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A Dispassionate View Of The Biafra Agitations & Ipob By Pastor Sunday Adelaja. - Politics (2) - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / A Dispassionate View Of The Biafra Agitations & Ipob By Pastor Sunday Adelaja. (3943 Views)

Saraki: Banning Of IPOB By Military & South-East Governors Is Unconstitutional / Amnesty International Raises Alarm On Kidnap Of IPOB By DSS / Jonathan’s Loss Triggered Biafra Agitations, Says Adesina (2) (3) (4)

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Re: A Dispassionate View Of The Biafra Agitations & Ipob By Pastor Sunday Adelaja. by koxyz: 4:32pm On Nov 24, 2015
chrisbaba1:
Pastor. Please hold your peace.

pharaoh?.... Heart hardened hell bent on a cause?

The igbos dream of another land let them have it......

I like where you stated the Hausa will have suppor from other Islamic nations, I've never seen it from that aspect.

Awesome writeup......
E no go better for person who say make una no go.From hencefort,all people should vacate the federal civil service,those doing business and working outsides should return home,it is then that we will take you serious.
Re: A Dispassionate View Of The Biafra Agitations & Ipob By Pastor Sunday Adelaja. by dialfa: 4:56pm On Nov 24, 2015
This pastor can lie o!
Someone told you he is delta in 1986?

3 Likes

Re: A Dispassionate View Of The Biafra Agitations & Ipob By Pastor Sunday Adelaja. by chiefobdk(m): 5:08pm On Nov 24, 2015
another pastor dat see Igbo giant in his dream .

Re: A Dispassionate View Of The Biafra Agitations & Ipob By Pastor Sunday Adelaja. by Rose2014: 5:17pm On Nov 24, 2015
dialfa:
This pastor can lie o!
Someone told you he is delta in 1986?

Waoh
Nice catch

2 Likes

Re: A Dispassionate View Of The Biafra Agitations & Ipob By Pastor Sunday Adelaja. by MRSALT: 6:22pm On Nov 24, 2015
I took time to read this article to see a strong reason that will defeat Biafran agitation. Unfortunately, I found none. Nigeria really lacks intellectuals in domestic affairs. All the points raised by many anti Biafrans are what this great pastor unashamedly repeated in this long epistle.I do not, and will never support Biafran agitation but I will never oppose it with these opinionated and shallow reasons.

2 Likes

Re: A Dispassionate View Of The Biafra Agitations & Ipob By Pastor Sunday Adelaja. by leksbore(m): 6:53pm On Nov 24, 2015
this write up should be on the daily times
Re: A Dispassionate View Of The Biafra Agitations & Ipob By Pastor Sunday Adelaja. by misterawo: 7:33pm On Nov 24, 2015
leksbore:
this write up should be on the Odudu-Arewa times

1 Like

Re: A Dispassionate View Of The Biafra Agitations & Ipob By Pastor Sunday Adelaja. by azzima(m): 8:49pm On Nov 24, 2015
What an accurate writing. BUT the OP wasted his time talking to BORN LOSERS. How can you wake up a man that's pretending to sleepThese Biafrans have been losing from the beginning of time and they are about to lose AGAIN.
Re: A Dispassionate View Of The Biafra Agitations & Ipob By Pastor Sunday Adelaja. by leksbore(m): 8:53pm On Nov 24, 2015
[quote author=misterawo post=40366687][/quote]sorry guyz it's my phone typography error,,I meant daily Times ,guardian newspaper.
Re: A Dispassionate View Of The Biafra Agitations & Ipob By Pastor Sunday Adelaja. by leksbore(m): 8:54pm On Nov 24, 2015
[quote author=misterawo post=40366687][/quote]oga u funny oo d man is saying the fact.
Re: A Dispassionate View Of The Biafra Agitations & Ipob By Pastor Sunday Adelaja. by Nobody: 8:57pm On Nov 24, 2015
zendy:
I can't believe how a human being can take the time to write a four part 'litany' to espouse the beauty of Igbos staying in the utterly failed British experiment called Nigeria

That's a yoruba for you.
Re: A Dispassionate View Of The Biafra Agitations & Ipob By Pastor Sunday Adelaja. by azzima(m): 9:03pm On Nov 24, 2015
Sadly, none of the ramblers so far have countered the facts that the OP stated. Usual Igbotic actions......no head but sentiments.
Re: A Dispassionate View Of The Biafra Agitations & Ipob By Pastor Sunday Adelaja. by theDEVILisHERE: 9:17pm On Nov 24, 2015
sirabbey:
Many articles have been written on the recent BIAFRA agitations by so many writers especially on social media and regular print media but this intervention by the popular Ukraine based Nigerian pastor Sunday Adelaja takes a dispassionate look at the whole affair and worthy of consideration by both supporter and opposers of the BIAFRA struggle.

The article is reproduced below in four parts

PART 1

As a Nigerian, I only managed to live in the country for the first 19 years of my life, but the Nigerian factor is so strong that it is not letting me go 30 years later. Even though I have lived in other countries more than I ever lived in Nigeria, yet the connection, the upbringing, the culture, the attachment and the Nigerian embodiment have all been so strong in me, that I am a Nigerian and will always be one. I, like many other Nigerians living abroad, have had the opportunity of changing my nationality by naturalization to become a citizen of one of the European countries, but I have managed to resist that temptation, at least so far.

My thoughts are that everything about me says that I am a Nigerian no matter what passport I carry, and I will always be a Nigerian. I can imagine myself standing before the German immigration office carrying a British Passport; even without a Nigerian passport, they would immediately be able to tell where I came from or at least question me, because they wouldn’t believe that I was an Englishman. I simply don’t look like one, I don’t speak like one, and everything about me gives me away. The way I speak, the way I look, hence no British or American passport could help me. I am a Nigerian through and through.

While growing up in Nigeria, though I must admit, I never valued what it meant to be a Nigerian. I mean to say I love being a Nigerian, but I never appreciated the whole meaning of what it means to be a Nigerian. To be more specific, I was not exposed to the wealth and beauty of the diversity that Nigeria presents. As a matter of fact, because I was only limited to my region of the country while growing up, I thought the people I saw in my vicinity were the only Nigerians around. Yes, that included some people of other nationalities that I was aware of at that time, Yorubas, Igbos and Hausas. I never knew much more than that, about Nigeria before I left the country. Nationalities like, Tiv, Ibibio, Efik, Idoma, Igala, Ijaw, etc. did not mean anything to me while I was in Nigeria, and they were just a bunch of names.

The scale of my ignorance became clear to me just before I left the shores of Nigeria at Murtala Muhammad International Airport, Lagos. After I had said goodbye to my relatives that came to bid me farewell, I was left alone with other young, aspiring Nigerians who, just like me, had just won a scholarship to study in Europe. There were 300 of us in all, the first batch had left a week earlier and I was now traveling with the second batch of students. Sitting alone in a corner on that mild September evening of 1986, I had no option, but to get to know my fellow Nigerians for the first time in my life. The first couple of people I got to know were from Imo and Anambra state. Then I began to hear people introducing themselves from places like Edo, Delta, Ogoni, Angas, Bambora, Bambuka, Baya, Bette, Bwazza, Baba, Degema, Ebira, Gokana, Igbira, etc.

What a shock it was for me to discover that behind this seven letter word – Nigeria, stands a whole chain of peoples, nationalities and nations. I was pleasantly taken aback when we began to discuss how each and every one of us had secured our scholarships. I couldn’t believe that all these people that I was talking with had so many distinctions from their school certificate exams. The lies and misconceptions I had grown up with as a Yoruba man that Hausas, Fulanis and Igbira people were uneducated, evaporated within a few minutes. I discovered that these people were not worse than me, but in some cases they were much better than me.

Another thing that totally shocked me was that some of these fellow Nigerians noticed how timid I was. I was seeing an airport for the first time. I had never traveled far from my village, worse still I was visiting Lagos for the very first time. These Nigerians, seeing that I was the youngest among them at only 19 years old, surrounded me with so much warmth, comfort and brotherly affection. I quickly discovered that Nigeria went far beyond my village.

Another aspect of Nigeria that was discovered by me was in the airplane itself after we were served with our first meal. As the “bush boy” that I was, I was not only unable to eat most of the food that was being served, but even ordinary bread was repulsive to me. This was a different type of bread. I had never before seen black bread in my life. It was at this point that these senior Nigerians showed me what a protection Nigeria offers to another Nigerian in their times of need. These people responded like my village people would have responded if not better, with much care, love, warmth and provision. Some of them sacrificed some of their food that they had taken with them on the plane, others offered me words of encouragement. I never expected to have my first rude encounter with cold on a plane. I was unaware that the atmosphere in the sky was much different from what I was used to all my life living in the hot Nigerian weather. Again, these Nigerians were there with empathy, love and understanding. I got a blanket and I was covered for the 8 hour duration of our journey.

These narrations above are only a short reminiscence of how I discovered Nigeria for myself. I would not like to go into the story of my daily encounters with my fellow Nigerians over the past 30 years living outside the shores of Nigeria. I have come to discover, how proud I am of being a Nigerian in a new way, much more than I could ever have appreciated it if I had lived in Nigeria. As prevalent and widespread as the bad stories about Nigerians are, I will dare to confess that 95% of my experience with Nigerians has been positive. I am only talking for myself and my experience, and I know several other people that could testify to the same thing.

Today, it seems to me like any Nigerian that I come across, comes from my village. This is better communicated when you live mainly among people of other races, far from your continent of birth. In cases when you don’t even see a black man for months or maybe for years; you will soon discover that seeing someone of your race or nationality is a thing of joy and celebration.

This takes me to the main subject of this article, MY THOUGHTS ABOUT THE BIAFRAN AGITATIONS. The Biafran people are mainly represented by the Igbos even though some claim Biafra includes the South-South people. As the case may be, the Igbo people are a leading light in our Union. As a matter of fact, Nigeria has changed so much in the past 30 years that each time I visit Nigerian churches both home and abroad, prominent among the songs of worship are Yoruba songs, Igbo songs, apart from English songs. I have even been to Yoruba parties where Igbo songs were being sung and vice versa. In most cases it does not really matter who the pastor of the congregation is, everybody has learned and is still learning by the day, to embrace the culture of other Nigerian tribes. With this Biafra agitation, I cannot but help to reflect on a scenario of the Nigerian state being divided. I cannot imagine a situation whereby the Igbo influence, culture and personalities would be removed or ejected from the Nigerian socio-economic reality. For someone like me who has come to understand and embrace a Nigeria that is beyond his village, it would be extremely heart breaking.

Our integration has been so intense during these years after the civil war that I now have family members who are Igbos. I don’t know how or where to send my sister in-law Amaka, or my cousins and nephews who bear the identity and carry the Igbo blood in them. We are Nigerians, we have one simple identity that makes it easier for all of us to accept each other beyond the tribal lines. We are all Nigerians, this is the way it has been all my lifetime and I believe it is the way it must remain. We all must be proud to be called Nigerians.

MY THOUGHTS ABOUT THE IGBO PEOPLE.

It is my personal belief that the people agitating for the Biafra Republic, who are mainly from the Igbo tribe are some of our most talented people. In my opinion, which I believe most Nigerians would agree with, Igbos are the most enterprising people in our nation. Their culture has become our culture no matter which part of the country you come from, thanks to the works of the likes of Chinua Achebe.

“Do not spoil what you have by desiring what you have not; remember that what you now have was once among the things you only hoped for.” – Epicurus

Unfortunately, my Igbo brothers and sisters, I must admit (not all) believe that they are being deprived of their rights in the Nigerian nation. My thought on that is, the truth be told, we have all been deprived in Nigeria. It is not something we are proud of, but it is part of our past. The Nigerian society we grew up in, starting from our independence, has not been a fulfillment of the dream and passion of the majority of us, either you are Igbo, Yoruba, Fulani, Tiv, Idoma, Angas, Berom, etc. We have all been deprived. We have all been oppressed, we have all been cheated, we have all been let down and we have all been deceived. So who or what has deprived us?

We have all been deprived not by a particular nationality or tribe. We have all been abused and violated by our past leaders. These leaders don’t belong to just one nationality, they include Igbo people as well. So let’s take a look at those people who have ruled us from independence to date, to get a better picture of who is to blame for our failure as a nation. A look at the list of Nigerian leaders in the years after independence will show us that Igbos have been prominently present in the governance of Nigeria till now.

The Igbo nation has produced a Nigerian President. The Igbo nation has produced a Nigerian Head of State. The Igbo nation has produced more than 5 speakers for the Nigerian senate. The Igbo nation has produced ministers of virtually all existing ministries in Nigeria. This includes key ministries like, Ministry of Finance, Chief of Staff, Foreign Affairs, Education, Health, Communication, Information and Technology, Power, Roads and Works, Petroleum, etc. So who is really to blame for the injustice in the Nigerian society? My answer is, we are all to blame!

A recent research claims that even though Fulanis have ruled Nigeria, or a mixture of Fulani and Hausa, it has been discovered that Hausas have never ruled Nigeria before, even though they are about 20% of Nigeria’s population. Another largely believed rumor says that Hausa is the largest tribe in Nigeria, while in actual fact they are second to Yorubas who are the biggest singular monogenic nationality in Nigeria. Fulanis are only about 9%, Yorubas 21%, Hausa 20% and Igbos 18%, Ijaw 10%, Kanuri 4 %, and others are minority groups.

Of all these groups, let’s examine which tribes of the 521 have ruled Nigeria before.

Abubakar Tarawa Balewa (Middle Belt Bauchi) 1960-1966 (Bageri tribe from Sefawa dynasty)
Nnamdi Azikiwe 1960-1966 (Igbo).
Major General Aguiyi Ironsi (Abia) Jan-Jul 29 1966 (Igbo)
General Yakubu Gowon (Middle Belt Plateau) 1966-1975 (Angas tribe)
General Murtala Muhammad (Middle Belt Plateau) 1975-Feb.1976 (Berom tribe)
General Olusegun Obasanjo (Ogun) 1976-1979 (Yoruba)
Shehu Shagari (Sokoto) 1979-1983 (Fulani).
General Muhammad Buhari (Katsina) 1983-1985 (Fulani)
General Ibrahim Babangida Badamosi (Middle Belt Niger) 1985-1993 (Gwari/Gbagyi tribe).
Ernest Shonekan (Ogun) 1993-Nov 1993 (Yoruba).
General Sanni Abacha (Borno/Chad) 1993-1998 (Kanuri tribe).
General Abdusalami Abubakar (Middle Belt Niger) 1998-1999 (Gwari/Gbagyi tribe).
Olusegun Obasanjo (Ogun) 1999-2007 (Yoruba).
Musa Yar’adua (Katsina) 2007-2010 (Fulani)
Goodluck Jonathan (Bayelsa) 2010-2014 (Ijaw/Igbo?)

Pastors are fraudsters who defraud humans for the meta-physical entities who they serve
Listen to them at your own peril

1 Like

Re: A Dispassionate View Of The Biafra Agitations & Ipob By Pastor Sunday Adelaja. by mauriceju2(m): 9:44pm On Nov 24, 2015
Hausa's children need 19 point to enter federal school while Igbo children need 99.9 to enter federal school , why
the same thing is going on in the federal civil service ,

hear what a Northerner said.
Sanusi Lamido Sanusi
‘Having said that, this nation must realise that Igbos have more than paid for their foolishness. They have been defeated in war, rendered paupers by monetary policy fiat, their properties declared abandoned and confiscated, kept out of strategic public sector appointments and deprived of public services. The rest of the country forced them to remain in Nigeria and has continued to deny them equity.
The Northern Bourgeoisie and the Yoruba Bourgeoisie have conspired to keep the Igbo out of the scheme of things. In the recent transition when the Igbo solidly supported the PDP in the hope of an Ekwueme presidency, the North and South-West treated this as a Biafra agenda. Every rule set for the primaries, every gentleman´s agreement was set aside to ensure that Obasanjo, not Ekwueme emerged as the candidate. Things went as far as getting the Federal Government to hurriedly gazette a pardon. Now, with this government, the marginalistion of the Igbo is more complete than ever before. The Igbos have taken all these quietly because, they reason, they brought it upon themselves. But the nation is sitting on a time-bomb.
After the First World War, the victors treated Germany with the same contempt Nigeria is treating Igbos. Two decades later, there was a Second World War, far costlier than the first. Germany was again defeated, but this time, they won a more honourable peace. Our present political leaders have no sense of History. There is a new Igbo man, who was not born in 1966 and neither knows nor cares about Nzeogwu and Ojukwu. There are Igbo men on the street who were never Biafrans. They were born Nigerians, are Nigerians, but suffer because of actions of earlier generations. They will soon decide that it is better to fight their own war, and may be find an honourable peace, than to remain in this contemptible state in perpetuity.
The Northern Bourgeoisie and the Yoruba Bourgeoisie have exacted their pound of flesh from the Igbos. For one Sardauna, one Tafawa Balewa, one Akintola and one Okotie-Eboh, hundreds of thousands have died and suffered.
If this issue is not addressed immediately, no conference will solve Nigeria´s problems’’.
By Sanusi Lamido Sanusi.
Re: A Dispassionate View Of The Biafra Agitations & Ipob By Pastor Sunday Adelaja. by mauriceju2(m): 9:49pm On Nov 24, 2015
There will be another war in Nigeria but it is not going to be now but after the generation that experience the civil war has gone, mark my word, this time it will be too bloody , unless the Hausa and Yoruba change and stop the game they are playing now,
Re: A Dispassionate View Of The Biafra Agitations & Ipob By Pastor Sunday Adelaja. by meccuno: 10:12pm On Nov 24, 2015
Sanusi Lamido Sanusi
‘Having said that, this nation must realise that Igbos have more than paid for their foolishness. They have been defeated in war, rendered paupers by monetary policy fiat, their properties declared abandoned and confiscated, kept out of strategic public sector appointments and deprived of public services. The rest of the country forced them to remain in Nigeria and has continued to deny them equity.
The Northern Bourgeoisie and the Yoruba Bourgeoisie have conspired to keep the Igbo out of the scheme of things. In the recent transition when the Igbo solidly supported the PDP in the hope of an Ekwueme presidency, the North and South-West treated this as a Biafra agenda. Every rule set for the primaries, every gentleman´s agreement was set aside to ensure that Obasanjo, not Ekwueme emerged as the candidate. Things went as far as getting the Federal Government to hurriedly gazette a pardon. Now, with this government, the marginalistion of the Igbo is more complete than ever before. The Igbos have taken all these quietly because, they reason, they brought it upon themselves. But the nation is sitting on a time-bomb.
After the First World War, the victors treated Germany with the same contempt Nigeria is treating Igbos. Two decades later, there was a Second World War, far costlier than the first. Germany was again defeated, but this time, they won a more honourable peace.
Our present political leaders have no sense of History. There is a new Igbo man, who was not born in 1966 and neither knows nor cares about Nzeogwu and Ojukwu. There are Igbo men on the street who were never Biafrans. They were born Nigerians, are Nigerians, but suffer because of actions of earlier generations. They will soon decide that it is better to fight their own war, and may be find an honourable peace, than to remain in this contemptible state in perpetuity.
The Northern Bourgeoisie and the Yoruba Bourgeoisie have exacted their pound of flesh from the Igbos. For one Sardauna, one Tafawa Balewa, one Akintola and one Okotie-Eboh, hundreds of thousands have died and suffered.
If this issue is not addressed immediately, no conference will solve Nigeria´s problems’’.
By Sanusi Lamido Sanusi.
Re: A Dispassionate View Of The Biafra Agitations & Ipob By Pastor Sunday Adelaja. by oweniwe(m): 11:10pm On Nov 24, 2015
Sunday Adelaja... You are very stoopid

Because underdevelopment, marginaluzation, unemployment, fuel scarcity ... Etc .. Affects d whole Nigeria and not only the igbo, therefore, we must all continue to suffer together?

Just listen to yourself ... Does it make sense to you that the so called SS is suffering fuel scarcity with the rest of Nigeria even though they have crude oil in abundance? ... Its not fair... This is wickedness ...!!..

Because you have a car, your neighbo must trek too abi? Because all Nigerians are suffering, igbo must continue to suffer with them too? You are mad...!!..

And you need to go back to school because you are stil ignorant like you were in the 1980s... Who told you igbo are only native of the SE? You think Biafra cannot survive on its own because it has no resources? Let me repeat again that you are very stoopid.
Re: A Dispassionate View Of The Biafra Agitations & Ipob By Pastor Sunday Adelaja. by masseratti: 12:14am On Nov 25, 2015
It's very sad when I see Yorubas disturbing themselves about this Biafra issue, it is their right to ask for it, they want to go please wait have nothing to lose,let them be to be honest this union I not working, we are asking for true federalism in the SW it's either we have it or we go on our own,every region should develop at its own pace please.
Re: A Dispassionate View Of The Biafra Agitations & Ipob By Pastor Sunday Adelaja. by RisingSun1: 12:15am On Nov 25, 2015
Pastor I want to ask you:

Why are you yorubas frightened about Biafra?

Does it mean yorubas won't be alive again if Biafra emerge?

Did God assigned the Igbos to be protecting yorubas from danger? You said that u are the largest tribe in Africa,why can't the largest tribe fight for her own cause and stand on her own feet?

This below useless statement by you is what happens when you believe that ur entire race will die if igbos leave you behind in Nigeria.

""I can almost guarantee you by the Spirit of God that if Biafra eventually gains independence and breaks away from Nigeria, a civil war might soon ensue within Biafra itself""

You said that it will be disheartening for igbos to go...Are we ur papa?? Can't you fight ur own battles? Can't you stand on ur two feets.

I NOW BELIEVE THAT YORUBAS ARE WEAK AND COWARDLY FROM BIRTH.
Re: A Dispassionate View Of The Biafra Agitations & Ipob By Pastor Sunday Adelaja. by pus22: 12:40am On Nov 25, 2015
sirabbey:
Many articles have been written on the recent BIAFRA agitations by so many writers especially on social media and regular print media but this intervention by the popular Ukraine based Nigerian pastor Sunday Adelaja takes a dispassionate look at the whole affair and worthy of consideration by both supporter and opposers of the BIAFRA struggle.

The article is reproduced below in four parts

PART 1

As a Nigerian, I only managed to live in the country for the first 19 years of my life, but the Nigerian factor is so strong that it is not letting me go 30 years later. Even though I have lived in other countries more than I ever lived in Nigeria, yet the connection, the upbringing, the culture, the attachment and the Nigerian embodiment have all been so strong in me, that I am a Nigerian and will always be one. I, like many other Nigerians living abroad, have had the opportunity of changing my nationality by naturalization to become a citizen of one of the European countries, but I have managed to resist that temptation, at least so far.

My thoughts are that everything about me says that I am a Nigerian no matter what passport I carry, and I will always be a Nigerian. I can imagine myself standing before the German immigration office carrying a British Passport; even without a Nigerian passport, they would immediately be able to tell where I came from or at least question me, because they wouldn’t believe that I was an Englishman. I simply don’t look like one, I don’t speak like one, and everything about me gives me away. The way I speak, the way I look, hence no British or American passport could help me. I am a Nigerian through and through.

While growing up in Nigeria, though I must admit, I never valued what it meant to be a Nigerian. I mean to say I love being a Nigerian, but I never appreciated the whole meaning of what it means to be a Nigerian. To be more specific, I was not exposed to the wealth and beauty of the diversity that Nigeria presents. As a matter of fact, because I was only limited to my region of the country while growing up, I thought the people I saw in my vicinity were the only Nigerians around. Yes, that included some people of other nationalities that I was aware of at that time, Yorubas, Igbos and Hausas. I never knew much more than that, about Nigeria before I left the country. Nationalities like, Tiv, Ibibio, Efik, Idoma, Igala, Ijaw, etc. did not mean anything to me while I was in Nigeria, and they were just a bunch of names.

The scale of my ignorance became clear to me just before I left the shores of Nigeria at Murtala Muhammad International Airport, Lagos. After I had said goodbye to my relatives that came to bid me farewell, I was left alone with other young, aspiring Nigerians who, just like me, had just won a scholarship to study in Europe. There were 300 of us in all, the first batch had left a week earlier and I was now traveling with the second batch of students. Sitting alone in a corner on that mild September evening of 1986, I had no option, but to get to know my fellow Nigerians for the first time in my life. The first couple of people I got to know were from Imo and Anambra state. Then I began to hear people introducing themselves from places like Edo, Delta, Ogoni, Angas, Bambora, Bambuka, Baya, Bette, Bwazza, Baba, Degema, Ebira, Gokana, Igbira, etc.

What a shock it was for me to discover that behind this seven letter word – Nigeria, stands a whole chain of peoples, nationalities and nations. I was pleasantly taken aback when we began to discuss how each and every one of us had secured our scholarships. I couldn’t believe that all these people that I was talking with had so many distinctions from their school certificate exams. The lies and misconceptions I had grown up with as a Yoruba man that Hausas, Fulanis and Igbira people were uneducated, evaporated within a few minutes. I discovered that these people were not worse than me, but in some cases they were much better than me.

Another thing that totally shocked me was that some of these fellow Nigerians noticed how timid I was. I was seeing an airport for the first time. I had never traveled far from my village, worse still I was visiting Lagos for the very first time. These Nigerians, seeing that I was the youngest among them at only 19 years old, surrounded me with so much warmth, comfort and brotherly affection. I quickly discovered that Nigeria went far beyond my village.

Another aspect of Nigeria that was discovered by me was in the airplane itself after we were served with our first meal. As the “bush boy” that I was, I was not only unable to eat most of the food that was being served, but even ordinary bread was repulsive to me. This was a different type of bread. I had never before seen black bread in my life. It was at this point that these senior Nigerians showed me what a protection Nigeria offers to another Nigerian in their times of need. These people responded like my village people would have responded if not better, with much care, love, warmth and provision. Some of them sacrificed some of their food that they had taken with them on the plane, others offered me words of encouragement. I never expected to have my first rude encounter with cold on a plane. I was unaware that the atmosphere in the sky was much different from what I was used to all my life living in the hot Nigerian weather. Again, these Nigerians were there with empathy, love and understanding. I got a blanket and I was covered for the 8 hour duration of our journey.

These narrations above are only a short reminiscence of how I discovered Nigeria for myself. I would not like to go into the story of my daily encounters with my fellow Nigerians over the past 30 years living outside the shores of Nigeria. I have come to discover, how proud I am of being a Nigerian in a new way, much more than I could ever have appreciated it if I had lived in Nigeria. As prevalent and widespread as the bad stories about Nigerians are, I will dare to confess that 95% of my experience with Nigerians has been positive. I am only talking for myself and my experience, and I know several other people that could testify to the same thing.

Today, it seems to me like any Nigerian that I come across, comes from my village. This is better communicated when you live mainly among people of other races, far from your continent of birth. In cases when you don’t even see a black man for months or maybe for years; you will soon discover that seeing someone of your race or nationality is a thing of joy and celebration.

This takes me to the main subject of this article, MY THOUGHTS ABOUT THE BIAFRAN AGITATIONS. The Biafran people are mainly represented by the Igbos even though some claim Biafra includes the South-South people. As the case may be, the Igbo people are a leading light in our Union. As a matter of fact, Nigeria has changed so much in the past 30 years that each time I visit Nigerian churches both home and abroad, prominent among the songs of worship are Yoruba songs, Igbo songs, apart from English songs. I have even been to Yoruba parties where Igbo songs were being sung and vice versa. In most cases it does not really matter who the pastor of the congregation is, everybody has learned and is still learning by the day, to embrace the culture of other Nigerian tribes. With this Biafra agitation, I cannot but help to reflect on a scenario of the Nigerian state being divided. I cannot imagine a situation whereby the Igbo influence, culture and personalities would be removed or ejected from the Nigerian socio-economic reality. For someone like me who has come to understand and embrace a Nigeria that is beyond his village, it would be extremely heart breaking.

Our integration has been so intense during these years after the civil war that I now have family members who are Igbos. I don’t know how or where to send my sister in-law Amaka, or my cousins and nephews who bear the identity and carry the Igbo blood in them. We are Nigerians, we have one simple identity that makes it easier for all of us to accept each other beyond the tribal lines. We are all Nigerians, this is the way it has been all my lifetime and I believe it is the way it must remain. We all must be proud to be called Nigerians.

MY THOUGHTS ABOUT THE IGBO PEOPLE.

It is my personal belief that the people agitating for the Biafra Republic, who are mainly from the Igbo tribe are some of our most talented people. In my opinion, which I believe most Nigerians would agree with, Igbos are the most enterprising people in our nation. Their culture has become our culture no matter which part of the country you come from, thanks to the works of the likes of Chinua Achebe.

“Do not spoil what you have by desiring what you have not; remember that what you now have was once among the things you only hoped for.” – Epicurus

Unfortunately, my Igbo brothers and sisters, I must admit (not all) believe that they are being deprived of their rights in the Nigerian nation. My thought on that is, the truth be told, we have all been deprived in Nigeria. It is not something we are proud of, but it is part of our past. The Nigerian society we grew up in, starting from our independence, has not been a fulfillment of the dream and passion of the majority of us, either you are Igbo, Yoruba, Fulani, Tiv, Idoma, Angas, Berom, etc. We have all been deprived. We have all been oppressed, we have all been cheated, we have all been let down and we have all been deceived. So who or what has deprived us?

We have all been deprived not by a particular nationality or tribe. We have all been abused and violated by our past leaders. These leaders don’t belong to just one nationality, they include Igbo people as well. So let’s take a look at those people who have ruled us from independence to date, to get a better picture of who is to blame for our failure as a nation. A look at the list of Nigerian leaders in the years after independence will show us that Igbos have been prominently present in the governance of Nigeria till now.

The Igbo nation has produced a Nigerian President. The Igbo nation has produced a Nigerian Head of State. The Igbo nation has produced more than 5 speakers for the Nigerian senate. The Igbo nation has produced ministers of virtually all existing ministries in Nigeria. This includes key ministries like, Ministry of Finance, Chief of Staff, Foreign Affairs, Education, Health, Communication, Information and Technology, Power, Roads and Works, Petroleum, etc. So who is really to blame for the injustice in the Nigerian society? My answer is, we are all to blame!

A recent research claims that even though Fulanis have ruled Nigeria, or a mixture of Fulani and Hausa, it has been discovered that Hausas have never ruled Nigeria before, even though they are about 20% of Nigeria’s population. Another largely believed rumor says that Hausa is the largest tribe in Nigeria, while in actual fact they are second to Yorubas who are the biggest singular monogenic nationality in Nigeria. Fulanis are only about 9%, Yorubas 21%, Hausa 20% and Igbos 18%, Ijaw 10%, Kanuri 4 %, and others are minority groups.

Of all these groups, let’s examine which tribes of the 521 have ruled Nigeria before.

Abubakar Tarawa Balewa (Middle Belt Bauchi) 1960-1966 (Bageri tribe from Sefawa dynasty)
Nnamdi Azikiwe 1960-1966 (Igbo).
Major General Aguiyi Ironsi (Abia) Jan-Jul 29 1966 (Igbo)
General Yakubu Gowon (Middle Belt Plateau) 1966-1975 (Angas tribe)
General Murtala Muhammad (Middle Belt Plateau) 1975-Feb.1976 (Berom tribe)
General Olusegun Obasanjo 1976-1979 (igbo)
Shehu Shagari (Sokoto) 1979-1983 (Fulani).
General Muhammad Buhari (Katsina) 1983-1985 (Fulani)
General Ibrahim Babangida Badamosi (Middle Belt Niger) 1985-1993 (Gwari/Gbagyi tribe).
Ernest Shonekan (Ogun) 1993-Nov 1993 (Yoruba).
General Sanni Abacha (Borno/Chad) 1993-1998 (Kanuri tribe).
General Abdusalami Abubakar (Middle Belt Niger) 1998-1999 (Gwari/Gbagyi tribe).
Olusegun Obasanjo 1999-2007 (igbo).
Musa Yar’adua (Katsina) 2007-2010 (Fulani)
Goodluck Jonathan (Bayelsa) 2010-2014 (Ijaw/Igbo?)


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Re: A Dispassionate View Of The Biafra Agitations & Ipob By Pastor Sunday Adelaja. by theDEVILisHERE: 3:47am On Nov 25, 2015
bugzbunny:
I hv done a research
For any biafra u mention... A yoloba man loses 5mins of his lifespan.. Instead of this pastor to write more abt his pple seeing dat majority of his tribesmen are muslims.. Do more envangelism.. He is here masturbating on ipob..igbo matter.... Nawah ooo

The Nigerian apologist are not even saying "ok let's see how we can rectify this issues causing biafrans to aggitate for their nations restoration"
They are supposed to start a rapid campaign and movement geared towards trying to right the wrongs that put the country in the mess it is ( from repentance to restitution towards Biafrans who they have offended)

The young Nigerian appologist do not even love their country enough to try and start the campaign to rectify all evil and wickedness their fathers did to biafrans, so that they can save the nation they so love

You counter logic with logic
But no
They will rather the status quo remain
Becauase they are inherently evil and wicked like their fathers before them

Like I've said before
Nigeria was created by theives, liers, decivers, criminals, killers, terrorists, evil and wicked people from britain
Such people will always do things for their kind
It is no coincidence that this type of people always emerge at the helm of affairs in the country
Because the country was made for their type of people
Garbage in garbage out

1 Like

Re: A Dispassionate View Of The Biafra Agitations & Ipob By Pastor Sunday Adelaja. by chrisblack: 6:43am On Nov 25, 2015
bosedekemi:
Rubbish. Biafrans know who they are and weep it f them grin Nigeria is fake and never will work.
if from this write up you guys learnt nothing. Its means your are foolish. No sane person would read this and not see truth in it. I just hope it does not lead to what every one does not want. The human loss will be catastrophic. You guys are heading towards what you will regret
Re: A Dispassionate View Of The Biafra Agitations & Ipob By Pastor Sunday Adelaja. by rareman(m): 5:58pm On Nov 25, 2015
CyberWolf:
Nawa oo for this Yoruba people. Someone said that he does not wanna live with you again, is it by force? So you waste all your time writing this hogwash just to convince us to continue living with you? If you so love other Nigerians so much, why will you wanna secede too if Biafra goes? So it's Biafra that is keeping you in Nigeria? ....You even went ahead to tell us that it's Igbos that will suffer most angry Yes we know we will suffer and we are not afraid because we've been suffering from time immemorial, but we don't want to love with you again as a country, na fight?
Nawa oo for this scratched face people angry mind your biz let's mind ours sad

But truth be told, he has a point! No matter how you want to view it, you might not see it clearer now until we achieve Biafra. I stand for a united Nigeria
Re: A Dispassionate View Of The Biafra Agitations & Ipob By Pastor Sunday Adelaja. by MRSALT: 10:23pm On Nov 25, 2015
rareman:


But truth be told, he has a point! No matter how you want to view it, you might not see it clearer now until we achieve Biafra. I stand for a united Nigeria
Which point does he have? Biafran agitators are asking for peaceful not forceful dissolution of the federation. Why do people equate fight for self determination to war mongering?. This agitation can take as far as a century to come to pass and threat to destruction can not stop it. Afterall it took over 100 years for boko haram to come to be. Did the writer take this into consideration?

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