At the quiet courtyard of the Abuja National Mosque, grief hung gently in the air as mourners gathered for the funeral prayer of Hajiya Umma El-Rufai. Among them stood two men whose strained relationship had become a subject of public conversation—Nasir El-Rufai and his successor, Uba Sani.
They arrived separately, each surrounded by aides, each carrying not just the weight of loss, but the tension of unresolved differences. Eyes followed them, whispers moved through the crowd. No one expected more than a distant acknowledgment—if even that.
Then came Isa Ali Pantami.
Known for his calm presence and moral voice, Pantami moved quietly between the two men. He first greeted El-Rufai, offering words of comfort. Then he turned to Uba Sani, speaking softly, almost inaudibly amid the murmurs. After a brief moment, he gently signaled for both men to come closer.
There was a pause—the kind that stretches longer than time itself.
For a second, it seemed uncertain.
Then, slowly, they stepped forward.
What followed was simple, yet powerful: a handshake. Not forced, not dramatic—just firm enough to carry meaning. The crowd fell silent, as if witnessing something more than a greeting. In that moment, grief had done what politics could not—it softened hearts.
Pantami stood between them, not as a politician, but as a bridge.
No speeches were made. No declarations followed. But the message was clear: even in disagreement, humanity remains.
As the prayer concluded and the crowd began to disperse, many left with more than sorrow—they carried a quiet hope that perhaps, just perhaps, this moment marked the beginning of something new.
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