Akua Denteh: Last 'witch' to be murdered in Ghana?
https://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomePage/features/Akua-Denteh-Last-witch-to-be-murdered-in-Ghana-1023577
Akua Denteh: Last 'witch' to be murdered in Ghana?
https://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomePage/features/Akua-Denteh-Last-witch-to-be-murdered-in-Ghana-1023577
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The other side of the matter is that some people believe that they are witches and want to live unmolested. I once attended an pan-African conference in Yaounde which featured witches from various parts of Africa proudly clutching their flight brooms. It was such a creepy thing to have a witch sitting beside you to make you dream of flying alongside in the night! But to kill that aviator, No! That's terrible murder.--Obododimma.
If you want to stop the phenomenal rise in witch-finding, witch-killing, and belief in witches, you must first abolish Pentecostal churches--at least, most of them! There is an inverse relationship between the exponential growth in these churches and ever-pervasive belief in witchcraft, unfortunately among educated people in Ghana and Africa in general. After all, the Pentecostal church--which increasingly targets this population -- exists to claim the land for God and save the members from the devil and all occult forces. Well, that's after taking care of the theology of growth and late capitalism interests of the founder-pastors. If you eliminate witches and occult forces, these churches will wither away, just as "underdevelopment" is unlikely to end as long as you have the development industry or mercy-industrial complex.
On Sun, Aug 2, 2020, 6:55 AM Toyin Falola <toyin...@austin.utexas.edu> wrote:
--Akua Denteh: Last 'witch' to be murdered in Ghana?
https://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomePage/features/Akua-Denteh-Last-witch-to-be-murdered-in-Ghana-1023577
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Akua Denteh: Last 'witch' to be murdered in Ghana?
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Toyin,Thank you for the long explanation. Obviously, one has learnt more about witchcraft in Africa. The conference that I mentioned was an anthropology one anchored by Prof. Paul Nchoji Nkwi. It was held some years ago and I doubt that I could reach the major papers and some photographs. One is struggling to decongest now, you know.I don't know why the witches carried a Western stereotype of the symbolization of witchcraft. Maybe they did not even see that (the broom) as negative. It was obvious that they tried to reconstruct witchcraft and to allow people to think of the good sides.Sincerely,Obododimma.
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On Aug 4, 2020, at 06:46, 'Michael Afolayan' via USA Africa Dialogue Series <usaafric...@googlegroups.com> wrote:
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This is a horrendous act generated by ageism, ignorance of the biology of ageing, misogyny, fear of the known and the unknown, and an overall lack of respect for senior citizens at this juncture. I am not sure that the state can be sued except symbolically, but the symbolism may have an impact.
Weeding out the negative aspects ofAfrican traditions and belief systems, and preserving the many positive aspects, is the challenge for researchers, individuals, the community and the state.GE
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Thank you Michael for this statement. The other image of TF is that he is a modern day apostle.
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I agree, even our belief system has to be evaluated and reconstructed. When all is said and done, it would always amount to killing an elderly woman who is experiencing a gerontological process of life! And by the way, from what I heard from my Dad, the worst of this crime among the Yoruba was perpetrated in the early 1950s during the Ghanaian Atinga (Nana Tinga) Drive, the wave of which traveled across the Coast of West Africa and hundreds of women were accused of being Àję and murdered. Historians may shed some light on this episode.
I agree, even our belief system has to be evaluated and reconstructed. When all is said and done, it would always amount to killing an elderly woman who is experiencing a gerontological process of life! And by the way, from what I heard from my Dad, the worst of this crime among the Yoruba was perpetrated in the early 1950s during the Ghanaian Atinga (Nana Tinga) Drive, the wave of which traveled across the Coast of West Africa and hundreds of women were accused of being Àję and murdered. Historians may shed some light on this episode.
I agree, even our belief system has to be evaluated and reconstructed. When all is said and done, it would always amount to killing an elderly woman who is experiencing a gerontological process of life! And by the way, from what I heard from my Dad, the worst of this crime among the Yoruba was perpetrated in the early 1950s during the Ghanaian Atinga (Nana Tinga) Drive, the wave of which traveled across the Coast of West Africa and hundreds of women were accused of being Àję and murdered. Historians may shed some light on this episode.
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Sam:
In general, we have not paid attention to Anecdotal Knowledge. We are dismissive of it, but they are real. And whenever I say that something is real, I use it to mean a “belief”, a testimony, an experience limited to an individual or a group. Science teaches us that a woman without a womb cannot be pregnant. Pentecostalism teaches us that God can insert a replacement womb. Anecdotal knowledge, which can be corroborated by testimonies, teaches us that the belief is real—they know the woman and saw the child. Anecdotal is in the realm of personal experience, a non-rational interpretation of a phenomenon. It cannot be evaluated along the paradigm of the rational-scientific. Dreams are real! The interpretations are something else.
I have a headache. You don’t know, as it is my head, not yours!
My headache is caused by you. Why not?
Take “Panado,l” you said.
No, I need to see Baba Falola to make sacrifices!
You provided palm oil and chicken
The headache is gone!
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Silvia Barbosa de Carvalho's ''Notes on Collaborative Research with Priestessesof the Goddess Iyami Osoronga'', [ translated by Chrome browser] based on Brazilian Candomble, a development of Yoruba origin Orisa spirituality, is centered in
priestesses of a secret society of worship to the goddess Iyami Osoronga. The Osoronga Society, which worships Iyami Osoronga, considered as the mother of all, the womb of the world, the earth. The goddess is feared as a powerful sorceress, capable of accomplishing the greatest exploits through powerful spells.... Her secret teachings are passed on only to women summoned by the goddess to worship her, and her stories are told and retold, extolling her deeds and ratifying the powers of her priestesses, the Iyalode (s).
Washington asserts that among the Yoruba of Nigeria, ìyá mi (my mother) having undergone tonal changes becomes ìyà mi, which she translates as “My Mysterious Mother” (4).
Thereafter she consistently substitutes Ìyàmi Òsòròngà for Ìyámi Òsòròngà.
While dialectal or individual idiosyncracies might make Ìya-à-mi into Ìyàmi, the widely acceptable (or authentic) rendering is Ìyámi (My Mother), not Ìyàmi (which means not “My Mysterious Mother” but “My Suffering,” “My Punishment,” etc.). [ 216].
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Please be cautious: **External Email**
Please be cautious: **External Email**
Sam:
Please be cautious: **External Email**
Sam:
Falola's comments on anecdotal knowledge suggest the need to critically investigate those anecdotes.Tragically, the Pentecostsls have often negatively manipulated their calling, but strange things are truly possible through the use of various techniques.On 'excluding ancient Egypt, Nubia and Aksum from your examples of Classical African Knowledge Systems'' if Gloria was referring to me, I actually thought of Egypt when referencing African writing systems and their contribution to the dissemination of knowledge.I know less about them than I do about the two examples I gave but the following comment by mathematician and artist Evelyne Huet, in a response to debates on scope of secrecy in the Yoruba origin Ogboni esoteric order, at my July 14 Facebook post ''Dissociation of Self from Collection of Money in Connection with Participation in the Ogboni Fraternity'' could be helpful-...the Great Ancient Egyptian civilization, which was undoubtedly Black, disappeared because its immense knowledges, notably in geometry and astronomy, were strictly owned by a very small circle of great priests, who were very jealous of this power they had.
Their huge knowledges, because they were not at all displayed outside their minuscule circle, was kept (not to say stolen) and absorbed by Greeko-Roman civilization when they took the control of Egypt. And these amazing knowledges became White(!!) in the collective memory of the world!! Beginning with,for instance, the famous theorem by Pythagoras.
This was of course a terrible loss for the history and collective memory of Africa. And this happened because the Greeko-Roman model was to spread the knowledge, in contrast to the Egyptian priests' practice.
So, pt’s not an insane bet to think that world history,notably in its darkest components like the slave trade, would have been totally different if the Egyptian priests had shared their knowledges with a largecircle of their Egyptian contemporaries.
Because the history would not have been written at all in the same way, and would have notably necessarily told the prééminence of Africa in the development of the world's scientific knowledges.And it wouldn’t have been more or less only focused on what iscalled her « back to Totemism » which resulted of the Egyptian Priests behavior towards their own power’s protection. Of course, these so called « Totemism » cultures are extremely admirable, both in their art dimensions as in their spirituality.
But they necessarily are linked to a far more [ ancient] culture, the Ancient Egypt one, and this link has to be shown to restore the continuity of Africa’s history [ so as] to make the world’s citizens realize what is the reality of Africa and Africans' History,with a big H.
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tortoise never suffers headache, the snail never suffers liver pain and fish never suffers fever inside the river. On what experimental facts were these postulations (anecdotal knowledge) based?
Alagba, many many other Yoruba ‘wisdom sayings’ would fall under this hammer, and justifiably so when our judgment is based on modern scientific guidelines. But I believe that the lack of total harmony of these local observational statements with modern scientific knowledge does not necessarily make those wisdoms invalid. For example the Yoruba also say Aja tonlekoko nfiku sire i.e., a dog in pursuit of a hyena is playing with death, or that ajanaku o leekan i.e., you can't tether an elephant
The first statement obviously came about because the people had never seen packs of wild dogs in the Serengeti attack lone hyenas and kill them and actively compete with larger predators as seen on modern TV. If they did, they would upgrade their conclusion and their sayings. But as a logical deduction, it clearly still remains valid and as a piece of counsel to individuals without power or resource who in rashness or foolishness rushes to challenge a dangerous powerful opponents, it can be a lifesaving piece of advice s/he ever gets. The second statement falls flat in the face of the successful chaining of elephants by circus performers and animal trainers/tamers.
The validity of anecdotal knowledge, though, derives from deductions and conclusions made out of local observation – some of which had experimental components (via keeping of and watching the behaviors of these animals).
However, they are contextual rather than universal knowledge with the limited goal of guiding the people who share the same cultural background and experience that formed the basis of this knowledge. As long as we appreciate them for what they are, steps or stages in knowledge formation, we can benefit from the insight and guidance they provide and adapt them to other contexts.
BTW, I doubt whether modern science has proved that animals like tortoise, snail and fish indeed suffer headaches, liver pain, and fever respectively!! The local wisdom referencing these animals as not suffering these type of human ailments seem more to be a demonstration of the people’s awareness of the different estates or biological classes to which the animals belong which condition according to local observations obviates biological responses similar to what humans exhibit that we call headaches, liver pain, and fever. And this does not negate the fact that local people know that some other diseases afflict and kill these animals.
On dreams: I agree that most dreams require that people work to attain their promise. But we have heard of people whose dreams came through without working for them or whose work for them had no bearing on the realization of the dreams. life is complex and there are exceptionalities here and there.
However, I agree with you that as a rule and as a guideline for development and progress, it is reasonable to advise the dreamer to work towards the goal of their dreams.
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kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
On Aug 10, 2020, at 14:12, Harrow, Kenneth <har...@msu.edu> wrot
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kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
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kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
On Whitewashing Boko HaramSalimonu, you like to present what I call Revised History of Boko Haram According to Salimonu.Your revised history makes me see your tirade agst Western education as a Boko Haram style narrative.The Western inspired social order represented by the globally dominant education system and by Christianity are primary targets of attack by Boko Haram.Having described what you see as the beauties of Boko Haram to us, and presenting them as victims of a hypocritical govt, a group who is fighting only the Nigerian govt, you failed to include the fact that the group from the onset was a murderous group, killing rival Islamic clerics.
You also fail to mention in your picture of this group that from their 2011 escalation their primary targets were also Christians, whose churches they bombed and whose worshippers they machine gunned, even in the packed premises of the Madalla church on Christmas day, as well as demanding all Christians leave the North or face the consequences.They also declared they would not stop their terorism until the President becomes a Muslim.They embarked on bombing and murdering all demographics of Northern society after the faliure of their presentation of themselves as Muslim warriors defending Muslim interests.They slit throats of children sleeping in ther hostals, machine gunned school children taking exams, they abduct baducting school girls and women as sex slave, along with their attacks on military and govt establishments, the only aaspect you wish to reference in order to present them as motivated purely by revenge agst the Nigerian govt.This was a group that tried to create a govt within a govt in Borno state, creating a communal system as well as killing Islamic clerics who disagreed with their views, and attacking govt establishments possibly before their better known clashes with the police.You once demanded evidence that Boko Haram killed Islamic clerics and I provided the evidence.Its you now who needs to prove they did no such thing in order to justify your claim that their murders are due to being provoked by the govt.The name Boko Haram is the name given to the terrorist Islamic group once led by Muhammad Yusuf by natives of the regions they have afflicted, in recognition of a primary tenet of the group being their repudiation of Western education.They have never rejected that name in their recurrent efforts at mass media propaganda, so much so that their original name is now unknown to most.The attack on Western education is central to such facist and violent Islamic groups, Western education being representative of an anti-Islamic order they want to eradicate.
This has emerged with Boko Haram's attack on educational systems in the Northeast as well as in the efforts of the Taliban in Afghanistan, among others.Boko Haram, in their original emergence and later 2011 escalation, used a two tier strategy.Terror and killing agst rivals, either other Islamic clerics and representatives of the fed govt and claims of being defenders of the Islamic faith and of Muslims.This strategy broke down when Northern Muslims became fed up with their destruction of Northern society and turned against them.Since then, they have engaged in killing of a broad swathe of citizenry, including slitting throats of schoolchildren in their sleep, machine gunning school children as they sat for an exam, bombing markets and other busy locations, even as they have not been able to continue their earlier practice of bombing churches and machine gunning the worshippers because the GEJ govt's state of emergency drove them from population centres, but from time to time they are able to strike at Maiduguri, trying to take control of the garrison there and establish a command centre there, even though their ability to bomb military barracks and machine gun those there as well as bomb govt and international establishments has been severely reduced.thankstoyinOn Tue, 11 Aug 2020 at 07:23, Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju <toyin....@gmail.com> wrote:On Western Education in NigeriaI want to highlight the major qs, so that the political dust does not obscure them.
For that reason, I will respond to the question of the history and goals of Boko Haram in another comment.These qs are-1. Why do you think the Western education of Nigerians is the cause of Nigeria's underdevelopment?
In what specific ways is such causation possible and how is it demonstrated?In other words, what is the precise relationship between cause and effect?
Is it through inadequacy of technical skills through their being trained in different ways different from their Western counterparts?
Are the technological and scientific systems Nigeria needs different from those in the West and operational globally?
Does the Western education of Nigerians inhibit appreciation of the need for alternative social structures?
2. You claimed that Nigerians should return to a pre-Western colonisation system of existence in general and of education in particular. I quote you, highlighting what I understand as the operational core of your perspective-''If Western education works well in Nigeria as it does in the Western World, you and the rest of Nigerians will not be complaining about the retrogressive industrial and economic development in Nigeria. Educationally, there is no academic qualification in this world, real or honorary, that one would not find some Nigerians possessing it. Thus, Nigeria has one of the highest manpower indexes in the world which explains why there are more PhDs and Professors in Nigeria's MDAs than anywhere else on this globe. Oluwatoyin, you have given your white clothes to an expert washerman purportedly trained in the Western World, and he returned them to you visibly drenched into red palm oil, what would be your conclusion?
There is no short cut to the top of the palm tree, one must start to climb from the bottom. We must go back and start from where we fell to the colonialists before we can rise up.
Before then every Nigerian should ask him/herself : in what way is my education applicable to the industrial and economic development of Nigeria?
Honest answer to that question will determine alternatives to the present situation we all are ignorantly blaming Buhari for.''Could you please specify how this goal could be achieved?You are suggesting returning to African knowledge systems as they existed before the colonial experience.
Can you clarify, perhaps with reference to general world views and epistemologies-ways of looking at the world and how knowledge is developed, assessed and applied?Does this other fine method quoted below you suggest have anything to do with Westernization?Is it not actually best exemplified by Western approaches to development and might not be a good example of how to de-Westernize African education, the goal that your views suggest-- ''Before then every Nigerian should ask him/herself : in what way is my education applicable to the industrial and economic development of Nigeria?'' is actually best exemplified by response to Western approaches to development and might not be a good example of how to de-Westernize African education, the goal that your views suggest.I look forward to Gloria Emeagwali's presentation of her own views on Western education in Nigeria/Africa instead of making a blanket claim of agreement with Salimonu's views which might not be essentially the same as hers.She can give a summary of her views. Such a fast approach could motivate people to buy the book she is recommending and read the elaboration of her ideas in her chapter in that book or buy the book chapter alone, if that option exists .thankstoyin
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Kadiri likes to present Boko Haram as originally a non-violent group who were radicalized by hard hard-handed govt action and possibly by being hijacked by another group. The facts of the case are that the group was violent from its beginnings.
Killing of Islamic Clerics and Attacks on Rival Isamic Groups
'The targeted assassinations are the most revealing, involving political figures, such as Abba Anas bin `Umar (killed in May 2011), the brother of the Shehu of Borno, and secular opposition figures (Modu Fannami Godio, killed in January 2011), but also prominent clerics such as Bashir Kashara, a well-known Wahhabi figure (killed in October 2010), Ibrahim Ahmad Abdullahi, a non-violent preacher (killed in March 2011), and Ibrahim Birkuti, a well-known popular preacher who challenged Boko Haram (killed in June 2011). The shootings of these prominent clerics seem to be in accord with Boko Haram's purificationist agenda with regard to Islam. '
Two worshipers were killed and one wounded by Boko Haram Islamists during an attack at a mosque during Friday prayers in the northeastern city of Maiduguri. Two gunmen driving a motorcycle taxi indiscriminately shot into a Wahabist mosque. The radical group considers Wahabism heretical.
Timeline of Pre-2009 Boko Haram Attacks and of Boko Haram Attacks on Muslim Clerics
Boko Haram's culture of murder and destruction as endemic to the group is too well known for doubt. Boko Haram apologists present the group as simply a response to injustuces in Nigerian society as well as high hadedness agaugst the group by the Nigerian govt, yet Boko Haram as hs the murder of rival Islamic clerics as central to uts strtaegy, demonstrating this strtegy of kiling ruval clerics almost since the group's foundindg.
As Nigerian Taliban
The Return of the “Nigerian Taliban”1st February 2007 - World Defense Review
1. In December 2003, the Nigerian Taliban attacked a police station in the nearby village of Kanamma, killing a police officer. Over the following week, the group launched raids on police stations and other government buildings in four other towns, including Damaturu, the state capital.
1. ' raided the Yobe state capital of Damaturu in early 2004, attacking police stations. Later that same year, the militants tried to launch a guerrilla campaign around Gwoza, in Borno state near the Cameroonian border. Tthe Nigerian insurgents wanted to establish an Islamic state and pronounced Muslims who opposed them to be "unbelievers" deserving of death.
Armed members of a Nigerian
Islamist group known as the Taleban have stormed a police station in the
northern city of Kano, killing at least 13 people. | ||
Nigerian Taliban leader killed in custody
September 26, 2011
Author(s): David Cook
Combating Terrorism Centre at West Point
Articulation of ideology of religious violence
Nigeria's 'Taliban' plot comeback from hide-outs
11 Jan 2006
Tashen-Ilimi, whose nom de guerre means “new way of knowledge”, is described by his supporters as the leader of a small group of mainly middle-class young men which in 2003 launched a violent but short-lived uprising amid the sand dunes and savannah on Nigeria’s northern frontier.
The movement—which was dubbed Nigeria’s “Taliban” after the Afghan student movement which seized power in Kabul and created an ultra-conservative Islamic government—briefly took control of the village of Kanama on Nigeria’s border with Niger.
The group’s 200-strong force raided several police stations but was bloodily dispersed in an attack on a police patrol near Gwoza on the Cameroon border. A two day battle left 28 “Taliban” dead by government troops in January 2004. Eight months later, 60 survivors launched a guerrilla war.
Also invoked is the tired argument that global Islamic terrorism is essentially the outcome of manipulations by Western powers. What have Western powers to do with Islamic ideology that drives these terrorist movements? In the recurrent clashes for power on the world stage, opportunities and challenges will always emerge for various actors to respond to. A strategy of apologists for Islamic terrorism is to argue that these deadly movements are either simply responses to Western manipulations or the creations of Western powers.
The apologists thus seek to deny to the Islamic terrorists their own fervently and consistently declared aspirations to build religious empires of the ruins of the infidel societies they seek to destroy, or those societies they desire to intimidate so they many not defeat their goals, employing mass murders as represented by terrorist strikes in Europe and the US, using Muhammed's military career and later Islamic wars of conquest and empire building as inspirational templates, quoting copiously from the militaristic aspects of the Koran in support of their goals.
The Reality of the Clash of Civilisations
The Muslim world is currently undergoing an upheaval, in which global Islamic terrorism is the most evident expression. Christianity's destructive chauvinism, fed by the remnants of Roman militarism in Italy, has been largely defanged by the Reformation and subsequent transformations in European society, Jewish militarism was diluted by the Roman defeat and dispersion of the Jews though it continues to feed the current Israeli state. Islam alone remains among the warrior religions descended from Abraham that has not been compelled to accommodate itself to the world on a large scale as its geographical and religious centre gas remained largely unchanged for centuries. In this context, why wont Islamic terrorists seek to assert what they see as a pristine identity dating back to the ascendancy of Islam in past centuries?
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''If Western education works well in Nigeria as it does in the Western World, you and the rest of Nigerians will not be complaining about the retrogressive industrial and economic development in Nigeria. Educationally, there is no academic qualification in this world, real or honorary, that one would not find some Nigerians possessing it. Thus, Nigeria has one of the highest manpower indexes in the world which explains why there are more PhDs and Professors in Nigeria's MDAs than anywhere else on this globe. Oluwatoyin, you have given your white clothes to an expert washerman purportedly trained in the Western World, and he returned them to you visibly drenched into red palm oil, what would be your conclusion?
There is no short cut to the top of the palm tree, one must start to climb from the bottom. We must go back and start from where we fell to the colonialists before we can rise up.
Before then every Nigerian should ask him/herself : in what way is my education applicable to the industrial and economic development of Nigeria?
Honest answer to that question will determine alternatives to the present situation we all are ignorantly blaming Buhari for.''
Could you please specify how this goal could be achieved?
You are suggesting returning to African knowledge systems as they existed before the colonial experience.
Can you clarify, perhaps with reference to general world views and epistemologies-ways of looking at the world and how knowledge is developed, assessed and applied?
Does this other fine method quoted below you suggest have anything to do with Westernization?
Is it not actually best exemplified by Western approaches to development and might not be a good example of how to de-Westernize African education, the goal that your views suggest-
- ''Before then every Nigerian should ask him/herself : in what way is my education applicable to the industrial and economic development of Nigeria?'' is actually best exemplified by response to Western approaches to development and might not be a good example of how to de-Westernize African education, the goal that your views suggest.
I look forward to Gloria Emeagwali's presentation of her own views on Western education in Nigeria/Africa instead of making a blanket claim of agreement with Salimonu's views which might not be essentially the same as hers.
She can give a summary of her views. Such a fast approach could motivate people to buy the book she is recommending and read the elaboration of her ideas in her chapter in that book or buy the book chapter alone, if that option exists .
thanks
toyin
On Tue, 11 Aug 2020 at 00:03, Salimonu Kadiri <ogunl...@hotmail.com> wrote:
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kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
If Western
education works well in Nigeria as it does in the Western World, you and the
rest of Nigerians will not be complaining about the retrogressive industrial
and economic development in Nigeria.
Educationally, there is no academic
qualification in this world, real or honorary, that one would not find some
Nigerians possessing it. Thus, Nigeria has one of the highest manpower indexes
in the world which explains why there are more PhDs and Professors in Nigeria's
MDAs than anywhere else on this globe.
Oluwatoyin, you have given your white
clothes to an expert washerman purportedly trained in the Western World, and he
returned them to you visibly drenched into red palm oil, what would be your
conclusion?
There is no short cut to the top of the palm tree, one must start
to climb from the bottom. We must go back and start from where we fell to the
colonialists before we can rise up.
Before then every Nigerian should ask
him/herself : in what way is my education applicable to the industrial and
economic development of Nigeria? Honest answer to that question will determine
alternatives to the present situation we all are ignorantly blaming Buhari for.
kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
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OAA,im not really interested.the person presenting an argument that tries to be robust, though not really so, is Salimonu, and i have given him the attention his efforts deserve.feel free to keep your ''fruitless'' to yourself if that's the best you can do.if you want to demonstrate why the senate president is right instead of simply taking an unsubstantiated statement on trust, go ahead, then we could have something to discuss.you are trying to import the Mailafia discussion here without doing the research i insisted you must do before i respond to you.no, sir.toyintoyin
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kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
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kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
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kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university