TilThisDay.

2.7K posts

TilThisDay.

TilThisDay.

@Ugoville2

Nobody is perfect

NIGERIA Katılım Ağustos 2009
159 Takip Edilen50 Takipçiler
TilThisDay.
TilThisDay.@Ugoville2·
@YorubaFeminist Too late for wetin? Lol..the way una dey feel important eeh makes me laugh. All these bragging no pass Lagos and Tinubu presidency. I dunno where else una better pass Igbo.
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The Yoruba Feminist
The Yoruba Feminist@YorubaFeminist·
Too late to share this story now. Things will never be the same. Those of you who knew better stayed silent while Yorùbás were being labeled all sorts of things online for everyone to see. History was being rewritten right before your eyes, and open hostility was directed at the very people who have consistently stood as your true allies, yet you said nothing. Now you want to share this?
-valar morghulis-@eldivine

My dad had a similar experience. He owned three FMCG stores in Yaba, Tejuosho to be precise. After the war he didn't even come back to Lagos immediately because he felt he might not be welcome. Instead he moved to PH then to Sapele and started doing imports of sewing machines (many Igbo people started itinerant sewing which led them to Okrika). He couldn't crack the business however so his friend who had moved to Cotonou asked him to come join him. On his way there he passed through Lagos and decided to stop by his former area (two full years after the war ended) and found out that his long term neighbor a Yoruba man had kept his 3 shops running, restocking it and keeping all the records. When he saw my dad he told him he'd been looking for a way to reach him since the war ended, even sending messages but post war craziness meant no way to find him. He totaled the money he'd managed plus the cost of buying the stores and everything added up to £9,000. That's what my dad took plus the £6,000 he made from selling off his old business and started doing shoe and textile imports in Lome from 1973 onwards. Many such cases.

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-valar morghulis-
-valar morghulis-@eldivine·
My dad had a similar experience. He owned three FMCG stores in Yaba, Tejuosho to be precise. After the war he didn't even come back to Lagos immediately because he felt he might not be welcome. Instead he moved to PH then to Sapele and started doing imports of sewing machines (many Igbo people started itinerant sewing which led them to Okrika). He couldn't crack the business however so his friend who had moved to Cotonou asked him to come join him. On his way there he passed through Lagos and decided to stop by his former area (two full years after the war ended) and found out that his long term neighbor a Yoruba man had kept his 3 shops running, restocking it and keeping all the records. When he saw my dad he told him he'd been looking for a way to reach him since the war ended, even sending messages but post war craziness meant no way to find him. He totaled the money he'd managed plus the cost of buying the stores and everything added up to £9,000. That's what my dad took plus the £6,000 he made from selling off his old business and started doing shoe and textile imports in Lome from 1973 onwards. Many such cases.
Polyglot adedeji Odulesi@polyglotodulesi

During the Nigerian Civil War, many Igbo people fled cities like Lagos, leaving behind houses and property. Alex Ekwueme (then a young architect) left his house in Apapa. His neighbour, Otunba Subomi Balogun, a banker did not seize the property. Instead, he removed intruders from the house, renovated it and rented it out while Ekwueme was away. He carefully kept all the rent proceeds. When the war ended and Ekwueme returned, Balogun handed back the house to him and gave him a full envelope of all the rent collected Ekwueme was reportedly shocked, because many others lost their properties during that period. About a decade later, Ekwueme became Vice President under President Shehu Shagari (Second Republic, 1979–1983). Subomi Balogun wanted to establish his own bank but faced significant hurdles at the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN). Officials resisted because it was unprecedented for a private Nigerian citizen to own a commercial bank without foreign partners; there were also political suspicions (some alleged he might use it to finance certain politicians). After failing to get traction through official channels, Balogun turned to his old friend. One Sunday after Church Service, he and his wife "cornered" Ekwueme at the Cathedral Church in Marina, Lagos. They physically grabbed Ekwueme and his wife's clothing to get past security and plead their case. Ekwueme listened, reassured him, and instructed him to come to the Federal Executive Council meeting he would preside over (as Shagari was absent). That very Thursday, the Finance Minister called Balogun to confirm that the license had been approved on Ekwueme's instruction. This paved the way for FCMB and reportedly opened doors for other indigenous banks. Balogun later opened an FCMB branch in Ekwueme's hometown of Oko (Anambra State) in continuation of their friendship. We love ourselves, it is the politicians that are dividing us.

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TilThisDay.
TilThisDay.@Ugoville2·
@gharkekalesh The snake like lay there lie " if u wanna kill me, kill me. I've done my job."
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Ghar Ke Kalesh
Ghar Ke Kalesh@gharkekalesh·
The man who came to catch the snake paid a heavy price for playing with it, a painful de**ath in a live video within 3 minutes!
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Sky News
Sky News@SkyNews·
People have marched through some of South Africa's largest cities to protest against immigration. Sky's Africa correspondent @YousraElbagir witnessed a man being Tasered by a protester in central Johannesburg ⬇️
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2 bit
2 bit@WrongTurnNorth·
@cecild84 Im South African and i can tell u that this is just pure criminality. May these men rest in peace. Condolences to their families. This video shouldn’t be on the internet.
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Sahel Revolutionary Soldier
Two legitimate AFRICAN traders were shut dead by a Xenophobic mob who went to their shops, took their belongings and shut them at point blank range. All recorded on CCTV. The government and police are doing nothing
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Uloaku
Uloaku@ateen4eva·
@Ugoville2 @Hezekiah222 You didn’t have to comment ! Did I say it wasn’t passed well? Where did I say something do em English? Abeg shift.
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TilThisDay.
TilThisDay.@Ugoville2·
@khulidakaybee @fweshtiny For any successful heist, drug business, trafficking, prostitution and other evil/illegal activities in South Africa, there's an SA citizen colluding and empowering the perpetrators.
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IamKhuliNotChana🇿🇦
IamKhuliNotChana🇿🇦@khulidakaybee·
@fweshtiny Broe in all honesty if we dont fight for this country in 10 years its gonna be become like Nigeria and we would be force to also love the country, its really not about freedom, you people just destroy anything you touch, I mean have you seen Lagos,Harare and all these countries?
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Uloaku
Uloaku@ateen4eva·
@Hezekiah222 One chance …criminals . Nna suo Igbo Biko..or pidgin .
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Adugo_Chioma
Adugo_Chioma@sweety_vieve·
My suitors are from Ngwa, Mbaise, Abakaliki,Nsukka Anambra parents:👇👇👇👇
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Chude
Chude@Chude_ND1·
🇫🇷 Vs 🇺🇸 I new knew Roosters are this strong!
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TilThisDay.
TilThisDay.@Ugoville2·
@VideosVuvu That is not a black mamba, and the snake is a constrictor. That's the only reason it could curl around and hold down the eagle. Mambas don't constrict only non-venomous snakes do.
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Vuvu Videos
Vuvu Videos@VideosVuvu·
A deadly Black Mamba is snatched mid-air by a Snake Eagle… but the hunter becomes the hunted as the snake twists free and locks onto the eagle’s talons in a brutal struggle. Before either can escape, lions arrive on the scene, turning the chaos into a full-scale battle-leaving the trapped eagle with almost no chance of breaking free. #videosvuvu
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TilThisDay.
TilThisDay.@Ugoville2·
@Odogwu3430464 @treazyblaq 🤣🤣🤣 Nwanne butuo. I'm just telling you our dishes are loved more because they taste better. It's sad that other people are renaming it because of the Igbo factor, or they can't pronounce igbo names. That's not an excuse, tho.
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Odogwu✈️🫥
Odogwu✈️🫥@Odogwu3430464·
@Ugoville2 @treazyblaq Bro abeg don’t got me angry this afternoon, take correction and stop renaming Igbo food English name just to fit in. Be conservative about Igbo culture and prestige.
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Treazy
Treazy@treazyblaq·
It’s Ofe Egusi, not melon soup. It’s Ofe Onugbu, not bitterleaf soup. It’s Ofe Nsala, not white soup. It’s Ofe Ogbono, not draw soup. It’s Ofe Akwu, not banga stew. It’s Abacha, not African salad. It’s Akpụ, not swallow or fufu. Why is it always Igbo food that gets renamed, simplified, and translated for everyone else’s comfort? You don’t see that happening with eforiro, afang, ewedu, amala, or gbegiri, they’re called exactly what they are. Call our food what it is.
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TilThisDay.
TilThisDay.@Ugoville2·
@Odogwu3430464 @treazyblaq Because it's not loved like igbo foods. Other tribes cook igbo dishes..it's only the yoruba that cook amala and ewedu.
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TilThisDay.
TilThisDay.@Ugoville2·
@Voiceofyoruba Tomorrow, them go say na them start igba ndieze (band that praises the king).
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VOICEOFYORUBA
VOICEOFYORUBA@Voiceofyoruba·
What’s Yoruba band business in Igbo traditional marriage in the first place ? Igbo tradition marriage is royalty not noise
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