DARAMO

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DARAMO

DARAMO

@vdag3

Chelsea Fan / Content creator ⚽ passion. on here we share what we see transfers, tactics, leadership, Game prediction & everything the stats. don't capture

Abuja, Nigeria Entrou em Ocak 2014
3.8K Seguindo2K Seguidores
DARAMO
DARAMO@vdag3·
@Afoke3030 Yes you are right maintaining the level across Europe is not just one league season
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Lisa
Lisa@Afoke3030·
Deserved recognition, but his real test is maintaining that level across Europe, not just one league season.
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DARAMO
DARAMO@vdag3·
@Afoke3030 If dembélé should it again that should be back to back
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DARAMO
DARAMO@vdag3·
@Afoke3030 It's very good and it is also joy of parents the celebrate along with their child
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Lisa
Lisa@Afoke3030·
Michael Olise celebrates alongside his parents after being crowned the 2026 Best French Player Abroad. 🌟🏆 A proud moment marking another incredible milestone in his remarkable journey.
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BanterLab
BanterLab@ChiomaCezeabii·
💧 Quick one… Have you taken water this morning? 👀 Reply YES if you have ✅ Reply NO if you haven’t 😅 If it’s NO… go drink water now 💧🫀
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DARAMO
DARAMO@vdag3·
@crispdal23331 One needs to be grateful and almost every time because it's not by your power
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Francis
Francis@crispdal23331·
Big win today 🙏✨ Grateful for the opportunity, the trust, and the growth. Another contract secured and this is only the beginning. Hard work, consistency, and faith really pay off. 📈🤝 To everyone supporting the journey,thank you. More greatness ahead 🚀
Francis tweet mediaFrancis tweet mediaFrancis tweet media
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Francis
Francis@crispdal23331·
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DARAMO
DARAMO@vdag3·
@crispdal23331 I am interested me I already have UK account but I want a guideline on how to be monetized on UK account
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ALLAN
ALLAN@kashariboy25·
Is Alonso the right coach for Chelsea ?
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DARAMO
DARAMO@vdag3·
@Cooltiie Thank god most of us Africans we are all waking up now
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Royal A
Royal A@Cooltiie·
Colonialism didn’t just take land, it reshaped identity, language, and confidence in African systems.
Ancient Africa daily@africandaily_x

Mental Slavery and Religion in Africa By Kingsmart Mental slavery is when your mind is chained even after your body is free. In Nigeria and across Africa, the strongest chain today is the way religion has been used to erase how we think about ourselves. They replaced our names with their names Before colonialism, an Igbo child was named okoro, a male child, Nwando, nkwo, Nweke. Those names spoke to our relationship, with ancestors, with the land. Missionaries told us those names were “pagan.” So we dropped them for John, Mary, Peter. When you can’t even keep your name, you stop knowing who you are. They made us ashamed of our own system What we called Odi na be ndi — the way of the people — was labeled idolatry, darkness, witchcraft. Our elders became “witch doctors.” Our festivals became “evil.” Our courts became “backward.” Once you make a people ashamed of their system, they will beg for yours, even if yours doesn’t fit their land. They made religion separate from life In Africa, spirituality was never separate from farming, justice, family, and war. It was all one system. The Europeans split it. You go to church on Sunday, then live under colonial law and colonial education the rest of the week. That split created confusion. Now we pray for what our ancestors would have built with their hands. The chain is still in the mind The physical slave trade ended, but the mental one didn’t. Today many Nigerians will defend foreign religious leaders more than their own history. We argue about which foreign book is right, while our own proverbs, laws, and knowledge sit in dust. That’s mental slavery: fighting for the prison that holds you. Breaking it Breaking mental slavery doesn’t mean hating other religions. It means knowing what was yours before they came. It means calling Odi na be ndi by its name again. It means teaching your children their language, their history, and their way of organizing family and community. A free mind remembers first. --- Image to use: A symbolic photo showing an African elder teaching children under a tree, with traditional symbols like the kola nut and umunna meeting in the background, while faded images of a church and colonial documents sit in the background out of focus. The focus is on the elder and children — showing the return to what was ours.

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DARAMO
DARAMO@vdag3·
@Cooltiie Great information but why the exemption
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Royal A
Royal A@Cooltiie·
WHY JAMB EXEMPTS EDUCATION AND AGRICULTURAL NON-ENGINEERING STUDENTS FROM TAKING UTME JAMB says the exemption is aimed at increasing enrollment in Education and Agriculture-related courses, reducing UTME pressure, and solving the shortage of teachers and agricultural professionals in Nigeria. According to the Federal Government, many students avoid these courses because admission has become too stressful and competitive. Under the new policy, candidates applying for: - Education programmes - NCE courses - Agriculture-related non-engineering courses may gain admission without writing UTME, provided they meet the required O’Level qualifications and complete JAMB registration for CAPS verification. The government says the goal is to create alternative admission pathways while boosting manpower in sectors critical to education, food security, and national development. Important: The exemption does NOT include Agricultural Engineering or other Engineering courses. Implementation is expected to begin from the 2027 admission cycle.
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JAMB@JAMBHQ

Candidates seeking admissions into Education Programs and Agriculture non-Engineering Courses are now exempted from UTME.

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Angel Nazy
Angel Nazy@TrueQueen01·
Be honest:If you could delete ONE player from your rival's squad so they never played against you again,who are you picking? ​I’ll start:Erling Haaland.25 goals this season and he still gets called a 'ghost.If he’s a ghost,he’s the scariest one in football history.​Who is yours?
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Angel Nazy
Angel Nazy@TrueQueen01·
Football fans wake up after big matches and immediately check the timeline to see who survived the embarrassment 😭⚽
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Angel Nazy
Angel Nazy@TrueQueen01·
Football is one of the few things capable of making millions of strangers feel the exact same emotion at the same time ⚽
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DARAMO
DARAMO@vdag3·
@RealTalkWitjoyc He has a strength to do right now it's not men that can do that
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Real Talk With Joyce
Real Talk With Joyce@RealTalkWitjoyc·
This man nai be the real polygamy
Ancient Africa daily@africandaily_x

Polygamy: The True Root of African Man’s Marriage Culture and Family Eternal Peace of Mind Written by Kingsmart My brothers, make we talk true talk today. For Africa, especially Naija and whole black continent, polygamy no be mistake or old fashion thing. E be the very foundation of how our fathers and forefathers build marriage and family. Na the root wey dey give African man peace of mind till eternity. No be Western one-man-one-woman wey full of stress, divorce, and broken homes. Polygamy na our own way, e sweet, e strong, and e work well well. See am like this: One woman fit try, but two or three go complete the circle. African man get plenty responsibilities—work, farm, business, extended family. One wife alone go dey carry all the load, and before you know it, quarrel go dey every day, suspicion go full everywhere, and peace go run commot. But when you marry more than one, each wife get her own role. One go take care of the kitchen and children well, another go support the business, the third go bring wisdom and respect for the home. Na team work! No be competition if the man sabi lead with fairness. Our ancestors sabi this thing. From Yoruba land to Igbo villages, from Hausa palaces to the creeks of the Niger Delta, polygamy dey build big, strong families. The children plenty, the lineage no go die, the wealth go spread. The man get peace because him no dey sneak around or dey carry secret guilt. The wives sef go get sisters wey go help them, no be lonely house wey one woman dey suffer alone when husband travel. Na so family peace dey reign eternal. Some people go say na “backward,” but open your eyes, my brother. Look the Western world wey dey preach monogamy: divorce rate dey high like mountain, children dey suffer, men dey die early from stress and loneliness. But here for Africa, polygamy give man balance. E cool the blood, e reduce temptation, e bring respect. When the man dey fair—give each wife her time, her own house, her own respect—jealousy go reduce, love go grow, and the whole compound go dey shine. Of course, no be every man fit handle am. Polygamy no be for boys wey no get sense or money. Na for real men wey get mind, wey get resources, and wey sabi fear God and treat every wife with justice like our Prophet and elders teach. When you do am the right way, e no be problem, e be blessing. The family go big, the support go strong, and eternal peace of mind go follow the man till him old age. So my brother, if you dey think about marriage, remember your root. Polygamy na not just culture, na wisdom wey our fathers leave for us. E build empires, e keep bloodline alive, and e give African man that deep, lasting peace wey no money or fine car fit buy. Honour the tradition with wisdom, lead with love and fairness, and you go see wonders for your household. Written by Kingsmart #nffc #mamá #mamá

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DARAMO
DARAMO@vdag3·
@RealTalkWitjoyc As a lady you need to invest in yourself don't leave yourself for a man
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Real Talk With Joyce
Real Talk With Joyce@RealTalkWitjoyc·
There is this joy I get whenever I see ladies of these days investing in themselves. I will always appreciate women who put their effort to build themselves and not put all their hopes on a man.
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