By Kabiru Inuwa
In Katsina State, where the dust of determination dances with the wind of wisdom, a new dawn is breaking in education.
On August 21, 2025, the government of Katsina State, under the visionary leadership of Governor Dikko Umaru Radda, took a giant leap toward shaping the minds that will define tomorrow.
Like rain falling on thirsty earth, the initiative to train 18,000 teachers and distribute 20,000 tablets has come at a time when the roots of knowledge need watering and the lamps of learning need oil.
The Acting Governor, Malam Faruk Lawal (Sarkin Fulanin Jobe), unveiled the programme in Katsina, describing it as a beacon of hope for a renaissance in education. Quoting Aristotle’s words, “The roots of education are bitter, but the fruit is sweet,” he noted that the state was determined to sweeten that fruit by giving teachers the tools of transformation.
Governor Radda, who has consistently placed education at the center of his administration, understands that a nation that neglects its schools invites the shackles of slavery. Like a farmer who knows that the seed planted determines the harvest reaped, he is sowing the seeds of scholarship in the fertile fields of Katsina minds.
He is committed to ensuring that poverty does not chain the dreams of children. This is why he sponsors indigent students abroad to study medicine—not for prestige, but to return and heal the land with hands of hope.
Plato once said: “The direction in which education starts a man will determine his future life.” Governor Radda’s direction is clear: education is not an option, it is an obligation. His policies give wings to the wingless, turning pebbles into pillars and shadows into shining stars.
The distribution of 20,000 tablets to teachers was not merely the handing out of gadgets but the placing of torches in the hands of tutors—tools to illuminate the labyrinth of learning. In an era where chalkboards give way to digital boards, where knowledge travels at the speed of light, these tablets symbolize transformation. As Francis Bacon declared, “Knowledge is power.” Without access, however, knowledge is a caged bird. These devices open the cage, letting learning soar.
Training 18,000 teachers is like sharpening arrows before the hunt. Only sharpened minds can cut through the jungle of ignorance. This initiative strengthens teachers as torchbearers of truth, ensuring they inspire as much as they instruct. John Dewey once wrote, “Education is not preparation for life; education is life itself.” Katsina is breathing that life into its classrooms.
The implications of this policy stretch beyond school gates. An educated child today becomes an enlightened citizen tomorrow. Education is the engine of enterprise, the ladder from poverty to progress, and the anchor of advancement. Governor Radda’s vision is of a Katsina where every child holds a pen, not a pistol; a book, not a begging bowl.
Socrates reminded the world that “Education is the kindling of a flame, not the filling of a vessel.” This policy lights flames of curiosity, creativity, and character. Immanuel Kant added, “Science is organized knowledge. Wisdom is organized life.” Katsina is striving to organize both, ensuring that knowledge and wisdom walk hand in hand in the corridors of its schools.
This is more than a policy—it is a promise, a pledge, and a pathway to a Katsina where no child is left in the cold corridors of ignorance. Its dividends will be paid in decades of development and generations of genius.
When history records this moment, it will note how Katsina lit lamps when darkness threatened, how it raised the banner of books when ignorance loomed. At the heart of it all was a leader—Governor Dikko Umaru Radda—who made education the heartbeat of hope.