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35 Int. J. Offender Therapy & Comp. Criminology 21 (1991)
Begging in Nigeria

handle is hein.journals/ijotcc35 and id is 21 raw text is: 


Begging in Nigeria

Patrick Edobor   Igbinovia

   Abstract: Phenomenon of beggars in Nigeria is described. Classes and types of beggars
   indicate the complexity of this social problem. The author points to a variety of sources
   for this problem and suggests specific changes as steps toward alleviation.

                            INTRODUCTION


Begging is one of the most serious social problems in Nigeria today.
    According  to the United  Nations, there are 450 million beggars and
destitutes in the world. Of these, 3 million are in Nigeria (The Role  of
Government,   1988, April 17, Sunday Times:8). Beggars are a social menace
in Nigeria: they roam the streets, harass citizens, disrupt the flow of traffic
on the highways,  and engage in various forms of crimes. Beggars are also
social parasites. Begging has become  a social institution-an industry, a
commercial   enterprise, an occupation  for otherwise  healthy and  able-
bodied citizens who have refused to work for a living. Many of the beggars
in Nigeria are carriers of terrible and contagious diseases, and they pose
serious health consequences  for the  citizenry (Ndubuisi, 1986). Indeed,
beggars not only constitute a scourge to Nigerian society, they also form the
dregs of the Nigerian society.
     Inspite of the prevalence of begging in Nigeria, it has received little
scholarly attention. With the exception of a pamphlet on the rehabilitation
of beggars in Nigeria, there are no other scholarly works on the phenom-
enon  (Okediji, Sofola, Abubakar, &  Gana,  1972). Therefore, the purpose
of this essay is to examine the nature, extent, characteristics, causes, and
patterns of begging  in Nigeria. Several recommendations   aimed  at pre-
venting and controlling the phenomenon   are tendered.

                       BEGGING AND RELIGION
     Little is known about the origin of begging in society. What is certain,
however,  is that the giving and receiving of alms is not a recent phenome-
non. Soliciting alms has always been a way for poor people to make a living
in all societies. Indeed, the practice could probably  be traced back  to
biblical times, when beggars were seen at the gates of temples of worship
soliciting alms. The Bible and the Koran state emphatically that the affluent
should give alms to the poor. In the Koran it is stated:

     In the Name of Allah the Compassionate, the Merciful.
     107:1 Have you thought of him that denies the Last Judgement? It is he who turns
           away the orphan and does not urge others to feed the poor.

International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology, 35(1), 1991


from the SAGE Social Science Collections. All Rights Reserved.

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