Chukwukaima

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Chukwukaima

Chukwukaima

@loluzeee

Iyawo Alhajin’t. Nothing to see here( But you can click the link in the bio if you’re nosy). Not Igbo

Katılım Nisan 2022
674 Takip Edilen766 Takipçiler
Yasmeen
Yasmeen@theyasmeeniah·
Eid Mubarakkkkk 💚🤎
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Raenest (formerly Geegpay)
Raenest (formerly Geegpay)@RaenestApp·
We asked the people of Raenest what their biggest Valentine's Day spend was and here's Femi's Reply. Are the Femi rumours true? 😂 What's the highest amount you've spent on valentine's day and who did you spend it on? Tell us 👇🙃 #Loveacrossborders
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Nostalgic Naija
Nostalgic Naija@NostalgicVibeNG·
Throwback Sunday Jam "Mọ Wá Dúpẹ́" - Paul Play Dairo (2002) "Mọ Wá Dúpẹ́" featured on Paul Play Dairo's second studio album, "Project II." Notably, Paul Play is the son of the late Nigerian Music Icon I.K. Dairo.
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Fâ
@victorfatanmi·
I get the environmental goals but these wooden spoons aren't it at all...
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Ayotunde, the global woman🦷👑🌟
NYSC needs to remove states with High insecurities from their portal for posting people. This is actually unfair ngl
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Nafisah
Nafisah@Nafisah_aa·
Never in a million years did I imagine I would name my child Abebi, but here I am.
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kay
kay@Nosablaq·
Mahn, you people are very unkind and very mean. This person is panicking and going through all sorts for wanting to do good to a stranger, but look at you low budget Solomons doubling down with mean comments nobody asked for like she hasn't learnt the hard way already.
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SB
SB@seyedele·
Excuse my audacity in requesting 3 minutes of your time to watch this video. Also pardon any oversimplifications and do your own additional research 😊 But here’s a lesson from my founder notes. Cheers!
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Chukwukaima
Chukwukaima@loluzeee·
@qaozy Happy Birthday to you 🎉🎉🎉😍
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Kaosar Salam ✨
Kaosar Salam ✨@qaozy·
Happy birthday to the most beautiful and funniest babe in the world…ME 🙂‍↔️
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SB
SB@seyedele·
I can’t even join in on the war jokes cos God really forbid abeg 🙏🏾
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The Force!
The Force!@Orifunke·
Hi. I remember having this conversation with a group of colleagues months ago, who referenced Rwanda as a model for unified ethnicity in Nigeria. Here's what many of them did not realize: The war in Rwanda was not originally a war between ethnic groups. The Hutus weren't a different ethnic group from the Tutsis. They spoke the same native language, are the same food, had the same traditions. The difference between them, at first, was social and economic class. Historically, the Tutsis were wealthier cattle owners, while the Hutus were mostly farmers. But when colonial rule came, those class distinctions were hardened; identity cards were introduced, and “Hutu” and “Tutsi” became fixed labels. By history, the Tutsis has more education and access to administration. While they were in the minority as citizens, they were the majority in top positions. Simply put: pre-colonialism, a Hutu could have been a Tutsi, not by tribe, but by class. That's why the Rwandan Genocide is a painful lesson on what happens when tensions are not addressed early. But we need to also understand it clearly as well: it wasn't ethnicity that was the issue. It was class. Hence, while Rwanda's story is inspiring for unity, it is still not a perfect model for uniformed ethnicity in Nigeria. Our divisions run deeper; we have different languages, distinct cultures and traditions. Sometimes, people of same ethnic group even have different languages. It's unrealistic to ask them to drop who they are at their core. The goal shouldn't be to erase our differences but to build unity in spite of them. Everyone must have an appreciation of the other and their roots, even when they are different in language and culture.
Alex Onyia@winexviv

My team went to Kigali for team bonding. While we were having a conversation this morning, I asked two Rwandan ladies their tribe and they responded “Rwanda”. I asked again and they still responded “Rwanda”. I now asked myself can Nigeria ever get here?

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