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Aguleri Is The Ancestral Home Of The Igbos, Not Nri - Daily Sun, July 15, 2014 - Politics - Nairaland

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Aguleri Is The Ancestral Home Of The Igbos, Not Nri - Daily Sun, July 15, 2014 by eri1stson: 12:35pm On Jul 15, 2014
INTRODUCTION
The attention of the people of Aguleri has been drawn to the story on the settlement of the Igbos in Nigeria, published in the Daily Sun of Wednesday 26th February, 2014, under the caption: "How Igbo first settled in Nri". Consequent upon this, the undersigned persons have been mandated to make the following statement on the issue, on behalf of Aguleri:
To say the least, the story under reference is grossly misleading. It is a historical distortion and a travesty of Igbo history. We find it difficult to believe that a prominent member of the family of Eri, the progenitor of the Igbos, and of all personages, His Royal Majesty Obidiegwu Onyeso of Nri, is credited with such a grievous falsification of facts on the history of the Igbos. This is why we have waited this long to react to the story, expecting that he would disown it or disassociate himself from the misrepresentations therein. But since he has not done so, we are now convinced that the views and assertions in the story were correctly attributed to him.
Igwe Onyeso's present stance, as reflected in the story, is a shocking contradiction to what he knows and believes to be the correct situation, as he practically and faithfully demonstrated during his visit to Aguleri in 1988, as part of the necessary traditional rites for the traditional ruler of Agukwu-Nri. For him to be singing a different tune now, even to the point of contesting the headship of Eri clan, and by extension of Ndi Igbo, with Aguleri is, indeed, unfortunate. We do not wish to engage in a public controversy with our brother, the Eze Nri, over a matter all of us know the truth. That explains why Aguleri has never bothered to make an issue over the wrong impression held by some people that Agukwu-Nri is the head of the Igbos, believing that our brothers, the Nris, are aware of the truth, and that there is no need publicly debunking the misconception. However, the erroneous assertions by Igwe Onyeso in the said publication have now made it necessary to correct that impression and set the records of Igbo history straight, particularly their settlement in Nigeria.
THE FACTS
From historical findings, Eri from Israel was the fifth son of Gad, the seventh son of Jacob (Genesis 46:15-18 and Numbers 26:16:18). He migrated from Egypt with a group of companions just before the exodus of the Israelites from Egypt many centuries ago. They travelled by water and finally arrived at the confluence of Ezu and Omabala (Anambra) Rivers, located in present-day Aguleri, where, according to oral tradition, it was spiritually or divinely revealed to Eri that the point was to be their final destination and settlement. They moved into the hinterland and settled in the present-day Aguleri. Eri lived and died at Aguleri.
Agulu was the eldest son of Eri, and not Menri, as claimed by Igwe Onyeso. This is supported by oral tradition in Aguleri and in other communities of Eri clan. It is also confirmed by historical accounts by many writers of Igbo history. For instance, Alaezi J.G.C, in his book: “IBOS: Hebrew Exiles from Israel,” stated that “Aguleri was the oldest of the Eri descendants in Nigeria. Eri himself was the fifth son of Gad and Gad the seventh son of Jacob or Israel (See Genesis 46:15-18; Numbers 26:16-18; Exodus 1:1-5). Nri was the most prominent, but the last-born.” Menri (Nri) was prominent because, just as Levi was the Priest in the House of Jacob, Menri was the Priest in the House of Eri, and he performed priestly and spiritual functions throughout the Igbo settlement.
As the population at the settlement of Eri at Aguleri increased, and in combination with other factors, the children of Eri and/or their descendants left the settlement and founded various other settlements outside Aguleri, while Agulu, the first son, remained in their father's home at Aguleri with his descendants. Agulu, fondly called Agulu-Nwa-Eri, appended the name of their father, Eri, to his name and founded Agulu-Eri (Aguleri). Menri left Aguleri and settled at a big forest, where he engaged in hunting and farming, while also performing his spiritual work. He called the settlement Agu-Ukwu. When he was getting very old, he told his children to take him back to his ancestral home, as he would not want to die outside his father's home. Menri was brought back to Aguleri, where he died and was buried. His grave is still marked at Okpu, in Ivite Aguleri, till this day. There is no other grave site of Menri, the founder of Nri, anywhere else in Igbo land, even in Nri itself, except in Aguleri.
It is pertinent to mention also that one of the foremost researchers on Igbo history, Isichei Elizabeth (1976), stated in her book, "A History of the Igbo People”, that the point of Igbo dispersal in Nigeria was around the Anambra valley/basin. No doubt, that point was at Aguleri. This fact was corroborated by Ujah (2006) when he stated in his book, “The Origin of Ibos,” that Arodi, the younger sibling of Eri, was one of the people that migrated with Eri and settled at Aguleri, from where he later left and gave birth to Arochukwu and Arondizuogu, as well as other Aro communities in Igboland.

Also, in 1995, a group of five Israeli anthropologists came to Nigeria, looking for evidence that the Eri of the House of Jacob was the same Eri in Nigeria. They went to several Igbo communities without much success in their mission, until they finally came to Aguleri. They were led on the visit to Aguleri by Senator Ben Obi (Ojeligbo) from Awka, accompanied by Chief Okoye Ojibeka from Nri and Chief George Odum from Mbaukwu. At Aguleri, the Israelis found several evidence that Eri of the House of Jacob was the same Eri in Aguleri. Among other things, they saw one of the sacred places in Aguleri, known as Obuga, at Enugwu Aguleri, established since ancient time and dedicated to the memory of the father of Eri, Gad. The name “Obuga” is really “Obu-Gad” (the House/Sanctum of Gad). They also saw a strange writing with cowries on the floor of Obuga, which they recognized as an ancient Hebrew writing. They later decoded the writing and the impression conveyed by its meaning was in accord with Aguleri traditional belief of Obuga as a sacred place of purity, peace and justice. The Isaelis were also shown the grave sites of Eri and Menri in Aguleri.

It is also a known fact that, by tradition, no Nri man would break the kolanut where an Aguleri man is present, except with his permission. This is in deference to the fact that Agulu (Aguleri) was the elder brother of Menri (Nri). Furthermore, in recognition of the fact that Aguleri is the first son of Eri and the ancestral home of Ndi-Igbo, as well as the custodian of all the spiritual sites and places of Eri kingdom, traditional rulers of Agukwu-Nri, from time past, till date, including the famous late Igwe Tabansi Udene, visited Aguleri for certain traditional rites, without which they would not have become traditional rulers of Nri. All the above facts amply confirm that Aguleri was the first settlement and the ancestral home of the Igbos, and not Nri, as erroneously claimed by Igwe Onyeso.

IGWE ONYESO AT AGULERI
In fulfillment of the age-long traditional rites for kingship in Nri, Igwe Obidiegwu Onyeso, as Igwe-elect, visited Aguleri in 1988, accompanied by a delegation from Nri, which included the late prominent lawyer, Chief Ezebilo Umeadi (SAN). Igwe-elect Onyeso and his delegation spent seven days in Aguleri, from 9th February to 15th February, 1988, visiting sacred places, paying homage and making sacrifices to certain deities/shrines. On arrival at Aguleri on 9th February, 1988, and after a brief reception at Obuga, at Umuezora, Enugwu Aguleri, Igwe-elect Onyeso and his people, the same day, went to Igboezunu Aguleri, where they visited the Okpanime shrine and Ama-Ovo (Ofo). At Okpanime, at Eziama, Igboezunu, they told the elders of Igboezunu that they had come to the shrine to ask for its blessings, to ensure a successful coronation of the Igwe-elect, Obidiegwu Onyeso. They presented kolanuts and thirty Naira in support of the kolanuts (i.e. ‘ego-oji’), some bottles of hot drink and tubers of yam, as well as a ram and a rooster, as items of homage and sacrifice to Okpanime. Thereafter, Igwe-elect Obidiegwu Onyeso told the Chief Priest of Okpanime shrine that he had come with his people to perform the traditional rites required of him as Igwe-elect of Nri, as his predecessors had done, and pleaded with Okpanime to forgive whatever might be their shortcomings and bless him. Responding, the Chief Priest recalled that two Igwes-elect of Nri had come in the past to the Okpanime shrine in his life-time for their coronation rites. He took a kolanut, presented it to ‘Chukwu Abiame’ (the God of Abraham), and called on Okpanime and two prominent deities of Aguleri, the Otutunzu Aguleri and the Ajana-Ukwu Aguleri, and also on ‘Anyanwu and Agballa’ to grant the Igwe-elect a successful coronation and reign as the traditional ruler of Nri.

From Okpanime, the delegation went to Ama-Ovo (Ofo) at Umumba, Igboezunu. The Chief Priest of the Ofo deity at Ama-Ofo mildly rebuked Igwe-elect Onyeso and his delegation for going to Okpanime shrine first, before visiting Ama-Ofo. He explained that by tradition the Igwe-elect and his delegation must have the Ofo before visiting Okpanime and other deities/shrines in Aguleri, hence the need to visit Ama-Ofo first, so as to receive the Ofo. The Nri people apologized for the error. Again, they presented kolanuts, with ‘ego oji’, some bottles of hot drink and tubers of yam, as well as a ram and a rooster, as items of homage and sacrifice at Ama-Ofo. The Chief Priest pointed at the Ofo tree in the place and remarked that the tree was as old as Aguleri. He prayed for a long and successful reign of the Igwe-elect as the Eze Nri. Speaking at the occasion, Igwe-elect Onyeso reiterated that he was following the footsteps of his predecessors by coming to Aguleri for certain traditional rites for Eze Nri. He affirmed that according to their oral tradition, Menri, the founder of Nri, left his father’s home at Aguleri on a hunting expedition and finally settled at the present-day Agukwu-Nri. The Nri delegation later danced for the Ofo deity, as directed by the Chief Priest, and in compliance with tradition. In conclusion of the ceremonies at Ama-Ofo, the Chief Priest handed over three Ofo sticks tied together, representing the three quarters of Aguleri, to a member of the Igwe-elect's delegation, on his behalf. He explained that he did not give the Igwe-elect the Ofo because the Ofo did not belong to the Eze Nri alone, but to the entire Nri people. From Ama-Ofo, they left for Ama-Okpu, at Ivite Aguleri.
On arrival at Ama-Okpu, Igwe-elect Onyeso and his people immediately performed the ritual of praying at the Oye shrine, with their hands raised, in total submission to the god of their father. The Chief Priest prayed for the support and blessing of Oye towards the success of the coronation of Igwe-elect Onyeso, as well as for his long reign as Eze Nri, since he and his people had complied with tradition by coming to the home of their father and before the Oye shrine. As was the case at Okpanime and Ama-Ofo, again, Igwe-elect Onyeso presented kolanuts, with ‘ego oji’, some bottles of hot drink and tubers of yam, as well as a ram and a rooster, as items of homage and sacrifice at Ama-Okpu. The Chief Priest of Oye Shrine told the Nri delegation that Okpu was their ancestral home, from where Menri, the founder of Nri, and his descendants left for their present settlement at Agu-Ukwu. He said that any Igwe-elect of Nri who failed to come to Aguleri to perform the necessary traditional rites would not be Eze Nri, and recalled that one or two of such people in the past did not end well. After the ceremonies at Ama-Okpu, the delegation left for Obuga, at Enugwu Aguleri, at about 7.30pm, marking the end of their activities on their first day in Aguleri.
The following day, 10th February, 1988, at Ama-Obuga (Obuga Public Square), Igwe-elect Onyeso and his delegation, again, and for the fourth time, made a presentation of some items as homage and sacrifice to the gods. This time, instead of a ram, they presented a cow, as well as kolanuts, with ‘ego oji’, some bottles of hot drink and tubers of yam, and also a rooster. One of the elders of Enugwu Aguleri, Ogbuanyinya Chinwuba Nweke, prayed for a hitch-free coronation for Igwe-elect Onyeso and pleaded with the gods to reveal to the oraculists, diviners and seers assembled at Obuga from Aguleri and beyond the identity of the person they (the gods) had chosen to collect ‘Ududu-Eze’ from the bottom of the confluence of Ezu and Anambra rivers (‘Agbanabo-Ezu-na-Omabala’) for the Igwe-elect of Nri, according to tradition. The next day, 11th February, 1988, one Igbanugo Ajana, a young boy from Umuezeora family of Enugwu Aguleri, was identified as the person to undertake the assignment. Igbanugo Ajana, who was then at Okombi camp, at Aguleri-Otu, was sent for by the head of his family. On arrival, Igbanugo Ajana was made to undergo three days of spiritual purification at Obuga. Meanwhile, Igwe-elect Onyeso sojourned at Obuga, waiting for the completion of the traditional rites.
Re: Aguleri Is The Ancestral Home Of The Igbos, Not Nri - Daily Sun, July 15, 2014 by eri1stson: 12:35pm On Jul 15, 2014
Very early in the morning of the seventh day of the visit of Igwe-elect Onyeso and his people to Aguleri (i.e. on 15th February, 1988), an elder from Enugwu Aguleri, Ogbuevi Ekwuo Agbasionwe, led a young virgin boy and Igbanugo Ajana, accompanied by Igwe-elect Onyeso and his delegation, as well as other Enugwu Aguleri elders and youths, on foot, from Obuga to the Anambra river, a distance of about three kilometers. Igbanugo Ajana, together with Ekwuo Agbasionwe and a few young men were then taken in a canoe to Agbanabo, while Igwe-elect Onyeso and others waited at the river bank. At Agbanabo, Igbanugo Ajana jumped into the river, while those who had accompanied him moved away and waited around for him to surface. After About two hours at the bottom of the river, Igbanugo Ajana emerged with some white clay in his palms. Those who had been hanging around for him, picked him up and took him back to the river bank, where others, including Igwe-elect Onyeso, had been waiting for him.
With the white clay in his palms, Igbanugo Ajana went to where the Igwe-elect and the virgin boy, who was now carrying a traditional wooden saucer covered with white cloth, were standing, and dropped the white clay in the wooden saucer. Ekwuo Agbasionwe wrapped the clay with the white cloth in the wooden saucer, which was then presented to Igwe-elect Onyeso, and he took the white clay, representing the Ududu-Eze. According to the elders of Aguleri, any object in the palms of the person that went to the bottom of the river at Agbanabo, be it clay, stone, stick, or whatever, is the Ududu-Eze, also known as ‘Ikekelu-Eze Nri’ (the power that creates Eze Nri). So, immediately Igwe-elect Obidiegwu Onyeso removed the Ududu-Eze from the wooden saucer, there was great jubilation, with praise singers and drummers from Nri singing his praise and thanking Aguleri and the gods for making their visit successful by giving their Igwe-elect the Idudu-Eze. By this time, everybody was hurrying back to Obuga, because, according to tradition, the Ududu-Eze should not spend the night at Aguleri, since it is the power/authority for rulership over Nri, and not Aguleri.
Back at Obuga, Igwe-elect Obidiegwu Onyeso now had the Ofo, which was given to him at Ama-Ofo, in one hand and the Ududu-Eze in the other hand. At this stage, His Royal Majesty, Eze Chukwuemeka Eri of Enugwu Aguleri, sat Igwe-elect Onyeso down on the replica of the throne of Agulu, which is at Obuga. From that moment, Igwe-elect Obidiegwu Onyeso became traditionally confirmed as the Igwe of Nri or Eze Nri. As soon as he got up from the throne at Obuga, Igwe Onyeso went back to the deities/shrines in the various quarters of Aguleri on a ‘thank you’ visit, for helping him to become the traditional ruler of Nri. Thereafter, he and his delegation left for Nri. After three native weeks (i.e twelve days) of Igwe Obidiegwu Onyeso leaving Aguleri, Ogbuevi Ekwuo Agbasionwe, acting on behalf of Aguleri elders, and in keeping with tradition, went to Nri to recite to Igwe Onyeso the do’s and don’ts (‘Igu Nso’) of being in possession of the Ofo and Ududu-Eze from Aguleri, as the traditional ruler of Agukwu-Nri.

TRADITIONAL OBLIGATION
It is, indeed, unbelievable that after going through all these coronation rites, Igwe Onyeso could refer to his visit to Aguleri in 1988 in a very casual and less-than-honest manner, by saying that “any coronated Eze Nri must obtain clay from the bottom where two rivers meet; the nearest place that meets the requirement was the confluence of Ezu and Omabala. I therefore went to Agbanabo to collect the clay for Udu Eze meant for Eze Nri. That I slept in Obuga was to shorten the distance to where I obtained the clay soil for the moulding of Udu-Eze. Aguleri and Nri do not have much in common". Igwe Onyeso knows, from the bottom of his heart, that he was being very economical with the truth. From the details given above, his visit to Aguleri to collect the Ududu-Eze or clay from Agbanabo is not a casual affair. It goes with a lot of ceremonies and tradition. Besides, Agbanabo, in the oral tradition of Eri clan, including Nri, is not just
any place "where two rivers meet". It has great spiritual significance, because it was at this point that Eri had a divine revelation that they had reached their ordained place of settlement. Members of Eri clan, including Nri, therefore, have a strong spiritual attachment to Agbanabo. And this has made it an important and mandatory feature in the coronation rites of the people of Nri. That was why Igwe Onyeso had to go to Agbanabo, at Aguleri, as a matter of traditional obligation, and not merely as any place "where two rivers meet".

As for Igwe Onyeso's reason for spending the night at Obuga, one may ask: is Obuga a guest house, or a hotel? The fact is that Obuga is a place for spiritual re-dedication and the evocation of the proud ancestry of Eri descendants and Ndi Igbo in general. It is a sacred place for royal empowerment and self-purification. Igwe Onyeso knows all this. And that was the real reason he went to Obuga. Also, it is quite misleading for Igwe Onyeso to give the covert impression that he spent only one night at Obuga, when he said: “that I slept in Obuga was to shorten the distance to where I obtained the clay soil for the moulding of Udu-Eze”. This is very untrue. He spent seven clear days at Obuga, in the performance of certain traditional rites at Aguleri for the Eze Nri, and was sleeping on the floor with a mat, as demanded by tradition.
Perhaps, it should be mentioned here that the visit of Igwe Obidiegwu Onyeso, as Igwe-elect, with his people to Aguleri in 1988, including the places he went to, making sacrifices and paying homage to certain deities/shrines, was well captured in a video coverage. The video is available in Aguleri archives for anyone who cares to see and is interested in knowing the truth.

KINGSHIP INSTITUTION IN AGULERI
We find it difficult to believe that Igwe Obidiegwu Onyeso of Agukwu-Nri is genuinely ignorant when he claimed that "Aguleri people have never produced Eze Aguleri since the beginning of time". If that is so, then it is a terrible exhibition of an unpardonable ignorance. According to Aguleri oral tradition, kingship started in Aguleri ‘ube eri’ or ‘mgbe eri’, meaning since the time of Eri, hence, one of the coronation rites Igwe-elect Onyeso performed at Aguleri was to sit on the replica of the throne of Agulu-Nwa-Eri at Obuga. But, specifically, there is the Umuezeora family of Enugwu Aguleri, which produced over thirty kings of Aguleri, up to the 18th century, and has continued, in recent times, up to now, to produce the Eze of Enugwu Aguleri. We also have the Idigo dynasty of Iruokechi family of Eziagulu Aguleri, which has produced Eze Aguleri from 1900 till date. Both dynasties are from Ugwunadegbe Aguleri.

CONCLUSION
We have gone into all the above details, in order to effectively debunk the false claims of Igwe Obidiegwu Onyeso. In the process, we believe we have also proved that Aguleri, and not Nri, is the first son of Eri and the ancestral home of Ndi-Igbo. We do not know what propelled our brother, Igwe Obidiegwu Onyeso, to engage in virtual apostasy by repudiating the traditional rites he went through at Aguleri, as well as the unwarranted denigration of Aguleri and the sacred and spiritual facts about Eri and his descendants, even to the extent of saying that “Aguleri and Nri do not have much in common”. This was after he had stated that Aguleri and Nri were among the direct children of Eri. We are, indeed, at a loss to understand our brother any more. We hope it is not a case of "he who the gods want to destroy, they first make mad”. Be that as it may, the spiritual and traditional bond between Aguleri and Nri cannot easily be wished away, just as we are reminded of the fate of some Igwes of Nri in the past, who failed to visit Aguleri to consummate the traditional rites for kingship in Nri. Perhaps, what happened to them is instructive and should be a guide to all it may concern!

ADDENDUM

Our attention has also been drawn to another story on the same subject matter of Igbo history, captioned: “How Igbo migrated from Israel”, published in the Daily Sun of Wednesday, May 28, 2014, by Elder Edozieuno Ndive Aniegboke of Umueri. The write-up appears to be driven by a strong desire to re-write the history of Umuleri, recently changed to Umueri, rather than an effort to enlighten the public. Of course, in doing this, Aniegboke distorted a lot of historical facts and manufactured stories to fit his design. He also engaged in his usual pastime of insulting Aguleri. Be it in spurious petitions written by him or his ilk against Aguleri, or in articles, such as the instant one, the “mercenaries from Aguleri” must be an issue. For instance, in the story in question, he concluded that “it is these mercenaries from Aguleri and co that are forcing (these) names of different known and unknown communities on Eri which the Aguleris don’t belong to”. He also falsified history when he insinuated that the name “Aguleri” was originally “Agu-Eri”, but because “the whiteman could not pronounce Agu-Eri hence he added the alphabet (L) to become Aguleri”. This is absolute fiction. The name Aguleri is supported by empirical evidence, for Agulu was the first son of Eri and the founder of ‘Agulu-Eri’ (Aguleri). It has also remained constant since the dawn of the history of Aguleri.

Indeed, Aniegboke’s article is more of nuisance value than any serious contribution to Igbo history. It is as confusing as it is full of historical inaccuracies and contradictions. At best, it is a comic relief. However, in the maze of confusion in the story, Aniegboke labored hard to assign a new founder to Umuleri, in the person of either Dabaw or Eri, as he appears not to have made up his mind yet on which one to stick to. In one instance, he claimed that Umuleri “are direct descendants of Dabaw”, and in another place he referred to Umuleri as “the original Eri descendants.” But the truth of the matter is that Igbo history is short or silent on the historical paternity of Umuleri. Rather, there is historical knowledge that Adamgbo, the daughter of Eri, was the founder of Umuleri, hence Umuleri and Aguleri are generally regarded as related communities, since Adamgbo was the sister of Agulu, the founder of Aguleri. Another school of thought has it that Umuelri was founded by Iguedo, an itinerant woman, hence Umuleri is a prominent member of the ‘Umu-Iguedo’ communities, till date. These are easily verifiable facts. And they are confirmed by the oral traditions of Umuleri and Aguleri, as well as of the ‘Umu-Iguedo’ clan. As a matter of fact, the original name of Umuleri bore evidence of the above circumstances of its founding. The name then was ‘Umu-Ulu-Eri’ (children of profit to Eri), since they are the children/descendants of Adamgbo, the daughter of Eri, who was not known in history to be married. It was later shortened to ‘Umuleri’, and just recently changed to ‘Umueri’. A more detailed comment on Aniegboke’s concoction of history will be made later, if need be.

Long live Aguleri! Long live Ndi-Igbo!! Long live Nigeria!!!

Signed by:

Chief Ralph Igwah

Chief Eddy Okoye

Chief Osita Chinwuba

Chief (Hon) Jerome Nnechi (JP)

Chief Paul Nnamah

Prince Raph Chikwenze

Chief Emma Ikem

Chief George Ejimofor (JP)

Chief Charles Chieze

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Re: Aguleri Is The Ancestral Home Of The Igbos, Not Nri - Daily Sun, July 15, 2014 by fijiano202(m): 12:54pm On Jul 15, 2014
Nice,this is the first igbo history that i can honestly believe

1 Like

Re: Aguleri Is The Ancestral Home Of The Igbos, Not Nri - Daily Sun, July 15, 2014 by OrlandoOwoh(m): 1:30pm On Jul 15, 2014
From Israel to Egypt, now it is Aguleri. Igbo people are confused.

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Re: Aguleri Is The Ancestral Home Of The Igbos, Not Nri - Daily Sun, July 15, 2014 by maestroferddi: 2:04pm On Jul 15, 2014
OrlandoOwoh: From Israel to Egypt, now it is Aguleri. Igbo people are confused.
Quit this blatant envy. It is so obvious...

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Re: Aguleri Is The Ancestral Home Of The Igbos, Not Nri - Daily Sun, July 15, 2014 by OrlandoOwoh(m): 2:18pm On Jul 15, 2014
maestroferddi: Quit this blatant envy. It is so obvious...
Do you even know the meaning of envy?

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Re: Aguleri Is The Ancestral Home Of The Igbos, Not Nri - Daily Sun, July 15, 2014 by Evergreeen123: 2:31pm On Jul 15, 2014
Aguleri is no mans land
Re: Aguleri Is The Ancestral Home Of The Igbos, Not Nri - Daily Sun, July 15, 2014 by maestroferddi: 2:53pm On Jul 15, 2014
OrlandoOwoh:
Do you even know the meaning of envy?
You tell me. When your rabid tendencies is stifling your ability to muster some semblance of constructive thinking. Maybe you do not know that Jacob and his children migrated to Egypt and that his descendants spent centuries therein. Maybe, just maybe...

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Re: Aguleri Is The Ancestral Home Of The Igbos, Not Nri - Daily Sun, July 15, 2014 by Abagworo(m): 2:57pm On Jul 15, 2014
These people keep trying to twist history with figments of their own imagination. Only a non-grounded Igbo man does not know his immediate history and a bit of the past. They should stop trying to link Igbos with borrowed religion because white men came and brainwashed our fathers in the last century. Igbos are a bit of every tribe around them with a core between Owerri and Awka.

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Re: Aguleri Is The Ancestral Home Of The Igbos, Not Nri - Daily Sun, July 15, 2014 by OrlandoOwoh(m): 3:10pm On Jul 15, 2014
maestroferddi: You tell me. When your rabid tendencies is stifling your ability to muster some semblance of constructive thinking. Maybe you do know that Jacob and his children migrated to Egypt and that his descendants spent millennia therein. Maybe, just maybe...
Maybe? You are not sure then. When you are, I will reply you.

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Re: Aguleri Is The Ancestral Home Of The Igbos, Not Nri - Daily Sun, July 15, 2014 by OdenigboAroli(m): 3:10pm On Jul 15, 2014
Abagworo: These people keep trying to twist history with figments of their own imagination. Only a non-grounded Igbo man does not know his immediate history and a bit of the past. They should stop trying to link Igbos with borrowed religion because white men came and brainwashed our fathers in the last century. Igbos are a bit of every tribe around them with a core between Owerri and Awka.

Well, Aguleri is as old as Methuselah; I don't agree that all Igbo originated from Eri/Not but a big chunk of the Igbo populace trace there origin to what is known as Anambra today. You claimed Owerri to Awka as the core with no historical facts. If you study the cultural and migratory trend of the Igbo you will understand who moved from where to where.

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Re: Aguleri Is The Ancestral Home Of The Igbos, Not Nri - Daily Sun, July 15, 2014 by maestroferddi: 3:15pm On Jul 15, 2014
OrlandoOwoh:
Maybe? You are not sure then. When you are, I will reply you.
Sorry, the joke is on you to disprove the postulations being made by showing who else are the descendants of Eri, the son of Gad
Re: Aguleri Is The Ancestral Home Of The Igbos, Not Nri - Daily Sun, July 15, 2014 by OrlandoOwoh(m): 3:21pm On Jul 15, 2014
maestroferddi: Sorry, the joke is on you to disprove the postulations being made by showing who else are the descendants of Eri, the son of Gad
There is nothing to show that Igbo are from Egypt or Israel.
Re: Aguleri Is The Ancestral Home Of The Igbos, Not Nri - Daily Sun, July 15, 2014 by maestroferddi: 3:27pm On Jul 15, 2014
OrlandoOwoh:
There is nothing to show that Igbo are from Egypt or Israel.
And they call this kind of petulance that wouldn't challenge historical narratives with valid counterpoints envy in my book. I don't know what they call it in yours...

1 Like

Re: Aguleri Is The Ancestral Home Of The Igbos, Not Nri - Daily Sun, July 15, 2014 by OrlandoOwoh(m): 3:35pm On Jul 15, 2014
maestroferddi: And they call this kind of petulance that wouldn't challenge historical narratives with valid counterpoints envy in my book. I don't know what they call it in yours...
You are a poor student of history. What historiography teaches you that, I'm sure it is not Thucydide's?
Re: Aguleri Is The Ancestral Home Of The Igbos, Not Nri - Daily Sun, July 15, 2014 by EmeeNaka: 3:35pm On Jul 15, 2014
Abagworo: These people keep trying to twist history with figments of their own imagination. Only a non-grounded Igbo man does not know his immediate history and a bit of the past. They should stop trying to link Igbos with borrowed religion because white men came and brainwashed our fathers in the last century. Igbos are a bit of every tribe around them with a core between Owerri and Awka.
Dont mind those fools. I cant imagine someone being confident writing that kind of nonsense.
Re: Aguleri Is The Ancestral Home Of The Igbos, Not Nri - Daily Sun, July 15, 2014 by Abagworo(m): 3:36pm On Jul 15, 2014
"According to the tradition of the Nri themselves, a man of Igala stock from Idah called Eri, son of Achado, a native doctor and hunter, came down the Omambala River in search of the River at a place later called Aguleri (Aguleri Igbo), and begat a number of children, to whom he passed on the secrets of his arts. His eldest son, who succeeded to the paraphernalia of his trade, was called Nriifikwuanim. This first son moved farther into Igbo land and settled among the Ugbene people, who showed him a portion of their farmland called “Agu Ukwu” to live and farm upon.

Nriifikwuanim prospered and became known not only for his powers to cure diseases, but also for his readiness to assume the risk of cleansing people of abominations. He was able to do this because abominations were sins against the Earth goddess – Aja Ana, and being a non-Igbo person he was not subject to the power of any Aja Ana in Igboland. What was “Alu” ―abomination‖ to the Igbo was not Alu to him, and what was “Nso” (forbidden conduct) did not concern him. He came from a different clime. He could, therefore, perform ceremonies to cleanse people of abominations attaching to them, and so make them acceptable to their communities once more. He took things – clothes, property – for his own use which the Igbos regarded as unclean or prohibited from the Igbo gods. He got rich thereby. From removing the stains of abomination from people, Nriifikwuanim developed the technique of sanctifying things in general, by rituals which he devised; for example, driving away evil spirits from or around people (exorcism)."

"When he became famous, he decided to move from Ugbene to the more populous areas of Igboland. He came and dwelt near Oka, on the land of another Igbo community owners of the land where he settled, by giving them a percentage of his earnings, in cash or kind; hence the saying “Ivbe Nri evbe Adama” ―What you pay to Nri Nri pays to Adama’s people‖.

Adama was the Head of Umudiana Village of Adazi, owners of the land, who gave the first land they settled upon to the Nris. Later on, the Nris expanded by buying more land for themselves. From the time they lived at Ugbene, Nriifikwuanim and his followers were referred to as “Ndu bun a Agu Ukwu” ―dwellers in Agu Ukwu land of the Ugbenes). From this reference to their locality the name “Agu Ukwu” identified Nriifikwuanim and his people, and even when they had left Ugbene town, they were still known as “Agu Ukwu” people. Also the title-name of Eze of today – Udene is but the corrupted form of the name Ugbene. So, when they came to live near Oka to work, the community of Nriifikwuanim was known as Agu Ukwu, and their place of habitation Agukwu town. In modern times, the name has been changed to Nri town, after the name of their ancestor – Nriifikwuanim. But the Ikolo drums of the Nris still call them: “Agu Ukwu Ugbene Agu Ukwu Ugbene!”"

"What Nriifikwuanim (Nri in shortened form) was able to do was most welcome to the Oka people. Previously, an offender who had committed an abomination – alu - which was a sin against Aja Ana, the Earth Goddess, and was infact a grievous offence whose tendency was to disrupt the solidarity of the society or affect the corporate existence of Oka, such as a person having carnal knowledge of the person’s father’s wife while the father was alive, or committing incest, could only be killed or sold into slavery. Such a person must, in any case, be excluded from the society which he had tried to tear asunder. There was no way of bringing him back, for no one could forgive offences against the gods.

But then there came a stranger, whom the Igbo gods could not touch, who said he could cleanse abominations by taking the risks upon himself. So, a second alternative opened up. An offender could be re-integrated with his community (after suffering whatever penalty was imposed on him by the community) by making his peace with the gods, after being cleansed of his abominable stain through a ceremony by Nriifikwuanim.


Nriifikwuanim and his descendants were, therefore, very much welcomed in Oka town. Their services were required wherever sanctification was called for. They were invited where evil spirits were to be driven out of a household, or when people must purify themselves to take a particular title (so as not to die in the midst of the ceremonies), or when a house must be cleansed because a man who had committed an abomination had died within it, or when unknown gods must be"

"Contrary to popular misconception, Nris were not Oka people, and Oka people were not Nris; for whereas Nris were of Igala stock, Okas were original Igbo. There was no blood connection between them. But the two groups of people co-operated with one another, and worked harmoniously together. Both traveled extensively throughout Igboland. And while the Nris looked after the spiritual needs of the people they served, the Okas looked after their economic well-being. That could be the meaning of the Ogene song, which went like this:- “:Etuvbe, etuvbe, gbavba-a-gbavba Oka na Nri bu ovbu, ebe-ne-be!”
(If you look deep into history, You will find that Oka and Nri are one). The two sets of people certainly complemented each other."

Because of the Nris ability to sanctify things, by removing the religious pollutions attached to them; and their ability to propitiate the gods, known and unknown, they were credited with the unique power of communicating with the gods. Therefore, wherever an Nri man was present in Igboland, he broke the kolanut, whether his elders were present or not. He did this, however, if no Oka man was present. If an Oka man was present, it was the Oka man that broke the kolanut, provided he was older than the Nri man. There was an ancient saying: Nri anara awakpo Oka oji” (No Nri man takes precedence over an Oka man in breaking the kolanut). The reason for the rule was that Oka people asserted that since it was they who manufactured the “Otonshi” – the metal staff or wand – with which the Nri performed their magical rites, it was not proper that the Nris should claim precedence over the creators of their source of power. The Nri themselves called their tool “Otonshi Nri ji eli Igbo”, meaning magic to Oka culture, and the cleansing of abominations – “nkpu alu”."

SOURCE: The Awka People by Amanke Okafor, page 53-55

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Re: Aguleri Is The Ancestral Home Of The Igbos, Not Nri - Daily Sun, July 15, 2014 by OdenigboAroli(m): 3:48pm On Jul 15, 2014
Abagworo: "According to the tradition of the Nri themselves, a man of Igala stock from Idah called Eri, son of Achado, a native doctor and hunter, came down the Omambala River in search of the River at a place later called Aguleri (Aguleri Igbo), and begat a number of children, to whom he passed on the secrets of his arts. His eldest son, who succeeded to the paraphernalia of his trade, was called Nriifikwuanim. This first son moved farther into Igbo land and settled among the Ugbene people, who showed him a portion of their farmland called “Agu Ukwu” to live and farm upon.

Nriifikwuanim prospered and became known not only for his powers to cure diseases, but also for his readiness to assume the risk of cleansing people of abominations. He was able to do this because abominations were sins against the Earth goddess – Aja Ana, and being a non-Igbo person he was not subject to the power of any Aja Ana in Igboland. What was “Alu” ―abomination‖ to the Igbo was not Alu to him, and what was “Nso” (forbidden conduct) did not concern him. He came from a different clime. He could, therefore, perform ceremonies to cleanse people of abominations attaching to them, and so make them acceptable to their communities once more. He took things – clothes, property – for his own use which the Igbos regarded as unclean or prohibited from the Igbo gods. He got rich thereby. From removing the stains of abomination from people, Nriifikwuanim developed the technique of sanctifying things in general, by rituals which he devised; for example, driving away evil spirits from or around people (exorcism)."

"When he became famous, he decided to move from Ugbene to the more populous areas of Igboland. He came and dwelt near Oka, on the land of another Igbo community owners of the land where he settled, by giving them a percentage of his earnings, in cash or kind; hence the saying “Ivbe Nri evbe Adama” ―What you pay to Nri Nri pays to Adama’s people‖.

Adama was the Head of Umudiana Village of Adazi, owners of the land, who gave the first land they settled upon to the Nris. Later on, the Nris expanded by buying more land for themselves. From the time they lived at Ugbene, Nriifikwuanim and his followers were referred to as “Ndu bun a Agu Ukwu” ―dwellers in Agu Ukwu land of the Ugbenes). From this reference to their locality the name “Agu Ukwu” identified Nriifikwuanim and his people, and even when they had left Ugbene town, they were still known as “Agu Ukwu” people. Also the title-name of Eze of today – Udene is but the corrupted form of the name Ugbene. So, when they came to live near Oka to work, the community of Nriifikwuanim was known as Agu Ukwu, and their place of habitation Agukwu town. In modern times, the name has been changed to Nri town, after the name of their ancestor – Nriifikwuanim. But the Ikolo drums of the Nris still call them: “Agu Ukwu Ugbene Agu Ukwu Ugbene!”"

"What Nriifikwuanim (Nri in shortened form) was able to do was most welcome to the Oka people. Previously, an offender who had committed an abomination – alu - which was a sin against Aja Ana, the Earth Goddess, and was infact a grievous offence whose tendency was to disrupt the solidarity of the society or affect the corporate existence of Oka, such as a person having carnal knowledge of the person’s father’s wife while the father was alive, or committing incest, could only be killed or sold into slavery. Such a person must, in any case, be excluded from the society which he had tried to tear asunder. There was no way of bringing him back, for no one could forgive offences against the gods.

But then there came a stranger, whom the Igbo gods could not touch, who said he could cleanse abominations by taking the risks upon himself. So, a second alternative opened up. An offender could be re-integrated with his community (after suffering whatever penalty was imposed on him by the community) by making his peace with the gods, after being cleansed of his abominable stain through a ceremony by Nriifikwuanim.


Nriifikwuanim and his descendants were, therefore, very much welcomed in Oka town. Their services were required wherever sanctification was called for. They were invited where evil spirits were to be driven out of a household, or when people must purify themselves to take a particular title (so as not to die in the midst of the ceremonies), or when a house must be cleansed because a man who had committed an abomination had died within it, or when unknown gods must be"

"Contrary to popular misconception, Nris were not Oka people, and Oka people were not Nris; for whereas Nris were of Igala stock, Okas were original Igbo. There was no blood connection between them. But the two groups of people co-operated with one another, and worked harmoniously together. Both traveled extensively throughout Igboland. And while the Nris looked after the spiritual needs of the people they served, the Okas looked after their economic well-being. That could be the meaning of the Ogene song, which went like this:- “:Etuvbe, etuvbe, gbavba-a-gbavba Oka na Nri bu ovbu, ebe-ne-be!”
(If you look deep into history, You will find that Oka and Nri are one). The two sets of people certainly complemented each other."

Because of the Nris ability to sanctify things, by removing the religious pollutions attached to them; and their ability to propitiate the gods, known and unknown, they were credited with the unique power of communicating with the gods. Therefore, wherever an Nri man was present in Igboland, he broke the kolanut, whether his elders were present or not. He did this, however, if no Oka man was present. If an Oka man was present, it was the Oka man that broke the kolanut, provided he was older than the Nri man. There was an ancient saying: Nri anara awakpo Oka oji” (No Nri man takes precedence over an Oka man in breaking the kolanut). The reason for the rule was that Oka people asserted that since it was they who manufactured the “Otonshi” – the metal staff or wand – with which the Nri performed their magical rites, it was not proper that the Nris should claim precedence over the creators of their source of power. The Nri themselves called their tool “Otonshi Nri ji eli Igbo”, meaning magic to Oka culture, and the cleansing of abominations – “nkpu alu”."

SOURCE: The Awka People by Amanke Okafor, page 53-55

So,Amanke Okafor is the authentic Nri history writer? How about Onwuejeogwu, Isichei? All of a sudden we are from Igala just because you want to stain our status as the custodians of the. Igbo culture and traditions. Look,this is bigger than you,I swear!

3 Likes

Re: Aguleri Is The Ancestral Home Of The Igbos, Not Nri - Daily Sun, July 15, 2014 by ChinoElects: 3:55pm On Jul 15, 2014
grin grin grin grin

Nwanne do not waste your time with that clown! He is only bitter that Anambra is the root of Igbo race! There is nothing he can do about it, he can't re-write history! cheesy


OdenigboAroli:

So,Amanke Okafor is the authentic Nri history writer? How about Onwuejeogwu, Isichei? All of a sudden we are from Igala just because you want to stain our status as the custodians of the. Igbo culture and traditions. Look,this is bigger than you,I swear!

2 Likes

Re: Aguleri Is The Ancestral Home Of The Igbos, Not Nri - Daily Sun, July 15, 2014 by Abagworo(m): 3:56pm On Jul 15, 2014
OdenigboAroli:

So,Amanke Okafor is the authentic Nri history writer? How about Onwuejeogwu, Isichei? All of a sudden we are from Igala just because you want to stain our status as the custodians of the. Igbo culture and traditions. Look,this is bigger than you,I swear!
. Do you want more history from other sources? I'm too knowledgeable to be deceived with falsehood and distorted history. Igboland has a core of Dialas/Dianas/Dialis/Dianis also Ifite/Ihite/Ivite/Ihi'e also Okpu/nfu which literally translates to aborigines. Beyond that core which stretches between Awka and Owerri are more of us either from the east as Efik/Ibibio or South as Ijaw or West as Bini/Yoruba or North as Igala/Tiv/Idoma that moved in as the Owerri/Awka were moving out to form a buffer with mix of the core and other cultures. You don't need a soothsayer to know that.

2 Likes

Re: Aguleri Is The Ancestral Home Of The Igbos, Not Nri - Daily Sun, July 15, 2014 by size38: 4:51pm On Jul 15, 2014
I think the Igbo Tribe should be questioned properly to get get their proper history. The Igbos have claimed to come from all corners of the world with no proper documentation about their Origin. Today u hear them claim Israel tomorrow, they claim Egypt. The next time they say Nri, Aro and stuffs like that. What is the Origin of the Igbos?

5 Likes

Re: Aguleri Is The Ancestral Home Of The Igbos, Not Nri - Daily Sun, July 15, 2014 by Abagworo(m): 5:23pm On Jul 15, 2014
size38: I think the Igbo Tribe should be questioned properly to get get their proper history. The Igbos have claimed to come from all corners of the world with no proper documentation about their Origin. Today u hear them claim Israel tomorrow, they claim Egypt. The next time they say Nri, Aro and stuffs like that. What is the Origin of the Igbos?
. Igbos know themselves and this nonsense is in no way peculiar to Igbos. Much of the black race who should be the origin of mankind have got their minds locked to an inferior belief of emerging from outside their homeland in a place which in modern day enjoys some level of advanced civilisation. For example as ridiculous as the Adam and Eve story sounds, we believe it in place of our own equally ridiculous story of creation just because it came from the whitemen. All Africans have story of creation and that should be our basis of argument and not that of the Europeans they brought in the 17th century.

2 Likes

Re: Aguleri Is The Ancestral Home Of The Igbos, Not Nri - Daily Sun, July 15, 2014 by bloodykiller: 5:31pm On Jul 15, 2014
Abagworo: . Igbos know themselves and this nonsense is in no way peculiar to Igbos. Much of the black race who should be the origin of mankind have got their minds locked to an inferior belief of emerging from outside their homeland in a place which in modern day enjoys some level of advanced civilisation. For example as ridiculous as the Adam and Eve story sounds, we believe it in place of our own equally ridiculous story of creation just because it came from the whitemen. All Africans have story of creation and that should be our basis of argument and not that of the Europeans they brought in the 17th century.

abagworo
Re: Aguleri Is The Ancestral Home Of The Igbos, Not Nri - Daily Sun, July 15, 2014 by Nobody: 5:31pm On Jul 15, 2014
All I know is that igbos are not the descendants of lost jews, all the talk of eri and gad is bullcrap
Re: Aguleri Is The Ancestral Home Of The Igbos, Not Nri - Daily Sun, July 15, 2014 by kmariko: 5:55pm On Jul 15, 2014
Whats with this stupidity among the so called intellectuals to link the Igbos with the middle east. why not look at human evolution within the space called " the central eastern Nigeria" is there a law in anthropology that says that Igbos did not migrate even from the banks of the futa jallon, Congo river or Benue river for that matter.

The Igbo so-called "intellectualls" are unconsciously through an invocative diffuse theory creating a sort of history - inferiority complex among their peers and more so inflicting their young "citizens" with this Middle eastern history dependency. It is the inability coupled with intellectuall laziness that the historians of Igbo origin tend to ascribe their lives to that of the Middle East.. Please guys go out there and find your history instead of paddling a patently false hood of your evolution as a tribe.

Igbos have absolutely no relationship with the Middle East... The history of human evolution in the world is pre- middle east so is the history of that evolution in " east central " part of Nigeria.
Re: Aguleri Is The Ancestral Home Of The Igbos, Not Nri - Daily Sun, July 15, 2014 by Ojiofor: 6:55pm On Jul 15, 2014
OrlandoOwoh: From Israel to Egypt, now it is Aguleri. Igbo people are confused.
No my friend Igbo people are not confused . the confused people are the children of Eri/Gad.
Re: Aguleri Is The Ancestral Home Of The Igbos, Not Nri - Daily Sun, July 15, 2014 by maestroferddi: 7:23pm On Jul 15, 2014
OrlandoOwoh:
You are a poor student of history. What historiography teaches you that, I'm sure it is not Thucydide's?
A case of dropping names? You called to question someone's hypothesis. Then the burden of proof to establish a tenable refutation should vicariously reside with you. That should be evident, don't you think?

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Re: Aguleri Is The Ancestral Home Of The Igbos, Not Nri - Daily Sun, July 15, 2014 by maestroferddi: 7:44pm On Jul 15, 2014
Abagworo: . Do you want more history from other sources? I'm too knowledgeable to be deceived with falsehood and distorted history. Igboland has a core of Dialas/Dianas/Dialis/Dianis also Ifite/Ihite/Ivite/Ihi'e also Okpu/nfu which literally translates to aborigines. Beyond that core which stretches between Awka and Owerri are more of us either from the east as Efik/Ibibio or South as Ijaw or West as Bini/Yoruba or North as Igala/Tiv/Idoma that moved in as the Owerri/Awka were moving out to form a buffer with mix of the core and other cultures. You don't need a soothsayer to know that.
I am really disappointed that you did paste that crap of a narrative. Where in Igboland has a stranger come to supplant/overshadow the bonafide sons of the soil? Someone sold you the dummy of an amateur distortion/fabrication of Igbo history and you bought it. Too bad...

2 Likes

Re: Aguleri Is The Ancestral Home Of The Igbos, Not Nri - Daily Sun, July 15, 2014 by OdenigboAroli(m): 7:47pm On Jul 15, 2014
Abagworo: . Do you want more history from other sources? I'm too knowledgeable to be deceived with falsehood and distorted history. Igboland has a core of Dialas/Dianas/Dialis/Dianis also Ifite/Ihite/Ivite/Ihi'e also Okpu/nfu which literally translates to aborigines. Beyond that core which stretches between Awka and Owerri are more of us either from the east as Efik/Ibibio or South as Ijaw or West as Bini/Yoruba or North as Igala/Tiv/Idoma that moved in as the Owerri/Awka were moving out to form a buffer with mix of the core and other cultures. You don't need a soothsayer to know that.

You are a drowning man.

1 Like

Re: Aguleri Is The Ancestral Home Of The Igbos, Not Nri - Daily Sun, July 15, 2014 by Abagworo(m): 8:00pm On Jul 15, 2014
maestroferddi: I am really disappointed that did paste that crap of a narrative. Where in Igboland has a stranger come to supplant/overshadow the bonafide sons of the soil? Someone sold you the dummy of an amateur distortion/fabrication of Igbo history and you bought it. Too bad...
. You are the one being naïve here. Igbo culture and tradition of origin is as clear as day and varies from clan to clan without any interference until whitemen came with bible and deceived our fathers into abandoning our traditional beliefs for Christianity. I'm deeply rooted traditionally and whatever I tell you here or elsewhere is the truth. Igbos believe God created them right here in Igboland. "Nri" is rooted in Igala and every true Igbo man knows that.
Re: Aguleri Is The Ancestral Home Of The Igbos, Not Nri - Daily Sun, July 15, 2014 by OdenigboAroli(m): 8:22pm On Jul 15, 2014
Abagworo: . You are the one being naïve here. Igbo culture and tradition of origin is as clear as day and varies from clan to clan without any interference until whitemen came with bible and deceived our fathers into abandoning our traditional beliefs for Christianity. I'm deeply rooted traditionally and whatever I tell you here or elsewhere is the truth. Igbos believe God created them right here in Igboland. "Nri" is rooted in Igala and every true Igbo man knows that.

Inferiority complex is a disease. And will not even dignify your madness by engaging you. Cultureless nonentity!

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