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Voice of Emancipation

Voice of Emancipation: Yoruba Heritage is Not for Sale

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By Kayode Emola

It is not enough that Nigeria has taken almost everything from us the Yoruba without giving us anything in return by turning every institution we built during the Regional Government of Awolowo between 1951 and 1960 into becoming a Nigerian property. It is now very evident that the sons of the destroyer are awake to steal our heritage, culture, and tradition.

Let us recall a few of our Yoruba properties and institutions that the Nigerian government has confiscated into becoming Nigeria’s property for the sake of convenience. First of all, before we go on to that, let’s say naming us Western Nigeria was very convenient for the colonial masters who had their perfect plan on how to steal our properties for their serfs in Northern Nigeria.

Our fathers were unsuspecting and believed that the other nationalities would be honourable with their actions, but time has revealed the truth. That is why our generation must not fall foul of the same mistakes they made back then. Let’s tell many of our folks that they are Yoruba and some of them might want to behead you for insisting that they are not Nigerians but Yoruba.

Yoruba people back home are much poorer today than 100 years ago, it is because we lost our sense of reasoning, thinking every other nationality in Nigeria has our best interest at heart. The truth is that they don’t and until we get out of Nigeria, we may lose the last thing we hold dear to us which is our heritage, our culture, and our tradition.

In the late 1940s and early 1950s when the struggle for freedom was rife around the globe after the second world war. African countries began vigorously to fight for their place in the world, but rather than drop the colonial mentality and embrace who they truly were, they left things to chance. Those who were fortunate to be at the helm of affairs at the time failed to imbue in their people any sense of identity.

Rather, they sought to continue in the legacies of their colonial masters to the detriment of their people. It is no wonder today, many African countries still suffer from the European colonial amnesia that was inflicted on us for many centuries.

In Yoruba for example, rather than go with the name Yoruba region of Nigeria for example, we chose to bear, the Western Region of Nigeria, which was the genesis of all our problems. Very quickly, we began to name everything we built after Western Nigeria and when it was time for the children of destruction to raise their ugly heads, we lost everything in a heartbeat. One by one, what we owned was turned into Nigeria, removing any trace of Western Nigeria in it effectively turning Yoruba institutions into the Nigerian government property.

Take for instance, the Nigeria Television Authority (NTA) belongs to the Yoruba people and will forever be our property, but today, we dared not even mention that it is ours. Many of our elderly folks will remember that it was Pa Awolowo who built the first Television station in Africa and named it Western Nigeria Television (WNTV). It was one of the first victims of the sons of destruction whom we accommodated thinking we were of the same ilk.

Again, The Yoruba government bought several properties abroad where it operated its diplomatic affairs. The majority of them were named Western Nigeria House (WNH) including what today stands as the Nigeria Embassy in London. Your guess is as good as mine, it is no longer WNH, it is now proudly Nigeria House erasing any memory of Western Nigeria that it ever had.

Of all the many things that Nigeria took from us the Yoruba, it is only those that had Oodua or Yoruba in its etymology that they couldn’t steal. It is the very reason why we must guide against the erasure of our Heritage and do everything we can to protect our Yoruba identity.

Recently, the Osun State Governor and his government contracted the Osun Osogbo Festival 2024 to an Igbo man, giving a Yoruba festival and heritage to a foreigner. The worst couldn’t be imagined when they quickly trademarked it and are now actively trying to rename it The Nigerian Festival. They are hell-bent on wiping the memory of our gullible people from anything we hold on to that reminds us of who we are as Yoruba.

If memory serves me well, we remember that the “ENDSARS” protest was branded a Nigerian protest only for the properties of Yoruba folks in Lagos to be the once that were targeted. In the end, the protest only actually gained momentum in Lagos which ceased to be the capital of Nigeria since 1991.

The sons of the destroyer are awake again deceiving our Yoruba Youths that there is hunger in town and everyone must come out to protest. Whilst, I support the protest, I believe it should begin in Abuja, filter through to Enugu and Kano, and then maybe in Ondo. It is after it has gained momentum in these regions, that we the Yoruba people can believe it is truly a Nigerian protest.

My message for our Yoruba people is to pick a side, and the best side to stay on is the Yoruba side. We must start by making the Osun state government realise that the Osun Osogbo festival is not for sale. It is our heritage and we are not prepared to lose it for all intents and purposes.

If the Osun state government doesn’t know anything about our history, then it is time to teach them. We must make them know that the Yoruba people are not interested in Nigeria. We are not prepared to throw away that which we hold dear to us which is our heritage and our culture. We have lost a lot and it is time that we start regaining our long lost glory.

It’s high time our Yoruba people left Nigeria and its inherent problems and focus on the Yoruba challenges. For all intents and purposes, Nigeria is Yoruba major problem and the sooner we get rid of Nigeria, the better every Yoruba person living in the homeland will be. So, my advice for our Yoruba people is to put our Heritage and our culture first in everything we do.

The time is now for every Yoruba to think Yoruba first, put Yoruba first, and act Yoruba first in everything we do. We must shed our Nigerian mentality which is nothing other than the colonial mentality. We must rebrand our Western Region or South West mentality into Yoruba country, whether within Nigeria now or when we eventually exit Nigeria for good.

I will not ruminate on this much but I believe by now, we get the idea of what I am trying to say. Nigeria is dying and there’s nothing any of us can do about it so the earlier we begin to build our Yoruba identity, the better it will be for every one of us.

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Voice of Emancipation

Voice of Emancipation: Kemi Badenoch: A Yoruba Lady May Become UK Prime Minister

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By Kayode Emola

She was the last person to enter the race to replace Rishi Sunak as the Conservative & Unionist Party leader in the UK, but alas she was the last person standing. As she takes on her new role as His Majesty loyal opposition leader, eyes will be on this young Yoruba girl who grew up on the streets of Lagos and what she has to offer.

A little over 100 years ago, it would have been unimaginable that a woman could even be allowed to vote let alone lead any major political party in the UK. However, today, a woman of Yoruba heritage is not only leading one of the oldest political parties in the UK but His Mmajesty’s opposition party.

While many Yoruba may be quick to congratulate Kemi, I believe it is time that those around her educate her on the dangers her Yoruba homeland is facing. Since colonialisation, Yorubaland has never remained the same in all aspects of developmental growth. We have fared even far worse since independence in 1960 and the return to democracy in 1999 than any living memory.

The story of our people in Yorubaland is nothing to write home about as the Nigerian economy continues to suffer from hyperinflation. Whilst Kemi’s role as an opposition leader may not give her the needed power to do whatever she wants; it is time for her to recognise that she is now in a strong position of influence. That influence must be used to advance the cause of Britain and her native Yoruba homeland.

As His Majesty’s loyal opposition leader, I will implore her to use her position to fight the injustices suffered by many ethnic minorities across Britain and around the world. She is in a strong position like the Biblical Esther who used her position in Babylon to influence the King for her people.

Kemi must recognise that any river that forgets its source will eventually dry up one day. The Yoruba heritage has a way of replenishing knowledge to those that seek it diligently and I will implore Kemi not to shy away from her roots.

The focus now for the opposition leader is to rebuild the conservative party to wrestle power from the Labour Party in 2029 or earlier if luck were to run out for Sir Keir Starmer.

Kemi has shown herself to be a talented young woman who is able to break any glass ceiling and I pray by God’s grace that she will succeed in her new role and surpass expectations. She must never be complacent with this new found love she has earned from the conservative party. She must repay that trust with loyalty and hard work and the least we can do as her fellow Yoruba people or admirer is to pray for her to succeed.

I know Kemi has not been vocal regarding the emancipation of her Yoruba people from the shackles of Nigeria. She must realise that just like Mordecai told Esther to do something to raise an alarm about the existential threat of the Jews, Kemi must be ready to raise an alarm about the existential threat the Yoruba people face in Nigeria.

Nigeria since independence, has slowly degenerated into a failed state and those who wield power in the country are not sincere with the people. In as much as the country has failed to sit down on a round table since 1960 to discuss what future it wants; it is high time the country is divided in peace so that every ethnic nationality can go their way to develop their land as they see fit.

Every Yoruba person at home and abroad must realise that there is only one task ahead of us and it is the task of total liberation. Anything short of this is a complete waste of time and beating about the bush. We need to take the bull by the horn and free our Yoruba nation from the bondage it currently finds itself.

I hope and pray that Kemi who is not just a leader in Yorubaland but in Britain where all our problems originated will be a champion of her people. I hope her time in Westminster will bring about positive change to the lives of those that she represents both here in the UK and in her native Yoruba land.

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Voice of Emancipation

Voice of Emancipation: Nigeria Will Never Be Great

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By Kayode Emola

Many people living in Nigeria are unaware of the deep-rooted trouble Nigeria is in and therefore often deceive themselves that Nigeria will one day live up to its expectations. The problems bedevilling the country is so great that it will take a life time or two to even scratch the surface if everyone is ready to work for it.

Recently, former President Olusegun Obasanjo lamented the country’s dire state and stated that President Tinubu had no plans before taking office. The truth is that since the so-called independence of Nigeria in 1960, no head of state that has ruled Nigeria ever had a plan for Nigeria before it took office. They have all taken office for the benefit of themselves, their families, and their cronies.

Nigerians are the eventual losers as they wait for a government that is coming to save them when the reality is that there is no hope in sight. We recall that Tinubu stated at the start of his presidency that Buhari had wrecked the country and that is why subsidy must be removed. Today, that revenue generated from subsidy is been squandered by the politicians while poverty goes through the roof.

The Nigerian government wants everyone to believe that inflation in the country is around 30% where in actual fact inflation is well over 500%. In 2021 when I last visited Nigeria, a loaf of bread was selling for ₦350 but today in just 3 years, that same bread is selling for over ₦4,000 in some high-end supermarket. This is just a tip of the ice-berg as the country is starring at a big trouble down the line.

It has now gotten to the stage where working people can no longer afford the basics of life. In a recent video, we saw a journalist who broke down live on camera and walked out of the studio because she could no longer afford to buy petrol to transport herself to work. We may not know the extent to which people are suffering but if Tinubu’s claim of inheriting a bad government is true, his current leadership approach is not a sign of a country that will recover anytime soon.

Even the Tinubu loyalists are now crying foul as though we did not warn them of what is to come. Asari Dokubo in a recent video was lamenting over the shame and humiliation he has had to endure in supporting Tinubu for the presidency. In his words, trust is now a very expensive commodity and it will be difficult for him to trust any Yoruba person.

It should teach us all a lesson especially we the Yoruba people that when one of our own fails the nation, we will all be held accountable even when we are not direct beneficiary of their misrule. Therefore, it is best we fail forward in our own independent Yoruba nation rather than struggle to make Nigeria a great country.

Nigeria was doomed to fail before it was even created, therefore no amount of patching can make it stand tall without wobbling. Every major nationality in Nigeria sees us Yoruba as their stumbling block to greatness. Truth be told, I share in their sentiments because if our traditional rulers and our Yoruba citizens stand up today, the whole Nigeria will shiver. Yet we stand aside when we truly see that the house has crumbled.

Instead of standing up, many of our people who themselves are riddled in poverty are the greatest defenders of the politicians who are stealing their commonwealth. It is a shame that our Yoruba people who pride themselves as the most educated people in Nigeria cannot read between the lines to see that Nigeria can never be great, therefore it is time to exit.

I call on the true patriots of Yorubaland to rise up now in unity and fight to defend their lands from the marauders who have turned our farmlands and homes into a killing field. I call on our Yoruba youths to stand up for their rights and to demand their own freedom as our political leaders are hell bent in selling us into perpetual slavery.

Our generation must be ready to pay a huge sacrifice to save the coming generation. We must be ready to stand up to the bullies who are stealing the little we have to cater for they and their family needs.

We must start now to ask the important questions of where we are going as a people and how we can get there. We know Nigeria as a country is heading nowhere and Yoruba nation is our only key if we want to build a lasting legacy for the children yet unborn; if not our Yoruba nation may perish in Nigeria.

Let us be determined to build a strong future for the coming generation without being apologetic. It is our duty to save our Yorubaland from the scavengers who are determined to ruin and to tell them enough is enough.

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Voice of Emancipation

Voice of Emancipation: Barrister Janet Fashakin: A Memorial

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By Kayode Emola

In our chaotic world, it is very easy to forget one another due to the constant demands of the precious little time we have. It was in the year 2020 that I first encountered our illustrious Yoruba daughter. It was a meeting organised by the then Yoruba World Congress UK with a group of professionals that eventually became the Yoruba Global Directorate.

Barrister Janet was among the 4 delegates from the Global Directorate who met with our team of 5 from YWC UK. Although that meeting didn’t go down well, Barrister Janet and Barr Taiwo Odumosu requested a follow-up meeting, which has never happened until this day.

Barrister Janet and her team went on to form what we now know as the Yoruba Global Directorate and YWC UK is nothing to write home about. However, one of the fascinating things about Barrister Janet is that she is not a quitter. She is a fighter and that is what she did until she took her final breath on Saturday 14, September 2024.

When the meeting between her team and the YWC UK didn’t go as planned, she didn’t buckle. She and her team went ahead to create the Global Directorate and she was very prominent in their Saturday’s weekly meeting until she eventually left the Global Directorate.

After leaving the Global Directorate, she formed many small groups that accomplished unspeakable feats. Prominent of them was the Interfaith group that brought three major religious groups (Christians, Muslims, and Yoruba Traditional Worshipers) under one roof to pray. This has never happened in the history of our people as Yoruba, even though we are well known for our religious tolerance.

This interfaith group which still thrives till date was able to achieve a lot together. The group was established in 2021 after Chief Sunday Igboho was arrested in Cotonou. The group met constantly to pray for God’s intervention and Chief Igboho’s early release. God attended to the prayers of the Yoruba people by ensuring that Chief Igboho was released from prison into house arrest before his eventual release.

Barrister Janet didn’t rest on her laurels after Chief Igboho was released from prison. She went on to successfully create her oko etile farming project which has revolutionise home farming in our Yoruba communities. She pursued this vision passionately and will constantly share the successes of the farming project on social media encouraging others to join the train.

Aside from being a Barrister of law, she completed a nursing degree back home in Nigeria and in the United Kingdom before relocating to the USA. Her background in the health sector is demonstrated in her charitable works as she never misses an opportunity to bless the lives of those that she encounters.

Barrister Janet is an embodiment of compassion and she radiates the light of God that shines brightly for all to see. Her departure from this life will be sorely missed not just by her immediate family but by the entire Yoruba nation struggle. Barrister Janet still has a lot to offer our Yoruba nation struggle but her passing has made those contributions fade away into the skies.

By the time we come to raise our Yoruba flag to which Barrister Janet composed a very beautiful song, I hope and pray that she and many others that has passed away will not be forgotten. The labour of our heroin Janet will never be in vain and her contributions to our struggle will continue to be in our hearts.

For those of us who are still around, this is the time to start making a positive impact and more so on our Yoruba nation’s struggle. The time is now to liberate our people from the bondage called Nigeria. Let us all join our strength together for this noble cause so that we can bring about the positive change we want to see in our society.

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