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A Nation...Not A Tribe - Femi Fani-Kayode



I was born on October 16th in the year of our Lord 1960 and consequently I celebrated my 53rd birthday last week wednesday. It was a quiet low-key affair in which, as is customary with me, I spent most of the day in fasting, prayer and sober reflection, surrounded by my loved ones, thanking the Lord for granting me yet another year of life and for delivering me from the hands of my numerous detractors and enemies.



I also took the time to thank my dear wife and soul mate Regina, for standing by me through thick and thin and for being such a blessing and my darling children who have had to put up with a father that is fast becoming one of the most controversial, misrepresented and misunderstood figures in Nigerian modern history- a title which I neither crave nor relish. May God bless them and all my numerous siblings, loved ones, friends, associates, collaborators, readers and well wishers for their encouraging words and constant love and support.

May God also bless my numerous haters, traducers and detractors for keeping me on my toes, for strengthening my resolve, for giving me a reason to exist and to fight on, for making me relevant and for enabling me to have one testimony after another. May God's name be praised. In the name of God the great and He that is more than able, I bless and thank you all from the bottom of my heart. It is because it is my birthday that I decided to share a few home truths today that will gladden the hearts of some but that may sadden others. Yet the truth must be spoken and even if my voice is drowned by the cacophony of dissent and rancour that sometimes trail such literary interventions, let it be on record that on this day the seed of truth and liberation was planted and the idea of a new beginning for a people that I have come to love more than life itself, my people, the yoruba people of south western Nigeria, was berthed. And for these views, these ideas, these contributions and these philosophies, as disagreeable as they may be to some, I offer no apology.


One of the basic truisms of nationhood is that we as a people must appreciate our roots. We must never forget who we are, where we come from and what we stand for. For example you cannot speak of Great Britain without a full recognition of the role, history and impact of the nationalities that make up that country and that are known as the english, the irish, the welsh and the scots. Without those four basic ethnic foundations and the extraordinary role that each and everyone of them has played in the history and evolution of their country, Great Britain is nothing and nothing good could have ever come out of her. We cannot despise our roots and set them aside and expect to flourish. We cannot deny our family and claim to be a responsible member of the wider society. Yes we are Nigerians but every Nigerian has a foundation and a root out of which he sprouted. There is no such thing as a Nigerian who did not come from somewhere or who did not come out of a nationality that is a constituent and vital part of the wider nation.

A tree without a root and foundation cannot grow and is more often than not stunted- it can never be that which it was meant to be unless it's roots and foundation are not only cherished and nurtured but are also, above all else, loved and valued. A man's family, lineage and name makes him what he is in the wider society and guides him in all that he does.The minute he turns his back on his family and forgets where he is coming from he is little more than an illegitimate child. And no matter how successful he is in life an illegitimate child he shall remain until the day he dies. It is the same for those that treat their root or their primary nationality with contempt and that are prepared to sacrifice it at the drop of a hat. Such people deserve to be pitied. Like the biblical Reuben they are ''as unstable as water'' and they carry a father's curse.They are not only confused but they are a danger to themselves, their friends, their community, their nationality and to the wider nation.


Why? Because they do not have the courage to be loyal. Worse still they have lost all sense of bearing and they no longer know who they are or where they come from. Nigeria is blessed with many proud, strong, distinct, noble, enlightened and sophisticated nationalities that make up the whole and each of them brings something or other to the table. From the fulani to the hausa, to the nupe, to the bini, to the Ijaw, to the igbo, to the kanuri, to the idoma, to the tiv, to the urhobo, to the itsekiri, to the bacahama, to the ishan, to the igbira, to the igalla, to the efik, to the ibibio, to the isoko, to the shuwa arab, to the kataf, to the kwale, to the jaba, to the zuru, to the kilba, to the kalabari, to the ikwere, to the gula, to the gwari, to the margui and so on and so forth we all have something to offer and we all have a sense of self-worth and self-respect which was established and cultivated many years before Nigeria even came into existence.

None of us must ever forget that beautiful root from whence we came for without it we become worthless. Without it we become something akin to a man without a soul or a city without walls- vulnerable, defenceless and hopeless. Without it we become nothing more than a commnunity of wandering gypsies and vagabonds- a collection of men who have forgotten their father's name and who know not from whence they came. For Nigeria to be great each and every one of it's nationalities must first flourish and they must all be in a position to achieve their full potentials. I am a yoruba man and I take immense pride in that. I know my root. And contrary to the views of many the yoruba, like all the other wonderful nationalities that reside in the Nigerian space, are not a mere tribe.


One of the most unfortunate aspects of not being properly educated is the fact that those that suffer from that affliction often accept everything that their slave and colonial masters and ethnic overlords tell them and, without thinking, they swallow the fables and labels hook, line and sinker. When a supposedly educated person insists on labelling a nation of highly advanced people, who have existed for thousands of years as a distinct race, who have had their own empires, who are the most educationally and culturally advanced on the African continent, who have a singe language with approximately 20 different dialects within them, who have contributed more to the industrial, commercial and intellectual growth of Nigeria than any other, who have a rich and illustrious history and heritage which few in Africa can match, who number at least 50 million in Nigeria alone and who constitute the largest number of African people living in the diaspora on earth, whose people have spread all over the world and have strong historical, cultural, religious and ethnic roots in Benin Republic, Ghana, Togo, Haiti, Brazil, Cuba and many other places, whose people have settled into and legitimately lay claim to Ilorin, Kaaba, Akoko Edo and other parts of northern and mid-western Nigeria, whose offspring and progenitor established many kingdoms including the Bini Kingdom, whose pantheon of gods and traditional religion of ifa is respected and practised in many parts of the world, whose historical, philosophical, religious and cultural contributions to Ancient Egypt are well known and well docuemented, whose level of sophistication and exposure to the knowledge of western education is second to none and whose sense of liberalism, justice, decency, hospitality and fairness is not understood, appreciated or reciprocated by any other ethnic group or nationality in Nigeria and so much more and that supposedly educated person still insists on calling such people, despite their sheer numbers and their homogenous geographical setting, a mere "tribe" then you know that that person is truly lost.


You may call others a tribe if you so choose but not the yoruba. We number as many people as the whole of South Africa, more than 90 per cent all African countries, almost as many as the UK or France and far many more than 90 per cent of the countries on the European continent. Our history dates back as far as that of the Celts, the Normans, the Vikings, the Romans, the Greeks, the Egyptians, the Persians, the Arabs, the Medes and the Anglo-Saxons. Our forefathers are amongst those that went to the best institutions of higher learning and citadels of excellence in the world like Oxford, Cambridge, Edinburgh and Durham Universities as far back as the early 1800's and they became the first lawyers, doctors, scientists, intellectuals, poets, writers, journalists, philosophers, priests and free thinkers on the African continent. Little wonder that our former colonial masters resolved in their hearts that we must never be allowed to take power at the centre because they saw us as their equals as opposed to being their serfs. We were right at the top whilst others were still living in villages in the deepest and darkest recesses of the African forest. We forged and built great empires that we nurtured and protected with all that we had.

Ours was not a primitive inheritance but a noble and righteous one that was established by the Living God and the hard work of our forefathers. And it is the memory of those great and powerful forefathers that I invoke today when I ask how far has our noble heritage taken us in the contraption called Nigeria? How have we fared as a people? For better or for worse? Our children ask us, ''was it always like this'' and who ''were'' the yoruba? They no longer ask who ''ARE'' the yoruba but who ''WERE'' the yoruba? Sadly that is our plight today- a people whose children regard them as ''once were'' and no longer ''are''. Like the biblical Gideon asked the angel of the Lord under the oak tree in Ophrah, we ask today, ''Oh Lord, if the Lord be with us why then is all this befallen us? And where be all His miracles which our father's told us of, saying 'did not the Lord bring us up from Egypt?' But now the Lord has forsaken us and delivered us into the hands of the Midianites''. Yet I say ''no'' because God is alive and with Him there is always hope. His word says ''His anger is for a moment but His joy is for life''. It says ''Weeping may endure in the night but joy comes in the morning''. It says ''nothing can separate us from the love of the Lord'' and that ''in all these things we are more than conquerers''.

We are still who and what we once were and it shall always be so no matter what Nigeria and the world does to us. They can take away our self-respect, compel us to forget our history, tell us that we are no different to anyone else, reduce us to the level of mediocrity and servitude, take the greatness out of our being, relish in humiliating us night and day and dash the hopes of our children and our loved ones for a better future and a brighter tomorrow. They can do all that to us but they can never take away our sense of self-worth, our dignity, our excellence in extravagance and our self-respect. As long as the breath of life remains in us we shall never forget who we are and what our purpose is on earth. We are a nation, not a tribe. And we are a nation that is craving for recognition and nationhood. A nation borne out of centuries of sacrifice, hard work, perserverance and diligence and whose foundation is unsullied, noble and pure. We are a nation within a nation that is beginning to berth and that is eagerly waiting to be born. A nation that, like ''great Germany'' in the late '30's and early '40's, will need ''lebensraum'' (breathing space) and that will, one day by the grace of the Living God, provide hope and good quality leadership for the west African sub-region and the entire African continent. That is our destiny. No more and no less. And by God's grace and the power of His might, we shall achieve it when our time comes.

Today we invoke the spirits and rekindle the memories of our forefathers and we weep for our people. What do we tell them about how we fared after they left us and went into eternity? This struggle belongs to our generation yet the question needs to be asked- have we lived up to expectation as they did? Have we asked the relevant questions, provided the appropiate answers and fought the good and noble fight as they once did? We remember with great pride, great men and women of yoruba stock that have passed on and we reflect on their noble struggle through the ages.

Men and women that stood up when it mattered the most and made a difference like Samuel Ajayi Crowther, Sapara Williams, Richard Akinwande-Savage, Kitoye Ajasa, Cissie Obasa, Eric Moore, Herbert Macauly, Joseph Egerton-Shyngle, Curtis Adeniyi-Jones, Adeyemo Alakija, Theophilius Adebayo Doherty, Victor Adedapo Kayode, Akinola Maja, Joseph Akanni Doherty, Kofo Abayomi, Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti, Wuraola Esan, J.C Vaughan, H.O. Davis, Adegoke Adelabu, Jeremiah Obafemi Awolowo, Samuel Ladoke Akintola, Remilekun Adetokunbo Fani-Kayode, Frederick Rotimi Alade Williams, Bode Thomas, Adesoji Aderemi, Odeleye Fadahunsi, Oduola Osuntokun, D.K.Olumofin, Emmanuel Okunsanya Okunowo, Moses Majekodunmi, Adetokunbo Adegboyega Ademola, Benjamin Oluwakayode Osuntokun, Josiah Olawoyin, S.L. Edu, Samuel Shonibare, Matthew Abonmagbe-Okupe, Dauda Adegbenro, S.O.Gbadamosi, Adeniran Ogunsanya, T.O.S Benson, Augustus Meredith Adisa Akinloye, Adekunle Fajuyi, Samuel Ademulegun, R.A. Shodeinde, Olusola Saraki, MKO Abiola, Bola Ige, Micheal Ajasin, Abraham Adesanya, Ganiyu Dawodu, Adewale Thompson, Solanke Onasanya, Kudirat Abiola, Emmanuel Omotehinwa, Beko Ransome-Kuti, Gani Fawenhimi, Alao Aka-Bashorun and dozens of others that are too numerous to mention.

These names shall never be forgotten and those who bear them should hold their heads up high for theirs is a noble lineage. These are indeed the immortals of whom Homer once sang. These are indeed the Achilles' and the Hectors of their time. Some sacrificed their lives and entered the noble halls of martydom willingly. Others struggled, defied authority, fought against all odds and were jailed or killed for their beliefs. Some lived long and fulfilled lives whilst others were cut short, remain largely unsung and died before their time. They were illustrious men and women of strength, courage, compassion and conscience to the last. Yet what do we tell them when our time comes and when we meet them again in the great beyond?
What will be our story when we sit with them at the marriage feast of the Lamb? Will we hold our heads up high and say that we did our best for our people? Or will we bury our heads in shame and admit that we could not make a difference? What we say or do today echoes into eternity. It is time for us as a nation and as a people to stand up and take our destiny into our own hands. It is time for us to go back to the beginning and to restore our lost glory.


Yet many ask what is next for this great and illustrious nationality and this berthing nation called the yoruba? How do we achieve our full potentials and become that which God has ordained us to be? Can this be done within the confines of the Nigerian state? Some have argued, quite rightly, that the way out is to have a sovereign national conference that will renegotiate the terms of our unity and revisit the very question of our existence as a nation. Yet the truth is that the forces that control the centre in Nigeria and that have controlled it since 1914 will never allow that to happen without a fight.

It is their intention and desire to keep us together as one in a flawed and failed unitary state with it's federal facade in perpetuity regardless of the grave damage that such a venture has wrought upon our people over the last 99 years. Successive President's in the last few decades have offered government-sponsored national conferences none of which are sovereign and each of which could not possibly solve our fundamental problems or properly answer our nationality question. The mantra has always been that the unity of Nigeria is ''not negotiable'' and our resolutions were always subject to their approval or the approval of some unrepresentative and questionable National Assembly which hardly represented the interests and views of the numerous nationalities in our country. We have one year to go before we achieve 100 years of being together as one entity and I believe that it is time for us to have a rethink and determine how we want the next 100 years to be.

It is time for us to question all these so-called ''settled issues'', ''no-go areas'', ''non-negotiables'' and ''givens''. We can no longer be satisfied and content with the failed answers and ideas of a vain and fanciful unity that exists only in our minds and in our imaginations. An illusionary unity that our fathers and forefathers held so dear and even fought a civil war to maintain and uphold. Given the nature of those that control the centre today and their unholy intentions for the rest of the country we must revisit that question of unity and we must ask ourselves ''at what price?'' The world is not static- it is dynamic and it is changing fast. Kingdoms come and kingdoms go. Empires fall and empires rise. Nations break and new nations are formed.


The world is changing and the great people and numerous nationalities that make up Nigeria must espouse that change, accept it and not be left behind. What was good for yesterday may not be good for today. And what is good for today may not have been good for yesterday. That is where we are today- on the threshold of change. And I believe that the time for that change is now. It is a new dawn, a new day and a new era. And I fervently believe that the God of Heaven and He who sits above the circles of the earth is about to do something new, something refreshing and something very dramatic. Why? Because we are a nation, not a tribe.
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34 comments

  1. Great words.it is well decoded.we r a nation nt a tribe.

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  2. so ur wife's name is Regina. she has an irresponsible husband. Femi , this is not a good way to seek for a job. You have large lips but try and close them sometimes. Stop bringing fracas in marriages just because you saw some pantie colours and stop fanning ethnic hatred because it might consume you first. Gaddafi

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  3. Well said FFK, may the Good LORD Bless and keep you for the YORUBA NATION. HAPPY BIRTHDAY IN ARREARS.

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  4. Another madman ,wat hav u offer to this country ,basket mouth.....,.frm Kupapa

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  5. when Igbo people fought for their libration, it was not granted to them. Now femi want the same libration for his people. Bear in mind that in next 1million years to come we will continue to be 1 nation, 1 big country & happy people. U wake up from the slumber late.

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  6. Wise words from FFK. Thanks much SIR.

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  7. Wise words from FFK. Thanks much SIR.

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  8. DO YOU WANT ANOTHER CIVIL WAR MR KAYODE?

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  9. DO YOU WANT ANOTHER CIVIL WAR MR FANI-KAYODE?

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  10. DO YOU WANT ANOTHER CIVIL WAR MR FANI-KAYODE?

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  11. It's you fools that fight wars yoruba poeple don't fight wars we use our sixth sence

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  12. We don't need to go to war to separate.Pple r tired of the amalgamation.GadaFI even said it wen he was alive ,the solution to our problem is splitting. Even if u thoroughly search the hearts of Niger Delta pple ,u wld c that they want separation.Oil is curse to Naija,let us separate nd let c who can survive.they r lots of other resources we can tap to make money is only laziness nd greed that make us to over reliannce on oil.Other Nation that don't ve oil r doing well better than Naija.

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  13. Nigeria will remain one ,if you like use your zero sense no tribe is going anywhere, we must remain one .Have your fathers finished boasting how they fought and won the civil war?

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  14. Can Asari Dokubo ( et al ) write same about his nation(s). FFK is a big mouth and not a bastard. That's what we are. Yorubas can talk, only a fool will not see sense in this N(ew)O(pined)N(ews)SENSE about the Nation of Nations called Nigeria( kolonial contraption)kolomentality.

    Other nationalities should do same.

    Too bad Obasanjo was obsessed with 3rd term instead of tackling this.

    Its better late than never.

    To you war mongers, almighty Russia broke without a bullet fired. The Igbos should ask Zik why they failed!!!!!!!

    FFK, Fela's omission is an error. 4given

    BabaPupa!!!
    Babapupa009@yahoo.com

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  15. Anon @7:30pm, and that 6th SENSE is FEAR. COWARDS! The YORUBAs are even afraid to voice their dissatisfaction with the entity called Nigeria, let alone fight for what they believe in. Fani had mention that several times in his MUMU essays that "many of his kins men are not happy with this forced marriage called Nigeria, but they are TOO AFRAID to voice out" so if U call FEAR the 6th sense I'm not surprised, besides YORUBAs are two edge sword.FFK is a typical mumu YORUBA MAN, I pity REGINA, she must be feeling like "NIGERIA" in her marriage with this CRACK HEAD FFK. RUBBISH WRITE UP!

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    Replies
    1. This El Matosky, u no go kill me with laugh, but na true u talk sha.

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    2. I agree with u totally.

      Delete
  16. Ibos will never change all they do is use abusive words, that shows they all lack manners and good upbringing

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  17. The legitimate son of Fani Power I greet u. I enjoyed ur presentation but just as I was getting carried away by ur intelligence, versatality and knowledge of history but local and international, u spoilt it with nepotism. The problems of Nigeria are caused by the 3 major tribes and now minorities are striving to be recognised. For goodness sake let's forget our tribes/roots and be patrotic to Nigeria as an entity and wish her well. I am older than u but in my 50s and I was born in Massey Hospital and lived in Ebute Metta and my father worked in Nig Railways. I have been a victim of tribalism when I worked in Nestle Foods Nig Plc. My faith in Jesus makes me a detribalised Edolite with kids married to non-native.Next time be more broad-minded my dear. I am now ur fan. Long Live Nigeria. Nigeria go survive!

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  18. El matosky, can't you write without using these your abusive language/ words?. That clearly shows your upbringing.na wah for u o?.

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  19. FFK u 4got 2 add two major qualities of d Yorubas, dat they are CO WARDS and HYPOCRITES.

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  20. "The minute he turns his back on his family and forgets where he is coming from he is little more than an illegitimate child. And no matter how successful he is in life an illegitimate child he shall remain until the day he dies. It is the same for those that treat their root or their primary nationality with contempt and that are prepared to sacrifice it at the drop of a hat."

    Can we infer this as true for Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi whom you support in his "bastard" fight against President Jonathan? Is he an illegitimate child?

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  21. I salute you Mr Fani-Kayode. He is not trying to cause rift amongst the ethnic groups but telling the world the beautiful sides of the Yorubas. In case you have forgotten, the Yorubas are peace loving people and will NEVER go to war for any reason. If we intend to secede, we will simply do it on dialogue (which we do not intend to do anyway). So stop insulting the noble man for eulogizing his tribe. Kindly state opinion in a polite way or do same for yours.

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  22. FFK so you are still a full at 53years,

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  23. El Mato o si,
    Yorubas are not cowards, but that's what get when you show greater understanding and maturity. Which no other nation in nigeria has little of . To test this pick a quarrel with an Igbo or Hausa or Yoruba on same issue and see the difference.


    It takes just a soul to change the course of history.

    Jesus
    Muhammed
    Gandhi
    Hitler
    Etc
    It could have been ojukwu(betrayed by Zik and the Igbos love for stock fish) .

    It maybe FFK.

    BabaPupa!!!

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  24. El Mato o si,
    Yorubas are not cowards, but that's what get when you show greater understanding and maturity. Which no other nation in nigeria has little of . To test this pick a quarrel with an Igbo or Hausa or Yoruba on same issue and see the difference.


    It takes just a soul to change the course of history.

    Jesus
    Muhammed
    Gandhi
    Hitler
    Etc
    It could have been ojukwu(betrayed by Zik and the Igbos love for stock fish) .

    It maybe FFK.

    BabaPupa!!!

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  25. well,mr ffk,u started well in this piece but spoilt it along d line.u shld have known dt this is not a yoruba forum.u can present this whenever u are invited to deliver a lecture in any of d numerous yoruba festivals like d type dt was held in ijebu-ode sometime ago.If its abt sing-praising one's tribe/herritage,this platform wd have bn repleted wt myriad of tribe-hailing articles so dt everyone wd just scroll&select d 1 dt is of his/her own tribe and read.Of course we have 1000tribes in 9ja...perhaps we shld begin to blow our trumpets

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  26. FFK, u are a good writer. U are creative, U are a good excuse giver for all ur faults. U find reasons for all ur faults meaning u are perfect.And the most unfortunate thing is that U are an epitome of TRIBALISM. All these grammar you are blowing here is just an effort to paint a picture that u are always right hence people should believe u are not tribalistic(if there is a word like tha).
    My broda stop dividing this country through ethnic sentiments and segregations.You are not the only one who believes in importance ones' root but urs is a very clear case of demonstration of tribalism.
    Above all learn to accept your mistakes bc only God is perfect.
    My two cents.

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  27. Ofcourse the writter was out to show the superiority (a word the yorubas can't claim) of his race above all else that is within the territory now called Nigeria, to the extent that he veiw the trust the noble britons vested in the hands of Northerners as less deserving and a conspiracy to deny them(his people) power; a claim that is laughable in it self. FFK uses words (beautifully constructed sentences) to confuse the ill educated or the biased mind; the two being narrowly seperated in contemporary Nigeria.

    Well, about the write-up, he started as one would expect of a learned individual by presenting himself as a victim of circumstances. He went ahead in prayers, not showing the religion that enjoys his patronage; perhaps because he does not want to inflict harm on his believes. FFK told us a lot about the virtues of the yorubas forgetting to mention that the pre-colonial era of the African history, of which Yoruba form a significant player, is beseiged with so many 'not palatable' facts. He also forgot to, or deliberately refuses to, admit the canibalism, sorcery, and general primitiveness of the yoruba dynasty. To judge him based on the unfolding events is to charge him as labelled in some quarters; A tribalist.

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  28. FKK's write-ups would have had more ppl reading if he can reduce then to a reasonable lenghts.

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  29. FFK, Please carry go...i personally enjoy your write-ups it widen my scope and gives me hope and joy and further tells me where i belong in the Nation called Yoruba.
    However, this literature is not meant for every one, but just selected few, if you dont like his face or articles please never you open it, and must you abuse him and detest whatever the young man has upstairs to say? Let each and everyone write or place an article here to see the level of responses, each time i open and see comments on FFK's articles, it gives me a joy that this man has a large follower-ship either good or bad. Waa pe Fun wa ooo baba FFK!

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  30. The thought of the kind of bush that spewed an uncouth native as El Matosky makes me retch. He lacks the civility needed to participate in the kind of intellectual discourse at hand; bros go play with your toys. FFK did Yoruba history justice as always, but beyond seemingly grandiose presentation of history: both contemporary and distant, he makes a wise point along the lines of a Yoruba adage that if the front encumbered one can always retrace his steps. We need to rethink this forced marriage conceived and forged whilst Lord Luggard was in the arms of his mistress.
    DASTE anchorpoint01@gmail.com

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  31. Another fool @40.who is really frustrated.dnt worry the next govt will compensate you with psychiatric appointment.

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  32. You cannot have nations under a nation. A nation is one. We have a nation not nations. We have one president not presidents. There is no Yoruba nation, Igbo nation, ijaw nation, edo nation, itsekiri nation or hausa nation. Just one nation, Nigeria. If you start talking about Yoruba nation, then the Yorubas should secede and form their own country. In fact, let us all secede and form 50 nations.

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