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All Those Glorious Years We Spent in Nigeria - A Ghanaian Experience by Kikijan: 9:29pm On Nov 06, 2012
(This article is dedicated to all those Ghanaians who went to Nigeria in search of a better life between 1978 and the second “Ghana Must Go” in 1985. You saw the very best of Nigeria and no matter what happened to you then, or later, you will never forget your time in that country!)

Some people say it was the “constro” boys who went first and came back home with the good news. Others say it was the trained teachers (Cert A holders) who went first, started teaching in secondary schools there and came back on holidays and took along their brothers and friends who are graduates. Still others maintain that Ghanaians had been travelling to Nigeria since goodness knows when. There were vehicles that made the long journey from Kumasi or Accra to Lagos. Long before our independence, Anlo fishermen and traders piled themselves into trucks setting forth from Keta into the wilds of Nigeria. The journey took the whole day. Nigeria was far away, very far away indeed.

No matter where the truth lies, one thing is certain. The great movement of Ghanaians to Nigeria in search of a better life would not happen until after 1975. Prior to that, nobody left Ghana to settle in Nigeria because Ghana was not good enough for him. There have always been ties between individual Ghanaians and Nigerians with inter-marriages meaning some Ghanaians moved to settle in Nigeria. But nobody left Ghana to escape economic hardships. Not until the mid-70s.

The largest chunk of the economic migrants from Ghana to Nigeria made their moves between 1978 and 1981 or thereabouts. By 1982, Lagos was full of Ghanaians from all walks of life. They ranged from university lecturers (and students), medical officers, political refugees, through secondary school teachers to our boys working on construction sites and our girls selling bread in the “go slow” on the highway leading out of Lagos to Abeokuta. They rushed to the slow moving vehicles peddling what they called “Ghana bread”. (Some of the Yoruba didn’t like this bread complaining that there was too much sugar in it. Yes, much of Ghanaian bread contains too much sugar. If there is not too much sugar, then there is too much salt!) Some of our girls chose the easy way out and betook themselves to the houses of ill-repute where they plied their damnable trade.

By the 70s, the journey now took only a few hours from Accra to Lagos. If you liked, you made the “short-short” one by taking a vehicle to Aflao, crossing the border on foot, taking a taxi to the station near Asigame (Grand Marché) in Lomé, where you took one of the Peugeot “caravans” straight to the Badagry border where another vehicle took you into Lagos. You could also take a vehicle from Cotonou and make it to the old port of Porto Novo (Xogbonu) and enter Nigeria at Idiroko which was the border crossing before the huge Badagry border was rebuilt as the main entry point. The Idiroko to Lagos road was still called the “Old Ghana Road” when we were there.

For the Ghanaian making the journey by road to Lagos for the first time, it was a real experience. Once you cleared the Badagry border and was on your way on the dual carriage to Lagos, you knew you were somewhere far away from Accra. Lagos looked big to you. Much of it was like a huge construction site. This was the time when foreign companies like Julius Berger were building flyovers, overhead bridges, and motorways all over the place.

Even though Ghanaians could be found in every state, most of them were in the Yoruba speaking states which are geographically nearest to Ghana. The Yoruba are the single largest of Nigeria’s more than 250 ethnic groups. There are far more Yoruba than there are Ghanaians of all tribes worldwide! Most of the Nigerians who lived among us in Ghana before the Aliens Compliance Order (ACO) were Yoruba. They were the ones we called “Alatafuo” or “Anago” and when we went to them, they also called us “omo Ghana” (no offence meant, none was taken either). So the Ghanaian connection with the Yoruba, in particular, is a long one. Some versions of Ewe history even trace the origins of the Ewe to a place called Ketu in Yorubaland. In the early 80s, in places like Ogbomosho, Ejigbo, Osogbo, Ilesha, one could still meet those Yoruba who had lived in Ghana before ACO and who still spoke fluent Twi, Fante, Ewe or Ga. They were proud to display their knowledge of these languages, having quite left the bitterness of the “munko munko” (ACO) behind them.

The years around 1980 marked the most dizzying heights of Nigeria’s oil-fired economy. The oil money was flowing through everybody’s fingers and some of us were there to partake of the goodies. They accepted us so long as there was something for everybody.

Every Ghanaian who went there got some kind of job. Teachers were in high demand. It was very easy for the Ghanaian teacher to fit into the Nigerian classroom. Because WAEC gave us all the same GCE syllabus, Ghanaian teachers found themselves teaching exactly the same things they were teaching in Ghana. Maths, Science and English teachers were especially in high demand. The greatest need for teachers was in the states controlled by the UPN which were implementing free education – the type Akufo-Addo is promising us. The UPN was then led by Chief Obafemi Awolowo, the revered Yoruba leader. (I have, sometimes, wondered if there is some resemblance between him and Akufo-Addo that goes beyond their old style round metal-rimmed glasses.) Secondary schools were built in all towns and villages and students went straight from primary school to these schools without any exams.

It was not that there were no Nigerians who could teach their children. The economy was so good that Nigerian university graduates looked down on the teaching job. They easily got higher paying jobs in industry or obtained generous state or federal government scholarships to pursue advanced studies in foreign universities. Ghanaians readily took their places and acquitted themselves well. Indeed, there will come a time, (if that time has not even passed) when a crop of prominent Nigerians can proudly say that some of their best teachers in secondary school were Ghanaians. They will be referring to that time, around the 80s, when so many Ghanaians taught so many Nigerians.

Everything was very cheap in this country. What we had then called “essential commodities” in Ghana were anything but essential in Agege (the name of the Lagos suburb that, in Ghana, became used for the entire country). Blue Band Margarine, which had ceased to exist in Ghana, was available at every roadside seller’s. Beer was one naira for the premier brands of Star and Gulder – brands that we had known from Ghana. The big bottle of Guinness, Odekun, (which was unavailable in Ghana) went for 1.30 naira and the little bottle (kekere) made you poorer by a mere 70 kobo. Semovita cost 80 kobo a kilo. We did not even have Semovita in Ghana then. Sardines and Geisha (which Nigerians looked down upon but were favourite items in Ghana, the lack of which can cause governments to be overthrown) were all over the place selling cheaply. During the Christmas season, imports were increased bringing down the prices of items across the board. In Ghana price increases were particularly notable during the Christmas season.

Those Ghanaians who went to Nigeria before 1980 saw the very best of the country, economically. In some states, graduate teachers were given car loans in cash! You took your 3,000 naira, went to a car dealer and drove away with your brand new locally assembled VW “beetul”. It cost you less than 3,000 naira so you had something left over to buy petrol and drinks to celebrate your first new car with your friends – to “wash” the car, as it were. In the early 80s, a graduate teacher’s monthly pay of 360 naira was enough to buy you a return ticket to the UK. That was before the Thatcher government brought in visa requirements for Ghanaians and Nigerians. Those Ghanaians daring enough went on holidays in Britain. The naira was equivalent to the pound and fetched you more than a dollar!

This was also the time Ghanaians would tell jokes about the newcomer who went to the wayside chop bar and asked for 50 kobo rice and 50 kobo meat and the seller woman looked at him with surprise. He insisted on his order and when he was served, there was no way he could eat it all. He thought the naira was like the cedi he had left behind in Ghana.

At the beginning of each academic year, the now defunct West Africa Magazine published long lists of Nigerian scholarship winners who would be going to universities in Europe and North America to study obscure subjects in the sciences and technology. It was as if the states were competing with each other to see which of them could send the greatest numbers of their citizens on scholarships abroad. We looked at these lists with a tinge of envy. Our country could not afford to give us similar privileges.

The daily newspapers were bumpy affairs of 48-60 pages at a time when our flagship national daily, Daily Graphic, was still running 16 pages in tiny print. There were even broadsheets, something we had never seen in Ghana before. A few of the numerous newspapers really had quality stuff. The newly established Lagos Guardian attracted articles from some of the country’s greatest brains – Wolé Soyinka, Niyi Osundare, Kole Omotoso, Chinweinzu. Then came the newsmagazine, Newswatch, modelled on Time Magazine and better than anything we ever had in Ghana. On its staff were some of the country’s best journalists including Dele Giwa who was murdered by a mail bomb during Babangida’s reign of terror. There were several television and radio stations at a time when Ghana still had only one television channel and one national broadcaster and we had never heard of FM broadcasting. Naija movies were not available then.

The Ghanaian immigrant felt completely at home. Ghana was not too far away and you could visit home for the weekend. We settled. We started enjoying the food, the beer, the women and the music. Oh, the music, especially Yoruba music. Because of Juju music’s roots in highlife, it was easy for Ghanaians to take on and like that music. Moreover, some of us still remembered the time when the Yoruba lived among us in Ghana and played lots of the music of the accordion playing I. K. Dairo. They may have played the music of Haruna Ishola too.

The 80s marked the heights of the careers of King Sunny Adé with his velvety voice (Gboromiro; Synchrooo ... synchro system) and “Shief” Commander Ebenezer Obey and his evergreen, forever and forever wedding song: Eto gbeyawo laye t’Oba Oluwa mi file le, pelu aseni... (What God has joined togedaa let no man put asondaaa...). Fuji, Apala and Sakara music are more difficult for Ghanaians to absorb. They are more traditionally based with Islamic roots. But if you live in a place where you hear a certain music type being played over and over again, and see the people cooing over it, you cannot help but get infected yourself. That is why many of us will never forget names like the late Alhaji Sikuru Ayindé Barrister, Kollington Ayinla, or Mama Salawa Abeni. Today, Fuji music has morphed into the Yoruba variant of hip-hop. But for those of us who were there in the early 80s, it is the music of Sunny Adé (is there any musician who has sung his way into the hearts of the Yoruba more than this man who has so many wonderful tracks you won’t know which ones to choose as your favourites?) and Ebenezer Obey (who is now into gospel music having also fallen victim to the excessive religiosity that is now afflicting many parts of Africa) that we have continued to enjoy long after we left the country even if we do not understand all the mgbati mgbati.

Then things started getting bad. Many of us saw the signs very early because we had seen similar signs in Ghana. Contracts were not being renewed. It was becoming more difficult to get jobs. Prices were going up. Some construction works were being terminated midway. Remittances through the banks were becoming more difficult to get as the black market rates of the naira started running away from the official rates.

They did not sack us from their country. We had survived “Ghana Must Go” 1 and 2. We left on our own when they relieved us of our teaching jobs. Many were too old to brave the journey to another part of the world. They returned to Ghana and went back to the teaching service or whatever else they were doing before the Agege craze. Many of the young ones came back to Ghana only to re-saddle and set forth again. Some of the “constro” boys, ever the most daring, took the desert road to Gaddafi’s Libya. Some of them lost their lives on the way. Some of us came to Europe. Others went to North America. There were those who made it to other African countries like South Africa, Botswana, Zambia, or any country willing to accept them. Anywhere else was better than the difficult days of Rawlings’ military Ghana.

Today, it is said that more than half of Nigeria’s 160 million people live on less than two dollars a day. The naira is now 150 to a dollar. The largest note is 1,000 naira (equivalent to 12 ghc). A proposal to print 5,000 naira bills was dropped. Another to re-denominate the naira was also discarded. A bottle of Guinness is around 300 naira and Semovita is 250 (na kekere bi dat o). The molue conductors at Oshodi are no longer shouting: “Enter with your ten ten kobo – 50 kobo one naira no change”. That belongs to a time in the distant past. The trip now costs 100 naira.

Nigerians are finding it difficult to exist on their monthly salaries. Many have voted with their feet and for some, even Ghana is better to live in. To be sure, though the Nigerian economy may not be riding the giddy Olympian heights of the late 70s, it has never descended into the gutters that the Ghanaian economy found itself in the same period. But the best is over and many Nigerians will give an arm to have the seventies and early eighties back.

Yes, there are Nigerians who are crooks, cheats, bandits, religious fanatics and what have you. But the fact is that MOST ordinary Nigerians are honest, peace loving, God-fearing, resourceful and friendly people. You have to live in the country to see these ones whom we do not hear much about. You can also ask the thousands of Ghanaians still living there. And, oh, the country itself is, actually, really beautiful.

For many of us, since Nigeria was our first foray outside our native land, the country remains special to us. We still have fond memories of our time there. I have not been back there since I left 26 years ago. I very much want to visit and walk the old paths again. What a wistful experience that will be!

http://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomePage/NewsArchive/artikel.php?ID=255477

Kofi Amenyo (kofi.amenyo@yahoo.com)

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Re: All Those Glorious Years We Spent in Nigeria - A Ghanaian Experience by ebankole: 11:30pm On Nov 06, 2012
GOD BLESS U.in as much that this almost brought out some tears off my eyes i'm still thankful to be a nigerian and african.We african must learn to see ourselves as one.

3 Likes

Re: All Those Glorious Years We Spent in Nigeria - A Ghanaian Experience by ektbear: 12:28am On Nov 07, 2012
Very touching.
Re: All Those Glorious Years We Spent in Nigeria - A Ghanaian Experience by mojounited(m): 4:40am On Nov 07, 2012
cry cry
Re: All Those Glorious Years We Spent in Nigeria - A Ghanaian Experience by akorlade(m): 5:47am On Nov 07, 2012
Kofi Amanyo from the BBC abi?
So you graced the street of ajegunle?
I see your street credibility.
NOSTALGIC.

2 Likes

Re: All Those Glorious Years We Spent in Nigeria - A Ghanaian Experience by denitro(m): 8:13am On Nov 07, 2012
Frontpage Pls
Re: All Those Glorious Years We Spent in Nigeria - A Ghanaian Experience by naptu2: 8:21am On Nov 07, 2012
I can relate to this. Our neighbours consisted of 3 sets of ghanaian families, two indian families, one nigerian-american family and one nigerian family. Most of my favourite teachers were ghanaian.

1 Like

Re: All Those Glorious Years We Spent in Nigeria - A Ghanaian Experience by Callotti: 8:24am On Nov 07, 2012
Very nice!
Too bad I can't even say such about Nigeria, EVEN as a Nigerian.
No apologies! kiss

2 Likes

Re: All Those Glorious Years We Spent in Nigeria - A Ghanaian Experience by ifyalways(f): 8:26am On Nov 07, 2012
I hope he posted this on Ghanaweb too. cheesy
Nice piece.Ghana has always been my second home.
Re: All Those Glorious Years We Spent in Nigeria - A Ghanaian Experience by naptu2: 8:30am On Nov 07, 2012
He wrote about imports increasing in December....this was the reason
naptu2: Kingsway smiley cheesy grin
[img]http://1.bp..com/_bDcpR_wJ7hk/TVL8LYkfbWI/AAAAAAAAEWs/uCu7KJ2tE54/s400/Kingsway%2Bbuilding%252C%2BLagos%2BMarina%252C%2Bearly%2B70%2527s.jpg[/img]

Above: Kingsway headquarters, Marina, Lagos in the early 1970s. Below: Kingsway Ibadan at christmas (also 1970s).

I remember the train ride to see Santa Claus. I remember bugging my mum because I wanted to buy everything in sight. I remember riding up and down the escalator (although I was scared that they'll cut my legs). I remember being told to "keep quiet" or "hurry up". The lights, the sounds, the toys smiley

Kingsway was the largest department store chain in Nigeria. It was owned by UAC (the biggest non-oil company in Nigeria). Some of the stores were just mere supermarkets, while others were large department stores occupying multi-storey buildings and selling everything imaginable.

A UAC executive had the idea to put little snack bars in Kingsway stores. Soon these snack bars became stand alone fast food joints (Kingsway Rendezvous). Kingsway Rendezvous was rebranded in 1987 and MR Biggs was born.

Other large department store chains included UTC, Leventis, CFAO and Bhojsons. Most of these department stores closed down due to the economic crisis of the late 1980s and early 1990s.





Read more here https://www.nairaland.com/1062509/nigeria-good-bad-beautiful-ugly
Re: All Those Glorious Years We Spent in Nigeria - A Ghanaian Experience by TonySpike: 9:19am On Nov 07, 2012
From all indications, the deterioration of Nigeria started from mid-1980s. I understand that the then Head-of-State, General Babangida, was responsible for flushing out lots of foreigners especially from our academia, industries and hospitality business. As a personal experience, an auditor I know lost more than 15 Indian companies from his pool of clients between 1990 and 1998. It was also He, Babangida, that destroyed this country called Nigeria. I still can't believe he wants to come back to rule after all the economic, political and intellectual abyss he plunged Nigeria into. As for the Ghanaian that wrote this piece, at least you remember Nigeria was good back in those days. Front Page please!!!

1 Like

Re: All Those Glorious Years We Spent in Nigeria - A Ghanaian Experience by Afam4eva(m): 9:49am On Nov 07, 2012
Kikijan: The Yoruba are the single largest of Nigeria’s more than 250 ethnic groups.
Na only me see this?

2 Likes

Re: All Those Glorious Years We Spent in Nigeria - A Ghanaian Experience by Chanchit: 10:05am On Nov 07, 2012
From the write up, you will know he knows exactly what he's talking about.

1 Like

Re: All Those Glorious Years We Spent in Nigeria - A Ghanaian Experience by TonySpike: 10:11am On Nov 07, 2012
afam4eva:
Na only me see this?

On top everything wey he write, na the only thing you see be that, Oga Afam? grin grin grin
Re: All Those Glorious Years We Spent in Nigeria - A Ghanaian Experience by manitobor(m): 10:23am On Nov 07, 2012
Very moving piece. Brings back sweet memories of the glorious days in Nigerian history. So much water has passed under the bridge ever since. That period has long gone and confined to the dustbin of history. We can only look back at those days with a pang of nostalgia because we know we will never have it so good again. So sad.

2 Likes

Re: All Those Glorious Years We Spent in Nigeria - A Ghanaian Experience by Afam4eva(m): 10:24am On Nov 07, 2012
Tony Spike:

On top everything wey he write, na the only thing you see be that, Oga Afam? grin grin grin
It was a good article but i noticed that he always replaced "Nigerians" with "Yorubas".
Re: All Those Glorious Years We Spent in Nigeria - A Ghanaian Experience by demelza: 10:29am On Nov 07, 2012
Cried as I read this, its just totally heartbreaking.....

2 Likes

Re: All Those Glorious Years We Spent in Nigeria - A Ghanaian Experience by Ryabcool(m): 10:36am On Nov 07, 2012
afam4eva:
Na only me see this?

No be only you see am. So what are you going to do about it? I see only two options; 1, ranting your ass off here on nairaland where the writer might never see it. 2, contact the man, disprove his claim by supplying concrete evidence, and demand a retract.
Re: All Those Glorious Years We Spent in Nigeria - A Ghanaian Experience by tushbobo(m): 10:41am On Nov 07, 2012
I remember our Surulere fountain school teachers- Mr.Kwawu,Mr.Ableze,Mr.Dappah etc who gave us a solid foundation especially in calculations and general knowledge. I never really had to read for calculation courses throughout my secondary and uni days and always came out tops.Thanks to these lovely Ghanian teachers.They were very good back then.

3 Likes

Re: All Those Glorious Years We Spent in Nigeria - A Ghanaian Experience by webfocus(m): 10:42am On Nov 07, 2012
:oA pound was equal to a naira and greater than a dollar ?
That can neva happen again
A pity

1 Like

Re: All Those Glorious Years We Spent in Nigeria - A Ghanaian Experience by Revealedtv(m): 10:44am On Nov 07, 2012
Chinua Achebe----->"There was a country"

Between I'm something like 15th to comment
Re: All Those Glorious Years We Spent in Nigeria - A Ghanaian Experience by Kslib(m): 10:44am On Nov 07, 2012
Abeg. Make the op go post am for Ghanaweb too. Nice memories sha...
Re: All Those Glorious Years We Spent in Nigeria - A Ghanaian Experience by Mckybarf(m): 10:51am On Nov 07, 2012
Another one of the many fantastic stories i have heard from many a ghanaian who lived in naija during those hay days. Its never too late to rebuild your country. Omo naija, ever. I am a ghanaian though.
Re: All Those Glorious Years We Spent in Nigeria - A Ghanaian Experience by Nonybb: 10:58am On Nov 07, 2012
#TEAR drop§

1 Like

Re: All Those Glorious Years We Spent in Nigeria - A Ghanaian Experience by Nobody: 11:02am On Nov 07, 2012
so the question be na who spoil am nd hw we go repair am?

1 Like

Re: All Those Glorious Years We Spent in Nigeria - A Ghanaian Experience by djfiifi(m): 11:11am On Nov 07, 2012
You see oooooo!
We Ghanaians dont hate Nigerians as some folks always try to portray.
I got my wife through Ghana-Nigeria movements.She is a Yoruba girl who traces her roots to Offa in Kwaraa State.Her grandfather migrated from there to Ghana in 50s

We are one family separated by the white imperialists.THE GOOD OLD DAYS.

7 Likes 1 Share

Re: All Those Glorious Years We Spent in Nigeria - A Ghanaian Experience by Nobody: 11:15am On Nov 07, 2012
Donlittle: so the question be na who spoil am nd hw we go repair am?

Ibrahim Badamosi Babangida. He finally legalized corruption with style.

4 Likes

Re: All Those Glorious Years We Spent in Nigeria - A Ghanaian Experience by powerfrank(m): 11:16am On Nov 07, 2012
i almost cried..i wish it was still like dat up till dat..GOD BLESS DIS COUNTRY

2 Likes

Re: All Those Glorious Years We Spent in Nigeria - A Ghanaian Experience by Welder(m): 11:17am On Nov 07, 2012
Donlittle: so the question be na who spoil am nd hw we go repair am?
The Military! Democracy and We Nigerians!
Re: All Those Glorious Years We Spent in Nigeria - A Ghanaian Experience by johndavid1(m): 11:31am On Nov 07, 2012
God bless Nigeria Naija 4 Life cool cool cool cool
Re: All Those Glorious Years We Spent in Nigeria - A Ghanaian Experience by Nobody: 11:33am On Nov 07, 2012
Splendid

1 Like

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