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99 Years In Nigeria: The El-khalils And The Seven-up Legacy - Foreign Affairs - Nairaland

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99 Years In Nigeria: The El-khalils And The Seven-up Legacy by FreeStuffsNG(op): 12:02pm On Oct 18, 2025
99 years in Nigeria: The El-Khalils and the Seven-Up legacy


Ninety-nine years after landing in Nigeria through Mohammed El-Khalil, the El-Khalil family has built a legacy in Nigeria, with the Seven-Up Bottling Company.

Faysal and Sari featured during the fireside chat at the Family Business Summit 2025, organised by PwC in conjunction with BusinessDay. Speaking during the chat, they provided insights into how they have built one of the biggest family businesses in Nigeria.

Faysal, who served as MD of SevenUp from 1978 to 2005, put the age of the business at 65. He said, “The first bottle from our factory rolled out on the 1st of October 1960. So, we celebrate two anniversaries on the 1st of October every year.”


Read Also: SBC: 65 years serving Nigeria – Businessday NG

The arrival of Mohammed El-Khalil in Nigeria
Sari commenced the conversation, providing a detailed summary of his grandfather’s sojourn to Nigeria. He highlighted that in the early years of the 20th century, when Lebanon was still under Ottoman rule, Mohammed El-Khalil set out in search of a better life. This trip took him to Mexico, where he encountered life’s difficulties. However, on a trip back to Lebanon, he landed in Marseille, France where he encountered a Lebanese couple.



According to Sari, a Lebanese couple instructed Mohammed, “You must go to Nigeria, you will find gold on the sides of the streets.”

In 1926, he landed in Nigeria.

The older Faysal continued the story. Like many newcomers at the time in Nigeria, Mohammed began in trading, buying bales of textiles and selling them in Lagos. Success in those days meant expanding into Balogun Street or Martin Street, and Mohammed was determined to get there.

Through discipline, thrift, and persistence, his trading business flourished. By 1927, he diversified into road transport, launching a venture that would, over time, become the largest privately owned transport company in West Africa.


Even as his business expanded, Mohammed remained deeply connected to his roots. He returned to Lebanon, where he met and married his wife. Though much of his time was spent in Nigeria, together they raised eight children, six boys and two girls. Several of them were born in Nigeria, reflecting the deep bond the family maintained with the country that had become their second home.

As the older children completed their education abroad, the family began to see a new chapter unfolding. By the late 1950s, when his eldest son Anwar returned to Nigeria, Mohammed realised it was time to diversify once again. This decision marked the beginning of the family’s transition from trading and transport into new sectors, a shift that would eventually lead to the creation of Seven-Up Bottling Company.

Sari’s journey to the top of the family business
For Sari El-Khalil, the current MD of the company, the story of Seven-Up is also the story of home. “I’ve spent most of my life in Nigeria,” he said. “I grew up here, son of the soil.”

Long before he carried an executive title, Sari’s earliest memories were not of boardrooms, but of trucks and bottling lines. As a boy, he noted that he would return from school to the company’s offices in Ijora, Lagos, running around the yard, trying to change the oil of trucks, and occasionally joining door-to-door sales teams.

“Even when I was in Lebanon,” he recalled, “I’d come back for the summers. And instead of partying with my friends, I’d get on the trucks and do sales. It’s been in my blood since I was very young, part of my DNA.”

But that early exposure didn’t translate into entitlement. After earning his undergraduate degree in Boston, Sari returned to Nigeria for a five-year internship in the company. “The plan was always to go back for an MBA, get higher education, and then come back,” he said. “But my mentor at the time advised me to step out, to see something different.”

That advice changed everything. Sari worked abroad for five years with PepsiCo, gaining first-hand corporate experience outside the family ecosystem. “It was the best decision,” he reflected. “It helped me understand what it means to work in a structured corporate environment, to be accountable, to earn your place. And at the same time, it made me appreciate even more what it means to own something, the difference between being an employee and being an owner.”

When he finally returned to Seven-Up, it wasn’t out of obligation, but conviction. “It was never forced,” he said. “I was given choices, and it led me back here.”

Family governance and constitution

For all its decades of expansion and commercial success, Faysal recounts that the El-Khalil story is not just about building factories, securing distribution networks, or selling soft drinks. It is also a story about family, about how the bonds that built a business can just as easily be tested by it.

After establishing Seven-Up Bottling Company and steering it into one of Nigeria’s most recognised consumer brands, he noted that the first generation of the El-Khalil family faced a governance challenge.

“Some founders fall into what we call the founder’s trap,” he reflected, recalling the early years after their father’s passing. “Our eldest brother, who led Seven-Up, became a sort of second founder. He was a visionary, but he didn’t want to let go.”

That tension, between continuity and change, shaped much of the company’s evolution. Faysal noted that, like many family businesses, questions arose about who should lead: was it by seniority or by merit? How long should one remain in the office? Should pay and influence be tied to bloodlines or to performance?

Out of this came a resolve to create what they called the family constitution, a detailed playbook to define how the family and the business would coexist. It outlined governance rules, leadership succession, retirement ages, and even boundaries for those who could join the enterprise.
https://businessday.ng/companies/article/99-years-in-nigeria-the-el-khalils-and-the-seven-up-legacy/

Re: 99 Years In Nigeria: The El-khalils And The Seven-up Legacy by FreeStuffsNG(op):
On a trip back to Lebanon, he landed in Marseille, France where he encountered a Lebanese couple. According to Sari, a Lebanese couple instructed Mohammed, “You must go to Nigeria (Lagos), you will find gold on the sides of the streets.”

In 1926, he landed in Lagos.

The older Faysal continued the story. Like many newcomers at the time in Nigeria, Mohammed began in trading, buying bales of textiles and selling them in Lagos. Success in those days meant expanding into Balogun Street or Martin Street, and Mohammed was determined to get there.

Very inspiring 👏 🙌

As far back as over a century ago, Lagos has been prosperous and there has been prosperity in Lagos of global reckoning that the prosperity of our city was on the lips of international audience.

This was a time that some parts of Nigeria were yet to be exposed and still covering their private parts with leaves.

To the glory of God and with tremendous gratitude to our forebears, I am happy to state that, till date and forever more, our city remains prosperous and peaceful.

We are LAGOS. We are the global centre of Excellence!

Please bring your legitimate and lawful investments to Lagos. Invest in Lagos for the best returns on investment.

God bless Lagos State and Nigeria forever more!


Documentations compiled by archivist Pa Oloko Alli-Balogun, an octogenarian from Lagos.

The population of Lagos Colony was analysed into 'Yoruba' and 'Non-Yoruba' tribes:

1. Eko tribe had fallen from 57% in 1872 to 23.6% 20 years later.
2. Popo or Egun tribe was 15.85%,

3. Other Yoruba groups
Oyo - 11.6%
Ijebu - 11.01%
Awori - 9.26%
Egba - 6.05%
Ijesha - 4.32%
Egbado - 3.63%
Ekiti/Efon people - 1.76%

4. Non-Yoruba groups
Nupe/Tapa - 1.86%
Hausa - 1.86%
The Kru - 1.37%.


The strength of the Eko tribe was concentrated in Wards A, B, C and D of Lagos Town and Harbour, and the Central District of Ebute Metta/Yaba.

The Aworis were concentrated in the Central District and the Popo's or Egun in the Western District.


This information can be obtained from The Nigerian Nolstagia group 1960 - 1980 project on www.facebook.com[/quote]

Re: 99 Years In Nigeria: The El-khalils And The Seven-up Legacy by JackDaAlienz(m): 12:48pm On Oct 18, 2025
So na Lebanese own 7up shocked shocked shocked
Re: 99 Years In Nigeria: The El-khalils And The Seven-up Legacy by WelcomeToBiafra: 12:53pm On Oct 18, 2025
So Nigeria is over 99 years old but these corrupt politicians are lying that Nigeria is 65... undecided no Nigerians can't sing their national anthem...
Re: 99 Years In Nigeria: The El-khalils And The Seven-up Legacy by OlujobaSamuel: 12:54pm On Oct 18, 2025
What's the relationship between 7up and PepsiCo
What happened to Mountain Dew also
There should be a further link to get more of these insights
Re: 99 Years In Nigeria: The El-khalils And The Seven-up Legacy by naijapikin2(m): 12:57pm On Oct 18, 2025
See lebanese o

These set of people who were known to be beggars not too long ago.

If were raised in the north you likely would have known them to be beggars. As at then even if you tried adopting them, with their poverty they'd still refuse.
Re: 99 Years In Nigeria: The El-khalils And The Seven-up Legacy by SIXTEENTH(m): 12:57pm On Oct 18, 2025
Big Up7 to the world indeed you helped shaped the era of golden ages
Re: 99 Years In Nigeria: The El-khalils And The Seven-up Legacy by favour32(m): 12:58pm On Oct 18, 2025
The person that saw the future in Nigeria is a great person.
Re: 99 Years In Nigeria: The El-khalils And The Seven-up Legacy by FreeStuffsNG(op): 12:59pm On Oct 18, 2025
naijapikin2:
See lebanese o

These set of people who were known to be beggars not too long ago.

If were raised in the north you likely would have known them to be beggars. As at then even if you tried adopting them, with their poverty they'd still refuse.
Smh.

Lebanese have never been beggars or known as beggars!

You're obviously not from Lagos wink
Go and read about who we call them in Lagos.

I know the people you are probably confusing them with but I will not tell you here.
Re: 99 Years In Nigeria: The El-khalils And The Seven-up Legacy by muyico(m): 12:59pm On Oct 18, 2025
My favorites drink, this man don chop my money tired, including sprite
Re: 99 Years In Nigeria: The El-khalils And The Seven-up Legacy by faceland: 1:02pm On Oct 18, 2025
naijapikin2:
See lebanese o

These set of people who were known to be beggars not too long ago.

If were raised in the north you likely would have known them to be beggars. As at then even if you tried adopting them, with their poverty they'd still refuse.
I have never seen a Labanese begger. They are usual crooks and extremely enterprising. Don't stand between them and money.

You know the stereotypes of Jews? That is what a Labanese is (an Arab Jew). 💰
Re: 99 Years In Nigeria: The El-khalils And The Seven-up Legacy by FreeStuffsNG(op): 1:05pm On Oct 18, 2025
faceland:
I have never seen a Labanese bigger. They are usual crooks. Don't stand between them and money.
Smh.
They're not crooks and again, you don’t know what they are particularly known for. It's in that report though wink
Re: 99 Years In Nigeria: The El-khalils And The Seven-up Legacy by naijapikin2(m): 1:05pm On Oct 18, 2025
FreeStuffsNG:
Smh.

Lebanese have never been beggars or known as beggars!

You're obviously not from Lagos wink
Go and read about who we call them in Lagos.

I know the people you are probably confusing them with but I will not tell you here.
Did you read my post at all. I said we that grew up in the north. Oga they were beggars. Who did you think I was confusing them withhuh

Don't role me Into your tribal battles o.. I just dey my own jeje.
Re: 99 Years In Nigeria: The El-khalils And The Seven-up Legacy by FreeStuffsNG(op): 1:08pm On Oct 18, 2025
naijapikin2:
Did you read my post at all. I said we that grew up in the north. Oga they were beggars. Who did you think I was confusing them withhuh

Don't role me Into your tribal battles o.. I just dey my own jeje.
You're making same mistake and it's pathetic.
Lebanese are not beggars! You're confusing them with another set of foreigners.
Re: 99 Years In Nigeria: The El-khalils And The Seven-up Legacy by Gotocourt: 1:09pm On Oct 18, 2025
By 1927, he diversified into road transport, launching a venture that would, over time, become the largest privately owned transport company in West Africa.


Which one was Sir Lois Ojukwu claiming huh
Re: 99 Years In Nigeria: The El-khalils And The Seven-up Legacy by faceland: 1:11pm On Oct 18, 2025
FreeStuffsNG:
Smh.
They're not crooks and again, you don’t know what they are particularly known for. It's in that report though wink
I think by plane it take 12+ hour to travel from their country to here. Those guys didn't travel all the way down here to just play.
Re: 99 Years In Nigeria: The El-khalils And The Seven-up Legacy by naijapikin2(m): 1:11pm On Oct 18, 2025
FreeStuffsNG:
You're making same mistake and it's pathetic.
Lebanese are not beggars! You're confusing them with another set of foreigners.
Oga I didn't grow up in lagos and you didn't grow in the north with me. Don't feel as you know every part of naija
Re: 99 Years In Nigeria: The El-khalils And The Seven-up Legacy by grandstar(m): 1:13pm On Oct 18, 2025
naijapikin2:
See lebanese o

These set of people who were known to be beggars not too long ago.

If were raised in the north you likely would have known them to be beggars. As at then even if you tried adopting them, with their poverty they'd still refuse.
You must be referring to the Berbers Touregs from Niger.
Re: 99 Years In Nigeria: The El-khalils And The Seven-up Legacy by naijapikin2(m): 1:13pm On Oct 18, 2025
faceland:
I have never seen a Labanese begger. They are usual crooks and extremely enterprising. Don't stand between them and money.

You know the stereotypes of Jews? That is what a Labanese is (an Arab Jew). 💰
Bros did you grow up with me in the north?

I said they were beggars. Can you be raised in all part of the country at once
Re: 99 Years In Nigeria: The El-khalils And The Seven-up Legacy by naijapikin2(m): 1:15pm On Oct 18, 2025
grandstar:
You must be referring to the Berbers Touregs from Niger.
The tuaregs yes... The lebanese also. Zaria in kd to be exact
Re: 99 Years In Nigeria: The El-khalils And The Seven-up Legacy by faceland: 1:17pm On Oct 18, 2025
naijapikin2:
Did you read my post at all. I said we that grew up in the north. Oga they were beggars. Who did you think I was confusing them withhuh

Don't role me Into your tribal battles o.. I just dey my own jeje.
There are those light skin tribe from Niger that you mistake as Labanese. Towaray or whatever they call themselves.

When I was a child, they were upper middle class. Their country is far way that they came in by flight while the people you are referring to just walked in.
Re: 99 Years In Nigeria: The El-khalils And The Seven-up Legacy by Mrchippychappy(m):
Abeg I want one of my Northern brothers to go to the country of this El-khali guy and try to create a business there, please I want to see something first.

This kind of one sided slave and master relationship all because of some unfounded religious hierarchy doesn't make any sense to me, how would I be actively involved in a religious practice that has clearly defined my role as that of a slave in that religion? How would I willfully subject myself and my family to such practice?

Nah, not me. Tufiakwa
Re: 99 Years In Nigeria: The El-khalils And The Seven-up Legacy by Rybnyk(m): 1:19pm On Oct 18, 2025
naijapikin2:
See lebanese o

These set of people who were known to be beggars not too long ago.

If were raised in the north you likely would have known them to be beggars. As at then even if you tried adopting them, with their poverty they'd still refuse.
You must be confusing them with shuwa Arabs or Chadians you see begging on the road.
Re: 99 Years In Nigeria: The El-khalils And The Seven-up Legacy by Mrchippychappy(m): 1:20pm On Oct 18, 2025
naijapikin2:
See lebanese o

These set of people who were known to be beggars not too long ago.

If were raised in the north you likely would have known them to be beggars. As at then even if you tried adopting them, with their poverty they'd still refuse.
Bro dey would argue with you, in their mind even the lowest person of Arab extraction is better than them, it comes with their religious belief.

These lebanese people were even in CMS back then in the 90s pulling on our shirt when I would go out to by things with my Dad, dem go surround us dey ask for money. Even sef, those park workers (back then Agbero never dey yet) dey knack some of the Lebanese girls that were much older in the garage, ask anyone who grew up in Lagos around the busy areas, they would tell you all this.
Re: 99 Years In Nigeria: The El-khalils And The Seven-up Legacy by BadBradley: 1:46pm On Oct 18, 2025
OlujobaSamuel:
What's the relationship between 7up and PepsiCo
What happened to Mountain Dew also
There should be a further link to get more of these insights
7up is using Pepsi franchise I think
Re: 99 Years In Nigeria: The El-khalils And The Seven-up Legacy by Believeintruth: 1:50pm On Oct 18, 2025
FreeStuffsNG:
On a trip back to Lebanon, he landed in Marseille, France where he encountered a Lebanese couple. According to Sari, a Lebanese couple instructed Mohammed, “You must go to Nigeria (Lagos), you will find gold on the sides of the streets.”

In 1926, he landed in Lagos.

The older Faysal continued the story. Like many newcomers at the time in Nigeria, Mohammed began in trading, buying bales of textiles and selling them in Lagos. Success in those days meant expanding into Balogun Street or Martin Street, and Mohammed was determined to get there.

Very inspiring 👏 🙌

As far back as over a century ago, Lagos has been prosperous and there has been prosperity in Lagos of global reckoning that the prosperity of our city was on the lips of international audience.

This was a time that some parts of Nigeria were yet to be exposed and still covering their private parts with leaves.

To the glory of God and with tremendous gratitude to our forebears, I am happy to state that, till date and forever more, our city remains prosperous and peaceful.

We are LAGOS. We are the global centre of Excellence!

Please bring your legitimate and lawful investments to Lagos. Invest in Lagos for the best returns on investment.

God bless Lagos State and Nigeria forever more!


Documentations compiled by archivist Pa Oloko Alli-Balogun, an octogenarian from Lagos.

The population of Lagos Colony was analysed into 'Yoruba' and 'Non-Yoruba' tribes:

1. Eko tribe had fallen from 57% in 1872 to 23.6% 20 years later.
2. Popo or Egun tribe was 15.85%,

3. Other Yoruba groups
Oyo - 11.6%
Ijebu - 11.01%
Awori - 9.26%
Egba - 6.05%
Ijesha - 4.32%
Egbado - 3.63%
Ekiti/Efon people - 1.76%

4. Non-Yoruba groups
Nupe/Tapa - 1.86%
Hausa - 1.86%
The Kru - 1.37%.


The strength of the Eko tribe was concentrated in Wards A, B, C and D of Lagos Town and Harbour, and the Central District of Ebute Metta/Yaba.

The Aworis were concentrated in the Central District and the Popo's or Egun in the Western District.


This information can be obtained from The Nigerian Nolstagia group 1960 - 1980 project on www.facebook.com
Oga you have succeeded in avoiding my question on Unilag. Who was the first VC of Unilag? Also the instruction was to go to Nigeria, stop trying to zone it down to only Lagos. Also Lagos belongs to all of us, it was built with the common sweat of Nigeria from its time as the federal capital territory.
Re: 99 Years In Nigeria: The El-khalils And The Seven-up Legacy by Akalia(m): 1:50pm On Oct 18, 2025
BadBradley:
7up is using Pepsi franchise I think
I was once a staff of Seven-up bottling company. You are right, 7up is a franchise bottler of PepsiCo international-bottles PepsiCo's range of beverages under license.
Re: 99 Years In Nigeria: The El-khalils And The Seven-up Legacy by Believeintruth: 1:51pm On Oct 18, 2025
FreeStuffsNG:
On a trip back to Lebanon, he landed in Marseille, France where he encountered a Lebanese couple. According to Sari, a Lebanese couple instructed Mohammed, “You must go to Nigeria (Lagos), you will find gold on the sides of the streets.”

In 1926, he landed in Lagos.

The older Faysal continued the story. Like many newcomers at the time in Nigeria, Mohammed began in trading, buying bales of textiles and selling them in Lagos. Success in those days meant expanding into Balogun Street or Martin Street, and Mohammed was determined to get there.

Very inspiring 👏 🙌

As far back as over a century ago, Lagos has been prosperous and there has been prosperity in Lagos of global reckoning that the prosperity of our city was on the lips of international audience.

This was a time that some parts of Nigeria were yet to be exposed and still covering their private parts with leaves.

To the glory of God and with tremendous gratitude to our forebears, I am happy to state that, till date and forever more, our city remains prosperous and peaceful.

We are LAGOS. We are the global centre of Excellence!

Please bring your legitimate and lawful investments to Lagos. Invest in Lagos for the best returns on investment.

God bless Lagos State and Nigeria forever more!


Documentations compiled by archivist Pa Oloko Alli-Balogun, an octogenarian from Lagos.

The population of Lagos Colony was analysed into 'Yoruba' and 'Non-Yoruba' tribes:

1. Eko tribe had fallen from 57% in 1872 to 23.6% 20 years later.
2. Popo or Egun tribe was 15.85%,

3. Other Yoruba groups
Oyo - 11.6%
Ijebu - 11.01%
Awori - 9.26%
Egba - 6.05%
Ijesha - 4.32%
Egbado - 3.63%
Ekiti/Efon people - 1.76%

4. Non-Yoruba groups
Nupe/Tapa - 1.86%
Hausa - 1.86%
The Kru - 1.37%.


The strength of the Eko tribe was concentrated in Wards A, B, C and D of Lagos Town and Harbour, and the Central District of Ebute Metta/Yaba.

The Aworis were concentrated in the Central District and the Popo's or Egun in the Western District.


This information can be obtained from The Nigerian Nolstagia group 1960 - 1980 project on www.facebook.com
Also on Lagos being among the fastest tech ecosystem in the world. Please be very specific as to the metrics being seen, because as at 2024 Lagos had dropped from the list of the fastest Tech ecosystems. Please stop misinforming people
Re: 99 Years In Nigeria: The El-khalils And The Seven-up Legacy by OlujobaSamuel: 1:57pm On Oct 18, 2025
BadBradley:
7up is using Pepsi franchise I think
Never knew. I used to think 7up is the Parent coy of Pepsi, that the company decided to rename to PepsiCo Inc some years back due to rebranding as Pepsi is more popular with the people than 7up
Re: 99 Years In Nigeria: The El-khalils And The Seven-up Legacy by naijapikin2(m): 2:04pm On Oct 18, 2025
Mrchippychappy:
Bro dey would argue with you, in their mind even the lowest person of Arab extraction is better than them, it comes with their religious belief.

These lebanese people were even in CMS back then in the 90s pulling on our shirt when I would go out to by things with my Dad, dem go surround us dey ask for money. Even sef, those park workers (back then Agbero never dey yet) dey knack some of the Lebanese girls that were much older in the garage, ask anyone who grew up in Lagos around the busy areas, they would tell you all this.
Omo see wahala o. I grew up in the north and they were real beggars. No mind them
Re: 99 Years In Nigeria: The El-khalils And The Seven-up Legacy by naijapikin2(m): 2:05pm On Oct 18, 2025
Rybnyk:
You must be confusing them with shuwa Arabs or Chadians you see begging on the road.
Nope
Nope
Nope
I grew up in zaria. Lebanese were beggars

Shikenan 😎
Re: 99 Years In Nigeria: The El-khalils And The Seven-up Legacy by Afonja007: 2:07pm On Oct 18, 2025
FreeStuffsNG:
On a trip back to Lebanon, he landed in Marseille, France where he encountered a Lebanese couple. According to Sari, a Lebanese couple instructed Mohammed, “You must go to Nigeria (Lagos), you will find gold on the sides of the streets.”

In 1926, he landed in Lagos.

The older Faysal continued the story. Like many newcomers at the time in Nigeria, Mohammed began in trading, buying bales of textiles and selling them in Lagos. Success in those days meant expanding into Balogun Street or Martin Street, and Mohammed was determined to get there.

Very inspiring 👏 🙌

As far back as over a century ago, Lagos has been prosperous and there has been prosperity in Lagos of global reckoning that the prosperity of our city was on the lips of international audience.

This was a time that some parts of Nigeria were yet to be exposed and still covering their private parts with leaves.

To the glory of God and with tremendous gratitude to our forebears, I am happy to state that, till date and forever more, our city remains prosperous and peaceful.

We are LAGOS. We are the global centre of Excellence!

Please bring your legitimate and lawful investments to Lagos. Invest in Lagos for the best returns on investment.

God bless Lagos State and Nigeria forever more!


Documentations compiled by archivist Pa Oloko Alli-Balogun, an octogenarian from Lagos.

The population of Lagos Colony was analysed into 'Yoruba' and 'Non-Yoruba' tribes:

1. Eko tribe had fallen from 57% in 1872 to 23.6% 20 years later.
2. Popo or Egun tribe was 15.85%,

3. Other Yoruba groups
Oyo - 11.6%
Ijebu - 11.01%
Awori - 9.26%
Egba - 6.05%
Ijesha - 4.32%
Egbado - 3.63%
Ekiti/Efon people - 1.76%

4. Non-Yoruba groups
Nupe/Tapa - 1.86%
Hausa - 1.86%
The Kru - 1.37%.


The strength of the Eko tribe was concentrated in Wards A, B, C and D of Lagos Town and Harbour, and the Central District of Ebute Metta/Yaba.

The Aworis were concentrated in the Central District and the Popo's or Egun in the Western District.


This information can be obtained from The Nigerian Nolstagia group 1960 - 1980 project on www.facebook.com
people from other part of the country are covering them selves with leaves while your people are already exposed right?400 year ago Portuguese monks travel to Japan to preach Christianity to Japanese people by then Japan was too backward today the same Japan is above Portugal both in technology and economy 20 times ,my question is your people met Europeans first what technology did your people learn from the Europeans because till today your people don't know how trumpet or even ordinary key was made, I am only mentioning products that don't have electrical engine inside yet your people don't know how it is made,the years they spent with white people is a waste please my dear brother is not something you will be proud of ,today they are like other Nigerian tribes
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