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What I Learnt From Yoruba Land - Azuka Onwuka - Culture (3) - Nairaland

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Re: What I Learnt From Yoruba Land - Azuka Onwuka by TimeTraveller: 5:16pm On May 21
Armaggedon:
They take life easy by using their people's body parts for ritual but when an Igbo man prospers more than them they begin to envy him.

They show off the most by doing owambe at any slightest meeting but when an Igbo sprays money, they are thrown into mass envy, questioning his wealth and tagging EFCC again him.

The most ethnic minded people I've come across, yet they do not love one another. The fiercest celebrity rivalry and spat usually happen amongst them.

The biggest farmers of hate and injustice. Whoever is unpopular among his people becomes their closest ally and whoever is born among them learns to hate his people until he grows up to meet his people and learns the truth.

The article is about Yorubas, but disgusting peeegs from the small dirty red dust five plots must come out to display their inferiority complex.

2 Likes

Re: What I Learnt From Yoruba Land - Azuka Onwuka by AlfaSeltzer(m): 5:17pm On May 21
Efulefu thread.

There's nothing good to learn from that land.
Re: What I Learnt From Yoruba Land - Azuka Onwuka by wiseoneking: 5:17pm On May 21
FreeStuffsNG:
Even though I had spent two years in Ondo State as a child, it was when I arrived in Lagos during my post-university National Youth Service Corps scheme that I was mature enough to study the way of life of the Yoruba people.

When I get into a new environment, I study the way of life of the residents, in order to understand how and why they do things. Whatever I consider admirable, I copy it. Whatever I don’t consider special, I don’t copy.

This is the responsibility of everyone and it is taught from the home and beaten into your ears in most Yoruba families. If you're outside Yorubaland, the counsel of your parents and family will be ringing like a bell in your ears so you constantly remember that they are waiting for you at home.

You just want to mind your business and appreciate your host. We are very very careful not to get involved in the local politics of our hosts outside our region in the country. There's a reason why. Our progressive approach to politics and governance is completely different so there's no point getting involved in the politics of your host who are not familiar with your kind of progressive politics. If you want to do politics, come back home to your Yorubaland and do your politics.

This is a brilliant write up by Azuka. I have always loved his column. I remember his column protesting how people write their home address by inserting comma after the number in a wrong way. Thank you Azuka.

May God bless Nigeria for ever! Check my signature for free stuffs!
You have come back again with this “ your host” trash. Why won't dome people go through an innocent writeup without tribal sentiments? Progressive poverty?
Re: What I Learnt From Yoruba Land - Azuka Onwuka by YeyeGbami: 5:18pm On May 21
Armaggedon:
They take life easy by using their people's body parts for ritual but when an Igbo man prospers more than them they begin to envy him.

They show off the most by doing owambe at any slightest meeting but when an Igbo sprays money, they are thrown into mass envy, questioning his wealth and tagging EFCC again him.

The most ethnic minded people I've come across, yet they do not love one another. The fiercest celebrity rivalry and spat usually happen amongst them.

The biggest farmers of hate and injustice. Whoever is unpopular among his people becomes their closest ally and whoever is born among them learns to hate his people until he grows up to meet his people and learns the truth.

Lies!!!
Re: What I Learnt From Yoruba Land - Azuka Onwuka by Sukkyy2010: 5:19pm On May 21
Armaggedon:
They take life easy by using their people's body parts for ritual but when an Igbo man prospers more than them they begin to envy him.

They show off the most by doing owambe at any slightest meeting but when an Igbo sprays money, they are thrown into mass envy, questioning his wealth and tagging EFCC again him.

The most ethnic minded people I've come across, yet they do not love one another. The fiercest celebrity rivalry and spat usually happen amongst them.

The biggest farmers of hate and injustice. Whoever is unpopular among his people becomes their closest ally and whoever is born among them learns to hate his people until he grows up to meet his people and learns the truth.
I've worked and live with Igbo's and I can attest that the sensible one's are just epitome of human perfection but you be Oloriburu Igbo, must you attract hatred to yourself in every slightest controversial discussion?.

I use to say it and I'll say it once more, you Igbos are the problem of yourself, y'all like to play a victim card at every little thing and that's the most common stereotype of you people as a tribe.

5 Likes 2 Shares

Re: What I Learnt From Yoruba Land - Azuka Onwuka by YeyeGbami: 5:20pm On May 21
ASAPFERG:
God bless yorubas. cool

God punish the other tribe grin

Not cool
Re: What I Learnt From Yoruba Land - Azuka Onwuka by Padipadi: 5:20pm On May 21
gidgiddy:
Yorubas and Igbos are as different as night and day, and that's why the British made a big mistake of putting both ethnic groups in one country

Yorubas and Igbos should have been in different countries
Awusas nko?
Re: What I Learnt From Yoruba Land - Azuka Onwuka by Padipadi: 5:21pm On May 21
Armaggedon:
They take life easy by using their people's body parts for ritual but when an Igbo man prospers more than them they begin to envy him.

They show off the most by doing owambe at any slightest meeting but when an Igbo sprays money, they are thrown into mass envy, questioning his wealth and tagging EFCC again him.

The most ethnic minded people I've come across, yet they do not love one another. The fiercest celebrity rivalry and spat usually happen amongst them.

The biggest farmers of hate and injustice. Whoever is unpopular among his people becomes their closest ally and whoever is born among them learns to hate his people until he grows up to meet his people and learns the truth.
So what good thing can you say about Yorubas?
Re: What I Learnt From Yoruba Land - Azuka Onwuka by YorubaLord: 5:24pm On May 21
WizardOfNG:


Not true. You are just saying this to be politically correct or to fraudulently exalt the culture of your ethnic group when it is undeserving compared to others.

Yoruba culture is far superior and more sophisticated in comparison to Igbo culture.

Look no further than the one example of how there is no culture of discrimination against the female child in a Yoruba community or household.

Compare to Igbo culture where, till today, a female eldest child, ostensibly because she is inferior to male siblings younger than her, cannot inherit the estate of her father.

Intelligent men dont talk for the sake of it. They try to ensure what they say make sense and/or can stand the test of factual and intellectual scrutiny.

This is one example alone I give yet many more exist, such as the Yorubas universally acclaimed respect for elders, to show Yoruba culture is vastly superior to that of Igbos even if you wish to delude yourself it is otherwise.

I dont expect different from you though because it is not in the nature of Igbos to give credit where due to then learn from others to become better.

Instead Igbos are automatically envious of and threathened by those they percieve as better to then be obsessed with badmouthing and running them down or comparing d1cks wtih them constantly.

God bless you joor!!!

Very retrogressive group of savages! I detest those animals... angry angry angry
Re: What I Learnt From Yoruba Land - Azuka Onwuka by gtown: 5:24pm On May 21
EmiloCorn:





Yes I know, you just go to any food market like the one in Iddo, go to beans section, price or beg for like one empty beans rafia bag and buy for your relatives burial undecided

Very cheap and dirty but straightforward. I love it cheesy
Still better than going to Malaysia, India, Italy, Indonesia etc to do drug trafficking, yahoo yahoo, prostitution, armed robbery etc to earn money we can use to bury our death

1 Like

Re: What I Learnt From Yoruba Land - Azuka Onwuka by YorubaLord: 5:25pm On May 21
Armaggedon:
They take life easy by using their people's body parts for ritual but when an Igbo man prospers more than them they begin to envy him.

They show off the most by doing owambe at any slightest meeting but when an Igbo sprays money, they are thrown into mass envy, questioning his wealth and tagging EFCC again him.

The most ethnic minded people I've come across, yet they do not love one another. The fiercest celebrity rivalry and spat usually happen amongst them.

The biggest farmers of hate and injustice. Whoever is unpopular among his people becomes their closest ally and whoever is born among them learns to hate his people until he grows up to meet his people and learns the truth.

Okoro savage, abeg go back to your useless jungle. No be by force to dwell in Yoruba land.

You Igbos are cursed! angry
Re: What I Learnt From Yoruba Land - Azuka Onwuka by d142475: 5:26pm On May 21
Yorubas and Igbos should have been in different countries
You got this one wrong. Modern states are not about blood or ethnic affinities. Modern States are about a people coming together to advance common interests. Moder States are based on social contract, which is an agreement on how a group of people organize their society and govern themselves. People who are different in orirtentaion and ideology can come together to form a country, because in spite of differences, uniting makes them stronger. Modern States are not homogenous!
Re: What I Learnt From Yoruba Land - Azuka Onwuka by Niok: 5:31pm On May 21
Yoruba tueh
Re: What I Learnt From Yoruba Land - Azuka Onwuka by Honestey: 5:34pm On May 21
If I should narrate what I learnt when I served in Igbo land, this platform no go fit contain the attacks I will face . Make I kuku kii qwayet because na only me waka come
Re: What I Learnt From Yoruba Land - Azuka Onwuka by Believeintruth: 5:37pm On May 21
post=130068621:
This is a very good piece.
Interesting to read.

For emphasis sake,
Here we go....

IGBO/BIAFRA VS TINUBU/YORUBA:
TOLERANCE BECOMING A CRIME
By Dr Chinedu Akabuike


1. Why do we hate Tinubu?
What for?

2. Tinubu never worked with federal or Eastern Nigeria let alone stealing money from Ndi Igbo.
He never worked as Minister or taken any Federal Appointment!

3. He never joined APGA let alone sabotaging our Party's interest?

4. Tinubu didn't meddle in Igbo internal affairs either!

5. Why do we call him thief?
What did he steal?

6. We call Yoruba "slaves".
We never reflect on what it means to be slaves in the true sense of the word.

7. We are putting mouth in Lagos politics without caution, yet we have a proverb that says it is the foolish housefly that follows the corpse into the grave.

8. Can Yoruba man become an Association or Local Government Chairman in the East? Let us be sincere with ourselves.
Yet, we enjoy all these privileges here including Assembly Membership!


9. Why asking for what we can't give?

10. We are here helping the "slaves" to develop their land. Who then is a slave?
10b. You call their city a no man's land so that we can further be enslaved slaving to develop it, and our generations are wasted gloating over mere privileges.
Who is a slave?
Do we actually think?

11. Can Yoruba tell Okorocha "o to gee" in Owerri?
He doesn't even need it.
He is too intelligent to die for a pot of ofe manu or nothing.

12. After the civil war, for many of us who were old enough to have witnessed it, the Yoruba were the first to open their arms to receive and accept us as we were, crude savages in search for means of survival.
It was regardless of what we equally did to them before and during the civil war. No party to the civil war was innocent!
I also remember not paying any rent among Yoruba guys without a penny for my first 3years in Lagos and another 2 years in Ibadan.

13. Can we survive Yoruba attack in Yoruba land if they actually mean to?
Will an Mbaise man cooperate with the Nsukka or Afikpo, or the Imo with Anambara?

14. If we all decide to relocate at once, Babangida send me home phenomena is still in the memory of some of us who survived the incessant and uncontrollable spate of robbery across the Onitsha bridge.
How many people will want to go in spite of our empty pride?

15. If Yoruba people are as foolish as we foolishly think, why agitating?
How will agitating be to our benefit?

16. Why not "O to gee" in Abia, Enugu or Owerri?

17. Can a man from Aba become a Commissioner or Perm.Sec. in Enugu State Civil Service?
Yet it happened here!
Why not be careful.

18. We adopted APGA and but "wisely" voted PDP.
How was Tinubu our headache.
Was he the cause of our downfall?
Why always blame others for our inabilities and want to take glory for any small thing we think we have done well and even overblow it?

19. We claim we were so creative during the civil war.
Now history.
We also claim every made in Nigeria is from Aba.
But go to Oyo and Osogbo to see what "lazy" mechanics are doing quietly in the automobile industry, yet we make noise that other ethnics are either mumu or lazy except we (alagbara ma mero baba ole; the most hardworking humans who cannot develop their own land unfortunately).

20. Why looking for avoidable problem? Why?

21. It was you in the North being attacked, in Malaysia being killed, in Gabon and Ghana being molested. 99.9% of Nigerians killed in South Africa are of Igbo extraction, and sometimes by fellow 'hardworking' Igbo. Why?

22. We choose Kanu and he dictates to us without consultation with any one of us. They choose Tinubu who becomes a hero among them by bowing to or adopting the choice of their majority.

Why are we angry?
We chose Azikwe and they chose Awolowo.
How are they more mumuish followers than ourselves?
Zik became a President and we gained from it, Awo was only a Premier, but we are only struggling to beat their records in all ramifications including education till today.
How are they mumus?
We chose APGA and they chose APC, why agitating?

Yoruba are yet to say Tinubu is their problem why do we want to die for nothing?
Why working in APGA but planning to collect salaries in APC?

I pray for the success of Biafra, but do we still remember that as Igbo we will automatically become foreigners on the streets of the Lagos we call a no Man's land?

How many of us will actually want to relocate home, should Biafra actualises or if citizenship is on the condition that you relinquish all other citizenship in Africa?

I leave that answer to the individual.
Nwayo nwayo biko unu.

do you guys know that dog whistling against a tribe is a criminal offence.
Re: What I Learnt From Yoruba Land - Azuka Onwuka by Kukutente23: 5:39pm On May 21
FreeStuffsNG:
What I learnt from Yoruba land




https://punchng.com/what-i-learnt-from-yoruba-land/

That idea of waiting for the ceremony to start before serving guests I agree with. I once had an experience where the couple were delayed through no fault of theirs before getting to the reception. A good number of guests had eaten and left before the main event started.

The idea of not attending church service depends on people not culture. Catholics attend wedding mass before going for reception. Most pentecostal weddings hardly attend weddings
Re: What I Learnt From Yoruba Land - Azuka Onwuka by Shikena(m): 5:42pm On May 21
Well stated!


FreeStuffsNG:
Even though I had spent two years in Ondo State as a child, it was when I arrived in Lagos during my post-university National Youth Service Corps scheme that I was mature enough to study the way of life of the Yoruba people.

When I get into a new environment, I study the way of life of the residents, in order to understand how and why they do things. Whatever I consider admirable, I copy it. Whatever I don’t consider special, I don’t copy.

This is the responsibility of everyone and it is taught from the home and beaten into your ears in most Yoruba families. If you're outside Yorubaland, the counsel of your parents and family will be ringing like a bell in your ears so you constantly remember that they are waiting for you at home.

You just want to mind your business and appreciate your host. We are very very careful not to get involved in the local politics of our hosts outside our region in the country. There's a reason why. Our progressive approach to politics and governance is completely different so there's no point getting involved in the politics of your host who are not familiar with your kind of progressive politics. If you want to do politics, come back home to your Yorubaland and do your politics.

This is a brilliant write up by Azuka. I have always loved his column. I remember his column protesting how people write their home address by inserting comma after the number in a wrong way. Thank you Azuka.

May God bless Nigeria for ever! Check my signature for free stuffs!
Re: What I Learnt From Yoruba Land - Azuka Onwuka by GboyegaD(m): 5:48pm On May 21
Abeg, why fanfare irrespective of age? Let people be honored by the presence of their loved ones, for me, that is the best you can do for the deceased. I do not subscribe to burying young ones as though they never lived.
Re: What I Learnt From Yoruba Land - Azuka Onwuka by herich(m): 5:54pm On May 21
WizardOfNG:



Unintelligent Igbos and predictable whataboutism. Tribal marks were a way of identifying children to even their communal home in the past.

How can that, by any sensible person, be compared to societal enslavement of Osus and shameless discrimination against your own people and women also?
See superior culture people with very dirty lifestyle.
Your culture's dirty and scary tribal marks that makes you look resemble ojuju calabar or uncivilized apes, is a superior culture.
Don't forget that dirtyness is also part of your so called superior culture.
Wait oh,,, so prostrating to greet can also make a culture superior,,,
Yoruba and bragging eh,,, after bragging and boasting of superiority,,, you and you brothers will still end up crying that Igbos likes to bragg and chestbeat.

Is all these remnants of your backward and shamelessly discriminatory culture not even still visible today whereby Bianca Ojukwu is barred from contesting a political role in Anambra yet all Igbos want to be political leaders in the land of others?

Just accept others are superior and learn from them. There is no basis for comparing Yoruba and Igbo culture same as only a lunatic can claim light and darkness are similar.
Re: What I Learnt From Yoruba Land - Azuka Onwuka by Ategberoson(m): 5:58pm On May 21
gidgiddy:
Yorubas and Igbos are as different as night and day, and that's why the British made a big mistake of putting both ethnic groups in one country

Yorubas and Igbos should have been in different countries


Yes o placing Yoruba with those toxic clowns was a biggest mistake


God bless Awolowo and co for not joining in a war that doesn't concern us


How can I be happy that I was placed together with people that value money more than human being, regret rather than reasoning, abuse and insult everyone and not themselves


A tribe that cried victims and marginalization all the time like a small pikin


Indeed the British mess up

1 Like

Re: What I Learnt From Yoruba Land - Azuka Onwuka by duality(m): 5:59pm On May 21
FreeStuffsNG:
Even though I had spent two years in Ondo State as a child, it was when I arrived in Lagos during my post-university National Youth Service Corps scheme that I was mature enough to study the way of life of the Yoruba people.

When I get into a new environment, I study the way of life of the residents, in order to understand how and why they do things. Whatever I consider admirable, I copy it. Whatever I don’t consider special, I don’t copy.

This is the responsibility of everyone and it is taught from the home and beaten into your ears in most Yoruba families. If you're outside Yorubaland, the counsel of your parents and family will be ringing like a bell in your ears so you constantly remember that they are waiting for you at home.

You just want to mind your business and appreciate your host. We are very very careful not to get involved in the local politics of our hosts outside our region in the country. There's a reason why. Our progressive approach to politics and governance is completely different so there's no point getting involved in the politics of your host who are not familiar with your kind of progressive politics. If you want to do politics, come back home to your Yorubaland and do your politics.

This is a brilliant write up by Azuka. I have always loved his column. I remember his column protesting how people write their home address by inserting comma after the number in a wrong way. Thank you Azuka.

May God bless Nigeria for ever! Check my signature for free stuffs!


Your take on the aspect of politics is primitive and born out of fear.

Also, no one is dragging politics with you. If a person has the right to vote and be voted for in a country as stated in the constitution, that's paramount. He or she can exercise such right. Anyone against such right is myopic and unexposed.

It is normal to see plurality of culture in a cosmopolitan environment. Lagos is the best example in the South West, that's the reason you find people of other cultures express themselves, even politically.

Other less cosmopolitan areas of the south west do not experience such level of expressions because they are not as exposed. When they grow to that level, they will experience it.

The assumption that anyone who say things like this, is from the south east, is also foolish.
Re: What I Learnt From Yoruba Land - Azuka Onwuka by casualobserver: 6:00pm On May 21
Armaggedon:
They take life easy by using their people's body parts for ritual but when an Igbo man prospers more than them they begin to envy him.

They show off the most by doing owambe at any slightest meeting but when an Igbo sprays money, they are thrown into mass envy, questioning his wealth and tagging EFCC again him.

The most ethnic minded people I've come across, yet they do not love one another. The fiercest celebrity rivalry and spat usually happen amongst them.

The biggest farmers of hate and injustice. Whoever is unpopular among his people becomes their closest ally and whoever is born among them learns to hate his people until he grows up to meet his people and learns the truth.

You are delusional. The typical Yoruba man just wants to educate his children, have a profession or trade that gives him respect in society, after that party and have sex..his life is complete. You think people envy you for your money because your focus is money money at all costs. Very often we laugh at you because the majority of you don’t even know how to spend it with class. For instance you build large vulgar houses with tacky expensive furniture and ghastly exterior tiles. I mean who puts marble or toilet tiles on his exterior walls….an ibo man!!!


Trust me we are not envious of you, quite the contrary, you can only be envious of someone who has what you want and don’t have. A typical Yoruba man just wants enough money to be comfortable. If money meant that much to us, more of us would be doing drugs and fake products like you. I had an uncle who had a very successful business in the 70s to 80s, your people entered his territory with fake products and killed his business. When I was about to start a business I went to him for advice and asked why he didn’t join them or take them on. His response was he is a comfortable man, the only way to compete with them was to also sell fake or substandard products, he cannot destroy his reputation built over decades by joining them to sell fake or substandard products.

4 Likes

Re: What I Learnt From Yoruba Land - Azuka Onwuka by Adonko(m): 6:02pm On May 21
post=130068621:
This is a very good piece.
Interesting to read.

For emphasis sake,
Here we go....

IGBO/BIAFRA VS TINUBU/YORUBA:
TOLERANCE BECOMING A CRIME
By Dr Chinedu Akabuike


1. Why do we hate Tinubu?
What for?

2. Tinubu never worked with federal or Eastern Nigeria let alone stealing money from Ndi Igbo.
He never worked as Minister or taken any Federal Appointment!

3. He never joined APGA let alone sabotaging our Party's interest?

4. Tinubu didn't meddle in Igbo internal affairs either!

5. Why do we call him thief?
What did he steal?

6. We call Yoruba "slaves".
We never reflect on what it means to be slaves in the true sense of the word.

7. We are putting mouth in Lagos politics without caution, yet we have a proverb that says it is the foolish housefly that follows the corpse into the grave.

8. Can Yoruba man become an Association or Local Government Chairman in the East? Let us be sincere with ourselves.
Yet, we enjoy all these privileges here including Assembly Membership!


9. Why asking for what we can't give?

10. We are here helping the "slaves" to develop their land. Who then is a slave?
10b. You call their city a no man's land so that we can further be enslaved slaving to develop it, and our generations are wasted gloating over mere privileges.
Who is a slave?
Do we actually think?

11. Can Yoruba tell Okorocha "o to gee" in Owerri?
He doesn't even need it.
He is too intelligent to die for a pot of ofe manu or nothing.

12. After the civil war, for many of us who were old enough to have witnessed it, the Yoruba were the first to open their arms to receive and accept us as we were, crude savages in search for means of survival.
It was regardless of what we equally did to them before and during the civil war. No party to the civil war was innocent!
I also remember not paying any rent among Yoruba guys without a penny for my first 3years in Lagos and another 2 years in Ibadan.

13. Can we survive Yoruba attack in Yoruba land if they actually mean to?
Will an Mbaise man cooperate with the Nsukka or Afikpo, or the Imo with Anambara?

14. If we all decide to relocate at once, Babangida send me home phenomena is still in the memory of some of us who survived the incessant and uncontrollable spate of robbery across the Onitsha bridge.
How many people will want to go in spite of our empty pride?

15. If Yoruba people are as foolish as we foolishly think, why agitating?
How will agitating be to our benefit?

16. Why not "O to gee" in Abia, Enugu or Owerri?

17. Can a man from Aba become a Commissioner or Perm.Sec. in Enugu State Civil Service?
Yet it happened here!
Why not be careful.

18. We adopted APGA and but "wisely" voted PDP.
How was Tinubu our headache.
Was he the cause of our downfall?
Why always blame others for our inabilities and want to take glory for any small thing we think we have done well and even overblow it?

19. We claim we were so creative during the civil war.
Now history.
We also claim every made in Nigeria is from Aba.
But go to Oyo and Osogbo to see what "lazy" mechanics are doing quietly in the automobile industry, yet we make noise that other ethnics are either mumu or lazy except we (alagbara ma mero baba ole; the most hardworking humans who cannot develop their own land unfortunately).

20. Why looking for avoidable problem? Why?

21. It was you in the North being attacked, in Malaysia being killed, in Gabon and Ghana being molested. 99.9% of Nigerians killed in South Africa are of Igbo extraction, and sometimes by fellow 'hardworking' Igbo. Why?

22. We choose Kanu and he dictates to us without consultation with any one of us. They choose Tinubu who becomes a hero among them by bowing to or adopting the choice of their majority.

Why are we angry?
We chose Azikwe and they chose Awolowo.
How are they more mumuish followers than ourselves?
Zik became a President and we gained from it, Awo was only a Premier, but we are only struggling to beat their records in all ramifications including education till today.
How are they mumus?
We chose APGA and they chose APC, why agitating?

Yoruba are yet to say Tinubu is their problem why do we want to die for nothing?
Why working in APGA but planning to collect salaries in APC?

I pray for the success of Biafra, but do we still remember that as Igbo we will automatically become foreigners on the streets of the Lagos we call a no Man's land?

How many of us will actually want to relocate home, should Biafra actualises or if citizenship is on the condition that you relinquish all other citizenship in Africa?

I leave that answer to the individual.
Nwayo nwayo biko unu.
listen I don't think anybody hates tinubu ...people reserved the right to like or dislike. But the issue here is he should do his job and his major job is to ensure he does everything possible to enable people puts food on the table confidently and without excess stress and provide them with security .

I for one don't think that's bad...but not doing the aforementioned there is nothing that you will say that will make people to like you.

I always tell people if you take someone from his food filled one room apartment and puts him in a duplex, mansion or castle without food it's only a mater of time he will dislike you, insult you and go back to his one room .

1 Like

Re: What I Learnt From Yoruba Land - Azuka Onwuka by SonOfDSoil01: 6:02pm On May 21
gidgiddy:
Yorubas and Igbos are as different as night and day, and that's why the British made a big mistake of putting both ethnic groups in one country

Yorubas and Igbos should have been in different countries
I quite agree with you, but why must you lot have to cross Niger bridge to Lagos and Sw to make it in life…..even the trend of migration shows y’all would have died of hunger if not for the accommodating spirit of Yorubas grin

1 Like

Re: What I Learnt From Yoruba Land - Azuka Onwuka by NovusHomo(m): 6:10pm On May 21
RaySimran:
A distorted comparismcomparison[/b] minced [b]mixed with blunt ignorance.

Your article should've been accurate if the focus was mainly to beautify us (who are foreigners to these environment) with Yorubas' unique artributes and not what's lacking in other tribe who has an entire different idealogy.

God bless Nigeria.
Re: What I Learnt From Yoruba Land - Azuka Onwuka by Godfullsam(m): 6:28pm On May 21
BossGerald:

Freestuffng were ya nwayoo 😂


Nigerians were living in harmony until tinubu/buhari/Apc happened at the national politics.

There're the goods and the bads in every tribe and place, one man's opinion is not enough for your self aggrandisement.

We still remember what Apc hooligans did to non Yoruba voters in the last election


Pls always remember the bold. It will help you guys to conduct yourselves sensibly in subsequent general elections to avoid a repeat of the same scenarios
Re: What I Learnt From Yoruba Land - Azuka Onwuka by NoToPile: 6:32pm On May 21
I just can't relate with celebrating an oku ofo's burial.

I literally cringe when I see burial posters of young adults, even little children.
Re: What I Learnt From Yoruba Land - Azuka Onwuka by WorldRichest: 6:35pm On May 21
Armaggedon:
They take life easy by using their people's body parts for ritual but when an Igbo man prospers more than them they begin to envy him.

They show off the most by doing owambe at any slightest meeting but when an Igbo sprays money, they are thrown into mass envy, questioning his wealth and tagging EFCC again him.

The most ethnic minded people I've come across, yet they do not love one another. The fiercest celebrity rivalry and spat usually happen amongst them.

The biggest farmers of hate and injustice. Whoever is unpopular among his people becomes their closest ally and whoever is born among them learns to hate his people until he grows up to meet his people and learns the truth.

If only you stay in your cursed region, you wouldn't be concerned with what is going on in another man's land.

If not that you exported your baby factories into Yoruba land, you won't be concerned about what is going on in another man's land.

If not that you traffic your hard drugs enroute the international airports in Yoruba land

If not that you dropped out of Primary School, and jumped into Mallam Audu's trailer carrying Cows from Bornu through Igboland to Yoruba land to come and sell Gala and La Casera inside holdups in Yoruba land and sleep under bridges, then you would not be suffocating and convulsing over what happens in Yoruba land
Re: What I Learnt From Yoruba Land - Azuka Onwuka by lekonso: 6:40pm On May 21
Armaggedon:
They take life easy by using their people's body parts for ritual but when an Igbo man prospers more than them they begin to envy him.

They show off the most by doing owambe at any slightest meeting but when an Igbo sprays money, they are thrown into mass envy, questioning his wealth and tagging EFCC again him.

The most ethnic minded people I've come across, yet they do not love one another. The fiercest celebrity rivalry and spat usually happen amongst them.

The biggest farmers of hate and injustice. Whoever is unpopular among his people becomes their closest ally and whoever is born among them learns to hate his people until he grows up to meet his people and learns the truth.
Aaaah! Tribalism don spoil you finish
Re: What I Learnt From Yoruba Land - Azuka Onwuka by dododawa1: 6:40pm On May 21
Yoruba

Senior

IGBO


In all

FIELDS
Re: What I Learnt From Yoruba Land - Azuka Onwuka by Afamsi: 6:41pm On May 21
WizardOfNG:


Not true. You are just saying this to be politically correct or to fraudulently exalt the culture of your ethnic group when it is undeserving compared to others.

Yoruba culture is far superior and more sophisticated in comparison to Igbo culture.

Look no further than the one example of how there is no culture of discrimination against the female child in a Yoruba community or household.

Compare to Igbo culture where, till today, a female eldest child, ostensibly because she is inferior to male siblings younger than her, cannot inherit the estate of her father.

Intelligent men dont talk for the sake of it. They try to ensure what they say make sense and/or can stand the test of factual and intellectual scrutiny.

This is one example alone I give yet many more exist, such as the Yorubas universally acclaimed respect for elders, to show Yoruba culture is vastly superior to that of Igbos.
oga shut dirty mouth. You dont know what you are saying

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