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Some Anambrans Contribute To Why Igbos Are Divided - Politics - Nairaland

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Some Anambrans Contribute To Why Igbos Are Divided by Nobody: 9:21pm On Oct 06, 2016
Naturally, Igbos are great people - hardworking, intellectual, popular - but nationally neglected. From my findings so far, I think the tribe is more internally divided than nationally marginalized, and some Anambrans contribute massively to the division without knowing.

This article is originally written by me. So if you have a different observation as mine, I urge you to argue wisely, instead of coming here to vent your anger without making reasonable point.

To start with, I'm a proud Igbo guy, though people from my place are regarded as less Igbos, while some try hard to deny their Igbo identities maybe, to avoid being regarded as less Igbos or for reasons best known to them. Quite silly, because their language or rather dialects, names and culture contradict their claim as everything about them promote the very Igbo identity they try to deny. Until one accepts who he is, identity crisis remains a permanent case among the Ikwerres and Aniomas, unless they are ready to drop their language and culture. Is that easy anyway?

Back to the topic. Don't get me wrong, I have associated with Anambrans for years and they are wonderful people - hardworking and friendly - but some of them can be extremely proud and segregating. Some feel that if you are not from Anambra, you are not a true Igbo. Others ain't ready to take it, hence the identity crisis among some Igbo speaking communities. Nobody likes to be intimidated.

Among the Igbos today, Ebonyians are regarded less igbos compare to any other Igbo speaking people. At least, I have met few people who told me boldly that Ebonyians are not Igbos. I once witnessed where two Igbo brothers had to introduce themselves to each other. One introduced himself as Anambran and the other as Ebonyian, and from that moment, the Ebonyi guy was being avoided by his Anambra brother. Foolishness at its peak.

Most Ebonyians feel ashamed to tell you they are from Ebonyi State due to fear of being considered inferior. Some Igbos even find it hard to believe that some talented singers like Patoranking, Tekno etc. are from the state. Believe it, if this discrimination continues, it will only take time before Ebonyians start denying their Igbo identity by rewriting their histories and ancestry from Nri and Arochukwu Kingdoms to elsewhere just like the Ikwerres and Aniomas.


Truth is that, Igbos living by the borders like Nsukka, Igbanke, Obigbo, Ikwerre, Abakaliki people etc. speak harder Igbo dialects. Most Igbo speaking people understand Nsukka dialect by 70%, Delta Igbo by 55% - 65%, Ikwerre by 55% - 65% and Abakaliki by 10%. People of these dialects understand central Igbo at least by 80% and practice the same culture. So what make any of them less Igbo?

An elderly family friend of ours from Ikwerre took time to narrate to me how and why the Ikwerre people started denying their Igbo identity. She pointed out many things, but one of my observations from her speech was her deep hatred for Anambrans. She couldn't just hide it from her expression. That's a story for another day anyway.

My point in this write up is that the pride, superiority and segregation displayed by some Anambrans contribute to why Igbos are divided in regards to their identity. I'm not here to condemn but to correct this error. We are all sons and daughters of Nri and Arochukwu Kingdoms. We are one.



God bless Anambrans. God bless Igbo Nation. God bless Nigeria.

Chukwu Okike gozie umu Igbo nile

7 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Some Anambrans Contribute To Why Igbos Are Divided by FKO81(m): 9:28pm On Oct 06, 2016
Kingset:
[s]Naturally, Igbos are great people - hardworking, intellectual, popular - but nationally neglected. From my findings so far, I think the tribe is more internally divided than nationally marginalized, and some Anambrans contribute massively to the division without knowing.

This article is originally written by me. So if you have a different observation as mine, I urge you to argue wisely, instead of coming here to vent your anger without making reasonable point.

To start with, I'm a proud Igbo guy, though people from my place are regarded as less Igbos, while some try hard to deny their Igbo identities maybe, to avoid being retarded as less or for reasons best known to them. Quite silly, because their language or rather dialects, names and culture contradict their claim as everything about them promote the identity they try to deny. Until one accepts who he is, identity crisis remains a permanent case, unless he's ready to drop his language and culture. Is that easy anyway?

Back to the topic. Don't get me wrong, I have associated with Anambrans for years and they are wonderful people - hardworking and friendly - but some of them can be extremely proud and segregating. Some feel that if you are not from Anambra, you are not a true Igbo. Others ain't ready to take it, hence the identity crisis among some Igbo speaking communities. Nobody likes to be intimidated.

Among the Igbos today, Ebonyians are regarded less igbos compare to any other Igbo speaking people. At least, I have met few people who told me boldly that Ebonyians are not Igbos. I once witnessed where two Igbo brothers had to introduce themselves to each other. One introduced himself as Anambran and the other as Ebonyian, and from that moment, the Ebonyi guy was being avoided by his Anambra brother. Foolishness at its peak.

Most Ebonyians feel ashamed to tell you they are from Ebonyi State due to fear of being considered inferior. Some Igbos even find it hard to believe that some talented singers like Patoranking, Tekno etc. are from the state. Believe it, if this discrimination continues, it will only take it before Ebonyians start denying their Igbo identity rewriting their histories and ancestry from Nri and Arochukwu Kingdoms to elsewhere just like the Ikwerres and Aniomas.


Truth is that, Igbos living by the borders like Nsukka, Igbanke, Obigbo, Ikwerre, Abakaliki people etc. speak harder Igbo dialects. Most Igbo speaking people understand Nsukka dialect by 70%, Delta Igbo by 55% - 65%, Ikwerre by 55% - 65% and Abakaliki by 10%. People of these dialects understand central Igbo at least by 80% and practice the same culture. So what make any of them less Igbo?

An elderly family friend of ours from Ikwerre took time to narrate to me how and why the Ikwerre people started denying their Igbo identity. She pointed out many things, but one of my observations from her speech was her deep hatred for Anambrans. She couldn't just hide it from her expression. That's a story for another anyway.

My point in this write up is that the pride, superiority and segregation displayed by some Anambrans contribute to why Igbos are divided in regards to their identity. I'm not here to condemn but to correct this error. We are all sons and daughters of Nri and Arochukwu Kingdoms. We are one.

I'm glad Seun and Nairaland has provided a means to air my observations and correct this error at least by 20% before it goes out of hand.

God bless Anambrans. God bless Igbo Nation. God bless Nigeria.

Chukwu Okike gozie umu Igbo nile


I will be very glad if Lalasticlala or any other mod bless this post with front page to correct this error. Nevertheless, I'm glad I have passed the message.[/s]
Ewu Osun, you just created this moniker few hours ago, seriously Anambra is really giving you nightmares grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin

32 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Some Anambrans Contribute To Why Igbos Are Divided by Chiefobdk1: 9:30pm On Oct 06, 2016
trash. from folks who wish dey re from ANAMBRA....


IF U R NOT FROM ANAMBRA.



sorry oooo

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: Some Anambrans Contribute To Why Igbos Are Divided by jopretty(f): 9:37pm On Oct 06, 2016
Great observation OP, I've also had my own fair share of this segregation. Was having a discus with some friends concerning traditional marriage and stuffs, I was like I don't think my trad would be held in my home state cos I have no friends there and do not want to risk the lives of the friends I have here on the road. One of the girls just shouted "hian, that's why we Anambrans hate people from Imo state, they like to be the ones changing cultures and customs but you guys will never succeed" I was like "wait oo, how do we achieve this oneness and country you all crave for if such hatred is harboured in your heart?" Since then I just mind my biz. We the igbos are not just trying when it comes to accepting and loving ourselves.

18 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Some Anambrans Contribute To Why Igbos Are Divided by Emycord: 9:40pm On Oct 06, 2016
Are you from anambra north onitsha ogbaru etc ?
Kingset:
Naturally, Igbos are great people - hardworking, intellectual, popular - but nationally neglected. From my findings so far, I think the tribe is more internally divided than nationally marginalized, and some Anambrans contribute massively to the division without knowing.

This article is originally written by me. So if you have a different observation as mine, I urge you to argue wisely, instead of coming here to vent your anger without making reasonable point.

To start with, I'm a proud Igbo guy, though people from my place are regarded as less Igbos, while some try hard to deny their Igbo identities maybe, to avoid being retarded as less or for reasons best known to them. Quite silly, because their language or rather dialects, names and culture contradict their claim as everything about them promote the identity they try to deny. Until one accepts who he is, identity crisis remains a permanent case, unless he's ready to drop his language and culture. Is that easy anyway?

Back to the topic. Don't get me wrong, I have associated with Anambrans for years and they are wonderful people - hardworking and friendly - but some of them can be extremely proud and segregating. Some feel that if you are not from Anambra, you are not a true Igbo. Others ain't ready to take it, hence the identity crisis among some Igbo speaking communities. Nobody likes to be intimidated.

Among the Igbos today, Ebonyians are regarded less igbos compare to any other Igbo speaking people. At least, I have met few people who told me boldly that Ebonyians are not Igbos. I once witnessed where two Igbo brothers had to introduce themselves to each other. One introduced himself as Anambran and the other as Ebonyian, and from that moment, the Ebonyi guy was being avoided by his Anambra brother. Foolishness at its peak.

Most Ebonyians feel ashamed to tell you they are from Ebonyi State due to fear of being considered inferior. Some Igbos even find it hard to believe that some talented singers like Patoranking, Tekno etc. are from the state. Believe it, if this discrimination continues, it will only take it before Ebonyians start denying their Igbo identity rewriting their histories and ancestry from Nri and Arochukwu Kingdoms to elsewhere just like the Ikwerres and Aniomas.


Truth is that, Igbos living by the borders like Nsukka, Igbanke, Obigbo, Ikwerre, Abakaliki people etc. speak harder Igbo dialects. Most Igbo speaking people understand Nsukka dialect by 70%, Delta Igbo by 55% - 65%, Ikwerre by 55% - 65% and Abakaliki by 10%. People of these dialects understand central Igbo at least by 80% and practice the same culture. So what make any of them less Igbo?

An elderly family friend of ours from Ikwerre took time to narrate to me how and why the Ikwerre people started denying their Igbo identity. She pointed out many things, but one of my observations from her speech was her deep hatred for Anambrans. She couldn't just hide it from her expression. That's a story for another anyway.

My point in this write up is that the pride, superiority and segregation displayed by some Anambrans contribute to why Igbos are divided in regards to their identity. I'm not here to condemn but to correct this error. We are all sons and daughters of Nri and Arochukwu Kingdoms. We are one.

I'm glad Seun and Nairaland has provided a means to air my observations and correct this error at least by 20% before it goes out of hand.

God bless Anambrans. God bless Igbo Nation. God bless Nigeria.

Chukwu Okike gozie umu Igbo nile


I will be very glad if Lalasticlala or any other mod bless this post with front page to correct this error. Nevertheless, I'm glad I have passed the message.
Re: Some Anambrans Contribute To Why Igbos Are Divided by chiamaka21(f): 9:44pm On Oct 06, 2016
FKO81:

Ewu Osun, you just created this moniker few hours ago, seriously Anambra is really giving you nightmares grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin
keep quite joor. is the OP not saying the truth.

27 Likes 1 Share

Re: Some Anambrans Contribute To Why Igbos Are Divided by FKO81(m): 9:45pm On Oct 06, 2016
When you come down to the South West and the people from Ondo or Ekiti will tell you that they never want to have anything to do with the Ijebu man. fact

27 Likes

Re: Some Anambrans Contribute To Why Igbos Are Divided by FKO81(m): 9:47pm On Oct 06, 2016
chiamaka21:
keep quite joor. is the OP not saying the truth.
When you come down to the South West and the people from Ondo or Ekiti will tell you that they never want to have anything to do with the Ijebu man, Do you want me to explore the discrimination in southwest now you go run for this thread if I start oh

13 Likes

Re: Some Anambrans Contribute To Why Igbos Are Divided by Oblang(m): 10:02pm On Oct 06, 2016
FKO81:

When you come down to the South West and the people from Ondo or Ekiti will tell you that they never want to have anything to do with the Ijebu man, Do you want me to explore the discrimination in southwest now you go run for this thread if I start oh

Is the op a Yoruba? prove the op wrong and don't drag the sw into it. There is no discrimination whatsoever among the Yorubas. many yorubas this days don't even marry from their native land..

25 Likes

Re: Some Anambrans Contribute To Why Igbos Are Divided by orimsamsam(m): 10:07pm On Oct 06, 2016
Oblang:


Is the op a Yoruba? prove the op wrong and don't drag the sw into it. There is no discrimination whatsoever among the Yorubas. many yorubas this days don't even marry from their native land..
don't mind him. The issue on ground is between the igbos why drag SW into it

17 Likes 1 Share

Re: Some Anambrans Contribute To Why Igbos Are Divided by CzarChris(m): 10:12pm On Oct 06, 2016
Let's call a spade a spade and not a shovel.

O wu ihe nwute na ndi Igbo enwe ha ofu obi, gi juo mu ihe a ndi Anambra na eme ajoka. A bu mu ezigbote nwafo Imo State. Mana ndi Anambra bia ha na akpomu nwa onye Igbo. Maka chukwu ihe a ajo gbuo udele na njo. Mu buru nwa onye Igbo, onye Anambra aburu kwanu nwa onye ole?

12 Likes

Re: Some Anambrans Contribute To Why Igbos Are Divided by chiamaka21(f): 10:14pm On Oct 06, 2016
FKO81:

When you come down to the South West and the people from Ondo or Ekiti will tell you that they never want to have anything to do with the Ijebu man, Do you want me to explore the discrimination in southwest now you go run for this thread if I start oh
one question I always ask my self is, can't we argue logically among our self without dragging South West into it. pls the discussion is between igbos. the discussion have nothing to do with the South West


back to the discussion. I don't just knw the reason why Anambra always think they are superior.

21 Likes

Re: Some Anambrans Contribute To Why Igbos Are Divided by FKO81(m): 10:14pm On Oct 06, 2016
Oblang:


Is the op a Yoruba? prove the op wrong and don't drag the sw into it. There is no discrimination whatsoever among the Yorubas. many yorubas this days don't even marry from their native land..
You guys should stop living false life, take your time and read this

http://leadership.ng/blogposts/509791/needless-war-house-oduduwa

Needless War In The House Of Oduduwa

[b]Are Binis of today’s Edo of the Yoruba stock and what is the status of the Ijebu people in the Yoruba cosmogony?

These two-in-one questions posed will continue to dog Yoruba history. Despite the works of great historians like Samuel Johnson, Ade Ajayi, Espie, Ayanleye and the rest, the questions remain open-ended.

The recent hot exchanges between the Awujale of Ijebuland, Oba Sikiru Adetona and the Alake of Egbalnd, Oba Adedotun Gbadebo, were avoidable and expand the hiatus among the Yoruba people and their neighbours.

The ranking of five foremost Yoruba Obas by Alake was the agent provocateur this time. Picking holes in the ranking, the Awujale faulted the 1903 gazette cited by the Alake on the categorisation of Obas. Not being a son of Oduduwa, it would have been better to just steer clear of colonial creations, which were done by the rule of thumb during that period.

But, instead, Kabiyesi reached out to Oba of Lagos, Rilwan Akiolu, a self-confessed Bini man for validation. Oba Akiolu supported the Awujale. Since the two are not of Yoruba ancestry, it remained to be seen how ego would not take the place of logic.

Binis never considered themselves as of Yoruba stock. The house of Oduduwa considers it fallacious. With the Benin Kingdom countering that no Yoruba Oba was higher than the Oba of Benin, the political history of Yoruba got more suffused in mysticism rather than empiricism.

The Ijebus too, claimed to be superior to other Yorubas because, according to them, it was the fifth Awujale (king of Ijebu-Ode) that cured Oduduwa (the progenitors of the Yoruba race) of blindness. For them, if the father of all Yorubas was a beneficiary of their fifth ruler, it then meant that they had existed before the foundation of the Yoruba race or at least, before they got to Nigeria.

The first Awujale was said to have come from a place called Waddai, somewhere in present day Sudan. The people are different from their immediate neighbours in Ijebuland. Chief Obafemi Awolowo, the late political sage and a Remo man, sealed this a long time ago. Historically, people from that axis of Ijebu are from Iremo quarters in Ile-Ife and migrated to where they settled now near the Ijebu people. Hence they are called Ijebu-Remo. Most Ijebu towns towards Ondo and in Lagos States also claim their ancestry to Ile-Ife.

The myths and conundrum of these assertions may take eternity to decipher and made a mince meat of the royal diplomacy of 41-year-old Ooni Ogunwusi couched in oneness of the Yorubarace. His several visitations to those considered rivals to his predecessor, Oba Okunade Sijuwade may be a pipedream with the current verbal warfare.

Ooni, the Arole Oodua had gone to Alaafin of Oyo and Awujale in search of unity. Only last weekend, he took a wife from Benin kingdom, to underscore his quest to end the war of attrition tearing apart the house of Oduduwa as we know it.

Perhaps our royal fathers should be reminded that democracy has demystified claims embedded in orality and whittled down the influence of royal fathers who today exist at the mercy of council chairmen and state governments who decide who and when to enthrone chief/Oba/Emir or depose. These discretions are embedded in law and not the native authority that have no force of enforcement under our present constitutional arrangements.

For most radically minded people, it was a needless argy-baggy for an endangered institution to fan the embers of disunity and expose itself to a predatory system that doesn’t discriminate between a slave and free-born.

Definitely, they have different motives. Some of them are doing it out of patriotism and love of their immediate source of origins; just wanting to project pride in their own roots. Some are doing this out of mischief.

It is clear the professorial chair endowed by Oba Adetona will see democracy as more relevant for scholarship than studies in traditional monarchy.[/b]

9 Likes

Re: Some Anambrans Contribute To Why Igbos Are Divided by apcisevil: 10:16pm On Oct 06, 2016
Oblang:


Is the op a Yoruba? prove the op wrong and don't drag the sw into it. There is no discrimination whatsoever among the Yorubas. many yorubas this days don't even marry from their native land..
There is big discrimination among yorubas, I can still recall a story a yorubaman told me... that's even when I know yorubas have different dialects and different ethnics...stop lying and deceiving yourselves

13 Likes

Re: Some Anambrans Contribute To Why Igbos Are Divided by FKO81(m): 10:18pm On Oct 06, 2016
chiamaka21:
[s]one question I always ask my self is, can't we argue logically among our self without dragging South West into it. pls the discussion is between igbos. the discussion have nothing to do with the South West


back to the discussion. I don't just knw the reason why Anambra always think they are superior[/s].
Cone head stop deceiving yourself

13 Likes 1 Share

Re: Some Anambrans Contribute To Why Igbos Are Divided by ChimaAdeoye: 10:20pm On Oct 06, 2016
[size=18pt]Afonjas looking to ignite arguments for Igbos.

Please abandon this thread for Afonjas.

If they like, let them call themselves Cardinal Arinze, we know Afonjas by their fruits.
[/size]

24 Likes 1 Share

Re: Some Anambrans Contribute To Why Igbos Are Divided by chiamaka21(f): 10:24pm On Oct 06, 2016
FKO81:

Cone head stop deceiving yourself
u are the reason they call us flat head. we Igbo should always learn how to say the truth.

9 Likes 1 Share

Re: Some Anambrans Contribute To Why Igbos Are Divided by ificatchmodeh: 10:28pm On Oct 06, 2016
FKO81:

You guys should stop living false life, take your time and read this

http://leadership.ng/blogposts/509791/needless-war-house-oduduwa

Needless War In The House Of Oduduwa

[b]Are Binis of today’s Edo of the Yoruba stock and what is the status of the Ijebu people in the Yoruba cosmogony?

These two-in-one questions posed will continue to dog Yoruba history. Despite the works of great historians like Samuel Johnson, Ade Ajayi, Espie, Ayanleye and the rest, the questions remain open-ended.

The recent hot exchanges between the Awujale of Ijebuland, Oba Sikiru Adetona and the Alake of Egbalnd, Oba Adedotun Gbadebo, were avoidable and expand the hiatus among the Yoruba people and their neighbours.

The ranking of five foremost Yoruba Obas by Alake was the agent provocateur this time. Picking holes in the ranking, the Awujale faulted the 1903 gazette cited by the Alake on the categorisation of Obas. Not being a son of Oduduwa, it would have been better to just steer clear of colonial creations, which were done by the rule of thumb during that period.

But, instead, Kabiyesi reached out to Oba of Lagos, Rilwan Akiolu, a self-confessed Bini man for validation. Oba Akiolu supported the Awujale. Since the two are not of Yoruba ancestry, it remained to be seen how ego would not take the place of logic.

Binis never considered themselves as of Yoruba stock. The house of Oduduwa considers it fallacious. With the Benin Kingdom countering that no Yoruba Oba was higher than the Oba of Benin, the political history of Yoruba got more suffused in mysticism rather than empiricism.

The Ijebus too, claimed to be superior to other Yorubas because, according to them, it was the fifth Awujale (king of Ijebu-Ode) that cured Oduduwa (the progenitors of the Yoruba race) of blindness. For them, if the father of all Yorubas was a beneficiary of their fifth ruler, it then meant that they had existed before the foundation of the Yoruba race or at least, before they got to Nigeria.

The first Awujale was said to have come from a place called Waddai, somewhere in present day Sudan. The people are different from their immediate neighbours in Ijebuland. Chief Obafemi Awolowo, the late political sage and a Remo man, sealed this a long time ago. Historically, people from that axis of Ijebu are from Iremo quarters in Ile-Ife and migrated to where they settled now near the Ijebu people. Hence they are called Ijebu-Remo. Most Ijebu towns towards Ondo and in Lagos States also claim their ancestry to Ile-Ife.

The myths and conundrum of these assertions may take eternity to decipher and made a mince meat of the royal diplomacy of 41-year-old Ooni Ogunwusi couched in oneness of the Yorubarace. His several visitations to those considered rivals to his predecessor, Oba Okunade Sijuwade may be a pipedream with the current verbal warfare.

Ooni, the Arole Oodua had gone to Alaafin of Oyo and Awujale in search of unity. Only last weekend, he took a wife from Benin kingdom, to underscore his quest to end the war of attrition tearing apart the house of Oduduwa as we know it.

Perhaps our royal fathers should be reminded that democracy has demystified claims embedded in orality and whittled down the influence of royal fathers who today exist at the mercy of council chairmen and state governments who decide who and when to enthrone chief/Oba/Emir or depose. These discretions are embedded in law and not the native authority that have no force of enforcement under our present constitutional arrangements.

For most radically minded people, it was a needless argy-baggy for an endangered institution to fan the embers of disunity and expose itself to a predatory system that doesn’t discriminate between a slave and free-born.

Definitely, they have different motives. Some of them are doing it out of patriotism and love of their immediate source of origins; just wanting to project pride in their own roots. Some are doing this out of mischief.

It is clear the professorial chair endowed by Oba Adetona will see democracy as more relevant for scholarship than studies in traditional monarchy.[/b]

2 Likes

Re: Some Anambrans Contribute To Why Igbos Are Divided by Oblang(m): 10:29pm On Oct 06, 2016
apcisevil:

There is big discrimination among yorubas, I can still recall a story a yorubaman told me... that's even when I know yorubas have different dialects and different ethnics...stop lying and deceiving yourselves

How does Yorubas having different dialects amt to discrimination?

9 Likes

Re: Some Anambrans Contribute To Why Igbos Are Divided by Nobody: 10:30pm On Oct 06, 2016
Kingset:
[s]Naturally, Igbos are great people - hardworking, intellectual, popular - but nationally neglected. From my findings so far, I think the tribe is more internally divided than nationally marginalized, and some Anambrans contribute massively to the division without knowing.

This article is originally written by me. So if you have a different observation as mine, I urge you to argue wisely, instead of coming here to vent your anger without making reasonable point.

To start with, I'm a proud Igbo guy, though people from my place are regarded as less Igbos, while some try hard to deny their Igbo identities maybe, to avoid being retarded as less or for reasons best known to them. Quite silly, because their language or rather dialects, names and culture contradict their claim as everything about them promote the identity they try to deny. Until one accepts who he is, identity crisis remains a permanent case, unless he's ready to drop his language and culture. Is that easy anyway?

Back to the topic. Don't get me wrong, I have associated with Anambrans for years and they are wonderful people - hardworking and friendly - but some of them can be extremely proud and segregating. Some feel that if you are not from Anambra, you are not a true Igbo. Others ain't ready to take it, hence the identity crisis among some Igbo speaking communities. Nobody likes to be intimidated.

Among the Igbos today, Ebonyians are regarded less igbos compare to any other Igbo speaking people. At least, I have met few people who told me boldly that Ebonyians are not Igbos. I once witnessed where two Igbo brothers had to introduce themselves to each other. One introduced himself as Anambran and the other as Ebonyian, and from that moment, the Ebonyi guy was being avoided by his Anambra brother. Foolishness at its peak.

Most Ebonyians feel ashamed to tell you they are from Ebonyi State due to fear of being considered inferior. Some Igbos even find it hard to believe that some talented singers like Patoranking, Tekno etc. are from the state. Believe it, if this discrimination continues, it will only take it before Ebonyians start denying their Igbo identity rewriting their histories and ancestry from Nri and Arochukwu Kingdoms to elsewhere just like the Ikwerres and Aniomas.


Truth is that, Igbos living by the borders like Nsukka, Igbanke, Obigbo, Ikwerre, Abakaliki people etc. speak harder Igbo dialects. Most Igbo speaking people understand Nsukka dialect by 70%, Delta Igbo by 55% - 65%, Ikwerre by 55% - 65% and Abakaliki by 10%. People of these dialects understand central Igbo at least by 80% and practice the same culture. So what make any of them less Igbo?

An elderly family friend of ours from Ikwerre took time to narrate to me how and why the Ikwerre people started denying their Igbo identity. She pointed out many things, but one of my observations from her speech was her deep hatred for Anambrans. She couldn't just hide it from her expression. That's a story for another anyway.

My point in this write up is that the pride, superiority and segregation displayed by some Anambrans contribute to why Igbos are divided in regards to their identity. I'm not here to condemn but to correct this error. We are all sons and daughters of Nri and Arochukwu Kingdoms. We are one.

I'm glad Seun and Nairaland has provided a means to air my observations and correct this error at least by 20% before it goes out of hand.

God bless Anambrans. God bless Igbo Nation. God bless Nigeria.

Chukwu Okike gozie umu Igbo nile


I will be very glad if Lalasticlala or any other mod bless this post with front page to correct this error. Nevertheless, I'm glad I have passed the message[/s].

Afonja

19 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Some Anambrans Contribute To Why Igbos Are Divided by stsinner: 10:31pm On Oct 06, 2016
jopretty:
Was having a discus with some friends concerning traditional marriage and stuffs, I was like I don't think my trad would be held in my home state cos I have no friends there and do not want to risk the lives of the friends
maybe her tone was wrong BUT wait oh, u want to do traditinal wedding yet u dont want tradition to take place? Like seriously? Ndi okenye obodo gi ekwughi okwu? U also dont want to risk the live of ur friends but u want the elders to risk their lives travelling to the city? Ndi igbo na-akpö nka 'ofeke'.

9 Likes

Re: Some Anambrans Contribute To Why Igbos Are Divided by FKO81(m): 10:31pm On Oct 06, 2016
ificatchmodeh:



Because I know who open the thread
Re: Some Anambrans Contribute To Why Igbos Are Divided by ificatchmodeh: 10:33pm On Oct 06, 2016
FKO81:

Because I know who open the thread

Okay.. shocked
Re: Some Anambrans Contribute To Why Igbos Are Divided by FKO81(m): 10:35pm On Oct 06, 2016
Oblang:


How does Yorubas having different dialects amt to discrimination?

The Ijebus too, claimed to be superior to other Yorubas because, according to them, it was the fifth Awujale (king of Ijebu-Ode) that cured Oduduwa (the progenitors of the Yoruba race) of blindness. For them, if the father of all Yorubas was a beneficiary of their fifth ruler, it then meant that they had existed before the foundation of the Yoruba race or at least, before they got to Nigeria.

The first Awujale was said to have come from a place called Waddai, somewhere in present day Sudan. The people are different from their immediate neighbours in Ijebuland

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Re: Some Anambrans Contribute To Why Igbos Are Divided by RockHard: 10:35pm On Oct 06, 2016
FKO81 or whatever you call yourself, why must you drag Yorubas into a purely igbo matter? Are you folks that insecure? You need help, seriously.

10 Likes

Re: Some Anambrans Contribute To Why Igbos Are Divided by TheEastActivist: 10:36pm On Oct 06, 2016
All I can say is that I can see afonjas disguising themselves as Igbos just to spite them.

Op if you are truly an Igbo man like you want us to believe you won't dare introduce yourself as less Igbo.

10 Likes

Re: Some Anambrans Contribute To Why Igbos Are Divided by Oblang(m): 10:37pm On Oct 06, 2016
FKO81:

You guys should stop living false life, take your time and read this

http://leadership.ng/blogposts/509791/needless-war-house-oduduwa

Needless War In The House Of Oduduwa

[b]Are Binis of today’s Edo of the Yoruba stock and what is the status of the Ijebu people in the Yoruba cosmogony?

These two-in-one questions posed will continue to dog Yoruba history. Despite the works of great historians like Samuel Johnson, Ade Ajayi, Espie, Ayanleye and the rest, the questions remain open-ended.

The recent hot exchanges between the Awujale of Ijebuland, Oba Sikiru Adetona and the Alake of Egbalnd, Oba Adedotun Gbadebo, were avoidable and expand the hiatus among the Yoruba people and their neighbours.

The ranking of five foremost Yoruba Obas by Alake was the agent provocateur this time. Picking holes in the ranking, the Awujale faulted the 1903 gazette cited by the Alake on the categorisation of Obas. Not being a son of Oduduwa, it would have been better to just steer clear of colonial creations, which were done by the rule of thumb during that period.

But, instead, Kabiyesi reached out to Oba of Lagos, Rilwan Akiolu, a self-confessed Bini man for validation. Oba Akiolu supported the Awujale. Since the two are not of Yoruba ancestry, it remained to be seen how ego would not take the place of logic.

Binis never considered themselves as of Yoruba stock. The house of Oduduwa considers it fallacious. With the Benin Kingdom countering that no Yoruba Oba was higher than the Oba of Benin, the political history of Yoruba got more suffused in mysticism rather than empiricism.

The Ijebus too, claimed to be superior to other Yorubas because, according to them, it was the fifth Awujale (king of Ijebu-Ode) that cured Oduduwa (the progenitors of the Yoruba race) of blindness. For them, if the father of all Yorubas was a beneficiary of their fifth ruler, it then meant that they had existed before the foundation of the Yoruba race or at least, before they got to Nigeria.

The first Awujale was said to have come from a place called Waddai, somewhere in present day Sudan. The people are different from their immediate neighbours in Ijebuland. Chief Obafemi Awolowo, the late political sage and a Remo man, sealed this a long time ago. Historically, people from that axis of Ijebu are from Iremo quarters in Ile-Ife and migrated to where they settled now near the Ijebu people. Hence they are called Ijebu-Remo. Most Ijebu towns towards Ondo and in Lagos States also claim their ancestry to Ile-Ife.

The myths and conundrum of these assertions may take eternity to decipher and made a mince meat of the royal diplomacy of 41-year-old Ooni Ogunwusi couched in oneness of the Yorubarace. His several visitations to those considered rivals to his predecessor, Oba Okunade Sijuwade may be a pipedream with the current verbal warfare.

Ooni, the Arole Oodua had gone to Alaafin of Oyo and Awujale in search of unity. Only last weekend, he took a wife from Benin kingdom, to underscore his quest to end the war of attrition tearing apart the house of Oduduwa as we know it.

Perhaps our royal fathers should be reminded that democracy has demystified claims embedded in orality and whittled down the influence of royal fathers who today exist at the mercy of council chairmen and state governments who decide who and when to enthrone chief/Oba/Emir or depose. These discretions are embedded in law and not the native authority that have no force of enforcement under our present constitutional arrangements.

For most radically minded people, it was a needless argy-baggy for an endangered institution to fan the embers of disunity and expose itself to a predatory system that doesn’t discriminate between a slave and free-born.

Definitely, they have different motives. Some of them are doing it out of patriotism and love of their immediate source of origins; just wanting to project pride in their own roots. Some are doing this out of mischief.

It is clear the professorial chair endowed by Oba Adetona will see democracy as more relevant for scholarship than studies in traditional monarchy.[/b]

All these are jst normal conflict in the interpretation of history that does not affect the relationship among average Yoruba ppl...face the op..

4 Likes

Re: Some Anambrans Contribute To Why Igbos Are Divided by ikechu1: 10:40pm On Oct 06, 2016
[size=14pt]NEW I'D. Opened literally Today and the first topic is this.[/size]

Let's see if SE would fall for this obvious divide and rule

I'll watch una in the sideline

11 Likes

Re: Some Anambrans Contribute To Why Igbos Are Divided by FKO81(m): 10:41pm On Oct 06, 2016
RockHard:
FKO81 or whatever you call yourself, why must you drag Yorubas into a purely igbo matter? Are you folks that insecure? You need help, seriously.
Warn your brothers to stop using fake monikers to be writing rubbish about Igbos

10 Likes 1 Share

Re: Some Anambrans Contribute To Why Igbos Are Divided by stsinner: 10:44pm On Oct 06, 2016
@Kingset
umuaka na-enye gi nsogbu. Okenye anaghí anö n'ulo,ewu ama n'ogbuli. Negodu ka ndi mba özo abughi ndi igbo si na-agu pöti gi n'a nya ndi igbo n'iru. Dobe okwu a ubochi nzuko ndi igbo. Ö bù na Imaghi na Ndi awusa(ebigbi ugwu) na ndi gbati gbati na-agu ya? Ogwusigo ka ora m na önù n'uchichi a. Ka chukwu okike abiama gozie gi. Ise e

8 Likes

Re: Some Anambrans Contribute To Why Igbos Are Divided by nonsobaba: 10:45pm On Oct 06, 2016
Another senseless thread from a Wawa clown. As far as I am concerned, Anambra and Imo are the real Igbos. Others are just there to enlarge our coast.

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: Some Anambrans Contribute To Why Igbos Are Divided by RockHard: 10:46pm On Oct 06, 2016
FKO81:

Warn your brothers to stop using fake monikers to be writing rubbish about Igbos

Bullshyt. You can't even PROVE that the OP is Yoruba to begin with. Anybody that has spent enough time on this board knows how you lots attack each other, forming Imo is better than Anambra and vice-versa. Yet you would rather scapegoat Yorubas rather than call yourselves to order and keep your linen out of this space. Get a life dude.

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