Being Nigerian Outside Nigeria: An Extra Burden by backT(m): 7:53pm On Jul 27, 2021 |
Visiting Austria for the first time and realizing that the police officers are particularly interested in the same set of people: The Nigerians. I’ve been in and out of South Africa for the last five years. On my first arrival in Johannesburg, January 2014, I was welcomed at the airport by Fr. Terry Nash. He was smiling, I was smiling, too. I was in the company of six other guys who introduced themselves – from Delta State, Akwa-Ibom, Benue, Anambra, etc.
It got to my turn and I said IMO. Fr. Nash’s smile ripened into a giggle, “I have heard about Imo, I met many people from Imo State because I’ve been in prison ministry. Nigerians generally make up a high population in the prison here. And the Imo guys make the church in prison so vibrant, those guys are great”, he said, still smiling. My own smile had left me.
Years later I would find myself suffering what seems like a stigma that comes with being Nigerian. Every time I found myself in the airport, my identity as a Nigerian is a source of worry: being asked to step aside for extra questions, being delayed by extra protocol because I’m Nigerian.
Three years ago I was returning to Nigeria on holiday. There was small chaos at the airport: the noise of police whistles and the barking of police dogs filled the air, “get that man”, a chubby white policeman was screaming. “Somebody has been caught with drugs again”, an unknown Black man quickly hinted me, “it is these Nigerians”. I quickly became furious.
“You can’t be sure it’s a Nigerian”, I retorted. Well, the guy was caught. Behold, he had a strong Nigerian accent while he was begging the policemen, and had the angled shape of my head: Igbo, with a rosary on his neck. I gave up on defending Nigerians’ reputation.
I gave up because shortly after a Nigerian family volunteered to do clean up in a certain Catholic parish in Johannesburg, the police stormed into the church one day and found drugs hiding behind the terbanacle.
I gave up when a Nigerian asked by an immigration officer to step aside, was scolding the officer for delaying him and raining legal threats, “I know my rights, you can’t keep me this long”, only for the immigration officer to find that his documents had all been forged.
Once, on returning to South Africa from Nigeria I was with an old Yoruba woman who couldn’t speak or read English, her son in Pretoria had a newborn baby. She had been invited, they somehow succeeded in making her a passport and got her a visa. She couldn’t read anything or understand any information at the airport, so I helped her because my Yoruba is fluent.
When finally we reached Johannesburg the immigration officers had questions about some “strange” things in her bag. I told them those were cooking ingredients, I was the translator between her and the officers. Soon she became worried and whispered into my ear, “Eyi n di isoro. Fun won ni five hundred naira” (this is becoming a problem, give them five hundred).
“Won o kiin gba five hundred (they don’t accept N500”, I replied.
“Oya fun won ni one thousand” (then give them one thousand). She squeezed a wrinkled one thousand naira note into my hand. I told her they do not use naira here. “haaaaaah” her mouth opened. I expected that, I smiled.
Bribe is a Nigerian culture, even our old people believe it works, and that there is no other way of moving past an obstacle aside from bribe, there is no other means of progress asides bribe. Bribe is a Nigerian salvation.
Weeks later I had a Nigerian friend who was in dire need. He lived with me, he talked about his two million naira which he was expecting from Nigeria, with many proves of the availability of the money. So he borrowed six thousand rand from me.
My friend, it’s now more than two years, he never paid. He fled to someplace else and never returned my calls. I learned later he had borrowed also from a Kenyan who was our neighbor, and this neighbor kept asking where my ‘brother’ was. Until today he never paid, and it doesn’t prick his conscience.
It’s important for we Nigerians to ask ourselves serious questions. What is the most important thing to a Nigerian? What kind of factors in our childhood makes us desperate and dangerously competitive? Sometimes we are under the pressure of our parents and peers to “prove ourselves”.
When the average Nigerian travels abroad he doesn’t travel to merely make a livelihood. His plan is to outshine his peers. I do not find this common among South Africans. They’re usually satisfied, they just want to have what they need, they don’t kill themselves over what is beyond them.
The first time I had a drive to Durban with a senior brother from Mariannhill we saw a Nigerian suspiciously passing a tightly-folded bag from under the counter, then they made signs to each other, then he sneaked out. Another man entered and sneakily collected it.
The Zambian brother tapped my back, “drugs, they are your brothers”. The saddest thing is that those who choose to talk about this are attacked and bullied on social media, they are regarded as unpatriotic citizens. Because Nigerian morality ends with sex and marriage. Finished.
Talk about issues on human sexuality and you’ll see the bible-thumping Nigeria saying, “hellfire, Adam and Steve, weapons of the devil, it is not our culture”, but bribery is our culture. Everything else asides from sexual activity is survival, so it’s unofficially acceptable. Our mouths are sharp when HIV is mentioned, we often think we are very moral. What shall it profit a virgin who is a thief? Nigerian morality is faux.
“What is your brother doing in Malaysia?” “He is hustling”, that is all you can say. He’s just hustling. He comes back to Nigeria and does Thanksgiving and the priest blesses him with chasuble spread out. He pays his tithes and gives huge offerings, and his name is announced in church. But nobody notices that poor man at the corner of the church who is a gateman and gives his offering from the little he earned through honest work.
What is your brother doing in Dubai? You give random and vague answers: He’s trying to find something, we are praying he succeeds, please put him in prayer. You know that kind of prayer, right?
A South African Bishop once made a joke, “it is easier to trust a stone than to trust a Nigerian. You keep a stone on this table, you’ll still find the stone when you come back. Keep a Nigerian and come back later, the Nigerian is gone”. And yet we wonder why religious orders outside Africa are afraid of considering Nigerian applications. Our brothers who were admitted into American dioceses arrived at the airport and then ran away.
I visited a church in Johannesburg where I heard during the announcements that the guy who teaches the altar servers had been shot dead. A Nigerian. Later the circumstances surrounding his death did not match with a person who would teach mass servers how to serve Holy Mass.
It should make us ask questions about what we value the most as Nigerians: religion or integrity? Perhaps something is wrong with how we have been evangelized.
Back home in Nigeria, Nigerians who are not corrupt are seen as fools by their fellow Nigerians. Their wives mock them. Those Nigerians who studied abroad and now see the world differently, hardly ever come close to political offices in Nigeria, they just won’t fit in. And yet we love Jesus the most, we are the bastion of faith in Africa.
Do you know why your visa has been rejected many times? It’s because your passport is a Nigerian passport. Ask your friend from Tanzania, he’ll tell you how easy it is for him to get a visa.
Do you know why your admission into that European University is taking long? It’s because they’re still investigating your documents to be sure that they’re not fake. Ask your South African friend, he already got an admission.
Now that a new word has been added into the Oxford Dictionary “Nigerian Scam” (please google it) we can be sure that our position in the world is in the first place. Think Nigerian, but let it be that your reputation is important.
Identify as Nigerian, but make sure those who come after you are not denied privileges because of you. Because of those who represent us positively around the globe, because of the many Nigerians who work to earn their living, I am proudly Nigerian.
I am proudly Nigerian, because Pius Adesanmi was, Chinua Achebe was, because Anthony Cardinal Okogie is, because Chimamanda Adichie is, because Fela Kuti was, because of people such as Flora Nwapa, Ben Okri, Dora Akunyuli, Bishop Hassan Kukah, etc. There are many models you could choose from instead of adding to our dirty script. Save other Nigerians from stigma, be true.
Cc: #Life Please, be a good Nigerian wherever you are. Thank You 14 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Being Nigerian Outside Nigeria: An Extra Burden by Delph123(m): 8:07pm On Jul 27, 2021 |
Sorry I can’t read all this long drama Summarize it |
Re: Being Nigerian Outside Nigeria: An Extra Burden by zeuss: 8:15pm On Jul 27, 2021 |
Good read....na buhari people spoil everything. |
Re: Being Nigerian Outside Nigeria: An Extra Burden by heniford2: 8:17pm On Jul 27, 2021 |
backT:
Visiting Austria for the first time and realizing that the police officers are particularly interested in the same set of people: The Nigerians. I’ve been in and out of South Africa for the last five years. On my first arrival in Johannesburg, January 2014, I was welcomed at the airport by Fr. Terry Nash. He was smiling, I was smiling, too. I was in the company of six other guys who introduced themselves – from Delta State, Akwa-Ibom, Benue, Anambra, etc.
It got to my turn and I said IMO. Fr. Nash’s smile ripened into a giggle, “I have heard about Imo, I met many people from Imo State because I’ve been in prison ministry. Nigerians generally make up a high population in the prison here. And the Imo guys make the church in prison so vibrant, those guys are great”, he said, still smiling. My own smile had left me.
Years later I would find myself suffering what seems like a stigma that comes with being Nigerian. Every time I found myself in the airport, my identity as a Nigerian is a source of worry: being asked to step aside for extra questions, being delayed by extra protocol because I’m Nigerian.
Three years ago I was returning to Nigeria on holiday. There was small chaos at the airport: the noise of police whistles and the barking of police dogs filled the air, “get that man”, a chubby white policeman was screaming. “Somebody has been caught with drugs again”, an unknown Black man quickly hinted me, “it is these Nigerians”. I quickly became furious.
“You can’t be sure it’s a Nigerian”, I retorted. Well, the guy was caught. Behold, he had a strong Nigerian accent while he was begging the policemen, and had the angled shape of my head: Igbo, with a rosary on his neck. I gave up on defending Nigerians’ reputation.
I gave up because shortly after a Nigerian family volunteered to do clean up in a certain Catholic parish in Johannesburg, the police stormed into the church one day and found drugs hiding behind the terbanacle.
I gave up when a Nigerian asked by an immigration officer to step aside, was scolding the officer for delaying him and raining legal threats, “I know my rights, you can’t keep me this long”, only for the immigration officer to find that his documents had all been forged.
Once, on returning to South Africa from Nigeria I was with an old Yoruba woman who couldn’t speak or read English, her son in Pretoria had a newborn baby. She had been invited, they somehow succeeded in making her a passport and got her a visa. She couldn’t read anything or understand any information at the airport, so I helped her because my Yoruba is fluent.
When finally we reached Johannesburg the immigration officers had questions about some “strange” things in her bag. I told them those were cooking ingredients, I was the translator between her and the officers. Soon she became worried and whispered into my ear, “Eyi n di isoro. Fun won ni five hundred naira” (this is becoming a problem, give them five hundred).
“Won o kiin gba five hundred (they don’t accept N500”, I replied.
“Oya fun won ni one thousand” (then give them one thousand). She squeezed a wrinkled one thousand naira note into my hand. I told her they do not use naira here. “haaaaaah” her mouth opened. I expected that, I smiled.
Bribe is a Nigerian culture, even our old people believe it works, and that there is no other way of moving past an obstacle aside from bribe, there is no other means of progress asides bribe. Bribe is a Nigerian salvation.
Weeks later I had a Nigerian friend who was in dire need. He lived with me, he talked about his two million naira which he was expecting from Nigeria, with many proves of the availability of the money. So he borrowed six thousand rand from me.
My friend, it’s now more than two years, he never paid. He fled to someplace else and never returned my calls. I learned later he had borrowed also from a Kenyan who was our neighbor, and this neighbor kept asking where my ‘brother’ was. Until today he never paid, and it doesn’t prick his conscience.
It’s important for we Nigerians to ask ourselves serious questions. What is the most important thing to a Nigerian? What kind of factors in our childhood makes us desperate and dangerously competitive? Sometimes we are under the pressure of our parents and peers to “prove ourselves”.
When the average Nigerian travels abroad he doesn’t travel to merely make a livelihood. His plan is to outshine his peers. I do not find this common among South Africans. They’re usually satisfied, they just want to have what they need, they don’t kill themselves over what is beyond them.
The first time I had a drive to Durban with a senior brother from Mariannhill we saw a Nigerian suspiciously passing a tightly-folded bag from under the counter, then they made signs to each other, then he sneaked out. Another man entered and sneakily collected it.
The Zambian brother tapped my back, “drugs, they are your brothers”. The saddest thing is that those who choose to talk about this are attacked and bullied on social media, they are regarded as unpatriotic citizens. Because Nigerian morality ends with sex and marriage. Finished.
Talk about issues on human sexuality and you’ll see the bible-thumping Nigeria saying, “hellfire, Adam and Steve, weapons of the devil, it is not our culture”, but bribery is our culture. Everything else asides from sexual activity is survival, so it’s unofficially acceptable. Our mouths are sharp when HIV is mentioned, we often think we are very moral. What shall it profit a virgin who is a thief? Nigerian morality is faux.
“What is your brother doing in Malaysia?” “He is hustling”, that is all you can say. He’s just hustling. He comes back to Nigeria and does Thanksgiving and the priest blesses him with chasuble spread out. He pays his tithes and gives huge offerings, and his name is announced in church. But nobody notices that poor man at the corner of the church who is a gateman and gives his offering from the little he earned through honest work.
What is your brother doing in Dubai? You give random and vague answers: He’s trying to find something, we are praying he succeeds, please put him in prayer. You know that kind of prayer, right?
A South African Bishop once made a joke, “it is easier to trust a stone than to trust a Nigerian. You keep a stone on this table, you’ll still find the stone when you come back. Keep a Nigerian and come back later, the Nigerian is gone”. And yet we wonder why religious orders outside Africa are afraid of considering Nigerian applications. Our brothers who were admitted into American dioceses arrived at the airport and then ran away.
I visited a church in Johannesburg where I heard during the announcements that the guy who teaches the altar servers had been shot dead. A Nigerian. Later the circumstances surrounding his death did not match with a person who would teach mass servers how to serve Holy Mass.
It should make us ask questions about what we value the most as Nigerians: religion or integrity? Perhaps something is wrong with how we have been evangelized.
Back home in Nigeria, Nigerians who are not corrupt are seen as fools by their fellow Nigerians. Their wives mock them. Those Nigerians who studied abroad and now see the world differently, hardly ever come close to political offices in Nigeria, they just won’t fit in. And yet we love Jesus the most, we are the bastion of faith in Africa.
Do you know why your visa has been rejected many times? It’s because your passport is a Nigerian passport. Ask your friend from Tanzania, he’ll tell you how easy it is for him to get a visa.
Do you know why your admission into that European University is taking long? It’s because they’re still investigating your documents to be sure that they’re not fake. Ask your South African friend, he already got an admission.
Now that a new word has been added into the Oxford Dictionary “Nigerian Scam” (please google it) we can be sure that our position in the world is in the first place. Think Nigerian, but let it be that your reputation is important.
Identify as Nigerian, but make sure those who come after you are not denied privileges because of you. Because of those who represent us positively around the globe, because of the many Nigerians who work to earn their living, I am proudly Nigerian.
I am proudly Nigerian, because Pius Adesanmi was, Chinua Achebe was, because Anthony Cardinal Okogie is, because Chimamanda Adichie is, because Fela Kuti was, because of people such as Flora Nwapa, Ben Okri, Dora Akunyuli, Bishop Hassan Kukah, etc. There are many models you could choose from instead of adding to our dirty script. Save other Nigerians from stigma, be true.
Cc: #Life Please, be a good Nigerian wherever you are. Thank You all this nonsense crap you typed here like igbo's or Nigeria are that bad let me lecture you the highest crime rate in the world is from Russians,bribery, cyber crime too Asians also do more drugs than Africa but you will not see any Asian nor Russians tiring the own down, Uk is bad that bribery and gangster is so high how many of there country men have wrote bad about it, Just this month 8,967 have died in US on gun killing do you here it abeg stop all this, germany stole our heritage about 1000 Arts from benin the just apologized did you not see it must we kill ourselves are we not representing ourselves good abeg stop all this shit 3 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Being Nigerian Outside Nigeria: An Extra Burden by khia: 8:30pm On Jul 27, 2021 |
backT:
Visiting Austria for the first time and realizing that the police officers are particularly interested in the same set of people: The Nigerians. I’ve been in and out of South Africa for the last five years. On my first arrival in Johannesburg, January 2014, I was welcomed at the airport by Fr. Terry Nash. He was smiling, I was smiling, too. I was in the company of six other guys who introduced themselves – from Delta State, Akwa-Ibom, Benue, Anambra, etc.
It got to my turn and I said IMO. Fr. Nash’s smile ripened into a giggle, “I have heard about Imo, I met many people from Imo State because I’ve been in prison ministry. Nigerians generally make up a high population in the prison here. And the Imo guys make the church in prison so vibrant, those guys are great”, he said, still smiling. My own smile had left me.
Years later I would find myself suffering what seems like a stigma that comes with being Nigerian. Every time I found myself in the airport, my identity as a Nigerian is a source of worry: being asked to step aside for extra questions, being delayed by extra protocol because I’m Nigerian.
Three years ago I was returning to Nigeria on holiday. There was small chaos at the airport: the noise of police whistles and the barking of police dogs filled the air, “get that man”, a chubby white policeman was screaming. “Somebody has been caught with drugs again”, an unknown Black man quickly hinted me, “it is these Nigerians”. I quickly became furious.
“You can’t be sure it’s a Nigerian”, I retorted. Well, the guy was caught. Behold, he had a strong Nigerian accent while he was begging the policemen, and had the angled shape of my head: Igbo, with a rosary on his neck. I gave up on defending Nigerians’ reputation.
I gave up because shortly after a Nigerian family volunteered to do clean up in a certain Catholic parish in Johannesburg, the police stormed into the church one day and found drugs hiding behind the terbanacle.
I gave up when a Nigerian asked by an immigration officer to step aside, was scolding the officer for delaying him and raining legal threats, “I know my rights, you can’t keep me this long”, only for the immigration officer to find that his documents had all been forged.
Once, on returning to South Africa from Nigeria I was with an old Yoruba woman who couldn’t speak or read English, her son in Pretoria had a newborn baby. She had been invited, they somehow succeeded in making her a passport and got her a visa. She couldn’t read anything or understand any information at the airport, so I helped her because my Yoruba is fluent.
When finally we reached Johannesburg the immigration officers had questions about some “strange” things in her bag. I told them those were cooking ingredients, I was the translator between her and the officers. Soon she became worried and whispered into my ear, “Eyi n di isoro. Fun won ni five hundred naira” (this is becoming a problem, give them five hundred).
“Won o kiin gba five hundred (they don’t accept N500”, I replied.
“Oya fun won ni one thousand” (then give them one thousand). She squeezed a wrinkled one thousand naira note into my hand. I told her they do not use naira here. “haaaaaah” her mouth opened. I expected that, I smiled.
Bribe is a Nigerian culture, even our old people believe it works, and that there is no other way of moving past an obstacle aside from bribe, there is no other means of progress asides bribe. Bribe is a Nigerian salvation.
Weeks later I had a Nigerian friend who was in dire need. He lived with me, he talked about his two million naira which he was expecting from Nigeria, with many proves of the availability of the money. So he borrowed six thousand rand from me.
My friend, it’s now more than two years, he never paid. He fled to someplace else and never returned my calls. I learned later he had borrowed also from a Kenyan who was our neighbor, and this neighbor kept asking where my ‘brother’ was. Until today he never paid, and it doesn’t prick his conscience.
It’s important for we Nigerians to ask ourselves serious questions. What is the most important thing to a Nigerian? What kind of factors in our childhood makes us desperate and dangerously competitive? Sometimes we are under the pressure of our parents and peers to “prove ourselves”.
When the average Nigerian travels abroad he doesn’t travel to merely make a livelihood. His plan is to outshine his peers. I do not find this common among South Africans. They’re usually satisfied, they just want to have what they need, they don’t kill themselves over what is beyond them.
The first time I had a drive to Durban with a senior brother from Mariannhill we saw a Nigerian suspiciously passing a tightly-folded bag from under the counter, then they made signs to each other, then he sneaked out. Another man entered and sneakily collected it.
The Zambian brother tapped my back, “drugs, they are your brothers”. The saddest thing is that those who choose to talk about this are attacked and bullied on social media, they are regarded as unpatriotic citizens. Because Nigerian morality ends with sex and marriage. Finished.
Talk about issues on human sexuality and you’ll see the bible-thumping Nigeria saying, “hellfire, Adam and Steve, weapons of the devil, it is not our culture”, but bribery is our culture. Everything else asides from sexual activity is survival, so it’s unofficially acceptable. Our mouths are sharp when HIV is mentioned, we often think we are very moral. What shall it profit a virgin who is a thief? Nigerian morality is faux.
“What is your brother doing in Malaysia?” “He is hustling”, that is all you can say. He’s just hustling. He comes back to Nigeria and does Thanksgiving and the priest blesses him with chasuble spread out. He pays his tithes and gives huge offerings, and his name is announced in church. But nobody notices that poor man at the corner of the church who is a gateman and gives his offering from the little he earned through honest work.
What is your brother doing in Dubai? You give random and vague answers: He’s trying to find something, we are praying he succeeds, please put him in prayer. You know that kind of prayer, right?
A South African Bishop once made a joke, “it is easier to trust a stone than to trust a Nigerian. You keep a stone on this table, you’ll still find the stone when you come back. Keep a Nigerian and come back later, the Nigerian is gone”. And yet we wonder why religious orders outside Africa are afraid of considering Nigerian applications. Our brothers who were admitted into American dioceses arrived at the airport and then ran away.
I visited a church in Johannesburg where I heard during the announcements that the guy who teaches the altar servers had been shot dead. A Nigerian. Later the circumstances surrounding his death did not match with a person who would teach mass servers how to serve Holy Mass.
It should make us ask questions about what we value the most as Nigerians: religion or integrity? Perhaps something is wrong with how we have been evangelized.
Back home in Nigeria, Nigerians who are not corrupt are seen as fools by their fellow Nigerians. Their wives mock them. Those Nigerians who studied abroad and now see the world differently, hardly ever come close to political offices in Nigeria, they just won’t fit in. And yet we love Jesus the most, we are the bastion of faith in Africa.
Do you know why your visa has been rejected many times? It’s because your passport is a Nigerian passport. Ask your friend from Tanzania, he’ll tell you how easy it is for him to get a visa.
Do you know why your admission into that European University is taking long? It’s because they’re still investigating your documents to be sure that they’re not fake. Ask your South African friend, he already got an admission.
Now that a new word has been added into the Oxford Dictionary “Nigerian Scam” (please google it) we can be sure that our position in the world is in the first place. Think Nigerian, but let it be that your reputation is important.
Identify as Nigerian, but make sure those who come after you are not denied privileges because of you. Because of those who represent us positively around the globe, because of the many Nigerians who work to earn their living, I am proudly Nigerian.
I am proudly Nigerian, because Pius Adesanmi was, Chinua Achebe was, because Anthony Cardinal Okogie is, because Chimamanda Adichie is, because Fela Kuti was, because of people such as Flora Nwapa, Ben Okri, Dora Akunyuli, Bishop Hassan Kukah, etc. There are many models you could choose from instead of adding to our dirty script. Save other Nigerians from stigma, be true.
Cc: #Life Please, be a good Nigerian wherever you are. Thank You This is sad but true, the US has the same outlook for Nigerians as well, that's why Trump wanted you out. It's the criminals and coons like the mentioned names below who make it difficult for the decent Nigerian people. Conner44, ACTIVIST001 SUPERPACK Bouz Meobizy |
Re: Being Nigerian Outside Nigeria: An Extra Burden by budaatum: 8:43pm On Jul 27, 2021 |
zeuss: Good read....na buhari people spoil everything. It is this sort of irresponsibility that gives Nigerians a bad rep. If we took responsibility for our actions perhaps we would be minded to behave better instead of claimimg bubu made us behave as cows. It would be interesting to see whom we blame when bubu is no more. 2 Likes |
Re: Being Nigerian Outside Nigeria: An Extra Burden by zeuss: 8:52pm On Jul 27, 2021 |
budaatum:
It is this sort of irresponsibility that gives Nigerians a bad rep.
If we took responsibility for our actions perhaps we would be minded to behave better instead of claimimg bubu made us behave as cows.
It would be interesting to see whom we blame when bubu is no more. commot there, good leadership and strong institutions is what changes a nation for the better and not good individuals or self righteous idiots........self righteousness was what put buhari there. a place where people in their 100s are murdered for cow sake and nothing happens to the murderers ur telling me I am irresponsible for blame leadership.....u well so? |
Re: Being Nigerian Outside Nigeria: An Extra Burden by Nobody: 9:03pm On Jul 27, 2021 |
heniford2: all this nonsense crap you typed here like igbo's or Nigeria are that bad let me lecture you the highest crime rate in the world is from Russians,bribery, cyber crime too Asians also do more drugs than Africa but you will not see any Asian nor Russians tiring the own down, Uk is bad that bribery and gangster is so high how many of there country men have wrote bad about it, Just this month 8,967 have died in US on gun killing do you here it abeg stop all this, germany stole our heritage about 1000 Arts from benin the just apologized did you not see it must we kill ourselves are we not representing ourselves good abeg stop all this shit You be nammar o Quoting the entire text fa.... 5 Likes |
Re: Being Nigerian Outside Nigeria: An Extra Burden by heniford2: 9:17pm On Jul 27, 2021 |
iamadonis2:
You be nammar o
Quoting the entire text fa.... d tin vex me |
Re: Being Nigerian Outside Nigeria: An Extra Burden by Aksnoopy: 9:25pm On Jul 27, 2021 |
You are an idiot!
Nonsense propagandist national image laundering fake story!
Trying so hard to launder the image of a dead country. |
Re: Being Nigerian Outside Nigeria: An Extra Burden by khia: 11:42pm On Jul 27, 2021 |
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Re: Being Nigerian Outside Nigeria: An Extra Burden by CalmElder(m): 12:14am On Jul 28, 2021 |
heniford2: all this nonsense crap you typed here like igbo's or Nigeria are that bad let me lecture you the highest crime rate in the world is from Russians,bribery, cyber crime too Asians also do more drugs than Africa but you will not see any Asian nor Russians tiring the own down, Uk is bad that bribery and gangster is so high how many of there country men have wrote bad about it, Just this month 8,967 have died in US on gun killing do you here it abeg stop all this, germany stole our heritage about 1000 Arts from benin the just apologized did you not see it must we kill ourselves are we not representing ourselves good abeg stop all this shit Do you expect him to leave his siblings or children and go discipline another family's own? The countries you mentioned have their own people criticizing them. At least, this post will prick a few consciences, even if it one, na achievement. |
Re: Being Nigerian Outside Nigeria: An Extra Burden by budaatum: 3:42am On Jul 28, 2021 |
zeuss:
commot there, good leadership and strong institutions is what changes a nation for the better and not good individuals or self righteous idiots........self righteousness was what put buhari there. a place where people in their 100s are murdered for cow sake and nothing happens to the murderers ur telling me I am irresponsible for blame leadership.....u well so? Actually, it is intelligent citizens from whom the leaders are selected to create strong institutions that change a nation for the better, unless you expect strong institutions to drop from heaven. 2 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Being Nigerian Outside Nigeria: An Extra Burden by heniford2: 4:20am On Jul 28, 2021 |
khia:
The reason you don't hear so much about the crimes those others commit is because they are doing it in their own country but unfortunately Nigerians are invading other countries all over the world and bringing their criminal behavior with them. which in their own country Russian cyber hackers hacked America gas early last month demand Ransome 1 Like |
Re: Being Nigerian Outside Nigeria: An Extra Burden by DoggoneDogg: 4:44am On Jul 28, 2021 |
[s] Delph123: Sorry I can’t read all this long drama Summarize it [/s] It talks about idiots like you. 2 Likes |
Re: Being Nigerian Outside Nigeria: An Extra Burden by DoggoneDogg: 4:46am On Jul 28, 2021 |
[s] heniford2: all this nonsense crap you typed here like igbo's or Nigeria are that bad let me lecture you the highest crime rate in the world is from Russians,bribery, cyber crime too Asians also do more drugs than Africa but you will not see any Asian nor Russians tiring the own down, Uk is bad that bribery and gangster is so high how many of there country men have wrote bad about it, Just this month 8,967 have died in US on gun killing do you here it abeg stop all this, germany stole our heritage about 1000 Arts from benin the just apologized did you not see it must we kill ourselves are we not representing ourselves good abeg stop all this shit [/s] They are here. Defenders of immorality. 3 Likes |
Re: Being Nigerian Outside Nigeria: An Extra Burden by khia: 5:44am On Jul 28, 2021 |
heniford2: which in their own country Russian cyber hackers hacked America gas early last month demand Ransome LMAO I don't know why but your response is hilarious to me, I had to like it but the US isn't the whole world. I wouldn't be surprised if Trump is involved. |
Re: Being Nigerian Outside Nigeria: An Extra Burden by Jakumo(m): 6:12am On Jul 28, 2021 |
backT:
Behold, he had a strong Nigerian accent while he was begging the policemen, and had the angled shape of my head: Igbo, Bribe is a Nigerian salvation.
OP please could you be so kind as to explain the "angled shape of the head" reference above. How many DEGREES of slope in the skull can be used to define a person's head as being of a specific tribe ? Also, please explain how "Bribe is salvation" in Nigeria. I will tip you five thousand naira for this information. |
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Re: Being Nigerian Outside Nigeria: An Extra Burden by VlamesIffect(f): 7:47am On Jul 28, 2021 |
1 Like |
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Re: Being Nigerian Outside Nigeria: An Extra Burden by theTranscriber: 9:55am On Jul 28, 2021 |
khia:
This is sad but true, the US has the same outlook for Nigerians as well, that's why Trump wanted you out. It's the criminals and coons like the mentioned names below who make it difficult for the decent Nigerian people.
Conner44, ACTIVIST001 SUPERPACK Bouz Meobizy you know that the reputation of Nigerians in the US is nothing close to that Trump is just an abnormal petty child-mind Well decieve yourself as long as you want We'll keep coming And Nigeria will soon get better so we won't have to mass emigrate Enjoy your "America" while it lasts Before everyone dies of guns 1 Like |
Re: Being Nigerian Outside Nigeria: An Extra Burden by Nobody: 10:06am On Jul 28, 2021 |
khia:
This is sad but true, the US has the same outlook for Nigerians as well, that's why Trump wanted you out. It's the criminals and coons like the mentioned names below who make it difficult for the decent Nigerian people.
Conner44, ACTIVIST001 SUPERPACK Bouz Meobizy So your a decent nigerian like this now . You will soon be worn pampers and deported back to nigeria |
Re: Being Nigerian Outside Nigeria: An Extra Burden by Nobody: 10:50am On Jul 28, 2021 |
Am Igbo, but lust for materialism, making money our god and master will destroy us 2 Likes |
Re: Being Nigerian Outside Nigeria: An Extra Burden by Nobody: 10:52am On Jul 28, 2021 |
heniford2: all this nonsense crap you typed here like igbo's or Nigeria are that bad let me lecture you the highest crime rate in the world is from Russians,bribery, cyber crime too Asians also do more drugs than Africa but you will not see any Asian nor Russians tiring the own down, Uk is bad that bribery and gangster is so high how many of there country men have wrote bad about it, Just this month 8,967 have died in US on gun killing do you here it abeg stop all this, germany stole our heritage about 1000 Arts from benin the just apologized did you not see it must we kill ourselves are we not representing ourselves good abeg stop all this shit |
Re: Being Nigerian Outside Nigeria: An Extra Burden by SUPERPACK: 10:58am On Jul 28, 2021 |
khia:
This is sad but true, the US has the same outlook for Nigerians as well, that's why Trump wanted you out. It's the criminals and coons like the mentioned names below who make it difficult for the decent Nigerian people.
Conner44, ACTIVIST001 SUPERPACK Bouz Meobizy Your mom cooks for us in our criminal hideout. Anuofia. |
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Re: Being Nigerian Outside Nigeria: An Extra Burden by khia: 7:00pm On Jul 28, 2021 |
SUPERPACK: Your mom cooks for us in our criminal hideout. Anuofia. Thanks for paying her more than you give your own mom. |
Re: Being Nigerian Outside Nigeria: An Extra Burden by SUPERPACK: 7:03pm On Jul 28, 2021 |
khia:
Thanks for paying her more than you give your own mom. How can I pay a cheerful giver like her when she does all that for free. |
Re: Being Nigerian Outside Nigeria: An Extra Burden by khia: 7:03pm On Jul 28, 2021 |
Bouz: So your a decent nigerian like this now . You will soon be worn pampers and deported back to nigeria Wrong dude, I'm not Nigerian. |