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"Suffering Is The Label Of Our Tribe"- Nnamdi Azikiwe Inspiring Address To Igbos - Politics - Nairaland

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"Suffering Is The Label Of Our Tribe"- Nnamdi Azikiwe Inspiring Address To Igbos by Youngadvocate(m): 1:42pm On Apr 27, 2017
On June 25, the Oracle of Nigeria Independence and Freedom, Legend of our common history, gathered his Igbo brothers and sisters to sell out the fredom fight.

Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe, Owelle Onitsha Nke Mbu N'ala Igbo, mounted on to the platform to dispense his Charismatic, Oratory genuis in view to persuade Umu-Igbo to join in the fight for Nigerian emancipation and self-determination, highlighting the allergic nature of Ndi-Igbo to slavery, subjugation, intimidation and other attendant forces that cage human freedom.

His speech was unanimously accepted as expected at soon enough, the people would swing into action.  

In the following address given eleven years before Nigerian independence, Nnamdi Azikiwe calls for self-determination for the Ibo as they along with other ethnic groups march toward an inevitably free Nigeria.  This address was delivered at  the Ibo State Assembly held at Aba, Nigeria, on Saturday, June 25, 1949.

Read on..

Harbingers of a new day for the Ibo nation, having selected me to preside over the deliberations of this assembly of the Ibo nation, I am conscious of the fact that you have not done so because of any extraordinary attributes in me. I realize that I am not the oldest among you, nor the wisest, nor the wealthiest, nor the most experienced, nor the most learned. I am therefore grateful to you for elevating me to this high pedestal.

The Ibo people have reached a cross-road and it is for us to decide which is the right course to follow. We are confronted with routes leading to diverse goals, but as I see it, there is only one road that I can safely recommend for us to tread, and it is the road to self-determination for the Ibo within the framework of a federated commonwealth of Nigeria and the Cameroons, leading to a United States of Africa. Other roads, in my opinion, are calculated to lead us astray from the path of national self-realization.

It would appear that God has specially created the Ibo people to suffer persecution and be victimized because of their resolute will to live. Since suffering is the label of our tribe, we can afford to be sacrificed for the ultimate redemption of the children of Africa. Is it not fortunate that the Ibo are among the few remnants of indigenous African nations who are still not spoliated by the artificial niceties of Western materialism? Is it not historically significant that throughout the glorious history of Africa, the Ibo is one of the select few to have escaped the humiliation of a conqueror’s sword or to be a victim of a Carthaginian treaty? Search through the records of African history and you will fail to find an occasion when, in any pitched battle, any African nation has either marched across Ibo territory or subjected the Ibo nation to a humiliating conquest. Instead, there is record to show that the martial prowess of the Ibo, at all stages of human history, has rivaled them not only to survive persecution, but also to adapt themselves to the role thus thrust upon them by history, of preserving all that is best and most noble in African culture and tradition. Placed in this high estate, the Ibo cannot shirk the responsibility conferred on it by its manifest destiny. Having undergone a course of suffering the Ibo must therefore enter into its heritage by asserting its birthright, without apologies.

Follow me in a kaleidoscopic study of the Ibo. Four million strong in man-power! Our agricultural resources include economic and food crops which are the bases of modern civilization, not to mention fruits and vegetables which flourish in the tropics! Our mineral resources include coal, lignite, lead, antimony, iron, diatomite, clay, oil, tin! Our forest products include timber of economic value, including iroko and mahogany! Our fauna and flora are marvels of the world! Our land is blessed by waterways of world renown, including the River Niger, Imo River, Cross River! Our ports are among the best known in the continent of Africa. Yet in spite of these natural advantages, which illustrate without doubt the potential wealth of the Ibo, we are among the least developed in Nigeria, economically, and we are so ostracized socially, that we have become extraneous in the political institutions of Nigeria.

I have not come here today in order to catalogue the disabilities which the Ibo suffer, in spite of our potential wealth, in spite of our teeming man-power, in spite of our vitality as an indigenous African people; suffice it to say that it would enable you to appreciate the manifest destiny of the Ibo if I enumerated some of the acts of discrimination against us as a people. Socially, the British Press has not been sparing in describing us as ‘the most hated in Nigeria’. In this unholy crusade, the Daily Mirror, The Times, The Economist, News Review and the Daily Mail have been in the forefront. In the Nigerian Press, you are living witnesses of what has happened in the last eighteen months, when Lagos, Zaria and Calabar sections of the Nigerian Press were virtually encouraged to provoke us to tendentious propaganda. It is needless for me to tell you that today, both in England and in West Africa, the expression ‘Ibo’ has become a word of opprobrium.

Politically, you have seen with your own eyes how four million people were disenfranchized by the British, for decades, because of our alleged backwardness. We have never been represented on the Executive Council, and not one Ibo town has had the franchise, despite the fact that our native political institutions are essentially democratic—in fact, more democratic than any other nation in Africa, in spite of our extreme individualism.

Economically, we have laboured under onerous taxation measures, without receiving sufficient social amenities to justify them. We have been taxed without representation, and our contributions in taxes have been used to develop other areas, Out of proportion to the incidence of taxation in those areas. It would seem that we are becoming a victim of economic annihilation through a gradual but studied process. What are my reasons for cataloguing these disabilities and interpreting them as calculated to emasculate us, and so render us impotent to assert our right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness?

Complete reading:http://igbobia.com/?q=suffering-is-the-label-of-our-tribedr-nnamdi-azikiwe-inspiring-address-to-igbos-in-1949-on-self.html:

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Re: "Suffering Is The Label Of Our Tribe"- Nnamdi Azikiwe Inspiring Address To Igbos by Youngadvocate(m): 9:45pm On Apr 27, 2017
Re: "Suffering Is The Label Of Our Tribe"- Nnamdi Azikiwe Inspiring Address To Igbos by PFRB: 10:53am On Apr 28, 2017
I saw it in facebook as Lamentations of Nnamdi Azikiwe. Lamentations not inspiration.
Re: "Suffering Is The Label Of Our Tribe"- Nnamdi Azikiwe Inspiring Address To Igbos by sarrki(m): 10:56am On Apr 28, 2017
PFRB:
I saw it in facebook as Lamentations of Nnamdi Azikiwe. Lamentations not inspiration.

This are leaders

Not that criminal call Nnamdi kanu
Re: "Suffering Is The Label Of Our Tribe"- Nnamdi Azikiwe Inspiring Address To Igbos by elfeezy(m): 6:53pm On Apr 28, 2017
sarrki:


This are leaders

Not that criminal call Nnamdi kanu

ur worst nightmare Mazi Nnamdi Kanu,,
grow up and get a job bro..

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