Culture › Re: Need Answer To The Yoruba Picture Please. by AdoZazzau(op): 8:32am On Jun 02, 2013 |
PAGAN 9JA: that was a very foolish thing muhammad did. I can just imagine the pain the Arabic Tribesmen felt at the destruction of their ancient beliefs and heritage. what an a$$. how could he expect a stone idol to walk arounnd and defend other idols? An idol is an object used in worship. *smh La-Illah Ill-Allahu! Please speak with respect regarding the Prophet (SAWS). Please! |
Culture › Re: Need Answer To The Yoruba Picture Please. by AdoZazzau(op): 8:23am On Jun 02, 2013 |
Dudu_Negro: Op,
Its hard to tell if this was muslim or ifa priest in the first picture. if you notice the man opposite him as a cap on his head as well. i think we need more pictures, distinctly showing ifa priest in order to tell one way or another. however, i do agree that ive seen ifa priests with their covered in a shawl. look, islam rose in arabia, the pre-islamic home of ifa.......what do you expect? there are many similarities between the two.
You are a northerner, i suppose, and a muslim. right? have you ever been to zikr? Mr Dudu negro, so if you agree that you have seen Ifa worshipper in head cover, then you really do not need a picture and the identity of the covered head in this picture matters less. Yes, I am Muslim and a Northerner and I have attended many zikrs. If it means anything to you, I have led group zikrs. I will be glad to discuss if you would like knowledge on zikr. Abdullahi, father of the Prophet (SAWS), was a custodian of idols and deities kept in the Kabba, back in the age of jahilliya. It is narrated that Muhammad (SAWS) went in one day and smashed everything except one big one. When the tribe elders came in to pay homage and bow to their idols they were alarmed. Abdullahi called his son to come and explain why he destroyed the legacy of their tribal ancestors. Muhammad (SAWS) then wisely advised the elders that the big deity still standing witnessed the destruction and since they addressed him everyday this would be a good time for him to reply them and disclose who destroyed the temple. They realized their folly and recognized their gods was deaf, mute and dumb. They changed hearts and joined the Muslims. One of the clan heads refused to abandon his gods. Mr Dudunegro, now, take a guess who was stubbornly rebellious and refused to join the party of believers? Just take a guess.  I already know you are Yoruba but are you from Kogi or Kwara? |
Culture › Re: Need Answer To The Yoruba Picture Please. by AdoZazzau(op): 7:48am On Jun 02, 2013 |
tpia@: There is actually nothing there for you to learn.
Please keep it moving. Mr tpia@, you are propagating boko haram agenda. do you know what boko stand for? How about haram? You are discouraging my interest in knowledge.  This is why I find Mr bokohalal interesting, if that name was still available I will get it myself. |
Culture › Re: Need Answer To The Yoruba Picture Please. by AdoZazzau(op): 7:42am On Jun 02, 2013 |
ninja4life: Crap wat in d pictures indicate he is a yoruba talk more of being an ifa priest.@op get ur facts right and stop associating d rich yoruba culture with some foreign abrahamic religion practices. Mr naija4life, you don't believe me. The caption on the picture said Ifa priest. Wallahi, next time I run into another one I will bring picture and link. |
Culture › Re: The Fulanis, Africa's Most Influential Tribe by AdoZazzau: 7:32am On Jun 02, 2013 |
Everyone hates Fulani nowadays but I know in 2015 we will put you back where you all belong. You, Mr Shymexx, are you one of Jonathan's clan men? You sound like Mujahid, accusing people left and right. It's not good.
Mr Donroxxy, please don't mind the guy, he must be in his teen years. |
Culture › Re: Nigerian Men And Bleaching by AdoZazzau: 7:19am On Jun 02, 2013 |
Kafirs. |
Culture › Re: Need Answer To The Yoruba Picture Please. by AdoZazzau(op): 6:07am On May 28, 2013 |
tpia@: well, the photo looks muslim, imo.
However, i see no reason for you to bother yourself about all this other stuff you're saying, since i really fail to see how it concerns you per se.
is there a reason why you're so interested in yorubas? I ignored the images the first two times but I couldnt pass the opportunity of finding out this third time. Maybe there is something there for me to learn. Do you know why they cover the head and what is the significance? |
Islam › Re: Jesus Disciples by AdoZazzau: 11:41pm On May 27, 2013 |
pointblank 321: Thank you for your attempt. John the Baptist was not a disciple of Jesus but John his brother.
My reason for asking the question is because I have heard many muslims say the Gospel according to Mathew, Mark, Luke and John were not written by Jesus eye witnesses, who were supposed to be His Disciples.
But when I read in the Quran that Jesus had Disciples, I therefore wondered who could be the disciples the quran talks about if not the twelve, including Mathew, Mark, Luke and John that we see in the Bible.
It would therefore be wrong to say the Gospel was not written by eye-witnesses of Jesus. The disciples were His eye-witnesses, which the Quran said they bore witnesses to Him as clearly stated in the Surat above.
Since the Quran testifies to the fact that there were disciples who witnessed the sayings and deed of Jesus, why doubt their reports as contained in their writings? Ok. I see what you mean. If there were witnessing disciples and they penned their narrations then what language was it in? |
Culture › Re: The Fulanis, Africa's Most Influential Tribe by AdoZazzau: 10:24pm On May 27, 2013 |
shymexx: We know "Bororojo" used to be "Fulaman," "AdoZazzau" is "donroxy"(another fake Yoruba). But with you, there's "fire" on the mountain, with the "Star" of David providing protection.  Well, let me know who donroxxy is please. I would like to mee this person. |
Culture › Re: The Fulanis, Africa's Most Influential Tribe by AdoZazzau: 10:23pm On May 27, 2013 |
KidStranglehold: Umm...Theres something called Google. The people I posted were all non Fulani especially Mansa Musa. Again there's Google.
Um...^^^What does any of that have to do with what I posted?
What do you mean racial types?? There are no racial types but just ethic groups. I believe were only discussing ethic groups here... I thank you my dear brother. I must say the kind of stuffs that exist in google is scary, particularly on culture, you can pick and choose what supports your view even when they are half truths. A damage has been done to the mind of the African forever and there is no healing it. |
Culture › Re: The Fulanis, Africa's Most Influential Tribe by AdoZazzau: 8:09pm On May 27, 2013 |
PhysicsQED: It's a thread called "Benin Art and Architecture" and it's on page 1 of the culture section. It's thread showing some of the past art of the kingdom, plus a few surviving pictures and images of buildings in the traditional style. Thanks. |
Culture › Re: The Fulanis, Africa's Most Influential Tribe by AdoZazzau: 8:06pm On May 27, 2013 |
kwangi: Okay... Nobody says you guys shouldn't open fulani thread, but making bogus claims as was done with this thread is what "everybody" is against!
Yeah... Yoruba men marry fulani women! What's wrong with that? BTW, I'm Igbo. And I'm looking foward to the day I'll shine a Fulani kongo. Maybe I have and didn't even know. Dis one wey anybody wey get one drop of Fulani blood is being claimed as Fulani. I like that. Fulani are diverse people. The good looks on Fulani is due to blood mix. Mixing with different people create the diversity that sustain us, physically and spiritually. As long religion permits it there is no reason why Igbo cannot marry Fulani woman. Fulani men marry Igbo women, but you Southerners hate our women for marriage. Its one in a million occassion you will find a Southerner married to Fulani woman. On Yoruba, the intermix with Yorubas have gone on for ages, even before the Jihad. Im not criticizing them for having Fulani but I dont like how they join with others to berate Fulani. Its painful. |
Culture › Re: The Fulanis, Africa's Most Influential Tribe by AdoZazzau: 7:53pm On May 27, 2013 |
KidStranglehold: Um...Miss none of the people I listed were of Fulani descent, if you have any proof please post them. And Ahmed Baba was not a emperor but one of the greatest scholars of his time. http://www.youtube.com/watch?nomobile=1&v=1vhx5OHfekk
And I don't understand how your third sentence correlates with my post.
And what do you mean by this? "Bantu as a classification is no where a match for the Sudan." Well, go ahead and put their profiles up for review and I will trace their Pulo ancestry for you. If you list five names of army officers and one of navy and i call them all army please do not descend into this granular analysis of why i mislabeled a naval man an army. Thats not healthy for intellectual discussion on a general subject.. The third sentence is a challenge on your ability to properly identify racial types in the West African subregion. |
Culture › Re: The Fulanis, Africa's Most Influential Tribe by AdoZazzau: 7:38pm On May 27, 2013 |
PhysicsQED: I didn't suggest was dating a Fulani. Other posters in the thread have done that though. I think she can be a "fan" of the Fulanis without dating any of them, I just disagreed with her views and I wondered if maybe she had some Fulani ancestry and if she possibly had a bias of some sort because of that.
I wouldn't start a thread like that about Benin because it would probably be viewed as some sort of attempt at boasting or something. There are books which touch on that issue (influence) though. I did, however, start a thread on the art of Benin.
And I apologize for the insults and my lack of civility in the post above toward you and for any negative comments toward the Fulani in general - it seemed to me as if you went out of your way to make certain denigrating remarks about certain groups so I guess I got into a more combative/aggressive mindset when writing, but that's not really an excuse for my tone or words. For that, I'm sorry. Mr PhysicsQED, there is no human with breathe in the lungs who does not harbour a bias in his/her emotions. Any person that will raise his or her hand as an exception to the rule must be lying to himself; he is dead and does not even know it. Our bias is dictated by what we like. You might be Benin person or not, I dont know but I can assume so. That lady had not in any where said she is Fulani or Yoruba or Bini or Igbo, but she was accused of being Fulani, I suspect you guys already knew her as Yoruba, or maybe her name suggests that. Nonetheless, her topic and post should have been challenged, not her personality. I thank you for your understanding. On the Benin history, you know Im not going to write it, an Igboman will not put his history aside and write on Benin, Yoruba person might because you guys are brothers or cousins, but it is sweetest coming from a Benin person. What was the "art of Benin" about? |
Culture › Re: The Fulanis, Africa's Most Influential Tribe by AdoZazzau: 7:18pm On May 27, 2013 |
kwangi: Knew that too. You don't need a prophet to tell you she's not a full blooded Yoruba! What kind of thread is this? Mr Kwangi, please dont feed that again. Its done with. I don't believe she is Fulani but even if she were so what? Is this space reserved for Yorubas only? Must all topics posted in culture section be about Southerners? I am serious Southerners are racists. I am particularly offended by those of you who are Yorubas. There is no village in Yorubaland you will not find Fulani girls married to your men. Even Lagos, there are Yoruba men with Fulani wives. You guys are hypocrites. You take Fulani women into wedlock but you speak derogately of them in public. This is unacceptable. |
Culture › Re: The Fulanis, Africa's Most Influential Tribe by AdoZazzau: 7:04pm On May 27, 2013 |
KidStranglehold: I'm sorry...I love my Fulani people, I think they are really unique. But they are no way in h3ll the most 'Influential' of Africa. I'm not even trying to be mean. Their not even close to being the most influential people of west Africa. That title CLEARLY goes yo the Mande people.
Tichit Walatta-2000 BC!!! Earliest civilization of west Africa Ghana empire Mali empire Songhai empire etc...
Come on the list goes on and on...Where a Fulani person that stacks up to the great Ahmed Baba, Keita,Mansa Musa,Sonni Ali Ber or even Abu Bakari who may have even discovered the New World...( see this thread https://www.nairaland.com/1291722/did-west-africans-reach-new)
Again where are Fulani people who stack up to those people?
Now if we want to group Bantu people as one monolithic group....Thy are CLEARLY the most influential group of Africa! Even beating the Ancient Egyptians themselves. Those Bantu migrates brought civilization throughout most parts of Africa. They were one of the first in Africa to master iron smelting. Bantu people have great civilizations like.... Swahili states-Who traded as far as China and news are saying that they may have discovered Australia with Swahili coins found there. See my thread on East African sailors. Kongo Kingdom-advanced kingdom for its time. See my thread on the kingdom. Zulu empire-defeated British many times. Mutapa Empire-creators of great Zimbabwe.
If anyone's the most influential of Africa, its the Bantu people. Mr, I think this is nothing more than name dropping. Some of the West African Emperors you named were actually Fulani, and you didn't know this. For people who cant even differentiate Fulani from Hausa or Kanuri in your own country, how can you tell who is Pulo and who is Bambara in far away Guinea or Gambia? Bantu as a classification is no where a match for the Sudan. |
Culture › Re: The Fulanis, Africa's Most Influential Tribe by AdoZazzau: 6:52pm On May 27, 2013 |
PhysicsQED: I don't think you're very bright based on your first comment on this thread, but I'll attempt to reason with you anyway.
1. I didn't quote any "romanticized writings" from any Europeans about Benin. When I mentioned the British I was actually alluding to the writings of commander Bacon of the British expedition that conquered Benin on the issue of the use of guns by the Bini (he specifically claimed they didn't use any arrows and he described the volleys of the gun fire from the Bini at numerous points of his writing) and I was referring to the writings of other people who were actually there besides him, but anyone who has any familiarity with Bacon's writings on Benin knows that they are generally extremely negative about the Bini. It is just really naive or plain dumb to think that there are no negative writings or statements about Benin from Europeans when there are several - people simply gave their opinions and naturally, some are going to have a good opinion of certain things and some are going to have a bad opinion of certain things. Even one of the first people to comment on Benin, Duarte Pacheco Pereira, had some very negative things to say about the place, so why would anyone think that the writings of Europeans on Benin, even when some of these writings have negative statements about Benin - and even some of the supposedly "positive" writings on Benin sometimes contain negative statements - are somehow automatically "sweet in my ears"? This is just a silly assumption.
Your claim that "Europeans exagerrated their impressions of encounters with natives. If they see something good they called it the most beautiful, and if they see something fair they described it as the worst of any encounter any human should ever be suffered with" is simply not true because that does not apply to all the writers. I doubt that you've actually read much of these writings that you're referring to, otherwise you would know that it's not that hard to spot exaggeration. Furthermore, many of those sources that are detailed qualify their criticisms or praises of things by going into specifics and don't usually just lean wildly towards one extreme or another. At this point you're just making stuff up.
Then you say: "The writers behind them used these records to further their own goals and interests in Africa. There were writers who never set foot in places they wrote about and there were writers who passed through a place and wrote as if they spent half their lifetime in it. Europeans distorted the records big time and this was done all over Africa."
And yet you seem to be too lazy to cite numerous specific instances of what you're talking about (the names of the authors, what they claimed, and how exactly they were furthering their own goals and interests with what they claimed etc.). It's not news to anyone who has read any European explorers' accounts that they simply sometimes wrote wrong or incorrect information so you're not saying anything profound here, but it's silly to think that information about Benin or even the reputation of Benin or some other states came only from European explorers' writings. It sometimes came from other African peoples who had had interactions with Benin other African states in the past. The claims about Benin's influence or significance/capabilities in the past don't just come from European explorers' writings, but also from native/African sources as well.
You make a point to say: "For people who had no independent written record of their own like the Binis"
Yes, the Bini had no independent written record of their own, but what was the independent written record of the Fulanis, prior to adopting the Arabic script? Also, where were the Fulanis at before settling in Futa Jallon and what were they doing there (Futa Jallon) from the earliest times they settled there (which is when, exactly?) to their dispersal to other parts of Africa, according to the all-knowing supposed contemporary Fulani written records of those periods? Go into detail here when answering that, if you can. In reality, you guys wrote down your histories in recent centuries, many many centuries after much earlier events in your societies had already happened. So in what sense were you guys keeping detailed records of anything while it was happening except in recent centuries after the later jihads? Or did you guys simply have no significant history before these jihads?
And to this day, nobody knows what exactly the real ancient origins and history of the Fulani are (for example, what exact North African ethnic groups you mixed slightly with in the past, or when exactly you left your homelands to settle in other places) because you guys didn't leave real detailed records of these things, despite all the real and imagined/exaggerated scholarly activity and the adoption of an Arabic written script (an Ajami script). People were still trying to figure out whether the Fula originate from North Africa or West Africa until recently and they had to resort to genetics to resolve that, but nothing you all wrote down about your original homeland or origins or earliest history is available. At best all we have are bizarre claims of migration from the Middle East in some very late accounts, or nothing at all. And what's more, scholars that try to figure out what was going on in the Fulo state (in the Niger Valley region) in the 16th century or in "medieval" times generally have to rely on the writings of Portuguese and other Europeans or on the writings of Arabs or North Africans because you people didn't write anything then. There's no contemporary record of what you guys were doing in the Fulo state that actually comes from your people, because you didn't write anything about that at the time it was happening. There is no coherent "Fulani history" that traces your full history from antiquity to the present using contemporary Fulani written records from antiquity to the present because you guys simply didn't write anything on your history for many centuries, and only started the "record-keeping" stuff in recent centuries.
You've implied (by your reference to the written record and the Binis) that there's much significance to your people's eventual use of the script of the Arabs (whose ideology and religion is so sacred to you, as directly evidenced by your history), as far as having records of history, yet there is nothing in the 15th century (as an example of just one earlier century, but one could go further back still) literature that is actually from the Fulanis - nothing - that details the history of your people or even what you guys were doing at the time or in earlier centuries. You bring up the issue of keeping written records, yet all people can find from you guys as far as real history is concerned are things written in the early to mid 1800s or the 1900s, many many centuries after your group had already been existing and settled down, and even then some of these writings aren't necessarily without error and distortion (such as fantastical claims of origin from the Middle East of some groups). And keep in mind that when I write this, I don't want to read anything back from you about the history of the Hausa or their traditions or whatever they wrote about their early history or see it mentioned by you as if it had even the slightest bit of relevance to what I'm saying. I'm talking about the Fulani specifically. Cite the evidence for these supposed detailed written records of the Fulani from ancient times (not a time as late as the freaking 1800s - which was right before the colonial period - even something from only as far back as 1500 AD would be half-decent) that explain their history and origins and what they were doing and what they had been doing then.
It's also strange to think that "all you forest people view the white man as a sacred being whose account must not be challenged." Have you read any African history written by the professional scholars and historians from these people in the south that you call "forest people"? European assumptions, misinterpretations, etc. are routinely challenged in those writings. The fact that European writers and observers sometimes misinterpreted or misunderstood things that they saw and heard and could not always be relied on is something that has been pointed out in multiple publications by scholars from these groups.
In the case of the Bini specifically, are you silly enough to think the Binis accept every claim put forward by European writers (past or present) about Benin? There are "negative' things, apparently "neutral" things, and "positive" things written about Benin in European writings but there are also certain things that are just inaccurate about the culture or history or practices of the people in some writings. That's just one of the reasons why Binis wrote their own histories later on and still don't just blindly accept all the claims in European writings (past and present).
2. I don't understand the last bit about conquering "Yoruba seat of power" (I assume you mean Oyo). Has it occurred to you that they might not have had an interest in even attempting to do so for cultural/historical reasons? The rulers of Benin believed - presumably with good reason - that they had a direct relationship with the rulers at the "Yoruba seat of power" and the rulers of the "Yoruba seat of power" (Oyo) seemed to basically think the same thing. There seemed to be some idea in the air at both places that the were rulers there were relatives.
And as for the "Nupe seat of power" has it occurred to you that maybe part of the motivation for Benin's wars was economic based or trade related, rather than being blind fanatical religious expansion (like some groups)? If they were expanding for control of trade routes or other economic reasons, they might not want to waste time invading areas that aren't really economically significant but they also might not have wanted to invade and destabilize areas that supply them with things from much further off areas that they don't have direct access to themselves.
But on Nupe, the Fulani didn't even have the guts to take the place directly when it actually had some power - they exploited an ongoing civil war between the Muslim pretender to the Nupe throne and the pagan pretender to the Nupe throne, and after some really weaselly political scheming and manipulation and some further deception, they were later able to get control of the place through some very minor military engagements. The so called "conquest" was of a half-wrecked kingdom which had already been torn apart by civil war and which they turned against itself by exploiting religious divides and ongoing power struggles in the kingdom itself. Similarly, the Fulani didn't conquer the "Yoruba seat of power" through a direct military confrontation either. They exploited a civil war between Ilorin and Oyo (Ilorin was part of Oyo, but broke away to become independent), and employed deception and the same minor military engagements to achieve the takeover of Ilorin after Ilorin and its Yoruba allies had defeated Oyo. When the Fulanis tried to invade Ibadan (a direct military conflict), they simply lost. Ahmadu Bello (the Sardauna) mentioned this in his autobiography, My Life, when he mentioned how a "Fulani column" penetrated "south of Ibadan" but then the tide of battle turned and then they made no progress whatsoever so a stalemate with the Yoruba set in for decades (this is in his autobiography, I'm paraphrasing, but if I had it with me I would post the exact quote).
Anyway, Benin defeated Igala when it was powerful, and Nupe was presumably tributary to this Igala state (or at least they used to claim this in their traditions) back when it was powerful, so I hardly see where you're getting this idea of Benin not taking on any other powerful state in the area. You're worrying about why Benin didn't take on Nupe, yet they (Benin) defeated the Igala - a state that the Nupes claimed (or at least they used to claim this in the past, don't know how much they still claim it now) they were tributary to when it was powerful. The Fulani couldn't even conquer other places in the Middle Belt and they had to use deception, political scheming, and the exploitation of an ongoing civil war to take over Nupe, and I'm supposed to buy into this silly myth of martial supremacy? I repeat that the Fulanis would have just been riddled with bullets and totally decimated while trying to conquer what they couldn't conquer. Mr PhysicsQED, i appreciate your response but i take exception to your mud throwing. I was using you as example of civility so far, am i wrong? This is unecessary. Fulanis and the Hausas have been called all kinds of derogatory names and labeled as inept, so this your opening charging that Im not bright is not unexpected, we are immune by now to the social stigma. For the sensibilities of others and respect for the owner of the thread lets have mutual respect. Please Sir, ok? I don't think you're very bright based on your first comment on this thread, but I'll attempt to reason with you anyway. You wrote back with quite an eyeful and I must admit that you have done your homework. With this much information in your posession why can't you open a thread and title it "The Benin Empire's Great Influence in West Africa", instead of accusing about dating Fulani ? |
Islam › Re: Jesus Disciples by AdoZazzau: 6:28pm On May 27, 2013 |
I think Yahya (John The Baptist) is the only one mentioned in Quran. I would like to learn if others were named. The Hadith is a better place to find mentiin of them.. |
Islam › Re: Lagos: Update On Hijab by AdoZazzau: 6:08pm On May 27, 2013 |
This is pitiful! I just finished commenting on Yoruba race and its lost glory. Yoruba does not suffer from the problems we have in the North when it comes to religious intolerance. What demon has suddenly posessed these leaders in Lagos that they want to create problem on an otherwise trouble-free issue? Yoruba is trying hard to be the land of western democracy and capitalism. Your cultural leaders need to tell Fashola to slow down and back off from converting Lagos to European-friendly but African-hostile land.
What does wearing hijab add or remove from the cultural or economic value of Lagos State? |
Culture › Re: The Fulanis, Africa's Most Influential Tribe by AdoZazzau: 5:44pm On May 27, 2013 |
bokohalal: The Nupes are not Edos northern neighbour. The Igalas are. You can ask them about us. Edos viewed some Yoruba tribes as Edos. The Yoruba seat of power? The Oba Of Benin would never had declared war on Uhe(Ife). Oyo was ruled by the same family. Ibadan came too late to be of importance to Benin. If Ibadan could stop the Fulanis,Binis would have driven them all the way to Futa Jalon. Mr Bokohalal, your name is unique, interesting. Yorubas abandoned their culture to do follow follow on white man culture, that's why everyone have the audacity to talk nonsense and insult them nowadays. If they had stuck to their traditional ways they should not be the scum that everybody spit on today. Yoruba was known in Futadjalon and their empire and greatness is in archived records that documented the Sudanese races. Fulani respect Yoruba more than any other race of people on this side of the Niger. This is why Fulani always turn to them for alliance. You should study history Mr Bokohalal. I like your name, far more acceptable than a bokoharam that wants to throw people back into dark ages. |
Culture › Re: The Fulanis, Africa's Most Influential Tribe by AdoZazzau: 5:16pm On May 27, 2013 |
shymexx: I'm not against the Fulani's. However, I'm against calling a tribe that hasn't achieved much, the most influential on the continent. Africa is too big and has achieved a lot to ridicule our achievements like that. I would've said the same thing, if she alluded the same thing to the Yoruba's. As far as I'm concerned - no tribe in Nigeria deserves that title.
The Fulani's are late-comers. And the fact that they never achieved anything with their own consciousness, says a lot about the type of people they're. Everything they achieved came from foreign ideologies and foreign empowerment. Mr Shymexx, so are you Yoruba? What do you mean by "the Fulanis never achieved anything?" What is your definition of achievement, devoid of foreign influence? |
Culture › Re: The Fulanis, Africa's Most Influential Tribe by AdoZazzau: 5:10pm On May 27, 2013 |
tpia@: Adozazzau
^ Are you nigerian?
You dont seem to be. Yes tpia@, I am a Nigerian. There is a disease that comes with western educatiin and is called "discrimination". You Southerners suffer from the white man's syndrome and penchant for putting humanity into category buckets. What seemings do I need to posess for you to recognize I am Nigerian? |
Culture › Re: The Fulanis, Africa's Most Influential Tribe by AdoZazzau: 5:01pm On May 27, 2013 |
shymexx: No, I've been civil with her so far. I was just posting the truth about her ancestry and calling her for lying that's Yoruba(when she's obviously not). Same goes for the other woman that I referenced in my post. The only person I've verbally attacked on here is: bororjo. And he started the name calling by calling me a "fool."
Anyway, I don't have problem with people being proud of the tribe/ethnic-group. However, I can't stand fake-fvcks who hide under another ethnicity to spew nonsense. It's just mindless and disrespectful. Also, if you want to allude anything to your tribe - make sure it's based on FACTS - not hyberbole and jejune fallacies.  My man, I don't know but Im assuming that you have had previous encounter to know who she is but nonetheless, why are you against Fulani this much? I must find a Fulani for you to marry. How would you like people disrespecting the children this Fulani girl will bear for you? |
Culture › Re: The Fulanis, Africa's Most Influential Tribe by AdoZazzau: 4:44pm On May 27, 2013 |
Madam , please forgive my use of too much space to air my views here but these comments I see from the Southern brothers are unbelievable. Im familiar with their labeling of Fulani as illiterates and backward but now there is a new hatred and it should not be tolerated. We are all one people. Your ancestry or lover should not be a yardstick for judging your writing skills or your views. If the Yorubas dont like it let them write their own influence and post.
I like your responses to these frivolous charges of dating Fulani and having Fulani interest. You stood up against the bullying and with style and diplomacy, I applaud you. I also want to be fair to them and agree that Africa is too big for Fulani to be a single most influential race. There is no doubt this is true regionally in West Africa, but Fulani's influence did not register in any other region outside "The Sudan". The topic may need a modification along with corresponding inferrences within context but everything else is quite truthful. |
Culture › Re: The Fulanis, Africa's Most Influential Tribe by AdoZazzau: 4:14pm On May 27, 2013 |
shymexx: I guess you're a fictional writer and it's better you stick to writing fictions. However, if you want to hang with the best, when it comes to African history, you need to write based on historical FACTS - and not jejune tales.
Only a Fula would label the non-achieving Fula tribe the most influential tribe in Africa. perhaps, you're one of the Yoruba fulani slaves in Ilorin. You betrayed your people and you've continued to su.ck Fulani's nuts since then. Stick to what you know, Africa is too big and has achieved too much, to be disrespected.
Also, the Fulani's are so influential yet they have a recessive culture. How come every time the Fulani culture comes in contact with other cultures; it dies straight-away? In Northern Nigeria - they lost their culture to the Hausa's. And in Ilorin, they have all been Yorubanised. Why is that? So much for an influential tribe looool.
Get a life, woman. Mr shymexx, please there is no need for this. Mr Physics took offense to her topic as well but he aired his complaints with civility. Please let us be respectful while in disagreements. You called this beautiful lady Fulani lover mixed with Yoruba ancestry, another one you called Igbo sympathiser mixed with Yoruba ancestry. My friend, this is hurtful. None of us choosed where our fate has brought us. You make arrogant remarks. What ancestry are you mixed with? |
Culture › Re: The Fulanis, Africa's Most Influential Tribe by AdoZazzau: 3:32pm On May 27, 2013*. Modified: 3:53pm On May 27, 2013 |
somalia9: and this is the reason why 90 percent of them look like you guys, and only 10 percent of them look like horners with the soft hair and straight nose.
am sure if their ancestors could have an up or down vote wether to intermarry with negroids knowing that their decandants would look negroid they would rethink about this issue. Mr Somalia, Fulani are very proud people and cherish their negroid heritage. Fulanis do not obsess with physical features and looks and love to mate and intermarry with the forest and coastal people if religion does not forbid it. Fulani does not discriminate on looks. They prefer negro to arabs for intermarriage. The savannah and forest people have a gene type that the Fulani desires and need for balance. Their men unfortunately are discriminatory and dont like Fulani women for marriage. |
Culture › Re: The Fulanis, Africa's Most Influential Tribe by AdoZazzau: 3:21pm On May 27, 2013 |
PhysicsQED: ^^ This is what excessive praise and undeserved hype does for some people who already have a distorted perception of things. The idea/claim of this thread is really too strange for me to bother addressing in detail, but I advise people who believe stuff like this above to simply pick up some books and get some real perspective.
The Fulanis were repeatedly defeated by states like Mali that surrounded their heartland. They were simply never a dominant force in their own wider home region until long after more powerful states had declined in power. Mali (the empire of the Mandinka people) was not really defeated by the Fula, but by a fellow Mande speaking group, the Bamana, and they were only bested by the Bamana after their power had declined from what it had been following numerous conflicts with other groups and internal conflicts. It's easy to claim to have bested a group such as the Mandinka that were more powerful than your own group, by referring to a conquest of a less powerful state (Bamana) that happened long after Mandinka power had already declined, but that doesn't mean anyone will actually believe the claim. The Wolof were conquered by the French. Or are the French now being claimed as Fulani too?
The claim on Benin is funny. Are you geographically challenged? Yoruba is and was not between the Fulani and Benin, so talk about being saved from the same fate as the Hausas because of that is silly. The Fulanis had a direct route south to Benin through Nupe, but they didn't attempt to conquer Benin itself after they (Fulanis) had gained control of Nupe, even though they had decades to try it (from 1836 onwards). Maybe they might have realized that their horsemen were generally useless in the rainforest area and especially against people armed with guns. Or maybe it was the fact that they were unable to conquer places in the Middle Belt area that were weaker than Benin so they couldn't even contemplate going further directly south. Or maybe it was both. Also, the conflict between Benin and the British that resulted in the conquest of Benin was fought almost entirely with guns (on both sides, although the British were much better equipped), as attested to by the British themselves, and Benin produced some of its own guns locally. The Fulani of the Sokoto Caliphate were still almost entirely using bows, arrows, swords and spears, even up to the time of their conquest by the British. If they had tried invading Benin, the Fulanis probably would have been shot dead off their horses while stumbling around stup1d and lost in the forests. Mr PhysicsQED, You opened with this quote This is what excessive praise and undeserved hype does for some people who already have a distorted perception of things. and you finished with a lecture on Bini's much hyped and excessively praised history. Let me share with you that Bini's glory today is the product of European writings. Much of these writings occured in an era in which the Europeans were obsessed with planting their tongue across the globe so it was an age of romanticized style of writing. Europeans exagerrated their impressions of encounters with natives. If they see something good they called it the most beautiful, and if they see something fair they described it as the worst of any encounter any human should ever be suffered with. This is how those who pioneered African exploration and wrote about it documented the records. The writers behind them used these records to further their own goals and interests in Africa. There were writers who never set foot in places they wrote about and there were writers who passed through a place and wrote as if they spent half their lifetime in it. Europeans distorted the records big time and this was done all over Africa. For people who had no independent written record of their own, like the Binis, of course, these hyped accounts is sweet in your ears. Your neighbors read what Europeans wrote about you and since all you forest people view the white man as a sacred being whose account must not be challenged, your status as a formidable kingdom is further elevated. If the hyped account of your glory match with your military prowess then you should have conquered the Yoruba seat of power or the Nupe seat of power. These were two neighboring powers to you. Gun or no gun, your romanticized kingdom would have been decimated if Fulani went into the forests. |
Culture › Re: The Fulanis, Africa's Most Influential Tribe by AdoZazzau: 2:40pm On May 27, 2013 |
CAMEROONPRIDE: ^^ dude you cant understand how these people destructed African culture.
@ topic last but not the least remove Cameroon in your talks...most of the fulani in Cameroon are of nigerian origin or at least have a Nigerian parent. you are not indigenous here. Why are you venting like this, Cameroon? This is the truth, whether minority or not, Fulani ruled Cameroon; whether the language is Hausa or not, Fulani ruled Nigeria; whether Southerners are negilgent or not, Fulani dominates the politics of both countries. How can the Southereners of Cameroon and Nigeria continue to boast of academic superiority but yet remain negligent and uninformed that an academically backward minority rule and dominate over you? Look at our current President, an academically advanced fellow with phd, the worst performing in our history. He is more articulate in english language than any Fulani that has ruled this country but he is equally less competent in leadership qualities than even the worst of them. Dear Cameroon, give honor where its due. |
Islam › Re: Imo Traditional Ruler Converts To Islam by AdoZazzau: 9:10am On May 27, 2013 |
Allahu Akbar! We welcome Musa Dimunah to the congregation of those who submit to the will of Allah. May Allah's will be done. |
Culture › Re: The Fulanis, Africa's Most Influential Tribe by AdoZazzau: 9:02am On May 27, 2013 |
We should give credit where its due. Fulanis are the supreme race in WestAfrica. Politically, militarily, academically, economically, agriculturally, no other tribe or race of people in West Africa has accomplished as the Fulanis have.
The Great Mandinkas, their brothers the Wolofs, the fearsome Hausa States,were all routed and subdued by Fulani. Fulani have ruled in all the West Afrivan countries, whether anglophone or francophone. Here in Nigeria, except for Yoruba and Kanuri, evrryone they came in contact with was easily subdued. Binis were lucky the Fulani onslaught was repulsed by Yoruba, they would have been history like the Hausas. |
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Politics › Re: We Have Forgiven Killers Of Our Operatives - SSS DG by AdoZazzau: 7:54am On May 27, 2013 |
I cannot believe what im reading here. A national intelligence gathering agency backs off from confrontation with an ordinary village cult.
There is no country left in Nigeria. Evrryone is just hanging on to chop chop oil money. No one is any longer interested in fighting to uphold the integrity of nationhood. |