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Article Written By Reno Omokri About The Igbos - Politics - Nairaland

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Article Written By Reno Omokri About The Igbos by golddust6000(m): 7:16am On Aug 23, 2016
The Igbo as a Blessing to Nigeria



On the 15th of August 1945, the axis nations fighting in the Pacific theater defeated imperial Japan and two weeks later, Japan formally surrendered to allied forces led by the U.S. General, Douglas McArthur, who formally accepted the signed articles of surrender.
But though the U.S. defeated Japan, they never decimated Japan's great technological and industrial complex. They were visionary enough to distinguish these from Japan's military industrial complex, which they scrapped.
Realizing that Japan was decades ahead of the West in many technologies, the allied powers, led by the US, allowed those industries to remain as a going concern and took the unique step of enacting legislation and policies to enable them flourish.


What they did in Japan, they also did in Europe. In Europe, the US, acting unilaterally, even went a step further by introducing the Marshall Plan through which America sent financial and other types of aid to help Europe (and especially Germany) recover from the ravages of the Second World War.

The point of the allied and American actions in Japan and Europe is that technological advancement belongs to the human race and should not be allowed to suffer because of a quarrel or war amongst humans.

This lesson was thoroughly established in 642 AD when the Library of Alexandria was burnt to the ground during the Muslim conquest of Egypt.

It has been argued that that act set the world several centuries back in technological advancement and has become something to watch out for during the prosecution of a war.

A war is a quarrel between or amongst people that is settled by means of violence. It is not a quarrel between or amongst technology, so civilized nations have pursued the policy of fighting wars while preserving technology.

Gone should be the days of the scorched earth policy which is why despite the bestiality of the apartheid regime, President Nelson Mandela did not do a Mugabe, but rather left intact White owned farms, industry and universities and only insisted that they be opened to Blacks and other races.

This brings me to Nigeria. I would like to state a fact that will be argued against, but still a fact that even those who would argue against it know to be true.

The Igbo (or Ibo) ethnic nationality of Nigeria are the most technologically advanced Black race on planet earth, bar none!

This is a fact. A fact that was proven to be true for 30 months while they were landlocked in their constantly shrinking enclave known as Biafra.

Cut off from the rest of the world, the ingenuity of the Igbo came to the fore during the civil war as they constructed the Uli airstrip and when that airstrip was bombed, they repaired it in record time and under the most trying circumstances. They would go on to repair Uli not once and not twice.

The Igbos refined petrol from a variety of non fossil fuels, including from but not limited to palm products (from which they also produced diesel) and manufactured surface to air missiles which they also adapted to surface to surface missiles (the Ogbunigwe).

They converted commercial planes to fighter jets and weaponized them. That was no mean feat in 1967.

In fact, when in 2012, the Nigerian Army rolled out the igirigi and promoted it as the first indigenous armored personnel carrier, they were wrong. I am not a Biafran. I am proudly Nigerian. And beyond that, I am a proud dark skinned Black African yet I make bold to say that the igirigi is not the first indigenous APC.

In fact, the first indigenous armored personnel carrier in Black Africa is the Red Devil, built by the Igbos during the Nigerian Civil War.

The Nigerian Civil War ended in January 1970 and the Nigerian Army unveiled the igirigi in July of 2012. If they had converted the Red Devil to their own use, they would probably be talking about a greater feat in the year 2012.

My question is what happened in the intervening 42 years between 1970 and 2012? Why didn't the Nigerian Army integrate the military industrial complex of Biafra into its Defence Industry Corporation of Nigeria, DICON?

Why did we have to reinvent the wheel at great cost in terms of time and money?

The Nigerian Civil War ended on a note of 'no victor no vanquished'. That was a watershed moment inspired by the Christlike mind of General Yakubu Gowon. That gesture is to be applauded.

But why did we as a nation not go the whole hog and take advantage of Biafra's technological advances and integrate her scientists into our Research and Development sector much like the US did with German and Japanese scientists?

That is where we failed as a nation.

I remember growing up as a child and how other Nigerians scoffed at 'Igbo made' electronic products. There was hardly anything including electronics, pharmaceuticals, spirits and wines that the Igbos could not counterfeit.

And rather than our leaders seeing the potential in those products, we all scoffed at them. Igbo made products were a pariah.

Did it ever occur to any of our leaders that if government had supported these technological advancement, Nigeria could have become an industrialized nation today and Igbo made products would have been exported abroad as made in Nigeria products?

It would surprise many that a number of the greatest technological advancement and products that came out of America after the Second World War were the work of German or Japanese scientists!

In an operation code named Operation Paperclip, 1500 German scientists, engineers and technicians were airlifted to the United States and given US permanent US residency and citizenship immediately after the defeat of Germany in 1945. The primary aim of Operation Paperclip was to prevent these skilled men and women from falling into Soviet Russian hands.

Hans Erich (Eric) Hollmann who was one of the fathers of radar technology was one of such scientists airlifted to America.

Kurt Lehovec the pioneer of the integrated circuit systems in electrical engineering is another. He was airlifted to America in 1945 where he became a Professor at the University of Southern California and passed on his knowledge to America's next generation of scientists.

The allies had been having issues with the jet engine and were not able to develop planes like the German Messerschmitt Me 262. But after the defeat of Germany, US forces gave safe passage to Rudi Beichel who went to the US and became an adviser to the US army on liquid propulsion. Other German scientists such as Magnus "Mac" Freiherr von Braun and his brother, Wernher Von Braun helped reverse engineer German jets which led to the development of the US American F-86 Sabres, a plane that helped the US dominate the air during the Korean War.

More importantly, Wernher Von Braun provided much of the know how that helped America build the Apollo spacecraft which allowed America beat Russia as the first nation to get to the moon.

Methamphetamine was invented by Japanese a Japanese chemist, Nagai Nagayoshi and the drug was shared with their German allies and helped their soldiers stay awake and focus. After the war, German scientists helped American scientist synthesize the drug which revolutionized the US health industry.

Why can't we do the same in Nigeria? Can you imagine what our technological base would have been if we as a nation had a policy of patronizing the so called Igbo made products right from the end of the war till today? What if we had absorbed the the Research and Production Organisation of Biafra (RAP as it was then known) into the Nigerian Army Corps of Engineers?

By now, we may have been manufacturing jets and we would not be dependent on foreign nations for weapons to fight terrorists.

This is why I was so disgusted with the minister of science and technology, Ogbonnaya Onu for aspiring, on Nigeria's behalf, to produce pencils by 2018!

I mean this man is the first civilian governor of the old Abia state which today encompasses both Abia and Ebonyi states.

Right there, under his own nose, Nigerians of Igbo extraction, without ANY governmental support, are manufacturing electronics and heavy machinery components and Onu is caught up on pencils!

Onu should visit Nnewi if he knows where it is. Right there he would see a city that does not wait for government. Nnewi people are so industrious that after years of waiting endlessly for government to provide basic amenities, they have built their own roads, have their own power stations and their own water works.

Just like Japan, Nnewi has manufacturers of such things like batteries, pistons, automobiles and other products. These Nnewi manufacturers have built schools for the kids of their workers on site, just like in Japan.

You just need to visit Nnewi or Aba to see what is going on in Nigeria. These guys are Nigeria's most guarded secret because even the federal government is not aware of them.

And the reason why this is so is because these people are Igbos!

It is time for Nigeria to forgive the Igbos for being Igbo and accept them as full partners and equal partners in the Nigerian project and use the entire strength of the Nigerian federal government to provide them the support to fulfill their destiny as the Black African people that are nucleus of the technological advancement of Africa.

Notice I say Africa, not just Nigeria. I don't say this lightly. All over West and Central Africa, Nigerians of Igbo extraction are the backbone of the commercial and technological sectors.

I can say what I have said above without any accusation of self or group interest promotion because I am not Igbo neither am I married to one. I have said the truth as my conscience sees it because I am committed to advancement of the Black Race because as a proud Black man, I know that no black African tribe is as great as the Black Race when it is united.


http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/08/igbo-blessing-nigeria/

221 Likes 34 Shares

Re: Article Written By Reno Omokri About The Igbos by Smallb0b0(f): 7:18am On Aug 23, 2016
Good morning oh

35 Likes

Re: Article Written By Reno Omokri About The Igbos by babyfaceafrica: 7:22am On Aug 23, 2016
N
Re: Article Written By Reno Omokri About The Igbos by golddust6000(m): 7:26am On Aug 23, 2016
babyfaceafrica:
N
You don start!

2 Likes

Re: Article Written By Reno Omokri About The Igbos by golddust6000(m): 7:27am On Aug 23, 2016
Smallb0b0:
M
Small children full nairaland i swear

11 Likes

Re: Article Written By Reno Omokri About The Igbos by babyfaceafrica: 7:28am On Aug 23, 2016
golddust6000:
You don start!
0
Re: Article Written By Reno Omokri About The Igbos by Nobody: 7:32am On Aug 23, 2016
Forget tribalism!
With unity comes progress...If we could just let go of the stereotypical nonsense and try to move this nation forward together, then and only then will CHANGE be possible..

41 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Article Written By Reno Omokri About The Igbos by iykebest1(m): 7:43am On Aug 23, 2016
my only offence is being an Igbo

118 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Article Written By Reno Omokri About The Igbos by locosis007(m): 7:46am On Aug 23, 2016
NICE WRITE UP THE IGBOS AND SO MANY OTHER TRIBES ARE GIFTED BUT THE COUNTRY DOESNT TAP INTO IT. Our Govt prefers already-made and foreign inventions.

IF ONLY YOU WERE THIS VOCAL IN THE PREVIOUS REGIME.

NOW YOU THEY FORM NATIONALIST ABI

GO SITDON.

54 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Article Written By Reno Omokri About The Igbos by Nobody: 7:49am On Aug 23, 2016
RevDesm0ndJuju:

Preach to your Yoruba brothers and sisters to stop their jjealousy
I have to preach to my Igbo brothers and sisters first. smiley FYI...I'm Igbo to the core grin

70 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Article Written By Reno Omokri About The Igbos by RevDesm0ndJuju: 7:53am On Aug 23, 2016
colik:


I have to preach to my Igbo brothers and sisters first. smiley
FYI...I'm Igbo to the core grin

No you are not

32 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Article Written By Reno Omokri About The Igbos by Nobody: 7:58am On Aug 23, 2016
I have written in my small book entitled The Trouble with Nigeria that Nigerians will probably achieve consensus on no other matter than their common resentment of the Igbo,” he wrote under the heading, A History of Ethnic Tension and Resentment. He traced the origin of “the national resentment of the Igbo” to its culture that “gave the Igbo man an unquestioned advantage over his compatriots in securing credentials for advancement in Nigerian colonial society.”


He observed that the Igbo culture’s emphasis on change, individualism and competitiveness gave his ethnic group an edge over the Hausa/Fulani man who was hindered by a “wary religion” and the Yoruba man who was hampered by” traditional hierarchies.”

He therefore described the Igbo, who are predominantly Catholic, as “fearing no god or man, was “custom-made to grasp the opportunities, such as they were, of the white man’s dispensations. And the Igbo did so with both hands.”

[b]He delved into history with his claim, asserting that the Igbo overcame the earlier Yoruba advantage within two decades earlier in the twentieth century.

“Although the Yoruba had a huge historical and geographical head start, the Igbo wiped out their handicap in one fantastic burst of energy in the twenty years between 1930 and 1950.”


He narrated the earlier advantage of Yoruba as contingent on their location on the coastline, but once the missionaries crossed the Niger, the Igbo took advantage of the opportunity and overtook the Yoruba.

“The increase was so exponential in such a short time that within three short decades the Igbos had closed the gap and quickly moved ahead as the group with the highest literacy rate, the highest standard of living, and the greatest of citizens with postsecondary education in Nigeria,” he contended.

He said Nigerian leadership should have taken advantage of the igbo talent and this failure was partly responsible for the failure of the Nigerian state, explaining further that competitive individualism and the adventurous spirit of the Igbo was a boon Nigerian leaders failed to recognize and harness for modernization.

“Nigeria’s pathetic attempt to crush these idiosyncrasies rather than celebrate them is one of the fundamental reasons the country has not developed as it should and has emerged as a laughingstock,” he claimed.
[/b]

He noted that the ousting of prominent Igbos from top offices was a ploy to achieve a simple and crude goal. He said what the Nigerians wanted was to “get the achievers out and replace them with less qualified individuals from the desired ethnic background so as to gain access to the resources of the state.”


Late Chinua Achebe of blessed memory in his memoir "There was a country"

like an American scholar once said, the igbo offense in Nigeria is just being igbo and nothing else. That igbo spirit is so mysteriously scary to other Nigerians.. they just don't understand how igbos do it.. i laugh when some oily red rustic neighborhood humans think we are in competition with them not knowing they don't even exist to us. we just do our thing and we flourish..it is a gift from God. it is call "AKARAKA" in igbo

just like in the picture below, the white planter knows the eboe slave nigga was intelligent,industrious, stubborn and indomitable when aroused, but shooting him was not the best option because it was as good as shooting the best slave in his plantation...

truly the black man has a problem with his thought process, that is why Africa and other black nations are backwards and the Western world succeeded in caging the only black race that would have been a spring board for African economic and technological independence by locking them in Nigeria and giving power to the inferiors to rule over them so as not to have that freedom to explore their hidden talent...
To me biafra is beyond Nigeria. The west is scare of the emergence of biafra because they know it will whittle down their influence in Africa and spring up the true independence of Africa not just politically but culturally,technologically and economically

142 Likes 17 Shares

Re: Article Written By Reno Omokri About The Igbos by Nobody: 8:00am On Aug 23, 2016
RevDesm0ndJuju:

No you are not
Lol. It would be silly to argue with you. It's a fact. I am Igbo. whether you believe it or not has nothing to do with me.

8 Likes

Re: Article Written By Reno Omokri About The Igbos by RZArecta(m): 8:05am On Aug 23, 2016
Most APC zombies here on nairaland were clapping hands like retardéd cows when minister Onu boasted about "producing pencils" by 20gogoro undecided and when we spoke, they told us to shut up calling us wailers. No wahala. Producing pencils isn't bad but its not what a minister of technology should boast about in this century (maybe two centuries ago) but then again what do you expect from this chainji government ? If govt is really serious about diversifying the economy, they should borrow a refined leaf from these Aba and Nnewi traders instead of calling them 5%. Govt will do well to encourage SME's which are the engine block of any economy (think China) since there's a long value chain that follows every business in that sector. Until Nigeria does so, we shall continue groping in the dark.

Ps : I have no time for unnecessary arguments today, APC zombies take note

55 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Article Written By Reno Omokri About The Igbos by mesoprogress(m): 8:16am On Aug 23, 2016
This is the reason I hate my Igbo brothers lumping SS, other minor Igbo nations (Anioma, Ikwerre, Etche), into their Biafra Republic. Let's form a pure Igbo nation. Our Igbo brothers in SS rejected us because of oil and SS brothers looking at us with suspicion. Igbos wake up! Seek your own country without these half-hearted neighbors and get it in record time.

Nigeria's failure is oil! If we ain't going with SS, they would sure ascent to our request. In our new country, hardwork and ingenuity will propel us ahead. Tell me mineral resources of Japan, Singapore, etc, yet their economy is larger than Saudi Arabia that pumps 11 million barrels of oil daily! Nigeria still struggling to produce 2.2M at its peak. Oil is not the answer.

79 Likes 14 Shares

Re: Article Written By Reno Omokri About The Igbos by Nobody: 8:20am On Aug 23, 2016
From

ben murray bruce to

femi fani kayode to

femi aribisala to

femi ogunlewe to

chief ayo babatope to

goodluck jonathan to

obansanjo to

Jerry John Rawlings(ex ghana president) to

Racial scholars like Chanda Chisala to Thomas Sowell to Razib Khan to Peter Frost

to diplomats like Henry Kissinger to

Garba Shehu

And now Remo omokri

even to the igbo worst hater... they will keep on acknowledging igbo superiority.

am waiting for a day i will a read an article from a renowned scholar acknowledging the oilly red mud rustic neighborhood for something which they have and continue to distinguish themselves in it and no other tribe both in Nigeria and africa can beat them in it other than cowardice,envy, destructive bad belleism, propaganda, Agberoism and living in illusion

www.nairaland.com/attachments/3606242_img20150921052004edit_jpeg1e50872f539456818f3b813301de20e3

www.nairaland.com/attachments/3871306_igbosmostbrilliant_jpeg6a61759eb60fd21eba9c8361b2ac1b53

64 Likes 5 Shares

Re: Article Written By Reno Omokri About The Igbos by hopeforcharles(m): 8:21am On Aug 23, 2016
RZArecta:
Most APC zombies here on nairaland were clapping hands like retardéd cows when minister Onu boasted about "producing pencils" by 20gogoro undecided and when we spoke, they told us to shut up calling us wailers. No wahala. Producing pencils isn't bad but its not what a minister of technology should boast about in this century (maybe two centuries ago) but then again what do you expect from this chainji government ? If govt is really serious about diversifying the economy, they should borrow a refined leaf from these Aba and Nnewi traders instead of calling them 5%. Govt will do well to encourage SME's which are the engine block of any economy (think China) since there's a long value chain that follows every business in that sector. Until Nigeria does so, we shall continue groping in the dark.

Ps : I have no time for unnecessary arguments today, APC zombies take note
You have said my mind and said it all, meanwhile ekwusigo, likewise me I don't have time for arguments I prefer facts and figures,

8 Likes

Re: Article Written By Reno Omokri About The Igbos by MENZPRIDE(m): 8:22am On Aug 23, 2016
True talk, Mr. Reno.
I think there is the Fear Factor of being left behind. Most Persons feel the Igbos will develop and advance beyond other regions if the Industriousness of the Igbos are encouraged and supported... The Curious case of Anambra Vegetable Export. Vs Sahara Reporters comes to mind.
I heard the Igbos have been crying for a Seaport. But successive Gov'ts has been side-stepping the issue coz of the endless Opportunities and Possibilities a Seaport brings.
The Governors from the Region have not really help matters too.
Like Abia State which is closer to mine (Rivers), the more the change of Governors and Gov'ts, the more the State tends to remain the same.

29 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Article Written By Reno Omokri About The Igbos by NDPVF(m): 8:23am On Aug 23, 2016
And when i say i love Igbo people more than any other tribe or race in Africa,and went ahead to defend them from jelouse neighbours,mad people start tagging me igbo. Igbo-Ibibio,a union made in heaven.

114 Likes 11 Shares

Re: Article Written By Reno Omokri About The Igbos by Deathslater: 8:24am On Aug 23, 2016
my great grandpa was an igbo man. he fought in the Second World War against the imperial Japanese army.

9 Likes 1 Share

Re: Article Written By Reno Omokri About The Igbos by Deathslater: 8:27am On Aug 23, 2016
NDPVF:
And when i say i love Igbo people more than any other tribe or race in Africa,and went ahead to defend them from jelouse neighbours,mad people start tagging me igbo. Igbo-Ibibio,a union made in heaven.
we are brothers don't mind the cone heads.

67 Likes 7 Shares

Re: Article Written By Reno Omokri About The Igbos by NDPVF(m): 8:39am On Aug 23, 2016
And when i say i love Igbo people more than any other tribe or race in Africa,and went ahead to defend them from jelouse neighbours,mad people start tagging me igbo. Igbo-Ibibio,a union made in heaven!.

45 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Article Written By Reno Omokri About The Igbos by NDPVF(m): 8:42am On Aug 23, 2016
Deathslater:
we are brothers don't mind the cone heads.
am too sophisticated for their yeye propaganda.

58 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Article Written By Reno Omokri About The Igbos by Deathslater: 8:45am On Aug 23, 2016
NDPVF:
am too sophisticated for their yeye propaganda.
way to go Bro.

37 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Article Written By Reno Omokri About The Igbos by ayzTIGER: 9:10am On Aug 23, 2016
This is one of the reason why we advocate for the Land Of Rising Sun

31 Likes 1 Share

Re: Article Written By Reno Omokri About The Igbos by PAINGAIN: 9:16am On Aug 23, 2016
The one that kills them the most is that the more they try to frustrate the igbos, the more the igbos come up stronger. God has blessed the igbos and no one can touch us.

51 Likes 6 Shares

Re: Article Written By Reno Omokri About The Igbos by abumeinben(m): 9:18am On Aug 23, 2016
Enjoying this piece..


Our problems: personalised political ambition, discontinuity, tribe, cluelessness in face of abundance, short sighted and/or blind leaders, Religion, gullible followers, lazy citizens.

5 Likes

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