Voice of Emancipation
Voice Of Emancipation: Yoruba, It’s Time to Wake Up
By Kayode Emola
For the many Yoruba who can’t discern right from wrong or left from right, it’s time to clearly separate facts from fiction. Before the 1999 introduction of democracy to Nigeria, it was hailed as the panacea for development, the ingredient that would take Nigeria to the next level. 25 years of democracy later, over half the population of Nigeria lives in abject poverty. It is therefore high time we talked about our continuing as Nigerians.
It is plainly evident that Nigeria as a nation is heading nowhere meaningful. Still, my greatest frustration lies with the millions of Yoruba who cannot or will not open their eyes and see that it is over for the country. Many of them believe that one day Nigeria will solve all its problems and become a great nation; yet at the same time, believing that it is better for them personally to travel abroad for pastures green.
This is nothing short of hypocrisy at the highest level in fact, I would go so far as to call it cowardice in the face of the oppression present. For those who believe that Nigeria will one day become great, yet still harbour the idea of travelling abroad; or are currently living outside of Nigeria and not returning to build the country, you of all people are the most miserable.
Today, the people living in Ondo State will go out to validate the failed system the military government handed over in 1999. What they will not see is that the exercise of voting is a mirage that makes no difference either to their personal wellbeing or the good of the nation. And yet still they will believe in the slogans that have been spun by politicians for the sole purpose of deceiving the unsuspecting.
As Yoruba, we ought to look inward, and ask ourselves if we are truly enjoying being part of Nigeria. If not, then we must face the question of why are we silent about the hardship our people face. To paraphrase a popular vlogger, the politicians know that the people must go to bed with hope. It seems that successive governments previously have sowed the seed of hope to keep the people going, even as they knew that Nigeria will not get better.
However, the government under President Tinubu has not only perpetuated the citizens’ poverty but has also stolen their hope. Perhaps Tinubu’s decision to liberalise the country is the push needed to energise the Yoruba people towards the actualisation of Orile-ede Yoruba. If not, if even this can’t jolt them out of their reverie, then I can’t see anything that could shake these poverty-stricken Yoruba people from their die-hard belief that Nigeria will one day be a great nation.
It is now very obvious that when our sovereignty is actualised, we Yoruba will need to guard it jealously from the political hawks who ruined Nigeria. We need to make sure they do not transfer their corrupt way of governing Nigeria into the Yoruba country.
Therefore, it is time to begin planning in earnest what that new country will look like. We need to engage stakeholders throughout various levels of society to discuss how our new nation will function. These includes, though is not limited to, our traditional leaders, civil societies, artisans, various professionals and the general public.
We must now put immense pressure on President Tinubu and the current government to convene a sovereign national conference, so that the question of Nigeria can be answered once and for all. This should not be a conference that gags its participants into agreeing that Nigeria is indivisible, but one that allows each participating ethnic nationality the opportunity to decide their own future.
With that said, we must be aware of the nonchalant attitude displayed by the Nigerian government regarding nations’ quest for sovereignty. The Igbo people have decided to exit Nigeria by declaring their Biafra nation on 2nd December 2024, and will damn the consequences. If this happens, the instability caused will make Nigeria’s remaining as a country entirely untenable, under which circumstances we Yoruba people must be ready and uncompromising for our own exit.
The most sensible path that the Nigerian government could take would be that of peaceful dissolution; but the way things are currently heading, I don’t see that happening. Therefore, if and when the inevitable happens to Nigeria, every Yoruba person, both at home and in the diaspora, must be ready to obey the clarion call.
In so doing, we will show the international community that the Yoruba have affirmatively decided that we no longer wish to be perpetual slaves to those holding us to ransom. This moment is pivotal, the point at which we decide our future once and for all. Let us choose the road to freedom, so that we may truly look forward to building a viable nation that champions the rights and needs of the many, not just the political few.
Voice of Emancipation
Voice of Emancipation: Christmas, a Time to Share
By Kayode Emola
As we countdown to this year’s Christmas, taking stock of what has happened in our lives individually as a community is a good idea. While it would be difficult to write about everyone’s individual experience in one article, it is however, important to note that, we have all witnessed the good, the bad and the ugly this year.
For many, 2024 might be their worst year ever while for others, it may be the best year that has happened to them. One thing is certain, once we still have life, and we do not give up or lose hope, then the best is yet to come.
It is the reason we should not give up in sharing the little that we have with our family and friends. In life, there will always be people around us in one need or another, Christmas is a good place to share whatever we can with them even our experience and resources.
The Holy Bible teaches through the gospel of John, that “God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son”. If God who is the Almighty can give that one person that he treasures so much, how much more we, who have been blessed with material blessings. By sharing, we truly grow as it shows our maturity in letting go of what we hold fast to.
Growing up, we always looked forward to Christmas because it is one day of the year on which you are guaranteed a decent meal. People often reconcile differences and come together around Christmas time to bury any existing feud. It is one beautiful thing Christmas can do.
There will be people in many of our communities across Yorubaland who are unable to celebrate Christmas as they would have hoped for. Let us do whatever we can to reach out and support them with whatever we are able to. In so doing, we are buying for ourselves goodwill that would be repaid sometime in the future, either in this life or in the afterlife.
In celebrating Christmas, we shouldn’t downplay the extreme poverty currently afflicting millions of our people who are in despair. Many of them not certain of where the next meal will come from, despite their best efforts in putting food on the table.
We need to do everything in our power to help them come out of a place of lack to a place of plenty. Then, they too will be able to provide for their families and then help others. For those of us who have been fortunate to escape the heavy burden of the Nigerian economy, Christmas is a time to show some love to those who are still bearing the brunt of the misrule of Nigeria.
We therefore, need to educate our people, that in the coming year 2025, a dissolved Nigeria, with several new countries emerging may be the best thing that could happen to our people. Our Yoruba people need to understand that Nigeria doesn’t care about them, and it is time to begin to work towards our own liberation, rather than merely wishing it.
My hope is that our Yoruba people will see the need for us to get out of Nigeria as urgently as possible. This is because millions of people for no fault of their own are being dragged into the poverty net yearly. We can avoid this and begin to improve the fortunes of our people if we begin to put resources together for the total emancipation of our people.
Voice of Emancipation
Voice of Emancipation: Kemi Badenoch is a True Yoruba Heroine
By Kayode Emola
There is an Ilaje adage which says, “Mè a fi ówò ohi jù wè ilé bàámi:” “I won’t use a left hand to point at my father’s house”. Traditionally, Yoruba are proud of their heritage, which is why the Yoruba culture has endured thousands of generations, and is waxing stronger still.
When Kemi Badenoch won the contest to become leader of the Conservative & Unionist Party in the UK, many of her Yoruba kinsmen did not congratulate her wholeheartedly, because of the way she had denigrated the country of her parents. Many people thought Kemi’s rejection of Nigeria was a denial of her heritage.
There were very few Yoruba who, like myself, came to her defence. The truth is, she fully embraces her roots, identifying truly with who she really is. In Yoruba parlance, she would be referred to as “Òmó okó,” meaning a true child of her father.
Kemi’s recent spat with the Vice President of Nigeria puts the record straight as to where her allegiance lie. She showed that Nigeria and its corrupt leaders are not worth standing up for, and that her loyalty belongs to her Yoruba heritage. In so doing, she has done a great service to, not only herself and her family, but the entire Yoruba people, and we must appreciate this.
Most of us who hold Nigerian citizenship view it as a symbol of the oppression that prevents us from identifying who we truly are. It entangles us in an identity crisis that we would prefer to not have to face.
For the best part of two years, I have tried to educate people that I am not Nigerian but rather a Yoruba man from West Africa. It is so frustrating when many people ask you where that is on the map, and you must try to explain what should be naturally identifiable.
Yorubaland is geographically bigger than England and Wales put together, with a population that surpasses the combined populations of Wales, Scotland, and Northern Ireland. Yet even though Wales and Scotland are within the country of the United Kingdom, they are recognised as individual nations with their own lands and language.
How much more then should the 60 million Yoruba trapped in Nigeria be able to freely identify as Yoruba, instead of being lumped with peoples of other nationalities? This is the very crux of why Yoruba must become an independent sovereign nation, allowing us to choose our own national identity and destiny as we see fit.
Kemi Badenoch’s recent interview with the Spectator, where she claims she is a Yoruba and not necessarily a Nigerian, clearly shows a woman of virtue who understands the true meaning of identity. I believe that our kinsmen who are holding fast to a country that offers them nothing good are doing a great disservice to their Yoruba heritage.
They should realise the lesson taught by millennia of history, that civilisations can and do go into extinction. The attempts to impose a Nigerian consciousness onto our Yoruba psyche is designed to make us forget who we truly are. Even though the Yoruba civilisation has endured thousands of years, it still risks becoming extinct if we don’t hold dear to what we have.
It is therefore pertinent to note that our goal of disengaging from the country called Nigeria is to protect our Yoruba identity from loss by voluntary commission. I encourage my fellow kinsmen, both at home in Yorubaland and in diaspora, to promote our Yoruba identity and have less to do with the Nigerian nomenclature.
I ask every Yoruba citizen to begin to work hard towards the achieving of a sovereign Yoruba nation. The more we promote our Yoruba identity, the further we distance ourselves from Nigeria and its corruption. In so doing, we can foster a healthy environment for our people in a country that is truly our own.
Oodua a gbe gbogbo wa.
Voice of Emancipation
Voice of Emancipation: When Will Yoruba Nation Come
By Kayode Emola
Following the recent pronouncement of the United States of Biafra USB) in Finland by one wing of the Indigenous Peoples of Biafra (IPOB), a lot of people are asking when Yoruba nation will come to fruition. The good response is that what happened in Finland, as laudable as it is, is a complete jamboree.
Firstly, to critically analyse what happened in Finland, the Igbo nation that has only 5 states in Nigeria was able to come up with 40 states of Biafra. This goes to show that the people behind this charade are not deep thinkers but very shallow-minded and are only playing on the gullibility of the innocent Igbo people.
Secondly, people will see through the lies of some few people in the Biafran struggle perpetrating themselves as the leaders of IPOB. Their purported 40 states of Biafran are nothing short of usurping other peoples’ land and declaring it as a Biafra nation. This goes to show that these people have not learned anything from history about what made the late Ojukwu lose the Biafran Civil War between 1967 – 1970
Thirdly, prior to the declaration, their supposed leader claimed that they had amassed an enormous amount of firepower to confront the Nigerian army on 2 December 2024. This claim has since proven to be lies and deception used to deceive the unsuspecting public.
I can go on with so many reasons why we should not draw conclusions or parallels between the Yoruba nation struggle with the Biafran struggle. However, time will not permit me to do justice to that. What I would rather focus on with our Yoruba people is to set out the path for the emergence of our Yoruba nation and hope that those who can discern it will understand and follow.
The path to self-determination is a hard one and only a few will find it and for those who find it, only a few will be ready to walk on that path. The majority will be served by emotions and feelings therefore missing the mark. The path to self-determination requires meticulous planning, and after much planning, then comes the implementation stage.
As it stands, there are too many voices in the room, thereby preventing adequate planning. This has sometimes made the Yoruba people feel that there is no strategy with which the self-determination struggle is being pursued.
Therefore, I want to take this medium to explain to our comrades that there is serious planning going on as to how best to achieve the Yoruba nation without shedding any innocent blood. Once the planning phase is complete, we will then move to the implementation phase. It is at this implementation phase that tensions will become heightened, and people will begin to see actions.
Following the implementation phase, we will be able to decide with the other nationalities in Nigeria how we want to separate. That is assuming the implementation phase doesn’t lead to confrontation with the Nigerian state. If it does lead to confrontation, the Yoruba nation must be adequately prepared to protect its borders and citizens and the supply of goods and services to maintain the new state.
It is when all these have been achieved that Yoruba nation will come. Without all these ingredients, countless amount of declarations will not bring about a Yoruba or Biafran nation. It is the reason why I said earlier in this piece that the actions of the Finland-based Biafran group were a jamboree that should not be taken seriously.
I will urge our people to be vigilant and steadfast in our journey to nationhood and our quest to sovereignty. We are nearly there but we still are not there yet. Preparations to get to that stage will take us at least about a year from now to mobilise and get our people ready.
It is something that must be done meticulously, and serious planning must be put in place with the end goal in mind rather than the starting point. We must plan to succeed and therefore set high bars and targets for ourselves. Our successes must be equally measured along the way to ensure that we do not falter when it matters most.
It is when we are ready to go through this journey that we can truly from our hearts of hearts say the Yoruba nation will come. If not, I am afraid, we may be jumping to the gonging band that has nothing to offer, thereby becoming artists performing a jamboree event.
The Yoruba nation’s struggles call for serious minds to come together to execute the plans of delivering the Yoruba sovereign nation to the Yoruba people. Therefore, this task cannot be left to the fainthearted, or else it may take us longer to get to our promised destination. I pray and hope that God will bring together a team that will deliver this herculean task for the Yoruba people sooner rather than later.
We have seen that Nigeria has nothing good to offer its citizens other than wanton poverty and deprivation. Therefore, we cannot afford to waste time thinking that going the way of the Finland-based Biafran group will deliver to us a Yoruba nation. We need to be focused on the right path we currently are and put our hands to work so that we can get the desired result of a sovereign Yoruba nation.
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