Professor O. E. Uya: Ethnicity in Nigeria & the concept of Old Calabar

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  • Опубліковано 2 гру 2024
  • Prof. Uya instructs: “The notion of being Ibibio, or being Igbo, or Hausa-Fulani or Yoruba, is a very recent phenomenon in the history of Nigeria. Nigerians knew themselves in terms of their place of origin: ‘I am from Calabar!' Not, ‘I am Efik’. And ‘I’m from Calabar’ doesn’t mean ‘I was born in Calabar’, it means, ‘I have lived in Calabar’. . . . There was no fixity in terms of ethnicity, in many parts of Africa. The fixity came with the colonial period, where they decided that to administer you, you must have a chief. And in this area, the chiefs were not there! So you had to create chiefs. And you create chiefs for people, so ‘you are now Ibibio, and because you are Ibibio, you must have a chief’, and so on. In Oron we have a concept called ‘Ibibi-Oro’. Or if you were very elegant, they called you ‘Efik-Oro’. [There was a fluid concept of ‘ethnicity’]. Calabar is a melting pot of cultures. Ekpo masquerade is typical of Ibibio people, and it wasn’t played in Oron until the 1930s, and in Oron it was never an instrument of government, but is used as entertainment. Once the House of Chiefs was created in 1952, the Quas wanted a representative chief, and the Quas and Efiks began to quarrel for the first time in history. These are political struggles that have no cultural value in Calabar.
    Up to 1956 people of Usagade used to come to Oron for join community meetings. In the 1950s when I came to Calabar, there were more Igbo people in Calabar than Ibibio people.
    By the 1830s, the concept of Old Calabar had expanded into Umon, Oron, and Bakassi. The Dairy of Antera Duke describes that the notion of Old Calabar had expanded tremendously through the trade of Efiks.
    The story of Calabar is yet to be told, because of the unwillingness of people here to talk about it. An Efik person will not write the history of Calabar, but only of the Efik people. Author E.U. Aye was not a historian, he was a geographer, yet he wrote about Efik history (to the exclusion of the other groups). Another writer named Akak was a ‘social commentator’, and not even a good one. Monday Noah was Uya’s student at Howard University. Many historians in Calabar have confined themselves to the English records, and not bothered with the documents in Spanish, Portuguese, German, and French. There are a lot of gaps in Efik history!"

КОМЕНТАРІ • 10

  • @EyoAsuquo-gl2gh
    @EyoAsuquo-gl2gh Рік тому

    Extremely illuminating, a great historian's take

  • @gasdemup
    @gasdemup Рік тому

    Excellent work...The man was ahead of his time....

  • @HistoriesPast
    @HistoriesPast Рік тому

    Thank you for this video.

  • @localguidesconnect6301
    @localguidesconnect6301 2 роки тому +1

    Sustitulos en los vídeos 📹 por favor

  • @aniefiok1338
    @aniefiok1338 3 місяці тому +1

    It is either this man doesn't know his history or he is biased . just laughably bias😂😂. Did he said that the Ibibio just migrated recently, what?! The Ibibio Tribe Existed long before ever The Efik and the Iron you are talking about was known. But am not surprised because your history comes from 1950 according to you

    • @purpleedel
      @purpleedel 2 місяці тому

      What is you're argument?

  • @michaeljoseph7703
    @michaeljoseph7703 2 роки тому +3

    This man knows nothing about history

  • @AmahJones
    @AmahJones 2 місяці тому

    The Ibibios were the original inhabitants of Usak Edet (Isangele). Mr. Uya is a bloody idiot for his anti-Ibibio remarks. If Ivor Miller is gullible enough to believe his lies and concoctions, that's his problem. Ibibios were already in Calabar long before the Efiks migrated there. If there were more Ibo people than Ibibios, it's simply because more Ibos migrated there seeking opportunities.

    • @OffiongBassey-sf1sm
      @OffiongBassey-sf1sm 2 місяці тому

      You know nothing so rest

    • @purpleedel
      @purpleedel 2 місяці тому

      Okon Uya is a history professor. What is your qualification, and what sources do you have to back up your claim?