celebrity radar - gossips
The Forgotten Heroes Who Built Nigeria
The Forgotten Heroes Who Built Nigeria.
By George Omagbemi Sylvester | Published by saharaweeklyng.com
They gave us a nation, we gave them silence. It is time to remember.
History is never neutral. It is either remembered with honor or buried with neglect. In Nigeria today, too many of our NATION-BUILDERS – men and women who labored, sacrificed and sometimes died to give us a country, have been reduced to footnotes in dusty textbooks, if mentioned at all. We celebrate political survivalists and forget the visionaries. We elevate temporary rulers and ignore those who laid the bricks of our independence, our institutions and our unity.
Yet, as the historian John Henrik Clarke once said: “History is a clock that people use to tell their political and cultural time of day. It is also a compass they use to find themselves on the map of human geography.” When Nigeria forgets her heroes, she loses both her clock and her compass.
Who Built Nigeria?
The popular narrative reduces nation-building to a few familiar names ie Nnamdi Azikiwe, Obafemi Awolowo, Ahmadu Bello and Tafawa Balewa. Indeed, they were towering figures. But Nigeria was not the handiwork of four men. A longer roll call reveals activists, journalists, unionists, women leaders and intellectuals who carried the heavy stones of struggle.
Herbert Macaulay, often called the father of Nigerian nationalism, ignited the fire long before independence was in sight. Through the Nigerian National Democratic Party (NNDP) and later the National Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons (NCNC), he planted the seed of self-rule.
Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti, one of Africa’s most fearless women, led protests against colonial taxation, founded women’s organizations and fought for suffrage decades before feminism became a fashionable word. She was so effective that the colonial government once described her as “a danger to the British Empire.”
Margaret Ekpo, through unionism and politics, championed women’s rights and national liberation. She turned markets into platforms of resistance and inspired countless women to join political action.
Michael Imoudu, the labor leader, shook the colonial economy by organizing strikes that proved the Nigerian worker was no longer a silent tool. His defiance weakened the colonial state more effectively than many speeches.
Alvan Ikoku, an educationist, made sure that independence would not only be political but also intellectual. His relentless push for free and compulsory primary education laid the foundation for Nigeria’s intellectual capital.
Anthony Enahoro, who, at just 30 years old, moved the historic motion for Nigeria’s independence in 1953. Few Nigerians today even know his name.
These are not just names. They are the scaffolding without which Nigeria’s house would never have been built.
Why We Forgot Them.
Why does Nigeria forget its heroes?
First, politics of convenience. Our political class has always preferred personalities who fit their regional or party narrative. Thus, textbooks and public discourse highlight “ACCEPTABLE” figures while downplaying others.
Second, lack of historical infrastructure. Unlike Ghana with its Kwame Nkrumah Mausoleum or South Africa with its Apartheid Museum, Nigeria has no serious national museum of independence, no well-curated memorials, no state-driven national archive accessible to students. Memory has no monuments, so it fades.
Third, deliberate amnesia. Leaders often prefer citizens who cannot connect past failures to present misrule. If you do not remember that corruption scandals derailed the First Republic, you will not notice the rhyme when it happens again.
Finally, our cultural weakness in record-keeping. We celebrate birthdays and burials but neglect institutional memory. The result is a nation where an entire generation may know more about foreign celebrities than about their own freedom fighters.
Why Remembering Matters.
Forgetting heroes is not just disrespect; it is dangerous. When young Nigerians grow up without knowledge of the sacrifices that secured their citizenship, they become cynical, rootless and easily manipulated.
The Nobel laureate Chinua Achebe warned: “A people without the knowledge of their past history, origin and culture is like a tree without roots.” Nigeria today is dangerously rootless. Our youth consume imported histories while their own heroes gather dust in silence.
Remembering matters because:
It instills pride. Heroes are mirrors. When citizens see that ordinary Nigerians achieved extraordinary things, they believe in their own agency.
It teaches lessons. Funmilayo Kuti’s defiance, Imoudu’s organizing, Ikoku’s persistence; these are models of civic courage.
It builds unity. Heroes came from every region, every tribe. Their collective story undermines today’s poisonous tribalism.
A Nation’s Debt.
What do we owe the forgotten heroes? We owe them more than monuments. We owe them integration into our civic life. That means:
Curriculum reform – Every Nigerian child should know these names before they learn about foreign presidents or monarchs.
National Heroes’ Day – A public holiday dedicated not to a single leader but to all freedom fighters. Ghana celebrates Founders’ Day; why not Nigeria?
Memorialization – National monuments, renamed streets and scholarships that keep their legacy alive.
Public storytelling – Documentaries, films, plays and books that bring their struggles into popular culture. Nollywood spends billions telling fictional stories but often ignores the real drama of our liberation.
Lessons for Today.
If the heroes taught us anything, it is that nations are built by sacrifice, not slogans. Herbert Macaulay risked imprisonment; Funmilayo Kuti risked her life; Imoudu risked his livelihood. Compare that with today’s politicians, who risk nothing but the inconvenience of defending ill-gotten wealth.
Nigeria’s new generation must recover that spirit. Without heroes, we will remain a country of spectators waiting for miracles. With heroes, we will once again believe that history bends when people push.
The late Nelson Mandela once said: “Courage is not the absence of fear – it’s inspiring others to move beyond it.” Our forgotten heroes inspired, moved and gave us a nation. Now it is our turn to remember, honor and emulate.
Final Verdict.
A nation that buries its heroes is digging its own grave. Nigeria’s crisis is not just economic or political; it is also mnemonic – a crisis of memory. Until we reclaim the forgotten heroes who built Nigeria, we will continue to stumble, rootless and rudderless.
The call is simple but urgent: teach their names, tell their stories, build their monuments. Because if we forget the builders, the building will collapse.
Let the children of tomorrow never say of us: they inherited a nation, but they betrayed its memory.
celebrity radar - gossips
Exclusive: Omo’ba Titi Jeje on His Journey From Filmmaking to Politics — And the Leader Who Made It Possible
Exclusive: Omo’ba Titi Jeje on His Journey From Filmmaking to Politics — And the Leader Who Made It Possible
By SpotlightHub
In an exclusive conversation, Omo’ba Titi Jeje—a respected film director, producer, African storyteller, and cultural custodian—reflects on his remarkable journey from the world of storytelling to the heart of grassroots politics. Today, he serves as the Media Aide to Hon. Agbaje Lukmon Abiodun, the Chairman of Ayobo-Ipaja Local Council Development Area (LCDA), a role he describes as both humbling and transformative.
“My career as a filmmaker and cultural advocate opened doors for me on global platforms,” he begins. “But stepping into politics, serving directly under a leader of Hon. Agbaje’s caliber, is something I could never have achieved on my own. He saw beyond my art, beyond my cultural work, and believed in me in a way few others ever did.”
According to Omo’ba Titi Jeje, his transition into politics was not just about opportunity but about vision—Hon. Agbaje’s vision. Known for his passion for mentoring and raising the next generation of leaders, the Chairman has made it his mission to entrust young men and women with real responsibilities.
“Tutoring young and great minds has always been his call as a leader,” Jeje explains. “And I am living proof of that. His trust and mentorship didn’t just give me a position—it gave me a platform to grow, to serve, and to amplify the voices of our people.”
While his achievements in the creative industry remain a source of pride, Jeje is quick to emphasize that his political growth cannot be told without acknowledging Hon. Agbaje’s pivotal role. He credits the Chairman’s belief in his ability as the defining force behind his appointment and continued success.
“I can’t deny my own work has brought me far,” he concludes. “But the truth is, my story today in politics is incomplete without Hon. Agbaje Lukmon Abiodun. He believed, he trusted, and he lifted me—and that is leadership at its finest.”
For Omo’ba Titi Jeje, this is more than a career milestone; it is a calling. A calling made possible by a leader who continues to inspire a new generation of Nigerians to dream, serve, and lead.
celebrity radar - gossips
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celebrity radar - gossips
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