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To My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. - Politics (25) - Nairaland

Nairaland ForumNairaland GeneralPoliticsTo My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. (61949 Views)

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Re: To My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. by JamesDoe: 12:15am On Dec 28, 2011
"In the United States the Igbo slaves were known for being strong headed. In some states such as Georgia, the Igbo had a high suicide rate. Igbo slaves were most numerous in the states of Maryland and Virginia.

In the 19th century the state of Virginia received around 37,000 slaves from Calabar of which 30,000 were Igbo according to Douglas B. Chambers. The Frontier Culture Museum of Virginia estimates around 38% of captives taken to Virginia were from the Bight of Biafra. Igbo peoples constituted the majority of enslaved Africans in Maryland. Chambers has been quoted saying "My research suggests that perhaps 60 percent of black Americans have at least one Igbo ancestor, "



It would appear that historically ibo people were captured and rounded up by the other ethnic groups in Nigeria.  Ibo people are known as being strong headed, looking for a fight when the person they are challenging is not interested.  But the minute he faces them, they run away.  Fleeing like Ojukwu - mission abandoned.
Re: To My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. by Nobody: 12:15am On Dec 28, 2011
One of the scenes Oju - Iku toy soldiers showed him then he took to his heels,     grin grin grin

Re: To My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. by seedord247(m): 12:16am On Dec 28, 2011
saxywale:
One of the scenes Oju - Iku toy soldiers showed him then he took to his heels,    grin grin grin
grin grin grin grin grin grin
Re: To My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. by SisiKill1: 12:16am On Dec 28, 2011
Negro_Ntns:
Oh my God!!   cheesy  what!!  Sisi where have u been my dear?
Goodness, see fast posting. . .I can barely keep up.

To Sensei! Wahalahi Ina yin fushi!!!  angry angry  Saba de me ka ni yi fada da irun su?  angry angry angry angry Ka manta iri mutane su ke ne? Basu da hankali mana!!  Ka tunan wannan karim magana, Suna girma, suna cin k’asa? To in ka tuna, za ka bar su, su dai su yi wasa, su ci kasa, su sha rowan doti a cikin dauda. Ka gani? Nagode!!!


I've been good, just been terribly busy. . .it's gotten to the point where I have no time for fun sad

Whacha been up to. . .apart from dambe-ing I mean  tongue
Re: To My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. by Ngodigha1(m): 12:17am On Dec 28, 2011
saxywale:
One of the scenes Oju - Iku toy soldiers showed him then he took to his heels,    grin grin grin
Ass-monkey, get out of here as you are too boring. Scram puppy-fuckerr.
next.
Re: To My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. by JamesDoe: 12:19am On Dec 28, 2011
Some slaves arriving in Haiti included Igbo people, here they were considered suicidal and therefore they were unwanted by plantation owners here. According to Adiele Afigbo there is still the Creole saying of Ibos pend'cor'a yo (the Ibo hang themselves).


Rather than fight and free themselves like the other slaves in Haiti did, the ibos chose to exit by suicide.
Re: To My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. by seedord247(m): 12:20am On Dec 28, 2011
Ngodigha1:
Bottom-monkey, get out of here as you are too boring. Scram puppy-fuckerr.
next.
Inglorious Fool . . sue Ojukwu family for making 60% of your family selling POFF POFF and  Beans cake @ oshodi. grin grin grin
Re: To My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. by Ngodigha1(m): 12:20am On Dec 28, 2011
seadord, jamesdoe,sexywale in a photograph with their ape father-obj.

Re: To My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. by Nobody: 12:20am On Dec 28, 2011
Ibo lies
http://sunnewsonline.com/webpages/features/living/2010/aug/28/living-28-08-2010-002.htm
Professor traces biblical Eden to Nigeria
• Says Igboukwu is the place
From MODESTUS CHUKWULAKA, Abuja
Saturday, August 28, 2010
 


In 2005, Afro-centric scholar, Prof. Catherine Acholonu, rattled the imagination of a bemused global academic community, when she claimed that the biblical Adam, the progenitor of the human race, was an African, in all probability a Nigerian. Her book, Gram Code of African Adam, chronicles what she described as the hidden contributions of ancient Africans to world civilization. Acholonu, a former presidential aide on culture, had, in that work, challenged those who are intent on unraveling the mystery of the lost Garden of Eden to zero in their searchlight on the African continent because of what she considers compelling evidence in that direction.

Acholonu was even more audacious last year with the publication of the second book in her Adam series, entitled, They Lived Before Adam. In that book, she had rubbished the belief held by many for so long that the Igbo people of South-East Nigeria might have descended from the Hebrews. Rather, he said, it was the Jewish culture that had been enriched by Igbo traditions, as a result of earlier interface between the two peoples thousands of years earlier. In deed, Acholonu had questioned the veracity of the creation story, as recorded in the Bible and said the origin of the Igbo race pre-dates Adam! And if anything, she said, Adam, and ipso facto, his descendants, owed their ancestry to the Igbo.

Now, with her forth-coming book, The Lost Testament of the Ancestors of Adam, Acholonu, a professor of African History and Philosophy, is sure to ruffle no fewer feathers than she had done in her two recent books. Predictably, the present book completes the Adam trilogy, and Acholonu tells Saturday Sun that the book serves as a logical conclusion to the arguments that were advanced in the Gram Code concerning the pre-eminence of Africa, and particularly Nigeria, in the origins of man.

“The Gram Code touched on a lot of things, but when we wrote They Lived Before Adam, we put more flesh and details to some of the things we hinted at in the previous one. When we said that Eden is in Nigeria, we substantiated it; now the evidence is mounting,” she says.

In the 2005 book, Acholonu explains that she basically used her expertise as a linguist, focusing on pieces of linguistic evidence that suggested that Eden was somewhere in sub-Saharan Africa, most probably in West Africa. She says she and her team of researchers had backed up their claims by oral and written traditions that are yet to be controverted.

However, in last year’s book, Acholonu says they had to go deeper than linguistic evidence and traditions to look at “those cultures whose histories has been written down, explaining, “we analysed symbols from continent to continent and found out that West Africa, indeed, Nigeria, your people and my people have been the origin.” Quite an audacious claim, but Acholonu, who had, earlier in her academic career, written The Igbo Roots of Olaudah Equiano, said she does not envisage any controversy because the facts speak for themselves.

She says: “We put together what archaeologists and paleontologists have done over the years; those who study human fossils, and they found out that by seven million BC, people were living in the Chad Basin. They were not yet men, but ancestors to the homo erectus, they were called Australopithecus.”

According to her, a French paleontologist had concluded, after a 2002 study, that the ancestors of the homo erectus lived in the area around the Chad Basin. In the course of its research for the coming book, Acholonu says her team had found out that way back in the 1970s, a team of archaeologists from the University of Nigeria, Nsukka had discovered that homo erectus lived in Ugwuele, a town in the present day Abia State, South East of Nigeria, one million years before the birth of Christ. Home erectus was the direct ancestors of modern man, the homo sapience.

In Acholonu’s words, “the ancestors of Adam, the cave men lived in Ugwuele, and their ancestors lived in Borno area of Northern Nigeria. In other words, those people who were ancestors of Adam were here.”
Of course, she had said as much in her previous works, but now Acholonu appears to be more insistent and precise: “Africa has been the mother of everything; not just Africa, it’s Nigeria. Everything started here. We have not yet been dismissed by anybody.”

How does the Ugwuele and Chad Basin connection translate to the exact place, where the Garden of Eden, as described in the Bible, was? Again, Acholonu says she has borrowed from history to arrive at her conclusions. She says her team had been able to identify the locations named not only in Egyptian records, but also in Herodotus. She speaks of several references made to Eden in ancient history, and says the descriptions tally with her findings about Igbukwu in Anambra State.

Acholonu obviously knows she has a lot of explanations to make here, and says, as a caveat, that mythological Egypt should be distinguished from the much later ancient Egypt ruled by the pharaohs. The former, she says, was somewhere in West Africa and was ruled directly by the gods.
“They were calling us Ethiopia, Egypt, Nubia, Lybia and all sorts of name. Ethiopia was us,” she says, pointing out that history spoke a lot about Ethiopia West, “where the gods were dinning and where the Nile had its source. The Egyptians believed where the Nile had its source is Eden,” she says.

Describing Egyptian records as record of everything, she says her team studied the works of the founder of Egyptian civilization, Tot whom she describes as the god of writing and wisdom, insisting that the link between his works and Nigerian traditions are overwhelming.

“The gods of Egypt were living here; it was only in 3100 BC that Tot moved from Nigerian to Egypt. We’ve gone into several records from different parts of the world. The mythological Egypt was here, the same god-man ruled them,” she says.

She identifies River Nun in the Niger Delta as the source of the Nile, citing Herodotus who wrote that the source of the Nile “lies somewhere South-west of Egypt.” This description, she says, fits River Niger, which is the source of River Nile: “They said that that place where the Nile had its source is where the River Nun is, that’s where life started. That’s where the Niger enters the Atlantic.”
Bringing her argument further home, she speaks of a sacred lake referred to by Egyptian historians, which was square-shaped and flowed from the source of the Nile, a confluence of that river.
“They said the lake was 440 cubits and (was) the base of the great pyramid of Gizer, the oldest and biggest of the pyramids, that lake was Idemili Lake; the Igbo still talk of the same sacred lake, the Binis, the Yoruba speak the same,” she claims. Citing historical references to the city built upon the plateau, the scholar says the plateau was recovered from the deluge.

The city in question, she says, was reputed for its stone tools, which archaeologists have said thrived as an industry there, “like the whole world was being supplied stone tools from there,” adding that her team “capitalised from such information and placed it side by with what is generally known of Igbukwu.” According to her, given the pervading reference to plateau, the cave men, the source of the Nile, the mythical lake, stone writing (monolith) and other features that can easily be related with Igbukwu, it is not difficult to point to it as the Eden described by historians – and not by the Bible, anyway. 
When Tot, the founder of ancient Egypt came from Atlantis, she says, “he saw cave men, the same cave men of Ugwuele. Stones were cast at him, but he used his magic and built the city. That city was the first post-deluge city. It was from there that the world was populated. That city was built at least by 10,000 BC, they came here immediately after the deluge; it’s here in this country. That ancient forgotten city is at Igbukwu. It’s what the Egyptians called Yabo.

“It’s on a hill. Shaw already speaks about it. His finds in Igbukwu could fill museums. Igbukwu is the confluence city. Everyone in Igbukwu finds archaeological treasure while burying, while digging, while building. The city where the gods were going to banquet is Igbukwu; it was great to live anywhere close to the city,” she said.

Rather than be trailed by controversy and rebuttals, Acholonu says the two previous books in the Adam series were well received within and outside the country. For instance, They Lived Before Adam is available at Amazon and has received a number of international awards, the most recent being the US-based International Book Award. While the book was still in the works, Acholonu was invited to the Harlem Book fair in New York, where a dance drama was staged in honour of “the revelation the book was bringing to the world” at the Schomburg Centre for Black Culture.

“It’s an international bestseller; under one year we are getting orders from classrooms, individuals, libraries across the world, and this encouraged us and made to understand that there is so much hunger for what we are doing. We’ve toured a number of universities in the US,” she says.
In fact, Acholonu says she was told to go for the Nobel on account of the two books, so as to put the books on the spot to draw the attention of the world to the hitherto unknown African contribution to history. However, she was reminded that to go for the Nobel, she had to complete the trilogy, hence had to do the third and final book which is expected to be out next month. Asked what to expect from the book, the author of The Gram Code of African Adam said: “It’s a wash book!
Re: To My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. by Nadanbata: 12:21am On Dec 28, 2011
One Nigeria

Southerners talk talk No action. See why there is no such things as Southern Nigeria? If naija was to distegrate we will take advantage of your beefing and conquer more territory up to Ibadan and Enugu maybe  cool cool
Re: To My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. by realchange: 12:22am On Dec 28, 2011
y[b]OLE[/b]ba primitives

Re: To My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. by JamesDoe: 12:22am On Dec 28, 2011
Some slaves arriving in Haiti included Igbo people, here they were considered suicidal and therefore they were unwanted by plantation owners here. According to Adiele Afigbo there is still the Creole saying of "Ibos pend'cor'a yo" (the Ibo hang themselves).


Rather than fight and free themselves like the other slaves in Haiti did, the ibos chose to exit by suicide.

All I am doing is introducing Ibos to their history, they did not learn this at home. So we have to teach them outside!
Re: To My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. by Nadanbata: 12:23am On Dec 28, 2011
@Sisi_Kill

Daga ina kike wai tongue
Re: To My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. by Ngodigha1(m): 12:25am On Dec 28, 2011
seedord247:
Inglorious Fool . . sue Ojukwu family for making 60% of your family selling POFF POFF and  Beans cake @ oshodi. grin grin grin
fuckingg-retarded asz, do you lots do any other thing in Lagos apart from begging.
Go and screw yourself, monkey.
Re: To My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. by freecocoa(f): 12:26am On Dec 28, 2011
seedord247:
Oh My Gosh . . here she comes again.

Daughter of Oyinboyin grin . .  All your aim here to is get a Boy Friend . . . But in tha name of Amadioha nobody will manage you with that your 30 cents blouse. grin grin grin grin
Seedord I swear for you I can make an exception and ignore you cos you've been killed in the romance,this is just your ghost yapping,abeg go and meet your gayy partner REALITY101,if you need an arse to lick here I suggest you ask your brothers nicely,I can't be bothered with you  right now.
Re: To My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. by realchange: 12:27am On Dec 28, 2011
yOLEba primitives

Re: To My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. by JamesDoe: 12:28am On Dec 28, 2011
"Iboland was one of the areas of West Africa most seriously affected by the slave trade. Ibos were exported as slaves throughout the whole period of the trade, from the first recorded Ibo slave – one Caterina Ybou, sent to San Thome – until the slave trade came to an end in the middle years of the nineteenth century.”

If Ibos were warriors why were they over-represented in the slave trade?

Ibos need to read their history and learn corrections.  

I have researched thoroughly, but can not find an instance when an Ibo man can point to a people they have once conquered, defeated or even repelled.
Re: To My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. by Nobody: 12:28am On Dec 28, 2011
Ngodigha1:
fuckingg-slow asz, do you lots do any other thing in Lagos apart from begging.
Go and screw yourself, monkey.
And what do ibos do beside robbery,kidnapping and baby industry ?  shocked
Re: To My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. by seedord247(m): 12:28am On Dec 28, 2011
Nadanbata broo  . . . you are looking kinkin.

Re: To My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. by JamesDoe: 12:30am On Dec 28, 2011
"Iboland was one of the areas of West Africa most seriously affected by the slave trade. Ibos were exported as slaves throughout the whole period of the trade, from the first recorded Ibo slave – one Caterina Ybou, sent to San Thome – until the slave trade came to an end in the middle years of the nineteenth century.”

If Ibos were warriors why were they over-represented in the slave trade?

Ibos need to read their history and learn corrections.


I have researched thoroughly, but can not find an instance when an Ibo man can point to a people they have once conquered, defeated or even repelled.

Re: To My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. by Ngodigha1(m): 12:30am On Dec 28, 2011
The only thing jurubas do in lagos is peel oranges and sell roasted plantains to igbo people.
see yoruba woman selling to igbo.

Re: To My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. by realchange: 12:31am On Dec 28, 2011
yOLEba "city"

Re: To My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. by ajadek(m): 12:31am On Dec 28, 2011
I could remember when i was in phc @okirika,i use to go to ateketom house @okojiri very close to my hotel, i lodge @ayojoint hotel,very close to refineery cos i work there dat time,i just want dat dude to conferm,i saw yoruba among this millitant people,people from ondo state,even their herbalism,if i saw igbos maybe cooker or mesanger,igbos are try to mengo with them but they refuse them,they prefer yoruba instead of igbos,if u see war can u wait, ijaw establish war they receive armnesty which one do u receive,the fleet of warlord.
Re: To My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. by freecocoa(f): 12:32am On Dec 28, 2011
Yaro wende na duke shi ne ake giya ma wei ya ba uban shi ruwan doti,ina dariya a yaren su bluetooth nyanzu.
Re: To My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. by JamesDoe: 12:33am On Dec 28, 2011
If Nigeria was to go to war our weakest point is Ibo land.

Almost every other ethnic group has defeated their neighbours outside of Nigeria's border except for the ibo people.

Can an Ibo man give me just one example of a people they have ever captured, defeated or even repelled?

It would help my research.

Re: To My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. by seedord247(m): 12:33am On Dec 28, 2011
26yrs Old Ifeoma Slaughtered her 6-month Old Baby huh

Wonders will never end, that is what many people keep saying. On Friday, Ifeoma Gabriel, sharpened her knife, looked closely at her six-month old child and beheaded him without any remorse. She was promptly arrested by the police and she is now telling the security agencies what happened that fateful day. Correspondent, JOSEPH MIDAT, cornered the embattled mother at the Kaduna State Police Command, where she is being detained for the heinous crime and she opened up on why she killed her beloved baby. Excerpts.

Tell us your name?
My name is Ifeoma Gabriel, I am from Abia State.
Why are you in Police Custody?
I am here because of the problem with my baby.
What happened to the baby?
The baby was not feeling fine and was refusing to eat. So I used my kitchen knife to cut her head. I did that because, the baby had been sick for weeks. I do not know why I did that.

How old was the baby?
The baby was 6-months old.
But how old are you?
I’m 26 years old.

Why did you use the knife?
The baby was ill and I could not stand her situation any more. I was tired of carrying a sick baby.
Was that your first child?
She was my third baby; the first born is 15, and the second is getting to 13.

How did the father of your baby react to what you did?
He was not happy; he cried uncontrollably. He kept asking me why I beheaded the baby and I told him that I did not know what came over me while I was killing her.
Is it true that you drank the blood of your baby after killing her?
No, I did not want to drink the blood. However when people came and saw that I had killed her, they forced me to drink the blood and I had to do so under duress.

Are you happy now?
No, I am not happy, is just condition of my case.
Did you make any attempt to take you baby to hospital?
Yes, I did. I made effort to take her to the hospital where I attended ante natal clinic.

What did the Doctor say the baby was suffering from?
The medical people just give the baby injection and asked me to take her home and take care of her. And when I took the baby home, she fell sick again, then I killed her. I did not know what I was doing.
What is your prayer now?
My prayer is that God should not let that kind of thing to enter my head again.
What do you want the police to do for you?
They should allow me to remain here because my life is in danger.

Have you ever had any misunderstanding with your husband?
No, I have not been fighting with my husband.
Where was your husband Gabriel when you killed his daughter?
He went to Office.

At what time did you killed her?
In the afternoon when I was the only one at home
Re: To My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. by Nobody: 12:33am On Dec 28, 2011
freecocoa:
Yaro wende na duke shi ne ake giya ma wei ya ba uban shi ruwan doti,ina dariya a yaren su bluetooth nyanzu.
Are you scared of me ?
Re: To My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. by realchange: 12:34am On Dec 28, 2011
yOLEba turn Lagos into the dirtiest city in the world.

Re: To My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. by realchange: 12:35am On Dec 28, 2011
freaking animals
Re: To My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. by Ngodigha1(m): 12:37am On Dec 28, 2011
JamesDoe:
If Nigeria was to go to war our weakest point is Ibo land.

Almost every other ethnic group has defeated their neighbours outside of Nigeria's border except for the ibo people.

Can an Ibo man give me just one example of a people they have ever captured, defeated or even repelled?

It would help my research.
Brain-dead monkey, are you not ashamed of repeating the same thing all the time. Scram as you are very boring.
Anus sniffing goat-fuckerr.
Re: To My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. by seedord247(m): 12:38am On Dec 28, 2011
Real exchange broo you are not bad. grin grin grin

Re: To My Boko Haram And Northern Brothers, Let Us Learn From The Yoruba. by realchange: 12:38am On Dec 28, 2011
which kain claws be dis

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