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On This Day, We Lost Chief Obafemi Awolowo. - Politics - Nairaland

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CHIEF OBAFEMI AWOLOWO And His Achievements / Chief Obafemi Awolowo's Private Car in 1979 (photo) / Hoodlums Steal Obafemi Awolowo’s Glasses From Statue As Looting Continues (2) (3) (4)

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On This Day, We Lost Chief Obafemi Awolowo. by Sammy07: 11:42am On May 09, 2021
Chief Obafemi Jeremiah Oyeniyi Awolowo, GCFR (Yoruba: Ọbáfẹ́mi Awólọ́wọ̀; 6 March 1909 – 9 May 1987), was a Nigerian nationalist and statesman who played a key role in Nigeria's independence movement, the First and Second Republics and the Civil War.

He was the first premier of the Western Region and later federal commissioner for finance, and vice chairman of the Federal Executive Council during the Civil War. He was thrice a major contender for his country's highest office.

A native of Ikenne in Ogun State of south-western Nigeria, he started his career, like some of his well-known contemporaries, as a nationalist in the Nigerian Youth Movement in which he rose to become Western Provincial Secretary. Awolowo was responsible for much of the progressive social legislation that has made Nigeria a modern nation.

He was the first Leader of Government Business and Minister of Local Government and Finance, and first Premier of the Western Region under Nigeria's parliamentary system, from 1952 to 1959.

He was the official Leader of the Opposition in the federal parliament to the Balewa government from 1959 to 1963. In recognition of all these, Awolowo was the first individual in the modern era to be named Leader of the Yorubas (Yoruba: Asiwaju Awon Yoruba or Asiwaju Omo Oodua).

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Re: On This Day, We Lost Chief Obafemi Awolowo. by Sammy07: 11:42am On May 09, 2021

He Died 34years Ago Today (Saturday, March 6, 1909 – Saturday, May 9, 1987) .

Today, the 9th of May 2016, is a remarkable day in Yoruba history as we celebrate the life and times of Chief Obafemi Awolowo (A Nationalist, A Statesman and Former Premier of Western Nigeria).

On this day, 34 years ago, Nigeria’s political landscape shook to its roots, when the unexpected happened. The earth-shaking occurrence was the transition to glory of Chief Obafemi Awolowo. With such a massive blow, Nigeria lost her most priced and valued possession, the man whom Chief Emeka Odumegwu Ojukwu called, “The Best President Nigeria Never Had”. Chief Obafemi Awolowo was born in Ikenne, Remo Division of Ogun State in Southwest Nigeria on March 6, 1909. He was actively involved in politics from 1947 – 1987 (40yrs).

Obafemi Awolowo was born to Chief David Sopolu Awolowo and his wife Mary Efunyela Awolowo in Ikenne, Remo, (now Ogun State of Nigeria. Chief Obafemi Awolowo, leader of the banned Action Group and leader of the Yorubas of western Nigeria, was a son of a farmer and was a self- made man.
He was the leader of the Yorubas of Western Nigeria.

Chief Awolowo was educated at Anglican and Methodist schools in Ikenne, his home town, and at Baptist Boys’ High School in Abeokuta, Western Nigeria. His had hiccups with his education due to lack of money.
As a result of this, Chief Awolowo worked as a pupil teacher at the age of 17 (in 1926) and then went to Wesley College in Ibadan, the then capital city of Western Nigeria, to attend a course in teacher training. Leaving Wesley College, he studied shorthand and typing, and after working for a while in Lagos, returned to Wesley College in 1932 as a clerk. Two years later, he became a trader and a newspaper reporter. He organized in the late ’30s the Nigerian Produce Traders Association and became secretary of the Nigerian Motor Transport Union.

Awo was not satisfied with his level of education so he decided to take up part-time studies and, after matriculation in 1939, went on to obtain a Bachelor of Commerce degree in 1944; in that year he was also editing the now defunct Nigerian Worker.
In June 1940, he became secretary of the Ibadan branch of the Nigerian Youth Movement ( NYM ) and, in this position , led the agitation for the reform of the Ibadan Native Authority Advisory Board in 1942. He was co-founder of the Trade Union Congress Of Nigeria in 1943.
The following year, he went to London to study law and founded the Egbe Omo Oduduwa, a Yoruba tribal society. After qualifying in 1947, he returned to Nigeria to set up legal practice and continued to work for the Egbe Omo Oduduwa, becoming general secretary in 1948. Two years later he became the moving spirit in organizing with other Yoruba leaders the Action Group, which won the then Western Region elections in 1951.

Chief Awolowo was a leader of Government Business and Minister of Local Government from 1951-1954 when, with the introduction of the new constitution; he became the first Premier of Western Nigeria.
Chief Awolowo, who was highly competent, full of initiative, original in thought, practical and very often single-minded when he was convinced about something, built the Action Group into what was then described as ‘the best political party south of the Sahara’.

Chief Awolowo led an able and efficient team, both in Government and in making the Western Region the admiration of the rest of the Federation of Nigeria.
He resigned the premiership of Western Nigeria in 1959 to contest the Federal elections but, failing to win, became the leader of the opposition in the Federal House Of Representatives .

Chief Awolowo led his party’s delegation to the London Constitutional conferences in 1953 and 1954, and to a later conference in Lagos in 1958. So excellent was the administration of the Western Nigeria during Chief Awolowo’s tenure in Office as Premier that when in 1953 the British Government announced its intention to grant self-government in 1956 to any Region desiring it, the Action Group Leader asked for and secured it in the same year.
He was chosen by the Yoruba elite as their political leader or, formally, Leader of the 10,500,000 Yorubas, during the peak goodwill period following his release from imprisonment for about three years (he was released on August 3, 1966 with a state pardon) on the charge of plotting to overthrow the national government, and was later appointed Federal Commissioner for Finance and Vice-President of the Federal Executive Council in Yakubu Gowon’s Federal Military Government during the Civil War.

He was also leader of the Western delegation to the All Nigerian Conference on the future association of Nigeria.
In those capacities, he played a major role in preserving the Nigerian federation. As chairman and Presidential candidate of the Unity Party of Nigeria, which contested the elections of 1979 and 1983 on a social welfarist platform, Awolowo polled the second highest number of votes. He retired from politics on the termination of the Second Republic in 1983.

Chief Awolowo was an unyielding advocate of a federal constitution for Nigeria. He is also a strong antagonist of any form of feudalism or feudal system and its spread to other parts of Nigeria; an advocate of the creation of more states in Nigeria.

Awo brought the first television network to Africa in 1959 before quitting office voluntarily. In all his forty years in Nigerian politics, Awo remained the same – a man magnificently gifted, charismatic, competent and a “visioner par excellence”. He was indeed a statesman

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Re: On This Day, We Lost Chief Obafemi Awolowo. by phygo89(m): 11:42am On May 09, 2021
I heard he was coward?

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Re: On This Day, We Lost Chief Obafemi Awolowo. by Sammy07: 11:45am On May 09, 2021
[s]
phygo89:
I heard he was coward?
[/s]
That,didn't run away from his homeland

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Re: On This Day, We Lost Chief Obafemi Awolowo. by Sammy07: 11:46am On May 09, 2021
Quotes

OJUKWU : The best president Nigeria never had.

IBB: He is the main issue in Nigeria politics, you are either for or against him.

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Re: On This Day, We Lost Chief Obafemi Awolowo. by Sammy07: 11:47am On May 09, 2021
cheesy
Re: On This Day, We Lost Chief Obafemi Awolowo. by Sammy07: 11:47am On May 09, 2021
>
Re: On This Day, We Lost Chief Obafemi Awolowo. by zolajpower: 11:48am On May 09, 2021
Sammy07:
Chief Obafemi Jeremiah Oyeniyi Awolowo, GCFR (Yoruba: Ọbáfẹ́mi Awólọ́wọ̀; 6 March 1909 – 9 May 1987), was a Nigerian nationalist and statesman who played a key role in Nigeria's independence movement, the First and Second Republics and the Civil War.

He was the first premier of the Western Region and later federal commissioner for finance, and vice chairman of the Federal Executive Council during the Civil War. He was thrice a major contender for his country's highest office.

A native of Ikenne in Ogun State of south-western Nigeria, he started his career, like some of his well-known contemporaries, as a nationalist in the Nigerian Youth Movement in which he rose to become Western Provincial Secretary. Awolowo was responsible for much of the progressive social legislation that has made Nigeria a modern nation.

He was the first Leader of Government Business and Minister of Local Government and Finance, and first Premier of the Western Region under Nigeria's parliamentary system, from 1952 to 1959.

He was the official Leader of the Opposition in the federal parliament to the Balewa government from 1959 to 1963. In recognition of all these, Awolowo was the first individual in the modern era to be named Leader of the Yorubas (Yoruba: Asiwaju Awon Yoruba or Asiwaju Omo Oodua).





How true they said he died of poison

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Re: On This Day, We Lost Chief Obafemi Awolowo. by alfasexy: 11:53am On May 09, 2021
I wish to use this opportunity to congratulate the makers of otapiapia.

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Re: On This Day, We Lost Chief Obafemi Awolowo. by Simplyleo: 11:54am On May 09, 2021
phygo89:
I heard he was coward?
Yes, he was a coward.

But every word in this life is relative.

Compared to the bald headed bearded coward below, Awolowo is actually bravery personified.

Ever heard he chickened out in olosho dress?

The region under Awolowo's administration is now a host to some lost sheep from Israel.

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Re: On This Day, We Lost Chief Obafemi Awolowo. by Seerade029: 11:57am On May 09, 2021
Apart from his face being on 100 Naira notes, some other achievements of the late sage who hailed from Ikenne, Ogun State are catalogued below;

1.) He named Nigeria’s national currency as ‘Naira’ when he was the Federal Commissioner for Finance. The late sage took the name of Nigeria and collapsed it as ‘Naira’

2.) Awolowo introduced free primary education for all and free health care for children in the Western Region.

3. )He established the first television station in Africa in 1959.

4. )He also erected the first skyscraper in tropical Africa:the Cocoa House (still the tallest in Ibadan).

5.) Awo as fondly called was conferred by President Shehu Shagari with the title of the Grand Commander of the Federal Republic (GCFR), the first and only non-president to be so honoured in recognition of his sterling qualities and contributions to the service of the country.

6.) He was the first individual in the modern era to be named Leader of the Yorubas (Yoruba: Asiwaju Omo Oodua), a title which has come over time to be conventionally ascribed to his successors as the recognized political leader of the Yoruba peoples of Nigeria.

7.) The man widely believed by admirers to be the best President Nigeria never had was the first Leader of Government Business and Minister of Local Government and Finance and first Premier of the Western Region under Nigeria’s parliamentary system, from 1952 to 1959.

8.) In 1949 he founded the Nigerian Tribune, the oldest surviving private Nigerian newspaper, which he used to spread nationalist consciousness among his fellow Nigerians.

9.) The party he founded, Action Group was the first to move the motion for Nigeria’s independence in the federal parliament and he obtained internal self-government for the Western Region in 1957.

10.) The University of Ife was renamed Obafemi Awolowo University on 12 May 1987 in honour of Chief Obafemi Awolowo first premier of the Western Region of Nigeria.

11) He established Industrial Estates in Ogun and Lagos states

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Re: On This Day, We Lost Chief Obafemi Awolowo. by Seerade029: 12:00pm On May 09, 2021
50 Quotes from Obafemi Awolowo


Awo's Motto Formulated On His 30th Birthday
"After rain comes sunshine; After darkness comes the glorious dawn. There is no sorrow without its alloy of joy; there is no joy without its admixture of sorrow. Behind the ugly terrible mask of misfortune lies the beautiful soothing countenance of prosperity. So, tear the mask!"
- My Early Life, 1968.

Awo on His Wife of 50 Years
"Throughout all the changing fortunes of my life ... , my wife, Hannah Idowu Dideolu Awolowo (nee Adelana) has been to me a jewel of inestimable value. She is an ideal wife ... The outpouring of her love and devotion to me and to our family is exceeding and beyond words ... I do not hesitate to confess that I owe my success in life to three factors: the Grace of God, a Spartan self-discipline, and a good wife. Our home is to all of us, a true haven; a place of happiness, and of imperturbable seclusion from the buffetings of life."
- My Early Life, 1968

Awo on Risk Taking
"It is, I think, enough for me to say that life itself is, from the cradle to the grave, a series of unbroken risks. I make no boast about this, but those who know me intimately will testify to the fact that I have never, at any time, shrunk from taking my full share of the risks which life, with its unending opportunities and vicissitudes, offers."
- Voice of Reason, 1981

Awo On "The Courage To Look"
"The gloom of the world is but a shadow, and there is radiance in the darkness, if we could but
see. To be able to see this radiance, all you need to do is to cultivate the courage to look, and the insight to apprehend the light which shines, at all times and in all places, for those who make Truth the object of their daily pursuit."
Speech to University Graduands (1967): In Voice of Courage, 1981.

Awo On Failure As Springboard To Success
"I have come to learn, from personal experience, that failure and defeat always serve as springboards for greater achievements for I, whom who never acknowledges their potency, and who is prepared to meet the challenges posed by' them - for they always pose challenges.
Statement on Attaining the Age of 67; 1976

Awo On Light and Darkness
"In the presence of light, darkness cannot exist; nor can the night of misery and suffering... The
compelling urge to be a harbinger of light over Nigeria has been my one consuming passion for
more than four decades now ... My yearnings for the descent of light upon Nigeria became so deep that they were soon transformed into an irrepressible call to duty."
- Text of a Broadcast on the Nigerian Television, Ibadan, 1979

Awo On Self-Discipline
"I will, more than ever before, subject myself to severe self- discipline. Only men who are masters of themselves become easily masters of others. Therefore, my thoughts, my tongue,
and my actions shall be brought under strict control always."
- My March Through Prison, 1985


Awo's View of The World
"I must take the world as I find it: with its sprinkling of saints and its multitude of evil-doers, ... ; with its source of happiness and its tons of sorrow. My duty, therefore, is to view anything that may happen to me in this world with Christ- like calm and equanimity and to do all in my power to promote the progress and advancement of mankind".
- My March Through Prison, 1985


Awo On His Lifestyle As Example To The Youths[/b]
"Those who desire to reach, and keep their places at the top in any calling must be prepared to do so the hard way."
- Awo (Autobiography). 1960

Awo On The Temporary Nature Of Human Problems

"In the long run, all human problems do settle themselves aright, whatever anyone or group of people may do. This is so, because all those who do wrong and injustice, are merely setting themselves against the powerful tide of Nature's or, if you like, History's dialectical progression. Temporarily, this tide can be held back; but certainly, not permanently. "
- Address to 4th OAU Summit in Kinshasa, Sept, (/967): In Voice of Courage (1981)


[b]Awo On Leadership By Example
"Those of us placed in a position of leadership must be prepared to grasp the nettle if we unite in doing so, and if, in addition, we set a worthy example and a marat on pace in probity, unselfishness, and self-sacrifice, the people will follow, all too readily, in our footsteps. "
- Call to Rededication and Reconstruction (1961): In Voice of Reason (1981)

Awo On The Law Of Sowing and Reaping
"Like cause always produce like effect. In kind, we always reap what we sow; but quantitatively, we always reap much more than we sow."
- Lecture at the University of Lagos (1968): In Voice of Courage (1981)

Awo On Good and Evil
"The touchstone of what is good, be it thought, or word or action, is LOVE. We are to love our neighbours as ourselves. That is the law and the prophets. Anything therefore - any thought or word or action - which falls short of LOVE is evil, and holds within itself the germ of its own eventual and inevitable destruction."
- Lecture at the University of Lagos (1968): In Voice of Courage (1981)

Awo On Man and His Environment
"Man is not born to grope in the face of adverse environmental circumstances and conditions: he is ordained, and endowed with the capacity, to comprehend the universe, conquer his immediate surroundings, and rule the world. But first, he must understand the world and all its phenomena: he must do so systematically and scientifically."
- The People's Republic, 1968

Awo On Man As The Sole Dynamic In Nature
"Man is the sole dynamic in nature; and accordingly, every individual constitutes the supreme economic potential which a country possesses. It is axiomatic that man can create nothing. But, by an intelligent and purposive application of the exertions of his body and mind, he can exploit natural resources to produce goods and service..... Therefore, other things being equal, the healthier his body and the more educated his mind, the greater will be his morale and the more efficient he becomes as a producer and consumer."
- University of Ife Convocation Speech (/974): In Voice of Courage (1981)

Awo On Development of Human Personality
"A man whose personality is fully developed never fears anything; he cringes not, and never feels inferior to anyone; His breadth of mind enables him to exercise his freedom in such a manner as not to endanger the interests and freedom of others. He is a citizen of the world - free from narrow prejudices. He is what he is because the three main constituents of his entity - his body, brain, and mind - are fully developed. Mens Sana in Corpore Sano!"
- Voice of Reason (1981)

Awo On The Cultivation of The Human Mind
"Whether we are conscious of or acknowledge it or not, the fact remains stubborn and indestructible that poverty, disease, social unrest, and instability, and all kinds of international conflicts, have their origins in the minds of men ... It is only when the minds of men have been properly and rigorously cultivated and garnished, that they can be safely entrusted with public affairs with a certainty and assuredness that they will make the best of their unique opportunity and assignment."
- Inaugural Address as Chancellor of the University of Ife (1967) Voice of Wisdom, 1981

Awo On The Cardinal Aim of Education
"Any system of education which does not help a man to have a healthy and sound body and alert brain, and balanced and disciplined instinctive urges, is both misconceived and dangerous."
- The People's Republic. 1968

Awo on Free Education and Free Health Services
"In order to attain to the goals of economic freedom and prosperity, Nigeria must do certain things as a matter of urgency and priority. It must provide free education (at all levels) and free health facilities for the masses of its citizens."

Awo on the Welfare of the Individual
"Man is the Alpha and Omega, the only dynamic means and the sole end, of all earthly human activities .... All productive activities, if they are to be meaningful, equitable,just and human, should be geared to one and only one goal- the welfare of the individual."
- The People's Republic, 1970.

Awo On Citizens General Well-Being
"He needs a healthy body which can be reared only on good food, adequate shelter, decent clothing, a reasonable measure of comfort and luxury, and a wholesome environment. He needs a sound and cultivated mind which is free to know and meditate upon the things of his choice. He has natural, conventional and legal rights which must be protected and upheld, with impartiality and inflexible justice by government and the society in which he lives."
- Voice of Reason, 1980

Awo On Full Development And Employment Of All Talents
"When all the talents in society are not fully developed, it is not the individuals that are adversely affected alone who suffer; the society as a whole suffers as well. Now, granting that every Nigerian is given an opportunity to develop his talents, it is imperative that he should also be given an opportunity to employ these developed talents. Full development of man and his full employment are not only social imperatives, but also inseparably inter-connected and complementary."
-Address delivered to Ondo State House of Assembly (1980): In Voice of Wisdom (1981)
Re: On This Day, We Lost Chief Obafemi Awolowo. by ExpertEDITOR: 12:00pm On May 09, 2021
The children of 8 will soon be here to wail hard cheesy

Great Awo. May you forever live in our hearts.

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Re: On This Day, We Lost Chief Obafemi Awolowo. by Seerade029: 12:03pm On May 09, 2021
Awo On The Development of the Soul-Personality
"Throughout my adult life, I have learnt about the development of the soul personality, I know the law and the prophets, that is to say, that love is the cornerstone of the universe both visible and invisible."

My March Through Prison, 1988
Awo On Moral and Spiritual Reconstruction "There is an urgent and massive need for moral and spiritual reconstruction: the kind which will help to demolish morbid desire for naked power and domination ... and ensure justice equity and fair play for all."
- Lecture delivered to the Christian Laity of Nigeria. Lagos (1972): Voice of Wisdom (1981)

Awo On Human Desire For Power
"Let us make no pretense about it, every human being loves power; power over his fellow men in the state, or in business enterprises; or failing that; power over his wife and children, and over his brothers, sisters, and friends, or, in the case of children, power over his playmates. Of these categories of power, the desire for power over one's fellow men is the strongest."
- Address to Students' Parliament (1975): In Voice of Wisdom (1981)

Awo on Equality of The Blackman with Other Races
"The Blackman shall be absolute and undisputed master in his own home, and shall enjoy unaffected and un-patronising equality with the other races of the world."
- Press Statement (196/): Voice of Reason, 1981.

Awo on Power and How It Enslaves
"Power enslaves: absolute power enslaves absolutely. I have made a diligent search through history, and I have not come across a single instance where a regime, be it military or civilian, which has come to power at its own will, and has wielded that power for many years, has found it easy to extricate itself from the sweet uses and shackles of power, and then hand it to others outside its own hierarchy. It is possible, quite possible, that my search is not exhaustive and so, I stand to be corrected."
- University of Ife Convocation (1974): In Voice of Courage. 1981.

Awo on Africa's Dependence on Former Colonial Masters
"Today, Africa is a continent of COMPETING BEGGAR-NATIONs. We vie with one another for favours from our former colonial masters; and we deliberately fall over one another to invite neo- colonialists to come over to our different territories to preside over our economic fortunes ... Unless a beggar resolutely shakes off, and irrevocably turns his back on, his begging habit, he will forever remain a beggar. For, the more he begs, the more he develops the beggar characteristics of lack of initiative, courage, drive and self-reliance."
-Address to 4th OAU Summit in Kinshasa (1967): In Voice of Courage, 1981.

Awo on Self-Seeking African Leaders
"Africa has produced more self-seeking leaders than public-spirited ones. But, thank goodness, the masses of the people remain largely unspoilt and uncorrupted, and are developing fast the technique of differentiating gold from lead and real metal from dross. What is more, they have begun to show their preparedness for very rough action against any political leader who may be caught in the game of public trickery and fraud."
- The People's Republic, 1968

Awo On People's Revolt Against Bad Leadership
"A greedy, corrupt, and evil administration is bound to wither, sooner or later, in the face of obsessive desire and mounting clamour on the part of the masses of the people for a welfare regime which will benefit all equally. In the course of time there will be a clash of desires and wills between the exploiters and the exploited. These clash of desires and wills will stir the universal mind into action, and a situation will then arise which will bring about the termination of or radical change in the greedy, and evil regime."
- The People's Republic, 1968

Awo on the Wisdom of Managing Rivalries
"It is safer and wiser to cure unhealthy rivalry than to suppress it."
- Thoughts on The Nigerian Constitution, 1966.

Awo on the Danger of Not Practising What We Preach
"If we are in the habit of practising the opposite of what we preach, our admonition will not only lose their force and cogency, but also we ourselves will forfeit every claim to credibility. An ounce of example, it has been widely said, is far better than a ton of precepts."
-Address to the Congregation of the University of Ife (1970): In Voice of Wisdom, 1981.

Awo on Thoroughness in Doing Things[/b]
"A half-hearted slipshod doer may be likened to a fool who takes five steps forward and three steps backwards ... Again, a half-hearted doer may be likened to a man who sweeps a dirty room with a dirtier broom, and throws back into the room a good quality of the dirt which he has managed to remove from the room."
- Voice of Wisdom (1981)

[b]Awo's Self-Assessment As A Leader
"While many men in power and public office are busy carousing in the midst of women of easy virtue and men of low morals, I, as a few others like me, am busy at my desk thinking about the problems of Nigeria and proffering solutions to them. Only the deep can call to the deep."

Awo On The Risk That The Few Rich Are Running
"We have in our midst about 1,000 rich Nigerians who in the past cleverly rigged the sources of the wealth of our nation, and we are now tactically poised to oligopolise all the munificent avenues of riches that may supervene now and in the future. The rich, and the highly-placed in business, public life, and government, are running a dreadful risk in their callous neglect of the poor and down-trodden."
- Address delivered to Ondo House of Assembly (/980): Voice of Wisdom, 1981.

Awo on Secularity of Nigeria
"Nigeria should be a secular State ... As far as possible, there should be separation of activities between the States on the one hand, and religious bodies on the other."
- Thoughts on the Nigerian Constitution, 1966

Awo On A Motion For Self-Government
"Every time we talk about self-government, the British turn around and say if we depart from your country, there will be civil strife, there will be war ... But even under their rule, how many of our sons who were taken to Burma, were decimated in a war, the beginning of which we do not know, the cause of which we do not know, and in the declaring of which we took no "art or part". I challenge any Briton today to tell me whether the number of our people destroyed in their wars, are as many as those who had died in our so-called inter-tribal wars". .
- Speech given in The House of Representatives (1953):Voice of Reason, 1981

Awo on the Nigerian Federation
"Nigeria is not a nation. It is a mere geographical expression. The word Nigerian is merely a distinctive appellation to distinguish those who live within the boundaries of Nigeria from those who do not".
- Path To Nigerian Freedom, 1947

Awo On Nigeria As Created By The British
"It is incontestable that the British not only made Nigeria, but also hand it to us whole on their surrender of power. But the Nigeria, which they handed over to us, had in it the forces of its own disintegration. It is up to contemporary Nigerian leaders to neutralize these forces, preserve the Nigerian inheritance, and make all our people free, forward-looking and prosperous. "
- The Peoples' Republic, 1968.

Awo On Future Conflicts
"The seed for a future minority problem in the North has been sown by the Government. It will grow with growing political consciousness on the part of those who settle permanently in the North."
- Path to Nigerian Freedom. 1947

Awo on an Ijaw Presidency of Nigeria
"I look forward to the day - not in the far distant future - when an Ijaw would be President of our
Republic, and a Birom his Vice or vice versa."
- Speech at the UPN's First Campaign (1978): In Voice of Wisdom (1981)

Awo's Move for National Government
"At the conclusion of the Constitutional Conference in London in 1958, I had an overpowering feeling of foreboding ... that something untoward was going to happen to Nigeria. That it would happen, I felt sure; but when it would happen, I had no inkling ... At first, I felt there was nothing I could do about it. But later on, I thought I might do something about it."
- The Travails of Democracy and The Rule of Law, 1987.

Awo on Federalism for Multi-National Country
"I predict that every multi-lingual or multi-national country with a unitary constitution must either eventually have a federal constitution based on the principles which J have enunciated, or disintegrate, or be perennially afflicted with disharmony and instability."
- The Peoples' Republic, 1968.

Awo on Human Diversity and Political Autonomy
"You can unite but can never succeed in unifying peoples whom language has set distinctly apart from one another; the more educated a linguistic. group becomes, the stronger it waxes in its bids for political self-determination and autonomy, unless it happens to be the dominant group."
- Thoughts on the Nigerian Constitution, 1966.

Awo On Creation of More States for Minorities
"The creation of the Mid- West State will be the beginning of a journey which may be short or long but which will irresistibly bring Nigeria to the goal of true federalism and more States, and of individual freedom and happiness for all our people."
- Awolowo and Nigerian Federalism, 1988.

Awo on Population As Basis Of Sharing Revenue
"In a country where the accuracy of the census figures is so much in acrimonious dispute, it is gross and aggravating provocation to urge that population should be used as a basis of sharing what belongs to others who are much fewer in number."
-The Strategy and Tactics of the People's Republic of Nigeria, 1970

Awo on State Police[/b]
"Under my proposals, Police is a residual subject, because the immediate problem of maintaining law and order can only be properly and more effectively tackled by the State Government."
- The Strategy and Tactics of the Peoples' Republic of Nigeria, 1970.

[b]Awo on Peoples' Fear of His Death Arising from National Crisis
"Fortified with the justness of the cause we espouse in this crisis, and trusting in the never- failing providence of God, 1 can say with confidence that there, where my blood is shed, no grass will grow again, and no life is likely to flourish again. Undoubtedly, lives might be lost if the ugly crisis continues for long. But God, who sees our hearts and knows why we have refused to bow to blind tyranny, and are, as a result, in this politically helpless plight, will protect me and my colleagues from any harm."
- The Travails of Democracy and the Rule of Law, 1987.

Awo On The Nigerian Civil War
"It appears to me that the causes of the last Civil War lie embedded in the nether realms of such degrading and depraving evils as unemployment; mass ignorance; endemic and debilitating diseases; low productivity; abuse and misuse of power, bribery and corruption; favouritism and nepotism; ethnocentricity and tribalism; much poverty and much discontent."
- Address to The Nigerian Trade Union Congress (1970): In Voice of Courage, 1981

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Re: On This Day, We Lost Chief Obafemi Awolowo. by Seerade029: 12:10pm On May 09, 2021
wink

Re: On This Day, We Lost Chief Obafemi Awolowo. by Seerade029: 12:10pm On May 09, 2021
smiley

Re: On This Day, We Lost Chief Obafemi Awolowo. by Seerade029: 12:10pm On May 09, 2021
cool

Re: On This Day, We Lost Chief Obafemi Awolowo. by fergie001: 12:26pm On May 09, 2021
Great Man.

1 Like 1 Share

Re: On This Day, We Lost Chief Obafemi Awolowo. by Nobody: 12:29pm On May 09, 2021
After Oduduwa, it’s Awolowo.

Yorubas will forever be grateful, baba.

Sun re o.

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Re: On This Day, We Lost Chief Obafemi Awolowo. by goodnessme1(f): 12:35pm On May 09, 2021
After drinking rat poison called otapiapia.


Very active made in Aba rat killergrin grin

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Re: On This Day, We Lost Chief Obafemi Awolowo. by ExpertEDITOR: 12:37pm On May 09, 2021
goodnessme1:
After drinking rat poisongrin grin
After suyarising 3m iPod terrorists cheesy

Baba slept well and died fulfilled. Pray you have same ending.

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Re: On This Day, We Lost Chief Obafemi Awolowo. by goodnessme1(f): 12:38pm On May 09, 2021
zolajpower:


How true they said he died of poison
Add rat to the poison.

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Re: On This Day, We Lost Chief Obafemi Awolowo. by Zendinho(m): 12:38pm On May 09, 2021
It's very unfortunate that those who could have built the nation to an enviable height never had the NEEDED TIME to do so....

Those who had good intentions, and programmes, those who had the people's interst at heart were short changed....

MURTALA MOHAMMED
OBEFEMI AWOLOWO
MUSA YARADUA
GOOD LUCK JONATHAN

On the other hand, it's also unfortunate that those whose interest is only for tribal and religious fanatism, nepotism, bigotry etc have greater opportunities to perpetuate their evil agenda.


It's really really unfortunate.

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Re: On This Day, We Lost Chief Obafemi Awolowo. by illicit(m): 1:18pm On May 09, 2021
Awo lo...
Re: On This Day, We Lost Chief Obafemi Awolowo. by esnbrutality: 1:22pm On May 09, 2021
WITH ALL THESE GLOWING TRIBUTES YOUR POST IS ABOUT AN ACCESSORY TO GENOCIDE.... angry angry angry

LAGOS STATE GOVERNMENT NO SEND AM.

NO YORUBA NATIONAL CENTER SEND AM....

EVEN BUHARI AND HIS USELESS "TALKING DRUM ASSISTANTS" NO SEND AM

FEMI ADESINA ...NO SEND AM

Tinubu...NO SEND AM

AREGBESOLA....NO SEND AM

FASHOLE.....NO SEND AM

MURIC SEF ...NO SEND AM

WHY WILL AN INCONSEQUENTIAL ZOMBIE ...NOW WANT TO DISTURB THIS FORUM WITH THE BIOGRAPHY OF A COWARD WHO COMMITTED SUICIDE WITH PRODUCTS MANUFACTURED BY THE PEOPLE HE HATES??


OTAPIAPIA ..NA IGBO PEOPLE MAKE AM...AND AWOLOWO DRINK AM COME DIE....LIFE NA SERIOUS IRONY ... grin

3 Likes

Re: On This Day, We Lost Chief Obafemi Awolowo. by NyamiriFlathead(m): 1:31pm On May 09, 2021
goodnessme1:
After drinking rat poison called otapiapia.


Very active made in Aba rat killergrin grin
even nyamiri woman dey bash for this forum, wonders shall never end, can you stay when the heat comes
Re: On This Day, We Lost Chief Obafemi Awolowo. by Igboid: 1:32pm On May 09, 2021
Simplyleo:

Yes, he was a coward.

But every word in this life is relative.

Compared to the bald headed bearded coward below, Awolowo is actually bravery personified.

Ever heard he chickened out in olosho dress?

The region under Awolowo's administration is now a host to some lost sheep from Israel.

The highest form of cowardice is to run away from one's life and its challenges by taking the easy route of suicide.

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Re: On This Day, We Lost Chief Obafemi Awolowo. by Nobody: 1:33pm On May 09, 2021
Sammy07:
[s]Chief Obafemi Jeremiah Oyeniyi Awolowo, GCFR (Yoruba: Ọbáfẹ́mi Awólọ́wọ̀; 6 March 1909 – 9 May 1987), was a Nigerian nationalist and statesman who played a key role in Nigeria's independence movement, the First and Second Republics and the Civil War.

He was the first premier of the Western Region and later federal commissioner for finance, and vice chairman of the Federal Executive Council during the Civil War. He was thrice a major contender for his country's highest office.

A native of Ikenne in Ogun State of south-western Nigeria, he started his career, like some of his well-known contemporaries, as a nationalist in the Nigerian Youth Movement in which he rose to become Western Provincial Secretary. Awolowo was responsible for much of the progressive social legislation that has made Nigeria a modern nation.

He was the first Leader of Government Business and Minister of Local Government and Finance, and first Premier of the Western Region under Nigeria's parliamentary system, from 1952 to 1959.

He was the official Leader of the Opposition in the federal parliament to the Balewa government from 1959 to 1963. In recognition of all these, Awolowo was the first individual in the modern era to be named Leader of the Yorubas (Yoruba: Asiwaju Awon Yoruba or Asiwaju Omo Oodua).
[/s]




Trash

2 Likes

Re: On This Day, We Lost Chief Obafemi Awolowo. by topboss: 1:34pm On May 09, 2021
ON THIS DAY, WE LOST AWOLOWO TO OTAPIAPIA

3 Likes

Re: On This Day, We Lost Chief Obafemi Awolowo. by NyamiriFlathead(m): 1:36pm On May 09, 2021
What a great man from a great race, we miss you baba, rest in peace baba

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Re: On This Day, We Lost Chief Obafemi Awolowo. by Simplyleo: 1:43pm On May 09, 2021
Igboid:


The highest form of cowardice is to run away from one's life and it's challenges by taking the easy route of suicide.
Lmao.

What a people.

They will sit down in their village, discuss some imaginations among themselves, go online to post same poo, gbam, the poo becomes their source of reference.

Ask them for the weakest proof, they either rather insult you down to your forefathers or show you the same discussion they had among themselves as the proof.

Very funny pipu. cheesy

1 Like

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