Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,148,909 members, 7,802,957 topics. Date: Saturday, 20 April 2024 at 05:14 AM

Why Do Fulanis from Kwara Like Adopting Yoruba Names: Like Kolapo And Bukola - Politics - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Why Do Fulanis from Kwara Like Adopting Yoruba Names: Like Kolapo And Bukola (4777 Views)

Oby Ezekwesili And Bukola Saraki Gets Into War Of Words / Caption This Photo Of Amaechi And Bukola Saraki / Tinubu's War With Fashola And Bukola Saraki (2) (3) (4)

(1) (Reply) (Go Down)

Why Do Fulanis from Kwara Like Adopting Yoruba Names: Like Kolapo And Bukola by crisngige(m): 9:41pm On May 14, 2015
Other examples are the Fulani Emir who adopted the Yoruba name Kolapo and Tunde Idiagbon. If anybody knows why let him say it here.
Haters and bigots keep off.
Re: Why Do Fulanis from Kwara Like Adopting Yoruba Names: Like Kolapo And Bukola by Nobody: 9:46pm On May 14, 2015
I know of a Nupe girl calling herself oritoke
Re: Why Do Fulanis from Kwara Like Adopting Yoruba Names: Like Kolapo And Bukola by OduaVanguard: 9:46pm On May 14, 2015
First answer why Ikwerres bear Igbo names? Maybe those so-called Fulanis are actually Yorubas cheesy Same way you all claim ikwerres are actually igbos. Happy now? cheesy Morafocka omo Igbo oshi.

11 Likes

Re: Why Do Fulanis from Kwara Like Adopting Yoruba Names: Like Kolapo And Bukola by crisngige(m): 9:50pm On May 14, 2015
I feel it is a political strategy.
Re: Why Do Fulanis from Kwara Like Adopting Yoruba Names: Like Kolapo And Bukola by theV0ice: 9:52pm On May 14, 2015
cheesy cheesy

Bukola Saraki is a Fulani man cheesy cheesy

Yes 'it' is cheesy

2 Likes

Re: Why Do Fulanis from Kwara Like Adopting Yoruba Names: Like Kolapo And Bukola by crisngige(m): 9:53pm On May 14, 2015
Even in the North the Fulani dont speak their Fufulde language but speak Hausa instead.

3 Likes

Re: Why Do Fulanis from Kwara Like Adopting Yoruba Names: Like Kolapo And Bukola by zimoni(f): 9:54pm On May 14, 2015
Dem don start again.

Unna no dey tire.
Re: Why Do Fulanis from Kwara Like Adopting Yoruba Names: Like Kolapo And Bukola by crisngige(m): 9:57pm On May 14, 2015
Maybe that's why he has great support in the North for senate presidency. President and senate president will then be Fulani.

1 Like

Re: Why Do Fulanis from Kwara Like Adopting Yoruba Names: Like Kolapo And Bukola by xreal: 9:57pm On May 14, 2015
zimoni:
Dem don start again.

Unna no dey tire.

no mind them.

@op
Saraki be like fulani for your eye?
Idiagbon resemble fulani for your eye?

5 Likes

Re: Why Do Fulanis from Kwara Like Adopting Yoruba Names: Like Kolapo And Bukola by crisngige(m): 10:02pm On May 14, 2015
@ xreal
they say they are Fulani so thats what they are. Its just like Rotimi Amaechi that also adopted Rotimi (Yoruba name) but he is not Yoruba but Igbo.

1 Like

Re: Why Do Fulanis from Kwara Like Adopting Yoruba Names: Like Kolapo And Bukola by crisngige(m): 1:39pm On May 15, 2015
Bukola Saraki is Fulani. Emir Kolapo Sulu Gambari of Illorin is Fulani. It is Fulani culture to name themselves after the majority tribes wherever they settle. They are both Fulanis.

3 Likes

Re: Why Do Fulanis from Kwara Like Adopting Yoruba Names: Like Kolapo And Bukola by eneidoko(f): 1:42am On May 16, 2015
crisngige:
Other examples are the Fulani Emir who adopted the Yoruba name Kolapo and Tunde Idiagbon. If anybody knows why let him say it here.
Haters and bigots keep off.

Was Idiagbon a Fulani? Is Saraki a Fulani? Just asking for sake of knowledge.
Re: Why Do Fulanis from Kwara Like Adopting Yoruba Names: Like Kolapo And Bukola by StOla: 2:06am On May 16, 2015
First of all, your question should be Ilorin, not Kwara. Kwara has distinct Yoruba regions like Offa and others, and distinct non-Fulani and non-Yoruba regions too.

Concerning Ilorin, The inter-marriage between the Fulani occupiers and Yoruba natives is majorly responsible, while name adoption is limited to very few insignificant instances.

For Bukola Saraki, of his 4 grand parents, only one is Fulani (whose ethnic homogeneity is even in doubt), the remaining 3 are Yorubas.

So Bukola's claim to being Fulani is just the surname.

I want to believe the Yoruba name of the Emir of Ilorin is Folorunsho, not Kolapo. I doubt if I'm wrong.

The present governor, Abdulfatah Ahmed, is a full blooded Yoruba man from outside Ilorin, same with late Mohammed Lawal who was even from Ilorin (who ruled before Bukola Saraki).

Concerning Tunde Idiagbon, I fail to see any Fulani connection in his name.

11 Likes

Re: Why Do Fulanis from Kwara Like Adopting Yoruba Names: Like Kolapo And Bukola by Mapletraks: 4:07am On May 16, 2015
StOla:
First of all, your question should be Ilorin, not Kwara. Kwara has distinct Yoruba regions like Offa and others, and distinct non-Fulani and non-Yoruba regions too.

Concerning Ilorin, The inter-marriage between the Fulani occupiers and Yoruba natives is majorly responsible, while name adoption is limited to very few insignificant instances.

For Bukola Saraki, of his 4 grand parents, only one is Fulani (whose ethnic homogeneity is even in doubt), the remaining 3 are Yorubas.

So Bukola's claim to being Fulani is just the surname.

I want to believe the Yoruba name of the Emir of Ilorin is Folorunsho, not Kolapo. I doubt if I'm wrong.

The present governor, Abdulfatah Ahmed, is a full blooded Yoruba man from outside Ilorin, same with late Mohammed Lawal who was even from Ilorin (who ruled before Bukola Saraki).

Concerning Tunde Idiagbon, I fail to see any Fulani connection in his name.

^^^^^^^
In the late 1990s, I read a copy of Tempo Magazine where the Head of Afonja Descendants
said Tunde Idiagbon was of cattle Fulani ancestry on the paternal and maternal sides. Pa
Kasumu who is the Head of Afonja nearly knocked me off my chair with that statement.

I didn't know whether he was just being sarcastic
with that comment. More than 90% of Ilorin is of
Yoruba ancestry and even Sir Allan Burns who
was the Acting Governor of Nigeria in 1942
clearly stated in his hugely popular book
The History of Nigeria that Ilorin is one of the
LARGEST Yoruba towns on Page 33 of his book
which was published originally in 1929!

Yoruba is the lingua franca in Ilorin and the
smaller Fulani who arrived before 1900 had inter-married with the Yoruba just like it happened in Nupeland when they inter-married
with the much larger Nupe.

Bukola Saraki's quarter is a Yoruba one and
his paternal ancestry has strong Islamic scholarship attached to it. He also has a mother
from the Owo Royal family in Ondo State.
The late Olusola Saraki's mother hailed from
Oyo State.


A lot of myth and urban legend has surrounded
the paternal lineage of the Sarakis and ONLY
a DNA test for ancestry checks which is
available in the US and United Kingdom for
example can lay everything to rest.

2 Likes

Re: Why Do Fulanis from Kwara Like Adopting Yoruba Names: Like Kolapo And Bukola by Olabamidelemi(m): 6:54am On May 16, 2015
Mod pls do needful. I'm also interested in the topic
Re: Why Do Fulanis from Kwara Like Adopting Yoruba Names: Like Kolapo And Bukola by gratiaeo(m): 7:02am On May 16, 2015
Ilorin belong to the fulanis

2 Likes

Re: Why Do Fulanis from Kwara Like Adopting Yoruba Names: Like Kolapo And Bukola by leke12(m): 7:26am On May 16, 2015
Kwara state is a state smiliar in structure like kogi state(igala,yoruba,egbira). We have so many tribes in kwara ranging from nupe,baruba,fulani,yoruba and others, but the majority tribe is yoruba. Classification of states is not based on one tribe owning one state it was mainly faction by the 'drunk' military regime based on geography. Ilorin is mainly occupied by yoruba before d birth of Nigeria centuries ago,n 99.9% don't even speak fulani, a large percentage of fulanis have their settlements in hamlets jst like any other states only few are educated but majority of them bear yoruba names. Fulani been d emir of ilorin alone is due to the cultural,religion and historical relationship btw afonja and fulani which later back fire due to some help from yoruba chiefs too. It is d fulanis who are actually colonize by yorubas, they practice our culture,bear our names, eat our food and they dare not cause prob the way they do in other places, cause they knw wot is @ stake. Am from kwara state, yoruba (ekiti speaking side) I know that much about my state.

3 Likes

Re: Why Do Fulanis from Kwara Like Adopting Yoruba Names: Like Kolapo And Bukola by OrlandoOwoh(m): 7:34am On May 16, 2015
Mapletraks:


^^^^^^^
In the late 1990s, I read a copy of Tempo Magazine where the Head of Afonja Descendants
said Tunde Idiagbon was of cattle Fulani ancestry on the paternal and maternal sides. Pa
Kasumu who is the Head of Afonja nearly knocked me off my chair with that statement.

I didn't know whether he was just being sarcastic
with that comment. More than 90% of Ilorin is of
Yoruba ancestry and even Sir Allan Burns who
was the Acting Governor of Nigeria in 1942
clearly stated in his hugely popular book
The History of Nigeria that Ilorin is one of the
LARGEST Yoruba towns on Page 33 of his book
which was published originally in 1929!

Yoruba is the lingua franca in Ilorin and the
smaller Fulani who arrived before 1900 had inter-married with the Yoruba just like it happened in Nupeland when they inter-married
with the much larger Nupe.

Bukola Saraki's quarter is a Yoruba one and
his paternal ancestry has strong Islamic scholarship attached to it. He also has a mother
from the Owo Royal family in Ondo State.
The late Olusola Saraki's mother hailed from
Oyo State.


A lot of myth and urban legend has surrounded
the paternal lineage of the Sarakis and ONLY
a DNA test for ancestry checks which is
available in the US and United Kingdom for
example can lay everything to rest.
Olushola Saraki once claimed, in an interview with the Sun, that he is from Mali. Does this mean his projenitors migrated to Ilorin with their brand of Islam, not that they were Islamized during the jihad in Ilorin in the 19th century?
Re: Why Do Fulanis from Kwara Like Adopting Yoruba Names: Like Kolapo And Bukola by babyfaceafrica: 7:37am On May 16, 2015
I hope this thread doesn't turn to a tibal bashing one..cos I know that's what some mischief makers want...@op check bukola saraki lineage well...he is YORUBA
Re: Why Do Fulanis from Kwara Like Adopting Yoruba Names: Like Kolapo And Bukola by sinkhole: 7:56am On May 16, 2015
If decorum is maintained, this will be another very educative page. But I doubt if normal people that will maintain decorum and give us real education still remain on NL!
Re: Why Do Fulanis from Kwara Like Adopting Yoruba Names: Like Kolapo And Bukola by disumusa: 7:56am On May 16, 2015
The reason is that oduduwa migrate from larubawa i.e north mecca 2) sango mother is from nupe,now you se the cordiality of hausa and yoruba
Re: Why Do Fulanis from Kwara Like Adopting Yoruba Names: Like Kolapo And Bukola by Olabamidelemi(m): 7:57am On May 16, 2015
I just did a little research now and found out that Dr. OLUSOLA Saraki is just a liar seeking political power at all cost. In this SAHARAREPORTER interview with Ambasador Folorunsho Abdurazak, u will find out that Sarakis are from Ogun state. Read the full details here http://saharareporters.com/2010/12/09/saraki-not-kwara-alhaji-abdulganiyu-folorunsho-abdulrazak

1 Like

Re: Why Do Fulanis from Kwara Like Adopting Yoruba Names: Like Kolapo And Bukola by tarano: 12:11am On Jun 03, 2015
A pragmatic analysis of “Emir,” “Sarki,” “Oba” and “Chief” in Nigerian English

When I reviewed Nigerian social media chitchat in the wake of the death of the Emir of Kano and the appointment of his successor,
I noticed that Hausa-speaking Nigerians almost never use the word “Emir” to refer to the Emir of Kano when they write in Hausa. They use “Sarkin Kano,” sarki being the Hausa word for king. They only use “Emir” when they write in English.
This seems like an obvious, self-evident, banal observation. But it’s not—at least from a pragmatic point of view. (Pragmatics is the branch of linguistics that studies how social contexts affect the meaning of language). To start with, many southern Nigerians invariably associate the term “emir” with Muslim northerners. Many southern Nigerians, in fact, think “emir” is a Hausa word. Yet it isn’t natural for Hausa-speaking northerners to refer to their traditional rulers as “emir” when they converse in Hausa. Saying “emir” while speaking Hausa is generally understood as code-mixing, that is, interspersing a conversation with foreign words.
In other words, “emir” is a foreign word in Hausa. It was introduced to Hausa-speaking Nigerians by British colonizers, which is kind of interesting, even a bit ironic, considering that “emir” is derived from an Arabic word that has historical roots in Islam. As most linguists know, “emir” is the Anglicization of the Arabic “amir,” which literally means “leader” or “commander.”
The successors to the prophet of Islam (called “Caliphs” in Islamic literature) were often called “amir-ul- muminin,” which roughly translates as commander of the faithful (i.e., Muslim faithful). (Interestingly, Hausa people don’t call the most prominent traditional ruler in the Muslim north the Sultan of Sokoto; they call him “Sarkin Musulumi,” which translates as leader of Muslims—obviously a domestication of “amir-ul-muminin”; it’s also more natural for Hausa speakers to say “daular Usmaniyya” than to say “Sokoto Caliphate”).
Well, the linguistic journey of the word “emir” into English was a little tortuous. It was the French who first domesticated “amir” to “émir.» Then the word came to English as a French borrowing. As the reader can see, the English rendering of the world is unaltered from French, except for the dropping of the grave accent on the letter “e.” Etymologists say the first appearance of “emir” in English can be traced to 1593. Another prominent, widely used derivative of “amir” in English is “admiral.” It is derived from the Arabic “amir-ul-bahr,” which translates as “commander of the sea.”
Nonetheless, although “emir” is an English word, it evokes connotations of Hausa-Fulani Muslim overlordship in Nigeria. That is why Yoruba nationalists who want to “reclaim” Ilorin resent the labeling of the traditional ruler of the town as “Emir of Ilorin.” Every so often, Yoruba cultural nationalists spearhead the advocacy for the appointment of an “Oba of Ilorin.”
When I was a reporter for the Weekly Trust in 2000 I was assigned to cover an engineered controversy over the calls for an “Oba of Ilorin.” In the course of my investigation, I spoke with people from all classes of the Ilorin society.
One thing that struck me throughout my stay in Ilorin for the story was that everybody in the town, including members of the ruling family, called their traditional ruler “Oba” when they spoke in Yoruba. “Emir” sounded strange, even forced. Like Hausa people up north, the Ilorin people don’t relate well to the word “emir” unless they are putting on airs or speaking in English.
A particularly insightful encounter for me was an interview I had with an old, uneducated man who identified himself as a descendant of Afonja, the Yoruba founder of Ilorin who lost power to the progenitor of the current ruling family. I asked him if he wanted an “Oba of Ilorin.” He was genuinely befuddled. His response, in Yoruba, was: “what are you talking about? We already have an Oba.” Using the categories that have been popularized by the Nigerian news media, I said, “no, you don’t have an Oba; you have an emir.” His comeback threw me off. He didn’t know what an emir was. “Kilo je be? [what is that?],” he said.
That was when it dawned on me that “emir” is an English word that only western-educated northerners use to refer to their traditional rulers when they speak in English. Just like Hausa speakers call their traditional rulers “sarki,” Ilorin people call theirs “oba.” Every Ilorin person calls the emir’s palace “ile Oba” (which literally translates as “the Oba’s house”). The biggest market in Ilorin, which is close to the emir’s palace, is called “Oja Oba,” which translates as “the market of the Oba.”
So “emir” is rarely used in Ilorin—as in other northern Muslim places—outside official communication and in English-medium conversations. A more appropriate question for the old man should have been “do you want an Oba who is Yoruba rather than this Oba whose ancestors are Fulani?” I actually did rephrase my question like that after realizing that the old man couldn’t relate to the term “emir.”
How about “chief”? In southern Nigeria, a chief isn’t a traditional ruler; he is just someone who has been conferred with a traditional title by a traditional ruler. But Westerners, particularly Americans and Britons, tend to think Nigerians who prefix “Chief” to their names are kings who have dominion over communities. When I lived in the US state of Louisiana about 10 years ago, I read the newspaper profile of a cocky Nigerian resident of a Louisiana city who was described as the “ supreme king in absentia” of three different Nigerian communities because he told his interviewers that he was a “triple high chief,” whatever in the world that means. The editor of the paper was embarrassed when I later told him that a “chief” is merely a traditional title holder in southern Nigeria.
In northern Nigeria, however, “chief” is a politically loaded term and has a completely different meaning. It can mean a non-Muslim traditional ruler of any rank. It can also mean a low-ranked or unranked Muslim ruler in northern Nigeria, usually one whose lineage has no direct link with the Sokoto jihad. Increasingly, Muslim traditional rulers whose status has been elevated prefer to take on the title of “emir” in official documents. For instance, when the recently murdered Emir of Gwoza in Borno State was promoted to a second-class (and later first-class) traditional ruler, his title changed from “Chief of Gwoza” to “Emir of Gwoza.” In northern Nigeria it is offensive to call a Muslim traditional ruler a “chief” if he has been elevated to an “emir.” An acquaintance of mine, who is the son of the traditional ruler of Jere, didn’t take it kindly when I referred to his dad as the “Chief of Jere.” He had recently been elevated to an “emir,” although the people of Jere call him “Sarkin Jere” irrespective of his official designations.
While an “emir” has notional jurisdiction over an “emirate,” a “chief” rules over a “chiefdom.” In my part of Borgu, which is predominantly Muslim with Songhai-descended rulers whose “emirates” predate the Sokoto jihad by more than 100 years, we didn’t get the memo that a “chief” was a somewhat inferior ruler in Muslim northern Nigeria. In my hometown of Okuta, for several years, our traditional ruler was called a “chief” in official communication and his palace was called the “chief’s palace.” Of course, like everywhere else, natives call him “suno,” the Baatonu word for king. When my people became familiar with the pragmatic signification of “chief” in northern Nigerian officialese, they quickly changed the official title of the traditional ruler to “Emir.” The “Chief’s Place” became the “Emir’s palace.”
All this point to the context-dependence of the meanings of the linguistic markers we deploy for everyday communication.
Re: Why Do Fulanis from Kwara Like Adopting Yoruba Names: Like Kolapo And Bukola by crisngige(m): 11:10pm On Sep 21, 2015
What's the meaning of Illorin, does anyone know?
Re: Why Do Fulanis from Kwara Like Adopting Yoruba Names: Like Kolapo And Bukola by oyatz(m): 7:46pm On Jan 26, 2016
crisngige:
What's the meaning of Illorin, does anyone know?
Ilorin is Yoruba word coined from 'Ilu-Erin' meaning town of Elephants.Other Historians said it was corruption of two Yoruba words, 'Ilo Irin'= anvy to sharpene Ironm
Hunters from Old-Oyo,led by one AYINLA founded Ilorin some centuries ago.

3 Likes

(1) (Reply)

(photo) When The Pastor Said Turn To Your Neighbour And Say, "You Are Beautifull / Beat My Wife And See What I’ll Do – Tinubu / African Diaspora: Come Back With Glory Or Don’t Come Back At All!

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 56
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.