 Despite the hue and cry of a failed system, a group of young Nigerians have initiated a conversation with the aim of pointing out the way out of the nation's challenges. As an event held at the Citadel Global Community Church in Lagos, panellists including Pastor Tunde Bakery and Pastor Pojo Uyemade challenged the youth to fix the rot in the problem and plus TV Africa's Ongozi, OHSC tells us more. The conversation Africa is an annual gajing put together by the youth of the Citadel Global Community Church. The theme for this year is pointing the way forward. If it is to be, it's up to me. This is to provoke pragmatic steps and finding solutions to the merits of challenges confronting the socioeconomic and political spheres of the nation. The host and one of the panellists, Pastor Tunde Bakery, says that the price of greatness is responsibility, which is required to attain an assured destiny for Nigeria. If you get your PVC, I will not participate in the primary number of producer candidates. So what do you say PVC for? Out of two, there was just one. Then short of the matter, we are not involved. Participate in the process of producing candidates. In his intervention, Pastor Pojo Uyemade challenged the youth to get involved in partisan politics, especially in the two major political parties. Young people have taken the music that they play and they've gone global with it. They've gone to FuelTech, you can see them going global. They've gone into modern wood, they've gone global. They have the intelligence. If they take that same intelligence and understand the political process and participate in the political process, they will take over the political process in this country. So the issue is, forget being the same person, target being the delegates of these individual parties. The way to become a delegate is you've got to have to go for the one that is dealing generally. They will put those one meetings at times where they know you will not want to come, for sure. Other panellists shared their opinions on the Nigerian dream. We need to transform our country because no one will take us seriously unless it starts to get back together. And we are trying to go black and white. When Nigeria gets it back together, black is the whole of the world, the whole of the empire. So they are looking to see that 16 Nigerians are going to have no good out of collaboration with them. We've given hope on this nation called Nigeria. There's so much potential and we have to see that potential. We have to believe in that potential. And even though trust is so badly broken, we don't trust the politicians, we don't trust the government, we don't even trust each other. We're going to sit at the table and die in such a way that we don't have trust all over again. While everyone agrees it was a robust conversation, there are critical poses raised in this discourse, which include among many, what is a Nigerian dream? Is the Nigerian dream possible? Who are the people that can deliver on this dream? The panellists call on Nigerian youth to take charge, arguing that they have the power to transform the nation. For Plus TV Africa, Gozika or HSE.