Home News Nigeria must acknowledge her own complicity in colonialism, By Benjamin Maiangwa and...

Nigeria must acknowledge her own complicity in colonialism, By Benjamin Maiangwa and Muhammad Dan Suleiman

17

This is expressed through identity battles which sometimes harm people of “other” religions and ethnicities. Such battles have even led to a call for the state to be dissolved.

In our paper, we trace the history of how this came about. We use frameworks provided by three philosophers and historians. To trace the first phase – what we refer to as the invented phase, from 1885 to 1914 – we use a framework by historians Eric Hobsbawm and Terence Ranger.

The second phase we describe as the imagined phase. For this, we draw on a framework provided by political historian Benedict Anderson. Finally, we look at the formation of ‘native-settler’ identities as set out by political philosophers such as Mahmood Mamdani. They describe the colonial construction of a dominant majority and minority based on race, ethnicity and religion.

We assert in our paper that the first phase of adversarial identity formation in Nigeria was ‘invented’ by foreigners. The second phase was born out of the ‘imaginations’ of colonially anointed African leaders. And the last phase has been primarily by Africans’ own making and design.

We conclude that Africans need to take responsibility for their own actions. They need to consciously expose the effects that the colonial project had – and continues to have. And they need to look for ways to undo these. This includes accepting responsibility in instances where the mentality of coloniality has been internalised.

Three phases unpacked
The first phase, the ‘invented’, came out of splitting and joining societies along ethnic and cultural lines. For example, under British colonial rule, people were placed into different groups – which cut short their history and upset their social arrangements. While British colonialism sought to form one Nigeria, it created destructive divisions. This happened in two ways.

The colonial administration created physical borders to demarcate people and enable economic exploitation. Unsurprisingly, many conflicts have arisen over identity tied to power distribution and the control of resources. Groups that once flourished together with minor tensions and skirmishes have become intractable enemies due to these meaningless borderlines.

Psychological borders were also created to build hatred and bigotry. This can be seen in the way black skin and Africa are perceived or talked about. For instance, colourism favours black people of lighter hue while stigmatising and marginalising black people of darker hues.

Centuries of normalised anti-blackness have unsurprisingly resulted in skin bleaching and hair straightening practices. These are still common on the continent.

This form of colonialism remains in the oversimplification and generalisation of African practices and cultures to associate them only with negative connotations and undesirable traits.

Acts of creating difference were continued during the second phase (between 1914 and 1960). In this period British colonialism promulgated several policies to control African people. Leading scholars of Nigeria’s colonial and postcolonial societies such as Adiele Afigbo, Claude Ake and Peter Ekeh have set out how this was done.

For example, the North of Nigeria was ruled distinctly through an indirect system that governed through Fulani and Hausa aristocrats or “subcolonials” as described by Moses Ochonu.

These sorts of policies, as Peace Scholar Surulola Eke wrote:

facilitated the colonial objective of nurturing and exacerbating an “us” vs. “them,” Muslim vs. Christian, northerner vs. southerner, and Hausa–Fulani vs. Yoruba vs. Igbo syndrome in Nigeria.

The third phase can be subdivided into two periods. The first was from 1954 when preparations for independence started, through independence to just around the Nigeria-Biafra civil war (1967–1970). The second was the period starting from perhaps 1979 to the present.

The first phase saw the beginning of the quest for political dominance and superiority by the three major ethnic groups in Nigeria – Yoruba, “Hausa-Fulani”, and Igbo. All three groups, representing their respective regions of East, West, and North, rigorously competed for the dominance of the political space. The result was that the postcolonial state continued – and continues – to design its statecraft based on the colonial legacy.

The third phase has its roots in the political decision of elites to create a federal system of laws and social categories that hinged on where a person was born. It created a context in which post-independence Nigerian leaders exploited ethnic and religious sentiments to get political and social patronages.

Next steps
We conclude that the most enduring hindrance to national unity in Nigeria is not that colonialists created ethnicities and traditions. It is that Nigerians make them now.

Colonialism cannot continue to be responsible for the divisions and clashes that tear at the Nigerian state. Given the peculiar ethno-politics of the groups, even dissolving the federation would leave them with internal strife. The modern Nigerian state needs to look hard at what it has created. It must come up with practical Nigeria-specific solutions to continued tensions arising from paranoia and distrust of groups “othered” in strictly ethno-religious terms.

The postcolonial thinker Sabelo Ndlovu-Gatsheni argues this process would entail a journey of “self-critique, self-negation, and self-rediscovery”.

This needs to take into account the role of every sphere of Nigerian society in creation of mutually exclusive identities that deny the legitimacy and existence of the “other”.

A process like this could redeem Africa from inferior standards and complexes that justify behaviour like corruption and violence. But, crucially, African countries like Nigeria must start this process by identifying and acknowledging their own complicity in coloniality. This would require a shift in the concentration of blame and faultfinding on external forces.The Conversation

Muhammad Dan Suleiman, Research Fellow/Sessional Lecturer in Political Science and International Relations, University of Western Australia and Benjamin Maiangwa, Teaching Fellow in International Relations and Peace and Conflict Studies, Durham University.

Source: theafricareport

17 COMMENTS

  1. Magnificent goods from you, man. I have understand your stuff
    previous to and you are just extremely great.

    I really like what you have bought right here,
    certainly like what you’re saying and the best way
    through which you say it. You’re making it entertaining and you continue to care for
    to stay it smart. I can’t wait to read far more from you.

    That is really a tremendous site.

    My blog … info why, tinyurl.com,

  2. Hi there to every body, it’s my first pay a visit of this blog; this blog consists of amazing and
    genuinely excellent data designed for readers.

    Also visit my web blog; on info, tinyurl.com,

  3. Thanks for the auspicious writeup. It in reality was a amusement account it.
    Look complex to far added agreeable from you! However, how
    can we keep up a correspondence?

    Look at my site :: info off (tinyurl.com)

  4. Undeniably believe that which you stated. Your favorite reason appeared to be on the web the simplest thing
    to be aware of. I say to you, I definitely get annoyed while people consider worries that they just do not know about.
    You managed to hit the nail upon the top and also defined out the whole thing without having side effect
    , people can take a signal. Will likely be back to get more.
    Thanks

    Take a look at my page – cheapest flight tickets

  5. I’m not sure why but this website is loading extremely slow for me.
    Is anyone else having this issue or is it a issue on my end?

    I’ll check back later and see if the problem still exists.

    Look into my webpage – fly tickets

  6. Wow! This blog looks just like my old one! It’s on a entirely
    different subject but it has pretty much the same layout and
    design. Great choice of colors!

    Check out my site: airline flights

  7. Thank you for the good writeup. It in fact was a
    amusement account it. Look advanced to more added agreeable from you!
    By the way, how could we communicate?

    Check out my website gamefly

  8. Greetings! Quick question that’s entirely off topic. Do you know how to make
    your site mobile friendly? My weblog looks weird when browsing from my iphone.
    I’m trying to find a theme or plugin that might be able to fix this problem.
    If you have any suggestions, please share. Many thanks!

    Feel free to surf to my web page: gamefly

  9. Appreciating the time and energy you put into your
    site and detailed information you provide. It’s nice to come across a blog every once in a while that isn’t info the (tinyurl.com)
    same unwanted rehashed information. Wonderful read!
    I’ve saved your site and I’m adding your RSS feeds to my Google account.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Exit mobile version