm. Where others enthrone self, he enthrones community. His leadership rejects the toxic idea that politics must always be a zero-sum game. Instead, it redefines politics as reconciliation, governance as service, and leadership as healing.

The need for this emergence is not accidental but historical. Ekiti, famed for its intellectual brilliance and cultural pride, had long been haunted by a contradiction: a state born of unity but fractured by disunity. That contradiction demanded resolution, and Oyebanji’s leadership has provided it. BAOism is therefore more than an ideology; it is the rebirth of Ekiti’s political culture, the healing of its deepest wounds, and the articulation of its noblest aspirations.

Like Awolowo’s welfarism or Mandela’s reconciliatory spirit, BAOism is destined to outlive the man who inspires it. It is a doctrine that redefines leadership as moral duty and politics as a covenant of peace.

And because no philosophy is complete without its guiding tenets, BAOism finds expression in seven eternal principles:

The BAOist Manifesto

Unity Above Division
Ekiti is greater than any party, faction, or camp. In BAOism, the community is indivisible, and politics must never tear the fabric of brotherhood.

Peace as the Foundation of Progress
Development cannot thrive in bloodshed. For three years under BAO, Ekiti has known peace without killings, violence, or intimidation.

Humility in Power
Power is not for display but for service. The BAOist leader walks among his people, listens to their voices, and governs without arrogance.

Politics of Inclusion
No one is an outsider in BAOism. Friends and former foes alike are reconciled under the banner of Ekiti’s progress.

History as Compass
BAOism is rooted in Ekiti’s founding history. Oyebanji’s role in the creation of the state ensures that his leadership is forever guided by that founding mission: Ekiti must live in harmony with itself.

Governance as Healing
Politics must not be war. BAOism redefines governance as the mending of wounds, the reconciliation of differences, and the forging of common purpose.

The People as the Centre
In BAOism, governance is not about rulers and subjects but about a community of equals bound by dignity, service, and shared destiny.

BAOism is therefore the creed of peace, humility, and unity. It is Ekiti’s political renaissance, a rebirth of harmony in a land once fractured by rancor. Its emergence is not just timely but inevitable, for it answers the deepest yearnings of a people for stability, dignity, and progress. In Biodun Abayomi Oyebanji, Ekiti has not only found a governor—it has found a philosophy.
God bless the day Governor Biodun Abayomi Oyebanji was born
Greater Ekiti

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