Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / NewStats: 3,205,033 members, 7,990,865 topics. Date: Friday, 01 November 2024 at 06:25 AM |
Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Foreign Affairs / Former British Colonies Owe ‘Debt Of Gratitude’, Says Robert Jenrick (8980 Views)
20 Countries That Owe US Money / My Wife Cries Daily, Says Robert Mugabe / Zimbabwe Military Takeover Live Updates: Robert Mugabe Under House Arrest (2) (3) (4)
(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (Reply) (Go Down)
Re: Former British Colonies Owe ‘Debt Of Gratitude’, Says Robert Jenrick by Metrofox(m): 1:07am On Oct 31 |
QuinQ: Did they fight because of tribal differences or religion like India and Nigeria? |
Re: Former British Colonies Owe ‘Debt Of Gratitude’, Says Robert Jenrick by motymop: 1:07am On Oct 31 |
Datguy5: Ok Show me the hospitals, the paved roads and the city centers, the rail way, your ancestors built The skyscrapers, the cars, the ships, your ancestors built before colonization 2 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Former British Colonies Owe ‘Debt Of Gratitude’, Says Robert Jenrick by motymop: 1:09am On Oct 31 |
Chonchin: There was slave market before the arabs and European came. They just capitalize on it and expanded it 1 Like |
Re: Former British Colonies Owe ‘Debt Of Gratitude’, Says Robert Jenrick by Datguy5: 1:18am On Oct 31 |
motymop: how? most of those things weren't invented during the times of my ancestors but here " Fred Pearce wrote in New Scientist: They extend for some 16,000 km in all, in a mosaic of more than 500 interconnected settlement boundaries. They cover 2,510 sq. miles (6,500 square kilometres) and were all dug by the Edo people. In all, they are four times longer than the Great Wall of China, and consumed a hundred times more material than the Great Pyramid of Cheops. They took an estimated 150 million hours of digging to construct, and are perhaps the largest single archaeological phenomenon on the planet." "The Impluvium was used in Benin architecture to store rainwater. Among the residences of the nobility, a compluvium channeled the rainwater into the impluvium in order to permit light and air through the walls since windows were absent among these structures. The stored rainwater in the impluvium was discharged out of the house through a drainage system beneath the floor.[59] Archaeological works from the mid 20th century has revealed the existence of edge-laid potsherd pavements in Benin city, dated around or prior to the 14th century.[60] The Walls of Benin are a series of earthworks made up of banks and ditches, called Iya in the Edo language in the area around present-day Benin City, the capital of present-day Edo, Nigeria. They consist of 15 kilometres (9.3 miles) of city iya and an estimated 16,000 kilometres (9,900 miles) in the rural area around Benin.[61] Some estimates suggest that the walls of Benin may have been constructed between the thirteenth and mid-fifteenth century CE[62] and others suggest that the walls of Benin (in the Esan region) may have been constructed during the first millennium AD" 2 Likes |
Re: Former British Colonies Owe ‘Debt Of Gratitude’, Says Robert Jenrick by motymop: 1:18am On Oct 31 |
Metrofox: They civil war was about slavery. The south wanted slavery, the north wanted to abolish it The clash in ideas led to the civil war 2 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Former British Colonies Owe ‘Debt Of Gratitude’, Says Robert Jenrick by Golan007: 1:18am On Oct 31 |
motymop: And what is wrong with farming and living in a hut? Na your type dey do money ritual. 2 Likes |
Re: Former British Colonies Owe ‘Debt Of Gratitude’, Says Robert Jenrick by Golan007: 1:19am On Oct 31 |
motymop: Without skyscrapers we aren't human? 1 Like |
Re: Former British Colonies Owe ‘Debt Of Gratitude’, Says Robert Jenrick by motymop: 1:22am On Oct 31 |
Datguy5: All these na grammar Show me picture. Show me picture Atleast in 1890, there was pictures of skyscrapers in New York How was benin in 1890 Was there a sky scrappers? Was there hospitals? Was there a school? Was there modern housing? Was there drainage systems and tap water facilities? Was there electricity? Benin in 1890 was filled with huts 2 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Former British Colonies Owe ‘Debt Of Gratitude’, Says Robert Jenrick by Golan007: 1:23am On Oct 31 |
motymop: What's wrong with the house? 1 Like |
Re: Former British Colonies Owe ‘Debt Of Gratitude’, Says Robert Jenrick by gistray: 1:23am On Oct 31 |
SmartPolician: It is th fault of British for forcefully joining what they knew would never work so they can control us faraway in Britain using divine and conquer Hope you know Nigeria as a whole was just a company/product of the UK and was sold to Unilever before independence |
Re: Former British Colonies Owe ‘Debt Of Gratitude’, Says Robert Jenrick by Golan007: 1:23am On Oct 31 |
motymop: And so what? 1 Like |
Re: Former British Colonies Owe ‘Debt Of Gratitude’, Says Robert Jenrick by motymop: 1:25am On Oct 31 |
Golan007: We had huts, they had skyscrapers, that is the point Now that there are houses Can you live in a hut after living in an apartment building or a house concept brought by colonization. 1 Like |
Re: Former British Colonies Owe ‘Debt Of Gratitude’, Says Robert Jenrick by motymop: 1:25am On Oct 31 |
Golan007: You obviously have no argument. |
Re: Former British Colonies Owe ‘Debt Of Gratitude’, Says Robert Jenrick by motymop: 1:25am On Oct 31 |
Golan007: Can you live in a hut |
Re: Former British Colonies Owe ‘Debt Of Gratitude’, Says Robert Jenrick by motymop: 1:27am On Oct 31 |
You all claim you are free from colonization but you run there and want to live there. Your country Nigeria is a member of the common wealth controlled by the king |
Re: Former British Colonies Owe ‘Debt Of Gratitude’, Says Robert Jenrick by Datguy5: 1:30am On Oct 31 |
motymop: yeah after the British destroyed it A British delegation departed from the Oil Rivers Protectorate in 1897 with the stated aim of negotiating with the Oba of Benin regarding the trade agreement, which they felt he was not keeping. The leader of the delegation, James Robert Phillips, had asked his superiors in the British Foreign Office for permission to lead an armed British expedition to depose the Oba of Benin not long before the expedition,[34] but left for Benin City with a diplomatic delegation (or a reconnaissance mission disguised as a peaceful diplomatic delegation)[35] before receiving a reply to his request. Perceiving this to be an attempt to depose the Oba, the Oba's generals unilaterally ordered an attack on the delegation as it was approaching Benin City (which included eight unknowing British representatives and hundreds of African porters and labourers) all but two of whom were killed. A punitive expedition was launched in response, and a 1,200-men strong force, under the command of Sir Harry Rawson, captured Benin City. They deliberately sought out and destroyed certain areas of the city, including those thought to belong to the chiefs responsible for the ambush of the British delegation, and in the process a fire burnt the palace and surrounding quarters, which the British claimed was accidental source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benin_Expedition_of_1897 [img]https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTh2YDPoTCEwwCHsxPiBgkj3bk6CqUa4OuplA&s[/img] 2 Likes |
Re: Former British Colonies Owe ‘Debt Of Gratitude’, Says Robert Jenrick by Datguy5: 1:37am On Oct 31 |
motymop: my guy, we could have had it without colonization through something called "trade" 4 Likes |
Re: Former British Colonies Owe ‘Debt Of Gratitude’, Says Robert Jenrick by RodgersAkpafu: 1:38am On Oct 31 |
motymop: still being mentally defeated Mud houses and huts were suited for the environment and our own way of life which worked for us at the time Well built mud houses were the ultimate insulators, keeping the heat out, while keeping inside cool That was exactly what we needed at the time and it worked for us Our farming was labour intensive because that's what was suited for us (we had large families) Our ways of life was in tandem with the environment (we were eco friendly) We had our own legal system in place (fear of African Gods were the beginning of wisdom and kept everyone in check) We had our own forms of quarantine (dubbed as "evil forests" were undesirables were banished to, so they don't infect the general population with diseases or whatever ) We don't need sky scrapers because we have the land and the space Thinking sky scraper is a sign of development is peak delusion because rill today, many countries in central and Eastern Europe don't have sky scrapers (very minimal if at all) because unlike dumb Africans, they stuck to their historical style of building and people are appreciating it The list goes on and on the white man came and convinced you that your ways were inferior to his and YOUR DUMB ASS BELIEVED HIM. And you say you are not mentally defeated Okay, you have adapted his way of life, governance and all that How well have you fared since then ? Think for goodness sakes ! You have been programmed to think less of yourself and you are buying into the crap... Your ancestors will be ashamed of you to see their descendant cooning. White man tell u say you be descendant of Ham (a nigga you have never heard of before ) and because he was cursed by Noah (yet another nigga you never heard of before) ; and by virtue of that, you are designated inferior, and you believe him 6 Likes |
Re: Former British Colonies Owe ‘Debt Of Gratitude’, Says Robert Jenrick by RodgersAkpafu: 1:51am On Oct 31 |
RodgersAkpafu: Go and read the old manuscripts of explorers when they stepped in Africa for the first time they were intrigued When they landed in Benin (the Portuguese) They were amazed to see their streets lit, while Europe was still in darkness This was almost 500 years ago And you are here talking rubbish about whites being responsible for "opening our eyes" |
Re: Former British Colonies Owe ‘Debt Of Gratitude’, Says Robert Jenrick by Ghostagain: 2:01am On Oct 31 |
You've got proof or you're just talking out of emotions towards your slave masters ? motymop:
|
Re: Former British Colonies Owe ‘Debt Of Gratitude’, Says Robert Jenrick by FoolishBoy419: 2:31am On Oct 31 |
gistray: Just shut the fvck up. In what way is the South 'forward' by international standards? With the way you guys look down on the north daily online, I was expecting to see a place that at least looked 50% like a modern city but I saw no difference between the South and the North after visiting up to 6 Southern States. Southern Nigeria, like other countries below the Sahara, is full of nothing but horrible cities, illiterate and semi-educated agberos, pollution, crime infestation, backward cultural practices, poverty, and extreme corruption just as the case is in the north. With or without Northern Nigeria, with or without Southern unity, you'd just be another failed Subsaharan African country with so much debt, so much hunger, and so many incompetent fools governing you. It's time to take responsibility for your woes. 3 Likes |
Re: Former British Colonies Owe ‘Debt Of Gratitude’, Says Robert Jenrick by Ghostagain: 2:39am On Oct 31 |
I can't talk for all precolonial African countries, but mine was not failed nor in dept not incompétent. Our only mistake was loding a war to the British. I agree with you that some people in the south are just incredibly stupid when they keep assuming they are inherently smarter than northerners or that northerners are more backward than southerners. The north wasn't backward in precolonial days. 3 kingdoms stand out in Nigeria: 1. Benin 2. Sokoto/Kano 3. Bornu All other kingdoms were either inconsequential or dependencies of the 3 kingdoms above. I would like yorubas to stop their cultural appropriation of Benin culture. They claimed the title of Benin emperor, they claimed Benin emperor himself, they've claimed Benin's name, they've claimed Benin artefacts, they even claimed Benin people .... Now they are claiming Benin swords "Ada and Eben", the Oni of ife is copying the crown of the Oba of Benin .... Can the yoruba stop stealing my people's cultural heritage ? I have nothing against copiers when they acknowledge the original, but yoruba Always pretend they are the original and that they passed the tradition over to Benin ... FoolishBoy419: 1 Like |
Re: Former British Colonies Owe ‘Debt Of Gratitude’, Says Robert Jenrick by member13(m): 2:46am On Oct 31 |
Golan007: Who said anything about unclothedness? Are you drunk? That is what so many of you are good at: throwing insults instead of fixing the country and inventing things. Always angry. Animanu. |
Re: Former British Colonies Owe ‘Debt Of Gratitude’, Says Robert Jenrick by Believeintruth: 2:46am On Oct 31 |
QuinQ: Dude try and stop lying here. In Lancaster 1956 following the talks for independence the British gave as a precondition for Nigeria's independence that all the boundaries of colonial Nigeria must not be redrawn in any form. All those present in the talks including Awolowo all signed. The British never wanted the north to be removed from Nigeria. Zik never forced anyone to remove secession clause. I have always asked people who peddle this lie that how can one man over rule everyone one else who had supported the secession clause in that meeting? No one has ever been able to provide me an answer 1 Like |
Re: Former British Colonies Owe ‘Debt Of Gratitude’, Says Robert Jenrick by member13(m): 2:49am On Oct 31 |
Datguy5:A simple Google search? Lol. Another white man invention. We are here arguing amongst ourselves in a foreign language, while using devices created by foreigners. Lol 2 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Former British Colonies Owe ‘Debt Of Gratitude’, Says Robert Jenrick by Whois(m): 2:52am On Oct 31 |
motymop: In this 21st century speak for your family house |
Re: Former British Colonies Owe ‘Debt Of Gratitude’, Says Robert Jenrick by Datguy5: 2:54am On Oct 31 |
member13: so? that does not negate the achievements of black people nor make us subhuman |
Re: Former British Colonies Owe ‘Debt Of Gratitude’, Says Robert Jenrick by FoolishBoy419: 3:01am On Oct 31 |
Ghostagain: It's frustrating to come online and see people blaming us for all of their woes when they're actually doing only slightly better 😂 Benin was the most advanced society in Nigeria before Britain arrived in my opinion, considering that everything they had was indigenous unlike the North that benefitted from Arab influence. I'm still trying to find time to understand the relationship between the Benis and Yorubas. I knew from my secondary school days that they were distinct cultures. Is there any factor that is making Yorubas to claim Benin empire? What was the relationship between the two in the past? 1 Like |
Re: Former British Colonies Owe ‘Debt Of Gratitude’, Says Robert Jenrick by motymop: 3:08am On Oct 31 |
Ghostagain: You talking about walls, I am talking about infrastructures like paved roads, hospitals, schools, universities, irrigation systems, tap water, drainage systems, electricity, horse or cart as a means of transportation The only stuff you brag about is a wall which the British destroyed with 14 soldiers from the north. You posted a drawing of benin drew by your colonial masters. It is obvious you don't have written history Did you see men without clothes and women naked in that picture? Isn't that the benin king selling his people into slavery What are you defending? You have no argument if you are showing me mud walls and mud huts 2 Likes 1 Share
|
Re: Former British Colonies Owe ‘Debt Of Gratitude’, Says Robert Jenrick by Ghostagain: 3:10am On Oct 31 |
In short, there is no relations between Benin and yoruba, but the yorubas are desperate to claim Benin in any way or form. Yoruba is not a real ethnicity, rather it is a blender of ethnicities which claims to be one tribe and they desperately want to add Benin to it. To the best of my knowledge, yoruba are a mixture of slave returnee and local indigenous peoples. Among the local indigenous people whom are now part of the yorubas, many used to be Benin citizens. The expression yoruba first appeared around 1808 and it was meant as a synonym to oyo kingdom. Then later on, the expression was used to refer to a larger group of people, that group just kept getting bigger over the time. The peoples whom are identified as yoruba today descend from ancestors who identified as something else. What we know as yoruba today was the brainchild of politicians including awolowo, they tried to unite all the western region in the colonial era into one tribe with fairytales about ife. Most people of the western region accepted the political agenda, but people of the Midwest didn't especially since we were to be the most marginalised by these rewritings of history. So for some reasons, the yoruba have been obsessed with claiming anything about Benin since that era. They have basically claimed any trace of Benin culture as being given to Benin by ife. Of course these are claims without proof. Ife itself was a small village until 1912 when it was the British who started to urbanise it. Whereas Benin was witnessed as an empire on eyewitness written documents as far back as the 1400's FoolishBoy419: 2 Likes |
Re: Former British Colonies Owe ‘Debt Of Gratitude’, Says Robert Jenrick by motymop: 3:22am On Oct 31 |
RodgersAkpafu: You claim mud houses were suitable for the environment but here you are writing from the comfort of a House. Why are you not staying in a mud house or hut Your guys aren't always tune with reality. Basically all the stuff you are enjoying are as a result of colonization. The suit you wear and your mannerisms, even the churches you attend are as a result of colonization. If they tell you to go do Traditional religion, you will be here shouting in the name of Jesus your colonial masters brought to you. The only reason you typed all these is because you want to argue But deep down in your heart, you know that without your colonial masters, you won't be able to write in English. Can you even write in your local language or even preach fluently in your local language? Do you worship, the benin Gods or the white man God? Do you attend traditional God's festival or you do the Christian festival? I am sure you do none of your local traditions but respect the Christian traditions and here you are trying to say i am a dumb African Call me dumb because that I can see the reality and not argue blindly like the way you are doing. Call me dumb for accepting the reality, that we were colonized, defeated and a foreign God and way of life was imposed on us. I accept the badge of dumbness gladly 3 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Former British Colonies Owe ‘Debt Of Gratitude’, Says Robert Jenrick by Ghostagain: 3:23am On Oct 31 |
It's hard to reply you because you don't focus on anything, nor do you actually have any arguments, you seem to be more interested in vexation then in actually seriously discussing the topic. 1. We didn't need paved roads. 2. We didn't have a written form of language, we had our own indigenous systems, not European schools. 3. There is clearly a horse in the painting of Oba of Benin. 4. You are basically saying that we were not Europe. Yes we were not, we were Africans and we had our own way of life, our own culture, our own needs and our own centres of interest which are not the same as those of Europeans. 5. Benin had its own architecture which was not limited to walls motymop: |
(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (Reply)
Photos: Heavy U.S Military Equipments Arrives Germany Against Russian. / Egypt Has A New President: Mohamed Morsi / Inside The US B-2 Nuclear Stealth Bomber-the Most Expensive Jet Of All Times.
Viewing this topic: 2 guest(s)
(Go Up)
Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 133 |