WE ARE THE SONS AND DAUGHTERS OF ODUDUWA AND NOT YORUBAS


Bishop Ajayi Crowther

There are two demeaning and insulting names and words that the Fulani gave and used to describe southerners.

Firstly came “Nyamiri” (meaning ‘fetcher of water’) in reference to the people of the South-East and secondly “Yariba” in reference to the people of the South West.

The South East rejected that name but the South West accepted theirs. The name “Yoruba” derives from the word “Yariba” and it means “shady and unreliable”. I reject that strange name and label and I hope and pray that the good people of South Western Nigeria will see the wisdom in doing so too.


Sir Herbert Macaulay

I am not a “Yariba” or “Yoruba” but an “Omo Karo Jire” or an “Ooduwan” and my lanuage is not “Yoruba” but “Anago”. We are what we call ourselves. We are not “shady and uneliable”(Yariba) and we must not accept names that are given to us by our historical adversaries.

Any Omo Karo Jire or Ooduwan that continues to call himself a “Yoruba” is lost and does not know the implications of what he is doing to his own people. He is simply affirming and confirming an insulting label which has deep sinister, mystical and spiritual connotations.

The word “Yoruba” did not even exist until the 18th century and even then most of the tribes of the South West, including the Oyo’s, rejected it due to its origin and meaning. The word “Yoruba” is alien to our culture and not known in the Anago language. Ooduwans please take note.


Chief Obafemi Awolowo

The first time the word “Yoruba” was used as a generic term for ALL the people of the South West Nigeria was in the 19th century by Bishop Samuel Ajayi Crowther. He did us a great disservice there given the fact that it derives from the word”Yariba” which the Fulani used to describe our people.

The meaning of the word “Yariba” is “usurper, deceitful, shady, treacherous, cheating usurer and double-dealing bastard”. Once again I reject that name.

The good people of South West Nigeria are “Anagos” or “Omo Karo Jire’s” or “Omo Oluabi’s” or “Ooduwans” and we are NOT ‘Yaribas’ or ‘Yorubas’.


Chief Samuel Ladoke Akintola

I, FFK, a proud Ife, an Anago, an Aku, an Omo Karo Jire, an Omoluabi, an Ooduwan and a son of Oduduwa, will NEVER answer to the name “Yoruba” again or use it to describe my people. We are better than that.

The British named our nation “Nigeria” meaning “area of darkness” and the Fulani named our ethnic nationality “Yariba”.

Put together this means “a group of deceitful, shady, treacherous usurpers and bastards from an area of darkness”.


Chief Remi Fani-Kayode

Is it any wonder that we are still in servitude and bondage? What a terrible combination. We have been snared by our names.

May God open our eyes, may He help us and may He deliver us! We must start helping ourselves by rejecting these deeply demonic names, labels and terms.

We are FAR better than the baggage that those horrific names carry.


President Olusegun Obasanjo

If the Lord can change the name of Jacob (meaning ‘shady character, rogue and trickster’) to Israel (meaning ‘God contends’) then He can change ours too.

If Jabez (meaning ‘one who was born in sorrow’) can call on the Lord to break the chains and remove the limitations of his name, to enlarge his coast and to bless him abundantly so can we.

Remember: we ARE what we call ourselves!

ADDENDUM:

I read the contribution of a northerner by the name of Farouk Kperogi’s to this debate on Facebook and I marvelled at his attempt to befuddle the issues and misprepresent my assertions. Surely even intellectual dishonesty and historical revisionism has its limits.


Chief Moshood Kashimawo Abiola

To the sons and daughters of Oduduwa and all other southerners, who are my primary concern, I say do not be fooled: the Fulani have been using the words “Yariba” and “Nyamiri” for over 200 years.

Quite apart from that I would appreciate it if someone would please tell this Kperogi that it would be better for him to read what I wrote than to go out of his way to purposely and maliciously misrepresent me.

He claims that “it was reported” that I said “Yariba” and “Nyamiri” were FULANI words.

Needless to say I NEVER said or wrote that and if indeed it was reported in such a way in any medium then that is nothing but a case of pernicious falsehood, perfidious misrepresentation and pre-meditated and specious mendacity.


Bola Ige

What I wrote was that the Fulani GAVE and USED those words to describe the people of the South West and South East respectively. Contrary to his assertion I did not say they were Fulani or Hausa words. Giving or using a name or a word does not necessarily mean that that name or word is native to the language of the user and giver. This appears to me to be obvious and basic logic.

The name could derive from another race or language entirely and you can still use it in yours as a term to describe others. This is especially so whem you seek to demean and malign them.

As regards the meaning of the words I would suggest that Kperogi reads a little more widely and he will discover what those that coined them actually meant. It is simply a question of historical and literary research.

If you disagree with me on an issue or we have divergent opinions it is no big deal but at least qoute me accurately and do not misrepresent or misconstrue what I wrote.


Chief Ayo Adebanjo

More importantly if you insist on criticising me or disagreeing with me on an important matter like this you would do well to actually read what I wrote yourself and not rely on what “was reported” or what others told you that I wrote or said.

This surely is a given when it comes to even the most basic, elementry and rudimentry form of intellectual discourse.

The truth is that in his post Kperogi has confirmed virtually everything else that I wrote about this matter other than the mischevous and erroneous assertion that I claimed that the two words in question were from the Fulani or Hausa language. I repeat, I never made that assertion.

He also dropped the ball when he said that Nyamiri was a word that was created during the Nigerian civil war. This is not true. The word has its origins in the Igbo language but its subsequent corruption, bastardisation, condecending connotation and insulting usage by the Fulani commenced as far back as the 18th century.


Prof.Bank Akintoye

Needless to say I stand by every word that I wrote in my article titled “We Are Sons And Daughters of Oduduwa And Not Yorubas”.

I urge Kperogi and those that share his complex and inexplicable disposition to read it with a clear mind and actually learn something. I wish him well.
Permit me to conclude with this. One day all truth, no matter how bitter or hard to accept, will no longer be hidden and ignored and men will no longer be blinded by their own ignorance, pride and folly.

The following is a simple and clear contribution to the “Yoruba/Yariba” debate and in my view the highly acclaimed, well-respected and distiguished author, Chief Ifayemi Elebuibon, got it absolutely right.

The purveyors of falsehood, mendacity, historical revisionism, lies and perfidy in our midst do not want the sons and daughters of Oduduwa, the Aku’s and the Anagos to know the truth about the history of the name that they were given by the Fulani 100 years ago and they are desperate to supress that truth and cover it up.


Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu

Unfortunately for them the cat is out of the bag and the 100 dark years of bearing a name that is not ours, that has questionable roots and that has a malevolent and deeply insulting meaning will soon come to an end!

Is it any wonder that when great sons of Ooduwa, the Aku and the Anago, like Sir Adeyemo Alakija and Chief Obafemi Awolowo established the paramount and leading South Western socio-political and cultural organisation in history they named it “Egbe Omo Oduduwa” and not “Egbe Omo Yoruba”.

Consider this:

YORUBA DOES NOT EXIST IN IFA ― Ifayemi Elebuibon.

A renown traditionalist and the Araba of Osogbo, Chief Ifayemi Elebuibon said prior to contact with the Hausa/Fulani, the race is known as the people of Ife, saying it is unfortunate that the people failed to coin a word to call the race before coming into contact with the Hausas.

According to him, the Yoruba race is usually referred to as ‘aku’ in the very early stage because of the way the people greet each other.

He agreed that the race was given the name Yariba from which it became Yoruba, saying the earliest leaders of the race failed to have a collective name.

Elebuibon added that the race ought to be called the people of Ife, saying that was how Ifa referred to the race.

He said, “we are Ife people, it is rather unfortunate that we didn’t have one word to comprise all Yoruba before Fulani or Hausa gave us yariba to become Yoruba ‘aku’ is the words they used for us in beginning because we used to greet each other by saying ‘aku owuro’, ‘Aku asaale’ it is aku people or anago that other Africans referred to you.

He opined that since the people originate from Ile-Ife, the race is ought to be known the people of Ife,

“Actually since Yoruba origins is at Ile Ife ‘Eni fe abi ara Ile Ife Loye ka ma je’, we are indigenous people of Ootu Ife”, he added. (Vanguard Newspaper, 25th October, 2019)

Let those that refuse to accept the bitter truth, no matter how scholarly, elderly or eminent, reflect on Elebuibon’s insightful and incisive counsel and words. Remember: we are what we call ourselves.