Sunday, April 02, 2017
Nigeria, Nigerians, and Tribalism
Tribalism is
to Nigeria what Racism is to America.
Majority of
Nigerians are oblivious as to how tribalism works, especially the ones who have
never left their regions; think of the Yoruba man who has never left Western
Nigeria, or the Igbo who has never left the East.
They don’t
really care about tribalism and their only insight into tribalism would be the
hate/distrust people have for each other which they hide under statements like,
“Yoruba people are like this…”
But for members
of ‘minority’ tribes in Nigeria, tribalism is something you “eat” every day,
especially when your state or local government area is too small to contain
you, and you drift to the other people’s side because we are one Nigeria.
You’ll experience it in little ways, from school, market, church, on the road
etc.
People will
treat you different because you are not one of them.
Anyway this
girl, did I mention that she is yellow? So, of course she’s Igbo. She bought and went.
Me I was dragging N100.
Finally the lady sold to me, and maybe she saw the look in my eyes like, you
just sold the same thing for N200. She smiled sheepishly and said, “Omo Igbo
ni, she get money.” She said with a wink under the assumption that I am
Yoruba because I stringed a few words together while we were haggling. LOL.
Another time
I was out late so I decided to take a taxi. The friend I was out with,
bargained with the taxi driver, a smiling old man, and he agreed. So, I got in.
On our way
he started speaking Yoruba, I wasn’t in the mood to even try to banter with
him, so I said, “I am not Yoruba, I don’t understand what you’re saying.” That
is how oga changed face, and said he was no longer taking N1,000. He dropped me
half way because I refused to add a dime for him.
On the
street I live, all the traders sell at exorbitant prices for me and my sister.
It’s a Yoruba area, they know we are not Yoruba so it’s okay to cheat us. Well,
when I found out, case closed. I buy all I need before going home; including
biscuits.
This is not
just a Yoruba thing, the northern guy I buy pineapples from daily has sold
pineapples at N50 for a man who came and was speaking Hausa with him, right in
front of me, while I buy same pineapple for N100 from him every day. I asked
him why he smiled and said, ‘na my brother.’
Igbo folks
have sold things for me at cheaper rates because I stringed a few Igbo words
together, (5 years of schooling in the East) and I became their sister while
they didn’t budge for the other non-sisters and non-brothers.
I remember
my time in the East and how people always reminded me I wasn’t Igbo. From
church to school, to the hostel, and it wasn’t always pleasant.
Lagos is
supposed to be one of the most detribalized cities in Nigeria, but even here,
the people you interact with on a regular basis: traders, taxi drivers, okada
riders, often treat you different once they realise you’re not ‘one of them’.
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