Our own dear Deji Abodunde of the 1997 set of FGC Idoani, a set I like to refer to as the 'brainy generation', which paraded the likes of Francis Ajayi and (now Pastor) Kehinde Akinola of RCCG, Port Harcourt. You, along with your teenage friends, inspired us with your sacrificial spiritual stewardship at the FGC. That issue with the occultic school principal which led to the disbandment of your set of prefects (including yourself I think) remains indelible in the history of FGC Idoani. E ku ise takuntakun sir. I'm of the '99 set.
Thank you so much, Mr Deji Abodunde. For this serious hard work in reviving our story back to us. No one can tell or document our stories like ours the owner of the story. Solid work 🎉
Wow...this is really some significant research NCHS. Well done to the entire team...this is really great work. This just shows how much impact as a church we should be making in shaping society and culture
Wow! Just wow!👏👏 Thank you very much Mr. Abodunde for taking the time to research and share this well-researched history of the Yorubas. I found it informative and interesting and will make sure to share it. God bless you for this gift to the future generations of Nigerians interested in knowing our history.
Watching this at 2a.m in Obudu Mountain Resort and loving it! All i can say is wow! Good job, dear UA-camr. Keep it up 👍Just won yourself another subscription
Bishop Crowther stands as one of the most influential figures in Yoruba and Nigerian history. Through his pioneering translation of the Bible, he played a pivotal role in liberating Africa from idolatry, establishing the continent as a hub for global missionary work. His life exemplifies how humble beginnings and personal tragedy can be transformed into profound victory through faith. Crowther's contributions continue to inspire and underscore the transformative power of dedication and divine purpose.
Stop talking nonsense he sold his people to a bigger idolatry called christianity, a satanic religion of the the barbarians leading to the most inhuman atrocities of human history(slavery). Christianity is the yoke holding down black people from progressing. Repent from it.
Eku People - Coming from the common greeting used for everything by the Youruba people such as Eku-ile (greeting someone you meet at home), Eku-abo (welcome), Eku-Ijoko(greeting someone sitting), Eku-Ise(greeting someone that is working)... and so on. I can imagine that the first encounters of missionaries and other explorers or neighbors would have elicited the greeting Eku - followed by something... As a matter of fact, first encounters with foreigners without any translations between them would have gotten the foreigner hearing the word Eku continuously. So I can imagine the label being used to describe the people as the Eku people and probably not Aku.
There's Difference between "Aku" and "Eku" to a native Yoruba speaker. "Aku" Would be a pluralized first person term referring to the speaker's group, the "A" conveying the sense of We (English). "Eku" is second person and is spoken in reference to someone you are about to engage or are engaging. The meaning of the word is a bit hard to define in English but is completely natural to a Yoruba. Ku conveys a present continuous doing or being in effect the verb "to be" in all it's tenses. Eku used by itself is incomplete it is usually followed by a noun that expresses the state or condition of the recipient. For Example Eku Osan (Osan meaning Afternoon), is a ready to use greeting expressing Goodwill to someone you are encountering in the Afternoon. It's funny that Yorubas almost got named by a word commonly used for multipurpose friendly greetings.
I am a Lucumi from a Cuban father. I am a proud priestess of Yemoja. 🇨🇺💪🏿💪🏾💪🏽I can't imagine worshipping the religion of my enemy. Christianity has never been practiced in my family going back to the ones who came from Oyo. IFA is our religion a resistance of colonizers attack against us, trying to strip us of our identity and pride
Ah...it' not about a foreign religion. as a it a beneficial religion. If you import the internet from other countries, then that's a good import. Christianity is not about the"enemy's" religion, it is about, whta is the truth about life, eternal life, heaven and hell.. as God as given to all the world through his son Jesus christ, not any other name else.
This was an excellent video; Content, storytelling, selected images & editing. 🌟Even the background music was just the right volume (many content creators choose overtly dramatic music or it’s too loud). Though, I am neither Nigerian nor Yoruba - this is the most detailed example how Europeans decided to misname African people: KhoiSan, Nguni, Kuba, Dinka, Shilluk, etc. - the list is long. Crowther is also the classical example of kidnapped & traumatised African child/youth, ideologically indoctrinated, devoted Christian, hardworking assistant to European endeavours but then dumped when he dared to criticise their hypocrisy & greed. Sad
@@akinwumiakindahunsi7254 no, it is a Yoruba word. It is the name of the Northern Yoruba "Yagba" people. The Nupe and Ibaariba referred to all Yoruba using the name of the Yagba. This name was then translated into Hausa and other Sudanic languages as "Yariba". So now, variations of the word "Yagba" is what the Yoruba were know as. However to the Yoruba themselves that word could also refer to a specific Yoruba group, so Crowther chose a variation of that word, already popular and that won't be mistaken for the Yagba so that no confusion would arise due to its use.
@@akinwumiakindahunsi7254 what's important for me is that, it was a Yoruba man that did it. The Hausa word must have come from a Yoruba word or lifestyle
I just read the description of this channel. Wow! So you're the writer of "A heritage of faith: A history of Christianity in Nigeria". I bought it on Okada books app last year, I've read 4-5 chapters before Okada books closed down business. It was painful because I was already immersed in the book and intrigued. Please, how can I get a hard copy? I commend your efforts, may God continually strengthen you.
Thank you for the kind words. So sorry to hear about the Okada Books issue. We are out of stock presently. Will announce on the channel when they become available again. Hopefully soon. Thank you.
Kudos for this deep revelation of a documentary. While not surprising, it is unsettling that Papa Ajayi Crowther opted over "Akú" for "Yoruba" - a word of possibly derogatory non-indigenous origin. Just mind-numbing the irrelevance to which the conservative mindset of the non-African religion community of Africans (especially Christians) relegates any obligation to nationalism resulting in generational indignity. And it goes on steroids with the nerve of American conservatives’ Project 2025.
How did Raban, Clappeton and Crowder Ajayi arrived at the word - Awon eYan Oba (Ife) = Awon eyan OYO = YO-ru-ba = THE People with a central King. ''say's the first books I once read because they in the North and the Europeans could not pronouce it well. Eku/Aku is more descriptive from greetings/salutation rather than been descriptive to their royal culture source as I ealier mentioned. As you can see even Ijebu was spelt Idsebu
Please can you be more explicit. You seem to have a derivative formula. Secondly, what are the titles you read that seemingly pointed to Yo-ru-ba? Thanks.
Thanks tremenduously for giving us this remarkable exposition. As a Yoruba person, I feel that "Aku" is in no way more appropriate than "Yoruba" given the history and circumstances of our people.. The name Aku seems to me as analogous as calling the English "Hello" people. History has spoken and what happened has happened. I think Bishop Crowther's work/works is in a sense instrumental in helping to forge a sense of Oneness amongst the Yorubas, and in us seeing ourselves as one Nation of kinsmen, and we have been blessed by that oneness.
@@abidogunmodupe8212 Who told you non complained? The Egbas, the Ijebus and some other communities rejected it outrightly. But the British went ahead to implement it anyway.
The archeologist Akin Ogundiran in his book, "The Yorùbá: A New History," wrote that the use of the name Yorùbá to refer to the many kingdoms is not of the Hausa. Instead, it was the result of comtact with the Yàgbà in present-day Kọgí State by the Nupe ethnic group and trade with the Malian empire.
The name Yoruba or Yariba or yaruba were all existing before we adopted the name, they were ancient Yemenis tribe who established the first Yoruba dynasty in 14th century, the Fulani scholar that refers to us as Yariba did so because he was convinced that we are from this Yemen tribe due to our Middle East history, which was not necessarily true but that was his opinion
@@theseedtv45 Go to google and type, Al Yariba Oman tribe, you should see about them, and if you want more deeper article about them, type Yoruba dynasty Oman tribe, you should find something that talks about Yoruba dynasty existence in 14th-16th century
Interesting piece The Yorubas were more or less estranged brothers who shared a common ancestor, Oduduwa. They spoke different dialects of a common Language which had no name and referred to themselves more by location than anyother thing. Research is still on the origin of the Yoruba Language as there is the "Ikedu" tradition in Ifè which speaks of pre Oduduwa Ifè.
why are these documents were not been taught in school and why people still having confusion if it was been taught in school....can we have website where we can have access to it for more discusion.
One thing is clear, the name Yoruba is derived from the name Oyo which is the most significant empire among our various Oduduwa affiliated kingdoms of that era. We don't need to be worried or ashamed about this because even the name England was derived from one of the most prominent kingdoms called "Angles" in ancient Britain. The other tribes included the Jutes , Saxons and the Normans who came later. Don't let any anti-Yoruba individual tell you that it was derived from a derogatory Hausa word - meaning untrustworthy. They don't want us to be proud of our rich heritage. Yoruba and Hausa people have interacted for many years before the colonial era through trade and religion . Thus some of their people understood each others language . Some Yoruba still speak Hausa till date and vice-versa. Hence if the name Yoruba is a derogatory Hausa word, those that understood the Hausa language would have exposed and rejected it outrightly as an insulting word. We know some anti-Yoruba people who are recently spinning this misinformation and conspiracy theory about our noble name.
But what if they didn’t speak against it because they didn’t know what exactly its etymology was 🤔? What if indeed Yoruba was from the root word Yarriba? While sounding similar, they may not have taken it to mean the same thing. Also, what if there was indeed notable pushback against the use of the word but it wasn’t documented properly? In the end, more research may still be needed.
From this narration, there is no evidence that the word Yoruba originated from the Hausas. The Oyo might have referred to themselves as Yoruba, but the Hausa bastardised it like they did to some Yoruba words they use like alede (elede).
Hello. Thank you for following developments on the channel. I am presently restructuring the channel so that it would be documentary-focused. I'd probably move the Pa Elton messages to a new channel. Regards.
So many take away. Most African tribes didn't have the time to band together under a common leadership or kingdom prior to colonialism. Hence they didn't always have or agree to a common name. Yet they are descendant of a common ancestry. Igbos in various parts of the south also fall under this category. Ijaws too and Ibibio... Hence the identity issues. I am glad the Yoruba nation solved this issue long ago, doesn't really matter who originally owned the name.
Oh mu goodness This is a great awakening for me There are a lot of my land that is been revealed here o Most slaves of that time must have been 70% Yoruba Check around the world, Yorubas are dominant Have you seen Britain recently giving much attention to even our cultural heritage of dressings and cuisines?
I appreciate the scholarliness of this work! Evidence is presented for every definite claim. Great! However, I think you should do more work on why the Hausas were calling the people by so-called "Yariba". Afterall, there is an argument that it was a corruption of a word that was being used by the people. Personally, I agree with Sigmund that the people should have been generally called AKÚ, instead of YORÙBÁ. Now, it is what it is. Meanwhile, kudos to Ajayi for his efforts and, perhaps, unexpected "victory."
These comments are making me go raaaa…. How are you watching this as a Yoruba person and you feel good and uplifted?? This is clearly the history of how you were stripped of your real identity and the crooks that were responsible for it.. can we ever wake up?
The Yoruba culture is still the richest by History and its beautiful artefacts in Africa, South and North America, West Indies, and the whole world at large.Rivalling the Romans and Greeks Your complaints are irrelivant and for dull.ards
btw You sound like one of those envious people who needs to find a reason to criticise a vibrant culture in order to justify your hate.Yorubas don't care about your opinions because names can be nicknames too which in this case cuts both ways
@Criticalcrusade, the responses blew my mind as well. It's like.... it depends on the time, place, and context and you would have different reactions. I remember David Hundeyin sharing this exact history during the last election to show that the Yorubas were being pawned for political gains by the north and were not exhibiting their "most educated region" and "most hospitable people" status they used to be known for. They literally chewed him up and spat him out and took him out of the Yoruba book of life. I'm not sure what this youtuber's agenda is (if he has one), but my guts tell me he's trying to share that same message as David without rocking the (political) boat.
There is no identity that was taken away, all identities of people under the umbrella term Yoruba remains intact today. what was created was an umbrella identity which was never there, everyone goes by their individual identity and no umbrella identity and Yoruba only serves as umbrella identity
Ajayi crowther was not the reason why we're called Yoruba. Please a thorough research before embarking on any story. The Portuguese traders were referring to us as Yoruba, Anago, and lukumi in one of their books written in 1640's . Crowther could not have in any way. Thanks.
@@nduodiaka-ph9sl that's not what Yariba means. Yariba isn't even originally Hausa. It was the Nupe and Ibaariba word for Yarba, a northern Yoruba group and Hausa adopted it for all Yoruba people. It then got adopted back by Yoruba people to refer to all Yoruba people but ultimate it is just a version of Yarba, a Yoruba word.
The Hausas had called all Yoruba Speakers Yoruba since the 16th Century they didn’t differentiate between the different Yoruba Clans like Ijebu Ekiti, igbomina etc They called them all Yoruba. It was the Yoruba people who distinguished between the Yoruba clans where Yoruba meant Oyo people
@@nduodiaka-ph9slomo ibo, yariba or yoruba have no meaning in Fulani or hausa, keep fooling yourself. The word yoruba is a praise or nickname to the oyo meaning central king, or king lord over kingdoms.
@omoyemisilver1231 This is what the hausas themselfs said.if you don't know the origin. Why are you scared to Declare oduduwa country.? Look at how yorubas have been messing up the zoo, nigeria. The hausas are right, Unserios and untrustworthy.
Excellent job! Case closed. Literatures revealed the long standing debates of where that name came from. At least it is now called with our phonetic Yo-ru-ba while the different lands of odua know which groups they belong to be it Egbas, Oyos, Ijeshas, Ijebus ati bẹbẹ lọ😅.
In all of that beautiful presentation you can only deduced and emphasized the racial slur given to set of people by their neighbors. Well, we are called by so many names but then yoruba as a name is a swag of a word in and of itself.
@danielaloba001 I'm Awori, and we did not descend from Oduduwa. Ijebus are not descendants of Oduduwa. The Egbas are not descendants of Oduduwa either. Which of the Yorubas descended from out of space with your fabricated Oduduwa? It is high time for people like you to speak out and speak the truth. The Yorubas did not descend from a single man who parachuted to Ife. The Ooni of Ife is not an Oba. In fact, the word Oba is foreign to Yoruba. The Yoruba scholars who fabricated this single man named Oduduwa, who came down from heaven with all his entourage to Ife, is a big lie.
@@2LETLIVE it's obvious that you deviate from the context which is the name "Yoruba"and how it was established knowing that it is less than 200 years in print and in use. As for one man came down from heaven and found a race of people according to Yoruba cosmology,pls kindly tell me what the two popular holy books in west African derived the cosmology from? Were there no several verses stated "let us now go down and confound their languages on the earth" gods or angel came from above to the surface here..these stories are not exclusive to the Yorubas alone but many mighty civilizations from Oriental to Western world as well as Europa. Again tell me where did they go wrong given humanity is still searching how they came to be?
I appreciate your efforts concerning the history you narrated, but Each region in Yoruba territory knows their history, saying Yoruba was named by Hausa is totally incorrect , Yoruba itself have a meaning in the old Yoruba astrology and it spiritual that align with, Yoruba calling today derived from kingdoms everyone has it own findings and research,A neighbor can't just name you what you didn't name yourself, despite Ile ife ,Ilesha and other regions in the kingdoms have been existing thousands of years, before the existence of oduduwa, facts that we have common root and language and dialect that connected us together, oduduwa was a popular king in Yoruba history, it doesn't mean every kingdom in Yoruba was oduduwa descendant ,we have a long way to go.
Ajayi crowther was used by western, for their own benefits, even what ajayi crowther translate today was used to weaponize against Yoruba history culture, doesn't align with our true identity Quotes ,"I have travelled across the length and breadth of Africa and I have not seen one person who is a beggar, who is a thief such wealth I have seen in this country, such high moral values, people of such caliber, that I do not think we would ever conquer this country, unless we break the very backbone of this nation, which is her spiritual and cultural heritage and therefore, I propose that we replace her old and ancient education system, her culture, for if the Africans think that all that is foreign and English is good and greater than their own, they will lose their selfesteem, their native culture and they will become what we want them, a truly dominated nation". Lord Macaulay's Address to the British Parliament on 2nd Feb 1835
They have name, the name is kuotu ojire. It wasn't Hausa named Oyo Yoruba. The name came out when Omo Kuotu Ojire traded with Arab. Only Yoruba people called Arab Larubawa while Arab called them Yarubawa. Please, we have a gazette on this. Please don't distort our history. Thanks
I wonder too,if not because of the contraption system they impose on the Yoruba race for being part of Nigeria today ,the same western benefits, each region in Yoruba territory knows their history,a neighbor can't just name you what you didn't name yourself, despite Ile ife ,Ilesha and other regions in the kingdom have been existing thousands of years, before the existence of oduduwa,we have a long way to go
That's the point. There were people in Ile-Ife before the arrival of Oduduwa. Why then should the'kaaro,oojire' people ie the so called' Yoruba' be regarded as descendants of Oduduwa. Let us have a true picture of everything devoid of sentiments.
Hausa and Arabic are from the same language family; the Afro Asiatic family. As a result there are shared words and ultimately it doesn't matter that the Hausa may have gotten it from Arabs as they are distant cousins (linguistically speaking). Also due to geography the Yoruba are more likely to have interactions with the Hausa than Arabs as the southernmost Arabs are found in Chad and Bornu state, the Shuwa Arabs, whom are very far from what is Yoruba land today.
@@traykunableI think the Oduduwa tribe are actually Arabians. Remember all of Africa and what they call the Middle East which is North East Africa. The natives were and still are black Africans. Africans come is different shades and phenotypes but are what we call black people. Orignal Arabs are Africans but through slaving mixed with Central Asians and Caucasian slaves. Though throughout all the Arabic countries there are orignal black men who have been living there for thousands of years. Now also Oduduwa evidence leads out of Mecca or Arabia. Something not unique to other northwest Africans. Before Oduduwa left Arabia where exactly did his tribe come from could be Yemen or all over the Arabian desert. When Oduduwa made his passage into Yoruba lands there were already natives. So yes there are orignal Yoruba people from the lands and foreigners from Arabia. This is why the Oduduwa tribe are Arabs by definition. The Arabic language and Yoruba have numerous similarities and cognates. Many Arabian tribes for centuries even before Mohammed left Arabia into Africa. Into all of North-West Africa. That’s where the name Yarab, Y’araba, Yariba, Yarub, Yaruba come from highlighting the Arabic influence. Also for the language of Arabic the language is not mutual comprehensive by all Arabs. Hundreds of different dialects. A man from Lebanon can not understand a man who speaks Arabic in Mauritania. An Egyptian can not understand a man who speaks Arabic in Chad. Though it’s all Arabic. This is how Yoruba fits this definition. It’s Arabic but that does not mean it’s mutual understanding by all Arabs. Hausa as you mention is an Arabic language, as Kanuri, Mande, Fulani, and many other languages throughout Niger, Mali, Morocco, Algeria, Nigeria, Yemen, Eritrea Ethiopia etc…. Just different dialects which makes them incomprehensible. Yoruba is a rich and very intelligent. When the Alafin histories were saying that Oduduwa came from Mecca. They were not stupid or naive of who they were. Also the Alafin as his historians were proud Ifa followers and could care less for Islam at the time. Arab does not equate Islam. Arabia during that time and Northen Africa was not 100 percent Islamic as we view it now. Many traditional beliefs were being practice with Islam under the fold. Crowther dispute this heavily since he had become christianized. Yet this is not an unusual situation since many other Africans in North West Africa had migrated from Arabia. Arabia is African land originally based on truthful evidence (another topic) as for the originals who lived in Yorubaland before Oduduwa. They took the name Yoruba. The history of the originals is very ancient….. a more difficult scope to analyze but not impossible.
@traykunable Don't make a mistake. We have been talking about more than 2000yrs, not recently at all. I don't know whether I said Herotodus, the Greek geographer, talked about ile Ife. So I am not talking about now. Because we don't really know what is going on, we thought our life began when coloniser came to Africa. Even Portuguese people were coming long time ago be4 coloniser. Even we had what they called osupagio, where people all over the world came to see. Ife was not a small place, if I tell you that Borno origin originated from Yoruba, you will be surprised.
The Benin people (Edo) refer to the Yoruba people originally as "Olukumi". It was the Fulanis/Hausas that named the Olukumi people as as Yariba now corrupted Yoruba.
Do we as a nation speak & understand each other’s native language, whether you are Katanga and I am Ekiti, Egba or Ijebu etc? *Our Answer is* : Yes! And we call it “Yoruba”
@safetydeskltd9047 WOW.... It's like the "believe or die and go to hell" Christianity antics. You shouldn't seek knowledge, just believe whatever the hell you're fed. How do you grow? What a shame!
History is very important. Not that one is trying to put fire. Imagin the supposed custodian of Oduduwa tribe or yoruba saying that their forefathers descended from heaven with cock or whatever in his hands. This was what they made us believe while growing up, and this is what Ooni of Ife is still holding on to, and he want people to believe all over the world
He wrote the yoruba bible,by translating the english to yoruba. And that’s what we are enjoying today. Some believes that’s Sierra Leonean. No. He’s born at a town called then as “Osogun”, now met than “Iseyin town. He’s captured and sold as a young boy slave to the arabs. But, he’s rescued and saved by the British missionaries, and he’s converted and baptised as a Christian and had a name change. He’s then educated the western way at today’s “Fourah bay college”. God rest and bless his soul
Why are we like this? Arabs did not feature anywhere in the history of Ajayi crowder. Europeans bought Ajayi Crowther, and the slave ship was intercepted and its human cargoes returned to Sierra Leone. Frankly Arab NEVER featured in coastal West Africa Transatlantic slave trade. It was all done by those who called themselves Christians. Superficial conversion of Heathens to Christians just before they board the ships was one the lies the slave-traders used to justify their heinous trade in their warped minds.
This is commonly known. It must have been a traumatising experience, especially having to witness how most of the enslaved died on board. Nonetheless, despite all the work he did for the Europeans, they betrayed him - the classical case
Thank you for eulogizing Àjàyí Crowther. He translated the English bible into the so called Yoruba' language. He however made some mistakes in his translations.A notable one is translating SATAN as ÈṢÙ. ÈṢÙ in the believe system of the 'kaaro, oojires' the so called Yoruba' is not a rebel. He is a police man that sanitizes the society purnishing those with evil intents to corrupt society. Àjàyí Crowther made that mistake in translation probably because he was taken into slavery as a child and was ignorant of ÈṢÙ in his homeland. The best translation he should have given to the word SATAN in Yoruba is SATAANI.
so glad on this insights, it shows how the great Benin empire was the cradle to development in this region and how their progress directly or indirectly shape the people of this region... Oduduwa has a royal bloodline came to these lands and established the Oyo kingdom and other kingdoms in those lands, uniting the people to a single identity, which is the modern Yoruba though i see all this as a scheme for the British to marginalize the Edo people and ensure the dynasty and its people to rise to greatness again, giving benefits and rise to smaller tribes in and around its kingdom to ensure they put her down
Crowther was never a Yoruba man but a slave born in England and later moved him to Free Town after missionaries brought him to Nigeria and there he took a Yornba name
For those who feels original identity of Yoruba people was taken away, there is no identity that was taken away, all identities of people under the umbrella term Yoruba today remains intact. what was created was an umbrella identity which was never there, everyone goes by their individual identity and no umbrella identity and Yoruba only serves as umbrella identity
The term YORUBA is the Hausa corruption of the term YOBA, sometimes spelt YEBA or YABA, one of the indigenous names of Old OYO. The Hausa tongue corrupted it to YORIBA, YARIBA and YORUBA, and this name applied to all the people who spoke the related language and dialects that come to known as Yoruba.
I always wondered about this because the elderly people commonly use the word YOBA, or Yoouba instead of Yoruba till date. The northerners refer to the same western Nigerian people as yaribawa till today
"When the missionaries came to Africa they had the Bible and we had the land. They said 'Let us pray.' We closed our eyes. When we opened them we had the Bible and they had the land."
Yes, brother. When our ancestors pray, by pouring libation, they do not close their eyes. There is transparency. Must we close our eyes when prayers are to rendered? Should a ' God incarnate close his eyes because somebody is calling the name of a foreign god?
Nobody took our land. WE STILL have our lands, and are even more united now than before the Missionaries came.Yorubas no longer fight wars amongst themselves, or take Slaves of their own brethren.All thanks to those Missionaries.
The origin of the reason why Yoruba evolved or the reason why the Oyo people were referred to as Yoruba doesn’t seem to have been outlined in this video. Just the evolution of the word. It’s also history from the lens of European documentation. The oral history passed down in someway might not jive well with this. How the kings existed and were supposed descendants of Oduduwa from Alake to Egba. Egba people might be yet to adopt the name Yoruba but I doubt they saw themselves as distinct from Oyo people.
The Yorubas are actually part of the lost tribe of Israel during the time of the Biblical King Jeroboam or Yeroboam after the Assyrian invasion that led the kingdom into a land that was later known as Africa and West Africa, then majorly Nigeria.
Stop spreading BS. This is false. I know some of the modern era ancestors believed this but they learnt it from Muslims who they thought were more knowledgeable on the matter but they weren't.
Why is that where ever Christianity goes on the African continent they are native people who comes out and say they are also a lost tribe of Israel. It never fails.
The name Yoruba was coin by Samuel Ajayi crowder, however at first was rejected by most of the Yoruba leaders but after delibration it was accepted to describe the name of the people that speak this similar language but variation in accent. However for me. Yoruba people are people of verse wisdom, to the extent that they standardised how you name anything according to Yorubas tradition following a basic principle => "Ile lan nwo ki a to so omo loruko" surfice to say you look at events that surround the birth of a child before naming that child or anything, at the end of the day the name must tell a stoy about that child or thing. I beleive Samuel is very much awared of this principle before comming up with the name Yoruba. Most modern yoruba people could not explain the true meaning of the name Yoruba as it tanslate to nothing when you, say it which in my own opinion contradict the principle of naming, but we need to also note that one of the practice of Yoruba name is ability to create a short form of the name. I.e. Adenike => Nike or Omowinmi could become Wunmi...
continue from above. if you realy want to find the truth of the Yoruba name, the first thing you need to do is to locate the founder of the first Yoruba kingdom. "Oranmiyan" . You need to take a trip down to Ife where Oranmiyan left a big obelisk staff, on this staff there are 2 distinct symbols. I beleive this symbol is the name given to OYO, the obelisk is a message not anything to worship but we all know the mind set of our people. Also we should not eliminate the fact that Oranmiyan is a religious priest. the symbol on the staff has been well researched and its said to be the hebrew letter "Yord and Hi" =>YH for me something made this more interesting, there is a word thats often use to describe OYO people.. "OYO ayo omo le" this word does not make any sense since OYO was not a person, no where in Yoruba history that says a person was once call OYO and Oranmiyan found OYO. so whats it? this word "OYO ayo omo le" is a mutilated word that has lost its correct pronounciation after many years the correct word is "OYO AYO IMOLE" => IMOLE is LIGHT then what is OYO=> is the name of GOD one that appear and anytime he appear he does it with light. .. I know this may be difficult to swallow, but if you take sometime to reason you will see, what I am talking about this word OYO is use to describe the people of OYO as the children of OYO ..surfice to say children of God.. "OYO HA" or "OYO Hii" meaning the one that appear that we worship in modern Yoruba it would have been written as "OYO Hi yin".. more
Now that we know the reasons why Oranmiyan left that symbol, and the correct phrase of "OYO ayo imole" there is also a word that persist in yoruba language till today, we also use it to describe GOD, we say "Arugbo Ojo" ancient of days also the story of OYO is "Aro Ba" meaning since beginging of time it was.. "OYO ARO BA" =OYO ANCIENT OF DAY= this word OYO ARO BA became more mutilated by other tribes from the north our neighbor who could not pronounc the word propally became YAROBA =YARUBA=> " OYO ARO BA", Yoruba people will never accept a derogatory name to call themselve contrary to none Yoruba's beleive, as a Yoruba our name is very important to us, we guide it that no one want to stain his or her name.. so the Name Yoruba is not to be guest or assumed, its YORUBA mean children of ancient of days "OYO"... knowledge is power, where someone owns end another person own begins... "Ogbon ologbon kin je ki a pe agba ni were".. a wise person will think and ask question why?... LET ME ASK ANYONE OF YOU THIS QUESTION => what is the meaning of "ILEKUN"=> door why did Yoruba call it "ILEKUN"
THE YORUBA PEOPLE ARE NOT A SEPARATE RACE OF PEOPLE. THE SO-CALLED YORUBA PEOPLE ARE AN ETHNIC GROUP THAT BELONGED TO THE NEGROID RACE. PLEASE 🙏 KEEP THIS IMPORTANT FACT IN MIND.
“Negroid” is just another misnomer like Yoruba. It means similar to a “negro” - there were no negros in Africa before the Europeans decided to name Africans so who already had plenty of names for themselves
The term "race" used to have a wider meaning. They also referred to the "Anglo race" in older books but today no one would say English people are a race unto themselves. It basically just used to mean a type of something but in time, narrowed specifically to the 3, 4 or 6 races(types) of man.
From the above, it is clear to say that the yorubas never had a common name, but were named by the dialects or area they were found. But my question is how did the youba word came to exist. If the fulanis were calling us yariba at that time it means that they heard a name that was similar and due to their way of pronounciation, bastardised it.
I AM NOT A YORUBA. I AM AN IJEBU. All our kith and kin in Benin Republic, Togo, Ghana, Cote D'Ivoire are referred to as Anago. That's the name the slaves took to Brazil. How can I accept Yar'banza which is the root of Yoruba. In an old British dictionary, which was discovered, Yar'iba was translated as "Treacherous people". This is one of the grievous errors of Chief Obafemi Awolowo who was "obsessively obsessed" (acc to Prof Billy Dudley) with ruling Nigeria that he failed to pay attention to this issue of Yoruba and Alaafin Aolę's curse. Yar'banza is a concept of abuse by the Hausas and or the Mandingos for the Oyo people with whom they were trading. It means treacherous bastard. How on earth does one accept that as a name?
Thank you for all the comments. They are deeply appreciated! Please like and subscribe to my channel to get notified of new content.
Done... Thank you so much sir. Your work is well appreciated.
Our own dear Deji Abodunde of the 1997 set of FGC Idoani, a set I like to refer to as the 'brainy generation', which paraded the likes of Francis Ajayi and (now Pastor) Kehinde Akinola of RCCG, Port Harcourt.
You, along with your teenage friends, inspired us with your sacrificial spiritual stewardship at the FGC. That issue with the occultic school principal which led to the disbandment of your set of prefects (including yourself I think) remains indelible in the history of FGC Idoani.
E ku ise takuntakun sir.
I'm of the '99 set.
Thank you so much, Mr Deji Abodunde. For this serious hard work in reviving our story back to us. No one can tell or document our stories like ours the owner of the story. Solid work 🎉
Keep it up.
Thank you very very much. Deeply appreciated!
Please like and subscribe to my channel to get notified of new content.
Bro….. You are great! I need to speak with you personally
This is both scholarly and historically enriching. Thank you for outing these little known shreds of foundational history.
Thank you for your kind words
Wow...this is really some significant research NCHS. Well done to the entire team...this is really great work. This just shows how much impact as a church we should be making in shaping society and culture
Great work. Most educative to me as a North Central Nigerian who grew up with Yoruba (Ogbomosho) neighbours in Jos. Blessings.
Wonderful, thanks Sir
This is a fantastic rendition of the history of the western peoples of Nigeria and beyond. Thanks.
All I can say is THANK YOU SO MUCH! Mandatory viewing for my children. God bless you!
Thank you for this extensive work and information.
Thank you very much for the kind words.
Good compilation ❤
Yoruba is rich in history
Some kingdoms are empty bcos they lack history
Wow! Just wow!👏👏 Thank you very much Mr. Abodunde for taking the time to research and share this well-researched history of the Yorubas. I found it informative and interesting and will make sure to share it. God bless you for this gift to the future generations of Nigerians interested in knowing our history.
Thank you for the welldone and thought-out historical work. God bless!
Watching this at 2a.m in Obudu Mountain Resort and loving it! All i can say is wow!
Good job, dear UA-camr. Keep it up 👍Just won yourself another subscription
Thank you so much
Oh, why talk about obudu ranch? Now you make me want to visit there for my birthday 30th November 😊
Very well researched. Love the maps and photo references.
Highly commendable work.
Bishop Crowther stands as one of the most influential figures in Yoruba and Nigerian history. Through his pioneering translation of the Bible, he played a pivotal role in liberating Africa from idolatry, establishing the continent as a hub for global missionary work. His life exemplifies how humble beginnings and personal tragedy can be transformed into profound victory through faith. Crowther's contributions continue to inspire and underscore the transformative power of dedication and divine purpose.
But led to.thr colonization of THE MIND
Stop talking nonsense he sold his people to a bigger idolatry called christianity, a satanic religion of the the barbarians leading to the most inhuman atrocities of human history(slavery). Christianity is the yoke holding down black people from progressing. Repent from it.
Great body of work sir, I can't wait to watch and learn from your next work
Eku People - Coming from the common greeting used for everything by the Youruba people such as Eku-ile (greeting someone you meet at home), Eku-abo (welcome), Eku-Ijoko(greeting someone sitting), Eku-Ise(greeting someone that is working)... and so on. I can imagine that the first encounters of missionaries and other explorers or neighbors would have elicited the greeting Eku - followed by something... As a matter of fact, first encounters with foreigners without any translations between them would have gotten the foreigner hearing the word Eku continuously. So I can imagine the label being used to describe the people as the Eku people and probably not Aku.
Thank you for further clarifying this
@@misidee not really clarifying as a fact. Just a theory
😊😊😊
Some people greet by saying “a kú ìjókó” “a ku aro” etc. That form might have been more common among recaptives in Sierra Leone.
There's Difference between "Aku" and "Eku" to a native Yoruba speaker. "Aku" Would be a pluralized first person term referring to the speaker's group, the "A" conveying the sense of We (English). "Eku" is second person and is spoken in reference to someone you are about to engage or are engaging. The meaning of the word is a bit hard to define in English but is completely natural to a Yoruba. Ku conveys a present continuous doing or being in effect the verb "to be" in all it's tenses.
Eku used by itself is incomplete it is usually followed by a noun that expresses the state or condition of the recipient. For Example Eku Osan (Osan meaning Afternoon), is a ready to use greeting expressing Goodwill to someone you are encountering in the Afternoon.
It's funny that Yorubas almost got named by a word commonly used for multipurpose friendly greetings.
Brilliant research work by this channel.
I must say, this RICH, ENTERTAINING, yet very INFORMATIVE. I appreciate the work you put into this and your other videos, you earned a new follower.
This sweetening my soul, please I need more of our history. Ive subscribed, My group will see this. Thanks.
Wow Deji, you're a plus..thumbs up sir. We love your history works. Much love ❤️👍 sir.
I love this sincerely. Long lived Yoruba land.
You nor dey hear word...Aku
This is awesome. Thank you. GOD bless you, A dara fun yin l'ruko JESU.
Thank you for the kind words.
It so intriguing that I keep pausing the video to read the extracts.
Me too
Great job here. Please keep it up!
Thank you very much!
I am a Lucumi from a Cuban father. I am a proud priestess of Yemoja. 🇨🇺💪🏿💪🏾💪🏽I can't imagine worshipping the religion of my enemy. Christianity has never been practiced in my family going back to the ones who came from Oyo. IFA is our religion a resistance of colonizers attack against us, trying to strip us of our identity and pride
Ah...it' not about a foreign religion. as a it a beneficial religion. If you import the internet from other countries, then that's a good import. Christianity is not about the"enemy's" religion, it is about, whta is the truth about life, eternal life, heaven and hell.. as God as given to all the world through his son Jesus christ, not any other name else.
Great Job Deji
Absolutely amazing 🎉 thank you
Thank you.
Brilliant.... Well researched
Thank you for this information.👍
Wow. Insightful
This was an excellent video; Content, storytelling, selected images & editing. 🌟Even the background music was just the right volume (many content creators choose overtly dramatic music or it’s too loud). Though, I am neither Nigerian nor Yoruba - this is the most detailed example how Europeans decided to misname African people: KhoiSan, Nguni, Kuba, Dinka, Shilluk, etc. - the list is long. Crowther is also the classical example of kidnapped & traumatised African child/youth, ideologically indoctrinated, devoted Christian, hardworking assistant to European endeavours but then dumped when he dared to criticise their hypocrisy & greed. Sad
Thank you for your kind words about the quality of the video.
Well, you're just stating the reason why Africa chose independence, in the second half of ur statement.
Great work. Am educated. Thank you
This is superb. I have shared it in my contact
GREAT DOCUMENTARY. KUDOS!!! WE NEED HISTORY
We do o jàre! That's why this channel is well appreciated.
Interesting!
Woah. Thanks 🙏
Very enjoyable ❤
Great video!!
We all need to watch this.
Thank you !
Im so glad for this. Ive asked thos question of my family what does "Yoruba" mean?
The fact that nobody new what it meant means its not our word.
I'm glad Ajayi Crowther's idea won...as a son of the soil, he deserves the right to give the name more than the foreigners.
Except for the fact that he did not form the name, he only modified the Hausa's chosen word for descendants of Odùduwà. Hardly original!
@@akinwumiakindahunsi7254 no, it is a Yoruba word. It is the name of the Northern Yoruba "Yagba" people. The Nupe and Ibaariba referred to all Yoruba using the name of the Yagba. This name was then translated into Hausa and other Sudanic languages as "Yariba".
So now, variations of the word "Yagba" is what the Yoruba were know as. However to the Yoruba themselves that word could also refer to a specific Yoruba group, so Crowther chose a variation of that word, already popular and that won't be mistaken for the Yagba so that no confusion would arise due to its use.
@@akinwumiakindahunsi7254 what's important for me is that, it was a Yoruba man that did it.
The Hausa word must have come from a Yoruba word or lifestyle
@@akinwumiakindahunsi7254 no proof of that whatsoever
Aku...yoruba seems to be for oyo, and given by the hausas
I just read the description of this channel. Wow! So you're the writer of "A heritage of faith: A history of Christianity in Nigeria". I bought it on Okada books app last year, I've read 4-5 chapters before Okada books closed down business. It was painful because I was already immersed in the book and intrigued.
Please, how can I get a hard copy?
I commend your efforts, may God continually strengthen you.
Let me add that I attempted to buy the book on Amazon, but couldn't make payment.
Thank you for the kind words. So sorry to hear about the Okada Books issue. We are out of stock presently. Will announce on the channel when they become available again. Hopefully soon. Thank you.
@@onitimilehin7560what is the name of the book?
Interesting
Kudos for this deep revelation of a documentary. While not surprising, it is unsettling that Papa Ajayi Crowther opted over "Akú" for "Yoruba" - a word of possibly derogatory non-indigenous origin. Just mind-numbing the irrelevance to which the conservative mindset of the non-African religion community of Africans (especially Christians) relegates any obligation to nationalism resulting in generational indignity. And it goes on steroids with the nerve of American conservatives’ Project 2025.
Keep moving
How did Raban, Clappeton and Crowder Ajayi arrived at the word - Awon eYan Oba (Ife) = Awon eyan OYO = YO-ru-ba = THE People with a central King. ''say's the first books I once read because they in the North and the Europeans could not pronouce it well. Eku/Aku is more descriptive from greetings/salutation rather than been descriptive to their royal culture source as I ealier mentioned. As you can see even Ijebu was spelt Idsebu
Please can you be more explicit. You seem to have a derivative formula. Secondly, what are the titles you read that seemingly pointed to Yo-ru-ba? Thanks.
Welldone
Thank you
Thanks tremenduously for giving us this remarkable exposition. As a Yoruba person, I feel that "Aku" is in no way more appropriate than "Yoruba" given the history and circumstances of our people.. The name Aku seems to me as analogous as calling the English "Hello" people. History has spoken and what happened has happened.
I think Bishop Crowther's work/works is in a sense instrumental in helping to forge a sense of Oneness amongst the Yorubas, and in us seeing ourselves as one Nation of kinsmen, and we have been blessed by that oneness.
This simply means that Yoruba or Yariba was put together just the way Nigeria was put together. The people were not consulted, it was an imposition.
But none complained, it shows that's how God wants it, and we're happy with it because we never disowned each other.
@@abidogunmodupe8212 Who told you non complained? The Egbas, the Ijebus and some other communities rejected it outrightly. But the British went ahead to implement it anyway.
Probably for the best
The archeologist Akin Ogundiran in his book, "The Yorùbá: A New History," wrote that the use of the name Yorùbá to refer to the many kingdoms is not of the Hausa. Instead, it was the result of comtact with the Yàgbà in present-day Kọgí State by the Nupe ethnic group and trade with the Malian empire.
NUPE were a BIG part of the Oyo Kingdom. The masquerade, priests were all Nupes.
The name Yoruba or Yariba or yaruba were all existing before we adopted the name, they were ancient Yemenis tribe who established the first Yoruba dynasty in 14th century, the Fulani scholar that refers to us as Yariba did so because he was convinced that we are from this Yemen tribe due to our Middle East history, which was not necessarily true but that was his opinion
@@Ranking007-tq9ng😂😂😂😂😂😂
@@Ranking007-tq9ngplease can you provide any reference(s) to this assertion?
@@theseedtv45 Go to google and type, Al Yariba Oman tribe, you should see about them, and if you want more deeper article about them, type Yoruba dynasty Oman tribe, you should find something that talks about Yoruba dynasty existence in 14th-16th century
Bro Deji, how can I get Mojola Agbebi's book, sir? It's out of print on Amazon.
Hello. Thank you for your interest in the book. Please call 08029125794 to order in Nigeria.
Hah! Eku-Eka! (A variation of “Aku!”) was indeed a salutation among people of Osun State when I was growing up
Interesting piece
The Yorubas were more or less estranged brothers who shared a common ancestor, Oduduwa.
They spoke different dialects of a common Language which had no name and referred to themselves more by location than anyother thing.
Research is still on the origin of the Yoruba Language as there is the "Ikedu" tradition in Ifè which speaks of pre Oduduwa Ifè.
Exactly! Not all the sub ethnic people in the area now known as Yorubaland are descendants of Oduduwa, the Ilaje people for instance.
why are these documents were not been taught in school and why people still having confusion if it was been taught in school....can we have website where we can have access to it for more discusion.
Wow
One thing is clear, the name Yoruba is derived from the name Oyo which is the most significant empire among our various Oduduwa affiliated kingdoms of that era. We don't need to be worried or ashamed about this because even the name England was derived from one of the most prominent kingdoms called "Angles" in ancient Britain. The other tribes included the Jutes , Saxons and the Normans who came later. Don't let any anti-Yoruba individual tell you that it was derived from a derogatory Hausa word - meaning untrustworthy. They don't want us to be proud of our rich heritage. Yoruba and Hausa people have interacted for many years before the colonial era through trade and religion . Thus some of their people understood each others language . Some Yoruba still speak Hausa till date and vice-versa. Hence if the name Yoruba is a derogatory Hausa word, those that understood the Hausa language would have exposed and rejected it outrightly as an insulting word. We know some anti-Yoruba people who are recently spinning this misinformation and conspiracy theory about our noble name.
❤
But what if they didn’t speak against it because they didn’t know what exactly its etymology was 🤔? What if indeed Yoruba was from the root word Yarriba? While sounding similar, they may not have taken it to mean the same thing. Also, what if there was indeed notable pushback against the use of the word but it wasn’t documented properly?
In the end, more research may still be needed.
We're from Israel, even alafins letter shows we are from Israel, Zephaniah 3-10 proves the list tribes of Israel are in West Africa central Africa...
From this narration, there is no evidence that the word Yoruba originated from the Hausas. The Oyo might have referred to themselves as Yoruba, but the Hausa bastardised it like they did to some Yoruba words they use like alede (elede).
@ yes please sir 🎉, the remain paelton message
Hello. Thank you for following developments on the channel. I am presently restructuring the channel so that it would be documentary-focused. I'd probably move the Pa Elton messages to a new channel. Regards.
Hello well done. These your documentaries are Netflix worthy but presently are too short. A full proper production would be good
@@bolajokoonabolu8171 Thank you for your kind words!
So many take away. Most African tribes didn't have the time to band together under a common leadership or kingdom prior to colonialism. Hence they didn't always have or agree to a common name. Yet they are descendant of a common ancestry.
Igbos in various parts of the south also fall under this category. Ijaws too and Ibibio... Hence the identity issues.
I am glad the Yoruba nation solved this issue long ago, doesn't really matter who originally owned the name.
Please do Ibibio and Efik dialect
😃
Where is ondo?
Oh mu goodness
This is a great awakening for me
There are a lot of my land that is been revealed here o
Most slaves of that time must have been 70% Yoruba
Check around the world, Yorubas are dominant
Have you seen Britain recently giving much attention to even our cultural heritage of dressings and cuisines?
I would rather be a YORUBA man than an AKU man!
It's late already, that's the only choice.
I appreciate the scholarliness of this work! Evidence is presented for every definite claim. Great! However, I think you should do more work on why the Hausas were calling the people by so-called "Yariba". Afterall, there is an argument that it was a corruption of a word that was being used by the people.
Personally, I agree with Sigmund that the people should have been generally called AKÚ, instead of YORÙBÁ. Now, it is what it is. Meanwhile, kudos to Ajayi for his efforts and, perhaps, unexpected "victory."
Thank you for your kind words. As stated in the documentary, the reason why the Hausas referred to them by this name is now lost to history.
Yoruba speakers in Kogi state are still called "OKUN" because of the way they greet each other.
These comments are making me go raaaa…. How are you watching this as a Yoruba person and you feel good and uplifted?? This is clearly the history of how you were stripped of your real identity and the crooks that were responsible for it.. can we ever wake up?
The Yoruba culture is still the richest by History and its beautiful artefacts in Africa, South and North America, West Indies, and the whole world at large.Rivalling the Romans and Greeks Your complaints are irrelivant and for dull.ards
btw You sound like one of those envious people who needs to find a reason to criticise a vibrant culture in order to justify your hate.Yorubas don't care about your opinions because names can be nicknames too which in this case cuts both ways
@Criticalcrusade, the responses blew my mind as well. It's like.... it depends on the time, place, and context and you would have different reactions. I remember David Hundeyin sharing this exact history during the last election to show that the Yorubas were being pawned for political gains by the north and were not exhibiting their "most educated region" and "most hospitable people" status they used to be known for. They literally chewed him up and spat him out and took him out of the Yoruba book of life.
I'm not sure what this youtuber's agenda is (if he has one), but my guts tell me he's trying to share that same message as David without rocking the (political) boat.
What are you saying? nobody was stripped of anything. do your research and listen again.
There is no identity that was taken away, all identities of people under the umbrella term Yoruba remains intact today. what was created was an umbrella identity which was never there, everyone goes by their individual identity and no umbrella identity and Yoruba only serves as umbrella identity
Quite insightful, we have the Yorubas, not the Akus😃
Thank you.😃
Great insights. Do we know if the word Yarriba (for the hausas) had a particular meaning?
No it doesn't. Grab a Hausa or Fulani dictionary. The no Yo or Ya in there. The name closest to Yarba or Yoruba is Yaro. Which means boy.
@@babasolaadewumi3052 thx for the reply. Interesting - "boy"
@@babasolaadewumi3052imagine and there are many articles pulled up from google saying “yariba” means deceitful, cunning or usurper
Thé publisher must have décide thé name?
Ajayi crowther was not the reason why we're called Yoruba. Please a thorough research before embarking on any story. The Portuguese traders were referring to us as Yoruba, Anago, and lukumi in one of their books written in 1640's . Crowther could not have in any way. Thanks.
Please give us reference to your sources
He could still be the reason why Yoruba was the name chosen and not say, Lukumi as you mentioned.
Yoruba (Ya Riba) vs. Omo Odua
That is the question
I think Yoruba sounds more sweet than Aku..Hence, let's leave it like that.
The hausas used to use the word yariba to refer to unserious people not to be trusted. Later changed to yoruba.
@@nduodiaka-ph9slthe name Yoruba is older than that
@gabrielonibudo5566 the hausas said so.
@@nduodiaka-ph9sl that's not what Yariba means. Yariba isn't even originally Hausa.
It was the Nupe and Ibaariba word for Yarba, a northern Yoruba group and Hausa adopted it for all Yoruba people. It then got adopted back by Yoruba people to refer to all Yoruba people but ultimate it is just a version of Yarba, a Yoruba word.
What does the nane Yoruba mean?
The meaning is lost to history.
The Hausas had called all Yoruba Speakers Yoruba since the 16th Century they didn’t differentiate between the different Yoruba Clans like Ijebu Ekiti, igbomina etc
They called them all Yoruba.
It was the Yoruba people who distinguished between the Yoruba clans where Yoruba meant Oyo people
Yariba in house was used to refer to people that are not serious.
@@nduodiaka-ph9slomo ibo, yariba or yoruba have no meaning in Fulani or hausa, keep fooling yourself. The word yoruba is a praise or nickname to the oyo meaning central king, or king lord over kingdoms.
@omoyemisilver1231 This is what the hausas themselfs said.if you don't know the origin.
Why are you scared to Declare oduduwa country.?
Look at how yorubas have been messing up the zoo, nigeria.
The hausas are right,
Unserios and untrustworthy.
Igbo is also an aku word reffering to the hinterland people as Igbo which became the tribe name of the eri people of South East nigeria
💌💚💌
Excellent job! Case closed. Literatures revealed the long standing debates of where that name came from. At least it is now called with our phonetic Yo-ru-ba while the different lands of odua know which groups they belong to be it Egbas, Oyos, Ijeshas, Ijebus ati bẹbẹ lọ😅.
Yoruba was a slur given to you by the Hausa. Stop making stuff up.
@@2LETLIVE Slur or no slur! What,where and who do you belong to so that I can call you by your father's name?
In all of that beautiful presentation you can only deduced and emphasized the racial slur given to set of people by their neighbors. Well, we are called by so many names but then yoruba as a name is a swag of a word in and of itself.
@danielaloba001 I'm Awori, and we did not descend from Oduduwa. Ijebus are not descendants of Oduduwa. The Egbas are not descendants of Oduduwa either. Which of the Yorubas descended from out of space with your fabricated Oduduwa? It is high time for people like you to speak out and speak the truth. The Yorubas did not descend from a single man who parachuted to Ife. The Ooni of Ife is not an Oba. In fact, the word Oba is foreign to Yoruba. The Yoruba scholars who fabricated this single man named Oduduwa, who came down from heaven with all his entourage to Ife, is a big lie.
@@2LETLIVE it's obvious that you deviate from the context which is the name "Yoruba"and how it was established knowing that it is less than 200 years in print and in use. As for one man came down from heaven and found a race of people according to Yoruba cosmology,pls kindly tell me what the two popular holy books in west African derived the cosmology from? Were there no several verses stated "let us now go down and confound their languages on the earth" gods or angel came from above to the surface here..these stories are not exclusive to the Yorubas alone but many mighty civilizations from Oriental to Western world as well as Europa. Again tell me where did they go wrong given humanity is still searching how they came to be?
I appreciate your efforts concerning the history you narrated, but Each region in Yoruba territory knows their history, saying Yoruba was named by Hausa is totally incorrect , Yoruba itself have a meaning in the old Yoruba astrology and it spiritual that align with, Yoruba calling today derived from kingdoms everyone has it own findings and research,A neighbor can't just name you what you didn't name yourself, despite Ile ife ,Ilesha and other regions in the kingdoms have been existing thousands of years, before the existence of oduduwa, facts that we have common root and language and dialect that connected us together, oduduwa was a popular king in Yoruba history, it doesn't mean every kingdom in Yoruba was oduduwa descendant ,we have a long way to go.
Ajayi crowther was used by western, for their own benefits, even what ajayi crowther translate today was used to weaponize against Yoruba history culture, doesn't align with our true identity
Quotes
,"I have travelled across the length and breadth of Africa and I have not seen one person who is a beggar, who is a thief such wealth I have seen in this country, such high moral values, people of such caliber, that I do not think we would ever conquer this country, unless we break the very backbone of this nation, which is her spiritual and cultural heritage and therefore, I propose that we replace her old and ancient education system, her culture, for if the Africans think that all that is foreign and English is good and greater than their own, they will lose their selfesteem, their native culture and they will become what we want them, a truly dominated nation".
Lord Macaulay's Address to the British Parliament on 2nd Feb 1835
Hausas named them Yaribas meaning professional betrayals .
@@TochukwuNdukwe-dp4zv Always in the eyes of the beholder, uh? Keep betraying yourself and blaming it on Yorubas!
They have name, the name is kuotu ojire. It wasn't Hausa named Oyo Yoruba. The name came out when Omo Kuotu Ojire traded with Arab. Only Yoruba people called Arab Larubawa while Arab called them Yarubawa.
Please, we have a gazette on this. Please don't distort our history. Thanks
I wonder too,if not because of the contraption system they impose on the Yoruba race for being part of Nigeria today ,the same western benefits, each region in Yoruba territory knows their history,a neighbor can't just name you what you didn't name yourself, despite Ile ife ,Ilesha and other regions in the kingdom have been existing thousands of years, before the existence of oduduwa,we have a long way to go
That's the point. There were people in Ile-Ife before the arrival of Oduduwa. Why then should the'kaaro,oojire' people ie the so called' Yoruba' be regarded as descendants of Oduduwa. Let us have a true picture of everything devoid of sentiments.
Hausa and Arabic are from the same language family; the Afro Asiatic family. As a result there are shared words and ultimately it doesn't matter that the Hausa may have gotten it from Arabs as they are distant cousins (linguistically speaking). Also due to geography the Yoruba are more likely to have interactions with the Hausa than Arabs as the southernmost Arabs are found in Chad and Bornu state, the Shuwa Arabs, whom are very far from what is Yoruba land today.
@@traykunableI think the Oduduwa tribe are actually Arabians. Remember all of Africa and what they call the Middle East which is North East Africa. The natives were and still are black Africans. Africans come is different shades and phenotypes but are what we call black people. Orignal Arabs are Africans but through slaving mixed with Central Asians and Caucasian slaves. Though throughout all the Arabic countries there are orignal black men who have been living there for thousands of years. Now also Oduduwa evidence leads out of Mecca or Arabia. Something not unique to other northwest Africans. Before Oduduwa left Arabia where exactly did his tribe come from could be Yemen or all over the Arabian desert. When Oduduwa made his passage into Yoruba lands there were already natives. So yes there are orignal Yoruba people from the lands and foreigners from Arabia. This is why the Oduduwa tribe are Arabs by definition. The Arabic language and Yoruba have numerous similarities and cognates. Many Arabian tribes for centuries even before Mohammed left Arabia into Africa. Into all of North-West Africa. That’s where the name Yarab, Y’araba, Yariba, Yarub, Yaruba come from highlighting the Arabic influence. Also for the language of Arabic the language is not mutual comprehensive by all Arabs. Hundreds of different dialects. A man from Lebanon can not understand a man who speaks Arabic in Mauritania. An Egyptian can not understand a man who speaks Arabic in Chad. Though it’s all Arabic. This is how Yoruba fits this definition. It’s Arabic but that does not mean it’s mutual understanding by all Arabs. Hausa as you mention is an Arabic language, as Kanuri, Mande, Fulani, and many other languages throughout Niger, Mali, Morocco, Algeria, Nigeria, Yemen, Eritrea Ethiopia etc…. Just different dialects which makes them incomprehensible. Yoruba is a rich and very intelligent. When the Alafin histories were saying that Oduduwa came from Mecca. They were not stupid or naive of who they were. Also the Alafin as his historians were proud Ifa followers and could care less for Islam at the time. Arab does not equate Islam. Arabia during that time and Northen Africa was not 100 percent Islamic as we view it now. Many traditional beliefs were being practice with Islam under the fold. Crowther dispute this heavily since he had become christianized. Yet this is not an unusual situation since many other Africans in North West Africa had migrated from Arabia. Arabia is African land originally based on truthful evidence (another topic) as for the originals who lived in Yorubaland before Oduduwa. They took the name Yoruba. The history of the originals is very ancient….. a more difficult scope to analyze but not impossible.
@traykunable Don't make a mistake. We have been talking about more than 2000yrs, not recently at all. I don't know whether I said Herotodus, the Greek geographer, talked about ile Ife. So I am not talking about now. Because we don't really know what is going on, we thought our life began when coloniser came to Africa. Even Portuguese people were coming long time ago be4 coloniser. Even we had what they called osupagio, where people all over the world came to see. Ife was not a small place, if I tell you that Borno origin originated from Yoruba, you will be surprised.
The Benin people (Edo) refer to the Yoruba people originally as "Olukumi". It was the Fulanis/Hausas that named the Olukumi people as as Yariba now corrupted Yoruba.
Do we as a nation speak & understand each other’s native language, whether you are Katanga and I am Ekiti, Egba or Ijebu etc?
*Our Answer is* : Yes! And we call it “Yoruba”
My question is, why do the Hausas call them Yariba, what does Yariba mean in Hausa?
Don't put fire here, lets leave that side aside.
@@safetydeskltd9047 How? I'm trying to learn something here
@safetydeskltd9047 WOW.... It's like the "believe or die and go to hell" Christianity antics. You shouldn't seek knowledge, just believe whatever the hell you're fed. How do you grow? What a shame!
Irrelevant, it's a nickname just like Yorubas had and have many nicknames for them too
History is very important. Not that one is trying to put fire. Imagin the supposed custodian of Oduduwa tribe or yoruba saying that their forefathers descended from heaven with cock or whatever in his hands. This was what they made us believe while growing up, and this is what Ooni of Ife is still holding on to, and he want people to believe all over the world
He wrote the yoruba bible,by translating the english to yoruba. And that’s what we are enjoying today. Some believes that’s Sierra Leonean. No. He’s born at a town called then as “Osogun”, now met than “Iseyin town. He’s captured and sold as a young boy slave to the arabs. But, he’s rescued and saved by the British missionaries, and he’s converted and baptised as a Christian and had a name change. He’s then educated the western way at today’s “Fourah bay college”. God rest and bless his soul
We Are Not Hebrews
We Are Not Bantsus
Why are we like this? Arabs did not feature anywhere in the history of Ajayi crowder. Europeans bought Ajayi Crowther, and the slave ship was intercepted and its human cargoes returned to Sierra Leone. Frankly Arab NEVER featured in coastal West Africa Transatlantic slave trade. It was all done by those who called themselves Christians. Superficial conversion of Heathens to Christians just before they board the ships was one the lies the slave-traders used to justify their heinous trade in their warped minds.
This is commonly known. It must have been a traumatising experience, especially having to witness how most of the enslaved died on board. Nonetheless, despite all the work he did for the Europeans, they betrayed him - the classical case
Thank you for eulogizing Àjàyí Crowther. He translated the English bible into the so called Yoruba' language. He however made some mistakes in his translations.A notable one is translating SATAN as ÈṢÙ. ÈṢÙ in the believe system of the 'kaaro, oojires' the so called Yoruba' is not a rebel. He is a police man that sanitizes the society purnishing those with evil intents to corrupt society. Àjàyí Crowther made that mistake in translation probably because he was taken into slavery as a child and was ignorant of ÈṢÙ in his homeland. The best translation he should have given to the word SATAN in Yoruba is SATAANI.
so glad on this insights, it shows how the great Benin empire was the cradle to development in this region and how their progress directly or indirectly shape the people of this region... Oduduwa has a royal bloodline came to these lands and established the Oyo kingdom and other kingdoms in those lands, uniting the people to a single identity, which is the modern Yoruba
though i see all this as a scheme for the British to marginalize the Edo people and ensure the dynasty and its people to rise to greatness again, giving benefits and rise to smaller tribes in and around its kingdom to ensure they put her down
Crowther was never a Yoruba man but a slave born in England and later moved him to Free Town after missionaries brought him to Nigeria and there he took a Yornba name
For those who feels original identity of Yoruba people was taken away, there is no identity that was taken away, all identities of people under the umbrella term Yoruba today remains intact. what was created was an umbrella identity which was never there, everyone goes by their individual identity and no umbrella identity and Yoruba only serves as umbrella identity
The term YORUBA is the Hausa corruption of the term YOBA, sometimes spelt YEBA or YABA, one of the indigenous names of Old OYO. The Hausa tongue corrupted it to YORIBA, YARIBA and YORUBA, and this name applied to all the people who spoke the related language and dialects that come to known as Yoruba.
I always wondered about this because the elderly people commonly use the word YOBA, or Yoouba instead of Yoruba till date.
The northerners refer to the same western Nigerian people as yaribawa till today
"When the missionaries came to Africa they had the Bible and we had the land. They said 'Let us pray.' We closed our eyes. When we opened them we had the Bible and they had the land."
Yes, the most legendary quote by the late bishop Desmond Tutu. He had a wonderful sense of humour
Yes, brother. When our ancestors pray, by pouring libation, they do not close their eyes. There is transparency. Must we close our eyes when prayers are to rendered? Should a ' God incarnate close his eyes because somebody is calling the name of a foreign god?
Nobody took our land. WE STILL have our lands, and are even more united now than before the Missionaries came.Yorubas no longer fight wars amongst themselves, or take Slaves of their own brethren.All thanks to those Missionaries.
Is that not what the Nigeria pastors are doing. They say let us start the church before you know they are handing over to their children.
The origin of the reason why Yoruba evolved or the reason why the Oyo people were referred to as Yoruba doesn’t seem to have been outlined in this video. Just the evolution of the word. It’s also history from the lens of European documentation. The oral history passed down in someway might not jive well with this. How the kings existed and were supposed descendants of Oduduwa from Alake to Egba. Egba people might be yet to adopt the name Yoruba but I doubt they saw themselves as distinct from Oyo people.
The Yorubas are actually part of the lost tribe of Israel during the time of the Biblical King Jeroboam or Yeroboam after the Assyrian invasion that led the kingdom into a land that was later known as Africa and West Africa, then majorly Nigeria.
All people come from Africa. Stop spreading BS.
Stop spreading BS. This is false.
I know some of the modern era ancestors believed this but they learnt it from Muslims who they thought were more knowledgeable on the matter but they weren't.
Why is that where ever Christianity goes on the African continent they are native people who comes out and say they are also a lost tribe of Israel.
It never fails.
@@oseiosei6649 it's not just a Christian thing. According to Bello of the Sokoto Caliphate, he and the Yoruba claimed Canaanite origins.
😂😂
After Benin go say na Empire, no be Kingdom of Benin i see for the map😂
Started as a kingdom but later get bigger into an empire, every empire started as a small kingdom before becoming an empire
The name Yoruba was coin by Samuel Ajayi crowder, however at first was rejected by most of the Yoruba leaders but after delibration it was accepted to describe the name of the people that speak this similar language but variation in accent. However for me. Yoruba people are people of verse wisdom, to the extent that they standardised how you name anything according to Yorubas tradition following a basic principle => "Ile lan nwo ki a to so omo loruko" surfice to say you look at events that surround the birth of a child before naming that child or anything, at the end of the day the name must tell a stoy about that child or thing. I beleive Samuel is very much awared of this principle before comming up with the name Yoruba. Most modern yoruba people could not explain the true meaning of the name Yoruba as it tanslate to nothing when you, say it which in my own opinion contradict the principle of naming, but we need to also note that one of the practice of Yoruba name is ability to create a short form of the name. I.e. Adenike => Nike or Omowinmi could become Wunmi...
continue from above. if you realy want to find the truth of the Yoruba name, the first thing you need to do is to locate the founder of the first Yoruba kingdom. "Oranmiyan" . You need to take a trip down to Ife where Oranmiyan left a big obelisk staff, on this staff there are 2 distinct symbols. I beleive this symbol is the name given to OYO, the obelisk is a message not anything to worship but we all know the mind set of our people. Also we should not eliminate the fact that Oranmiyan is a religious priest. the symbol on the staff has been well researched and its said to be the hebrew letter "Yord and Hi" =>YH for me something made this more interesting, there is a word thats often use to describe OYO people.. "OYO ayo omo le" this word does not make any sense since OYO was not a person, no where in Yoruba history that says a person was once call OYO and Oranmiyan found OYO. so whats it? this word "OYO ayo omo le" is a mutilated word that has lost its correct pronounciation after many years the correct word is "OYO AYO IMOLE" => IMOLE is LIGHT then what is OYO=> is the name of GOD one that appear and anytime he appear he does it with light. .. I know this may be difficult to swallow, but if you take sometime to reason you will see, what I am talking about this word OYO is use to describe the people of OYO as the children of OYO ..surfice to say children of God.. "OYO HA" or "OYO Hii" meaning the one that appear that we worship in modern Yoruba it would have been written as "OYO Hi yin".. more
Now that we know the reasons why Oranmiyan left that symbol, and the correct phrase of "OYO ayo imole" there is also a word that persist in yoruba language till today, we also use it to describe GOD, we say "Arugbo Ojo" ancient of days also the story of OYO is "Aro Ba" meaning since beginging of time it was.. "OYO ARO BA" =OYO ANCIENT OF DAY= this word OYO ARO BA became more mutilated by other tribes from the north our neighbor who could not pronounc the word propally became YAROBA =YARUBA=> " OYO ARO BA", Yoruba people will never accept a derogatory name to call themselve contrary to none Yoruba's beleive, as a Yoruba our name is very important to us, we guide it that no one want to stain his or her name.. so the Name Yoruba is not to be guest or assumed, its YORUBA mean children of ancient of days "OYO"... knowledge is power, where someone owns end another person own begins... "Ogbon ologbon kin je ki a pe agba ni were".. a wise person will think and ask question why?... LET ME ASK ANYONE OF YOU THIS QUESTION => what is the meaning of "ILEKUN"=> door why did Yoruba call it "ILEKUN"
THE YORUBA PEOPLE ARE NOT A SEPARATE RACE OF PEOPLE. THE SO-CALLED YORUBA PEOPLE ARE AN ETHNIC GROUP THAT BELONGED TO THE NEGROID RACE. PLEASE 🙏 KEEP THIS IMPORTANT FACT IN MIND.
“Negroid” is just another misnomer like Yoruba. It means similar to a “negro” - there were no negros in Africa before the Europeans decided to name Africans so who already had plenty of names for themselves
The term "race" used to have a wider meaning. They also referred to the "Anglo race" in older books but today no one would say English people are a race unto themselves.
It basically just used to mean a type of something but in time, narrowed specifically to the 3, 4 or 6 races(types) of man.
From the above, it is clear to say that the yorubas never had a common name, but were named by the dialects or area they were found. But my question is how did the youba word came to exist. If the fulanis were calling us yariba at that time it means that they heard a name that was similar and due to their way of pronounciation, bastardised it.
I AM NOT A YORUBA. I AM AN IJEBU. All our kith and kin in Benin Republic, Togo, Ghana, Cote D'Ivoire are referred to as Anago. That's the name the slaves took to Brazil. How can I accept Yar'banza which is the root of Yoruba. In an old British dictionary, which was discovered, Yar'iba was translated as "Treacherous people". This is one of the grievous errors of Chief Obafemi Awolowo who was "obsessively obsessed" (acc to Prof Billy Dudley) with ruling Nigeria that he failed to pay attention to this issue of Yoruba and Alaafin Aolę's curse.
Yar'banza is a concept of abuse by the Hausas and or the Mandingos for the Oyo people with whom they were trading. It means treacherous bastard. How on earth does one accept that as a name?
Yoruba is not a race. It is an ethnic group.
You've chosen not to have sense. Listen to learn
From Israel