 As Nigeria marks 22 years since the military handed over power to an elected civilian government in 1999, plus TV Africa's Jacinta Obuquo went to the field to have a review of what June 12 means to a set of people popularly known as millennials and the Generation Z. 28 years ago, an estimated 14 million Nigerians, irrespective of ethnic, religious, class and regional affiliations, in a period when religious acrimony and tension had reached its zenith, defied bad weather to elect their president with the hope of ending dark days of military dictatorship. But today, how did the social-minded millennial understand the power it is of older generations? Is this feedback something to worry about as regards the death of history among the millennial? The government never put a premium on it. They never saw the significant hands of June 12, so they never promoted it. That is why. Secondly, it should blame the educational system that has no value in history. And this is also a policy issue, it's our government. You see that at a particular point, history was banned in this country. Then the third-level people are the so-called national orientation agencies. You want to ask me what are they doing? What are they orientating? Where is the national citizenship education? I'm not doing it. And on the rejection of the renaming of Union Lag after MKO, could it be that he was not really respected by both students and alumni? It is the coin, it is the coin of that name that was a problem. It doesn't pop to that brand. You see, so you put a malu. You know, malud in Yoruba, malu means malu cow. And you know what students really like? They will say, ah, I am a malu, as a student of malu. So those are the things those students will react against. And secondly, the academic field slighted. And that is, this is not diluted. You see, let me also say this. A man of people using the name of an institution, institution is bigger than personality. You see, even to name an institution, I've seen that trend, I think it's a bad trend. Don't name an institution after anybody's, because it's bigger than those people. It's bigger. People are still going to come and contribute. While the conversation continues on what constitutes history, individuals or people, the lesson here, according to social commentators, is that heroes and their exploits should not be discarded into the bin of history. Jacinta Obuco for Plus TV Africa.