ORIGIN OF AFRICA - Onyeji Nnaji
ORIGIN OF THE BLACK RACE: THE BIRTH OF BIAFRAN FATHERS
copied: from the book: REALITY AS MYTH; by Onyeji Nnaji
chapter two.
The difficulty
encountered by researchers searching for the birthplace of the African father had
been bedridden by two main factors. These factors are lack of proper attention
given to the oral tradition of the various ancient communities in Africa, and
the desire to favour oneself in the cause of one’s research work as found among
early African historians. The attempts to rectify these matters took us nearly
the whole book in our previous production. We have stressed the unquantifiable
relevance of the various oral traditions in the different areas of the African
continent. Stressing the importance of oral tradition in preserving history, we
agree with J. Ki-Zerbo in the assertion that,
Oral
tradition is not just a second-best source to be resorted to only when there is
nothing else. It is a distinct source in itself, with a now well established
methodology, and it lends the history of the African continent a marked
originality (History, 11).
In Africa, oral
tradition, folktales and cultural display of certain traditional features had
been the most dependable source of the African history. Africa had been
generally theosophical. The African life emanated from this theosophical
structure in the realm when death was not invoked and later this ominous
concept was assisted by theocratic principles. Theosophism formed the first
foundation of African lifestyle and the part of Africa found with this uncommon
system could be the place of the peopling of the African population. The Black fathers were autochthonous as Africans had always defended about themselves.
There is this reference to Africa, the homeland and the inhabitants, sons of
the soil. This reference is not found anywhere else but among the African
populations. It is an assertion that points towards their origin and their
point of beginning. Our trace of the Black father shall be dependent of the
oral tradition information as held by different African communities of ancient
reckoning.
Anytime the history of
the Black communities is called to mind, attentions go straight to the peopling
of the ancient Egypt, Nubia or Ethiopia because of their immeasurable
contributions in giving definitions to the Black race. Little or no information
was known about the Inner Africa
until the need to trace the history of the civilizers of ancient Egypt became
pressing. Nubia also became the centre of attraction when it became apparent
that the civilization that had lasted in Egypt for years had first existed in
Nubia. Ethiopia was without comparison their relevance in the history of the
Black race, being the only African nation to surface in the current copy of the
Christian Bible. From the surface of the relationship with the western
communities which gave a little information about the origin of civilization in
the world.
Another thing
historians had never given heed to about African history and the global as well
is the underlying understanding of the simple word, god. All the people who still have knowledge about their history in
Africa had always said that they came from the east. Those who also still
remember their history had always said that their fathers have the nature of
the gods. The Igbo and the Yoruba
also have said that their fathers were gods. These stories are told through
mouths, bothering the activities of people who existed in the beginning of
things.
Nnaji also has this
similar view in his essay on the origin of Africa.
History is history and
can never be separated from real life stories told through mouths which must
have certain evidence on the bearers’ culture, language, myths and other facets
of life obtainable within the setting of the people. (www.ajuede.com).
The discussions
under-page will disclose issues concerning this to us as we proceed. The
problem in deciphering the real meaning embedded in oral tradition anywhere in
the world is on the attempt to translate it through writing. In the search for
the history of Nkalaha in the North-eastern Igbo land, the community’s theosophist,
Nnaji nwa Nnaji made it clear to us that the history is not told as a story.
According to him the African history is not realized in tales, rather in Afa which he referred to as the language
of the gods. He said that he had to be in the proper mood before he could speak
Afa. Translation is seen here as our
problem in unearthing the beginning in its proper position, and oral tradition
remains the one undisputable source. Through oral tradition we know the origin
of the various ancient settlements in Africa. Through it we also know that
Africa did not descend from the West. Diop Anta made the following expressions
to show his position to this view.
From
what we know about the archaeology of South Africa, where humanity seems to
have been born; from what we know about Nubian civilization, probably the
oldest of all, from what we know about the prehistory of the Nile Valley, we
can legitimately assume that the “Great Waters” is none other than the Nile. No
matter where we collect legend on the genesis of the Black African people,
those who still remember their origins say they came from the east and their
forbearers found pygmies in the country. Dogon and the Yoruba legends report
that they came from the east, while those of the Fang, who as recently as the
nineteenth century had not yet reached the Atlantic coast, indicates the
northeast. Bakuba legends list the north as their provenance. For people living
in the Nile, traditions suggest that they came from the north; this is true of
the Batusti of Rwanda-Urundi (Civilization, 179).
We have identified the
position of the east in the first chapter above. Our knowledge of the birth
place of Africa can be sketched simply through Diop’s conclusion above. All the
nations mentioned above had ancient records as people who had existed before
others around them. Our understanding of this irrefutable fact opens ways
toward deciphering the Black fathers.
(i)
Black Fathers Unearthed
Nag Hammadi, a collection of untitled tablet
stone scripts unearthed deep in the sand in the valley of the Nag Hammadi
village in Egypt reveals issues concerning the people in the beginning. In the
chapter titled Origworld (origin of
the world) the tablet reveals that the cosmology of the first people is
associated with the number four.
Then the saviour created […] of them all – and the spirits
of these [are manifestly] superior, being blessed and varying in election – and
also (he created) many other beings, which have no king and are superior to
everyone that was before them. Consequently, four races exist. There are three
that belong to the kings of the eighth heaven. But the fourth race is kingless
and perfect, being the highest of all.
(PP. 124-5).
Nag
Hammadi makes us to know here that
the African ancestors were four set of people who were created in different generations (time). According to the Igbo oral
tradition, the Jewish Cabbala and the
Nag Hammadi, they were not made like Adam from the dust of the ground;
they descended from the sky. This is why in many oral tradition in Africa;
there had been several references to the sky as the original home of the
African father. In the cosmology of the Dogon, there is a reference to the
eight heavens as the home of the human ancestors. But the Dogon was not clear
about who these ancestors were. All that can be deduced from the Dogon
cosmology was the fact that they descended from the ancestors who descended
from the sky and lived in the east. Yoruba also share in the nuances that the
first men were sent down from the sky by God. A version of Yoruba oral tradition
insists that Obatala (whom Ifa called the father of the Igbo nation) was
saddled with the responsibility to create the world.
Olorun
threw down an iron chain from the sky and
told Obatala, the eldest of his
sons, to climb down and create land on the water below. On his way down,
Obatala joined some other Gods who were having a party, and he later discovered
that his younger brother, Oduduwa had created the world in his place…Obatala
and Oduduwa quarelled and all the other Gods took sides. In the end, Olorun
settled the dispute by giving Obatala the power to create mankind. Oduduwa was
allowed to rule the land that he had created. Oduduwa became the first Yoruba
king, ruler of the ancient city of Ile-Ife, the place where he was first
believed to have climbed down from the sky.
Obatala is addressed
here as the eldest among the gods who were sent to the earth course. The
continuation of that same oral tale reveals the person of Obatala as the father
of the African nations. Ruth Finnegan, in her research on Nigerian oral
literature captured this aspect of the nation’s history thus:
The
sky is immense, but grows no grass.
That
is what the oracle said to Obatala,
To
whom the great God gave the reins of the world.
God
of the Igbo, I stretch out my hands.
Give
the reins of the world to me (Oral Literature, 195).
Could these be enough
evidence to prove that the African ancestors have been discovered? I think not.
The Nag Hammadi, as quoted above is
seen again in another page supporting the Dogon myth and also insisting that the
people with the cosmology of four are the direct descents of the ancestors of
the Black Race. In another page, it related thus,
There are four generations, three generations belong to the
kings of the eighth heaven, and the fourth generation, which is the most exalted,
is kingless and perfect … They are kings. They are the immortal within the
mortal. (p. 219).
The
Kingless Generation was glorious and without number, they are designated the generation over whom no kingdoms exist. And
all the beings of the realm with no kingdom over it … are designated the
children of the un-conceived Father
(P. 277).
We found what seems
like pinpointing information that created a clear cut idea and particularized
the people meant by the ancient tablet in another page of the Nag Hammadi. Apart from the generations
being remarkable with their kingless ideology, we found astounding point on
page 722. It speaks of
A people among whom the three entities Father, Mother and
Child exist as perceptible speech having within it three names abiding in three
nnn.
From the citations above, we can draw apparent
picture of the Black fathers. They are people that descended from the sky on
different periods, having such features as:
(i) The first three ancestors descending in three
different generations.
(ii) The fourth generation descending last, and
being a perfect generation.
(iii) A people whose central ideology accommodates no
king.
(iv) A people whose cosmology is centred on the
number, four.
(v) A people whose father, mother and child
have a basic letter, NNN.
Now, following the view expressed by Diop Anta
above, notable ancient nations in Africa traced their origin to the east; the
place of the rising sun. From our observation of the eastern horizon which
points to the Igbo land in Nigeria, above every other pointers that traced the
origin of different African nations to West Africa; Nigeria, the Igbo oral
tradition embodies the entirety of the features we have identified above. At
first, the Igbo speak of them having descended from four different ancestors. And
in their explanations, the Igbo have the view that they descended from unborn
fathers. A paper discussed in the International Conference on World History in Indonesia,
2016 reveals the information below:
According to the Igbo creation story, which
eminently rests and is told by the priest king, Eze Nri, the Igbo belonged to
four distinct set of people who descended from the sky in the period of
creation; probably four generations before the birth of Adam. The first to
descend from the sky was Eri. He could not land properly because the earth was
waterlogged. He cried to Chukwu (God) who responded by sending another set of
people, the Awka to dry the water with their blacksmith. When this was done,
Eri could land well. Later, God sent the Umudiala. The Umudiala were custodians
of cultural practices and moral tenets. The fourth generation was sent far much
later. These four sets formed the ancestors of the Igbo nation that live in the
east (P.6).
The above paper which was written by Oyeji Nnaji
revealed that the fourth generation lives in the place reckoned with as the
home of the gods. The same place was identified by the Egyptian Book of the
Dead as the home of the Egyptian god (Osiri) known as Tuat. The ancient name of the city was Igbo Eze, translated
to mean Igbo is king. The concept highlights the metaphysical reference and
ideology which imping itself on the equality of man. Literally, it means that
everyone is a king, therefore there is no king. This brought about the popular
saying among all Igbo thus, Igbo Enwe Eze; Igbo does not have kings. This
same philosophy made Northrop Thomas, after caring a detailed anthropological research
in Igbo land in 1913, to choose to title his work, The King Is Everyone.
The other three generations according to their elderly strata are Nri, Awka and
Umudiala (popularly referred to as the heart land).
The Igbo have different geometrical shapes
associated with numbers whose meanings are decoded metaphysically. Significant
among these numbers are three, four, five, seven and eight. All
these figures and the geometries associated with them are discussed in chapter
seven of the book, Aspects of the Ancient African Metaphysics. Relevant
to our discussion here are the number three, four and eight. In the Igbo
cosmology, four points to the ancestors who gave birth to the Igbo nations.
This same idea assigned impetus to the adaptation of a peculiar market
structure that stimulates curiosity on the symbol four. In every
traditional practice that appears to involve the Igbo with the acts of the
gods, ancestors or marriage, the colanut used is those with four lobs.
Geometrically, the Igbo realize the number four in the use of a quadrangle
divided into four equal parts to form an “X” shape. The following object
reveals the symbol.
The number three, as identified in the Nag
Hammadi: the NNN, is
realized in the Igbo as in Nne, Nna and Nwa. On the other
hand, trying to represent these entities’ sexes, NNN still fits in thus: Nwoke,
Nwanyi and Nwata. The NNN forms the Nag Hammadi Trinity. The Nag
Hammadi calls this people the First Sons of the true God, and says of them,
“the fourth generation, which is the most exalted, is kingless and perfect.” From
our findings through the analysis of the languages of the ancient civilized
nations around the globe, call it Egypt, Nubia, Ethiopia or Summer, there is no
trace of any the nation whose language associates NNN with the term, mother,
father and child. In no other language was or is the terms found beginning with N. NNN is the principal of the
Igbo axiomatic concept which holds its relevance on the survival of the Igbo
race. The Igbo believe that everyone is a king. The Nag Hammadi affirmed
thus, “They are kings” (P.219). The Igbo have self-confidence inherent in them.
They do not prostrate before anyone in a bid to show respect or subordination
of any kind. They are self-dependent. Page
277 of Nag Hammadi intoned that,
The
Kingless Generation was glorious and without number, they are designated the generation over whom no kingdoms exist. And
all the beings of the realm with no kingdom over it … are designated the
children of the un-conceived Father.
Details
of the Igbo pre-colonial system of government reveal a people without a king
and without the intention to have any king. The Igbo nation was designated by
the creator himself to have no king. The reason is simple. The Igbo believe and
see themselves as gods. To them, each individual is a Chi, god; first to himself. As a chi, he is also a king to himself
and his household. on this not, the only Chi
an average Igbo believes should be esteemed above himself is the Chi Ukwu, the great Chi (the almighty) also called Chukwu
Okike, the creator God. This only the Igbo believe is above everyone and
should be respected as the king. What had prevailed in the ancient Igbo
societies till the era of the Whiteman was Theosophism and theocracy. This was
the reason behind the misconception between the Whiteman and the natives at the
beginning Western civilization.
Discussing
the lifestyle of the four generations of the sons of God, The Great Book of
the Sons of Fire, made the following remark, An anonymous book in the internet
entitled The Book of Creation by the Son of Fire, said thus,
The forbears of all the
nations of man were once one people, and they were the elect of God who
delivered all the Earth over to them, all the people, the beasts of the field,
the creatures of the wasteland and the things that grow. They dwelt through
long ages in lands of peace and plenty. There were some who struggled harder,
were more disciplined; because their forefathers had crossed the great dark
void, their desires were turned Godward and they were called The Children of
God". Their country was undulating
and forested. It was fertile, having many rivers and marshes. There were great mountains to the East and to the West, and in the
North was a vast stony plain.
The book speaks of a people who occupied the earth plane in the earliest
time. They lived in a country made up of different geographical conditions. They
were a people whom it refers to as the sons
of God. Their land is generally “undulating and forested. It was fertile,
having many rivers and marshes. The entire environment here explains Nigeria
completely. We can practically find places associated with all these features
in Nigeria than elsewhere in the world. The area concentrated by mountains is
in the east called Enugu. The
ecological analysis of Enugu simply shows that the mountains took over the
entire land. We have another mountain concentrated area in the western part of
Nigeria. The place is called Idonre,
in Ondo State. But, Idonre hills are very few compared to the uncountable
number of the mountains in Enugu.
Idonre is significant
because the mountains were carefully arranged as though it was intended. It
fenced the small town round, living an opening of the size of a large gate
between two mountains. The vast stony plain of the Nigeria-Plateau is known to
every ecologist that has studied the Nigeria ecosystem. The marshy soil and
concentration of rivers here refers to the alluvial soil of the Niger Delta
region. The book also reveals that the
people were one people, but their identities differ among their different races
or generations. These
generations were referred to as people who lived in “The Land of the Little
People and the Land of Giants, the Land of the Neckless
Ones…” Here the three races or generations were classified according to
their natures, not necessarily the time of their appearances. Details of these
generations are discussed in chapters two and three of Reminiscence.
“Their country was undulating and forested.” Ifa, the mouth piece of
the Yoruba tradition, culture and history revealed that the name of the Creator
God is Igbo and also calls God Igbo Oludamari (God of the Igbo). Perhaps, as
the first son of the living God (according to the Yoruba oral tales) the Igbo
fathers decided to take the name Igbo. Yoruba oral tale is alone in this
guise, in the modern Yoruba language, Igbo means forested area of land. The
land was forested, having many rivers: the Delta region of the Niger River has
been identified as the marshy soil as revealed bythe anonymous book, The Book of Creation by the Sons of Fire.
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