Friday, January 30, 2026
illuminaija
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Music
  • Foreign Music
    • All Songs
    • Download
    • DOWNLOAD MP3
  • Nigerian Songs
  • Videos
    • Comedy Videos
    • Movies
  • Biography
  • Net Worth
  • Relationship lifestyle
  • Dj Mix
  • Instrumentals
  • Albums
  • DCMA
  • Contact us
  • Home
  • Music
  • Foreign Music
    • All Songs
    • Download
    • DOWNLOAD MP3
  • Nigerian Songs
  • Videos
    • Comedy Videos
    • Movies
  • Biography
  • Net Worth
  • Relationship lifestyle
  • Dj Mix
  • Instrumentals
  • Albums
  • DCMA
  • Contact us
No Result
View All Result
illuminaija
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Music
  • Foreign Music
  • Nigerian Songs
  • Videos
  • Biography
  • Net Worth
  • Relationship lifestyle
  • Dj Mix
  • Instrumentals
  • Albums
  • DCMA
  • Contact us
Home News

My Great-Grandfather Sold Slaves: Nigerian Journalist Nwaubani Reveals Family History

by Shiz
July 19, 2020
in News

image

Nigerian journalist and novelist Adaobi Tricia Nwaubani has revealed that one of her ancestors sold slaves, in an article published by BBC.

She also reveals that slave trading, despite the abolition in 1807 by the British, continued in Nigeria till the early 1950s.

But she argues that her ancestor, her great grandfather, should not be judged by today’s standards or values…

***

My great-grandfather, Nwaubani Ogogo Oriaku, was what I prefer to call a businessman, from the Igbo ethnic group of south-eastern Nigeria. He dealt in a number of goods, including tobacco and palm produce. He also sold human beings.

He had agents who captured slaves from different places and brought them to him,” my father told me.

Nwaubani Ogogo’s slaves were sold through the ports of Calabar and Bonny in the south of what is today known as Nigeria.

People from ethnic groups along the coast, such as the Efik and Ijaw, usually acted as stevedores for the white merchants and as middlemen for Igbo traders like my great-grandfather.

They loaded and offloaded ships and supplied the foreigners with food and other provisions. They negotiated prices for slaves from the hinterlands, then collected royalties from both the sellers and buyers.

About 1.5 million Igbo slaves were shipped across the Atlantic Ocean between the 15th and 19th Centuries.

More than 1.5 million Africans were shipped to what was then called the New World – the Americas – through the Calabar port, in the Bight of Bonny, making it one of the largest points of exit during the transatlantic trade.

The only life they knew

Nwaubani Ogogo lived in a time when the fittest survived and the bravest excelled. The concept of “all men are created equal” was completely alien to traditional religion and law in his society.

It would be unfair to judge a 19th Century man by 21st Century principles.

image

Adaobi Tricia Nwaubani

Assessing the people of Africa’s past by today’s standards would compel us to cast the majority of our heroes as villains, denying us the right to fully celebrate anyone who was not influenced by Western ideology.

Igbo slave traders like my great-grandfather did not suffer any crisis of social acceptance or legality. They did not need any religious or scientific justifications for their actions. They were simply living the life into which they were raised.

That was all they knew.

The most popular story I’ve heard about my great-grandfather was how he successfully confronted officials of the British colonial government after they seized some of his slaves.

My great-grandfather apparently did not consider it fair that his slaves had been seized

The slaves were being transported by middlemen, along with a consignment of tobacco and palm produce, from Nwaubani Ogogo’s hometown of Umuahia to the coast.

Buying and selling of human beings among the Igbo had been going on long before the Europeans arrived. People became slaves as punishment for crime, payment for debts, or prisoners of war.

The successful sale of adults was considered an exploit for which a man was hailed by praise singers, akin to exploits in wrestling, war, or in hunting animals like the lion.

Igbo slaves served as domestic servants and labourers. They were sometimes also sacrificed in religious ceremonies and buried alive with their masters to attend to them in the next world.

Slavery was so ingrained in the culture that a number of popular Igbo proverbs make reference to it:

*A slave who looks on while a fellow slave is tied up and thrown into the grave with his master should realise that the same thing could be done to him someday

*Anyone who has no slave is his own slave

*It is when the son is being given advice that the slave learns

The arrival of European merchants offering guns, mirrors, gin, and other exotic goods in exchange for humans massively increased demand, leading people to kidnap others and sell them.

The trade in African people continued until 1888, when Brazil became the last country in the Western hemisphere to abolish it.

When the British extended their rule to south-eastern Nigeria in the late 19th Century and early 20th Century, they began to enforce abolition through military action.

But by using force rather than persuasion, many local people such as my great-grandfather may not have understood that abolition was about the dignity of humankind and not a mere change in economic policy that affected demand and supply.

“We think this trade must go on,” one local king in Bonny infamously said in the 19th Century.

“That is the verdict of our oracle and our priests. They say that your country, however great, can never stop a trade ordained by God.”

The Missionary Society was formed in London in 1799 by British anti-slavery campaigners
As far as my great-grandfather was concerned, he had a bona fide trading licence from the Royal Niger Company, a British company that administered commerce in the region in the last quarter of the 19th Century.

So when his property was seized, an aggrieved Nwaubani Ogogo boldly went to see the colonial officers responsible and presented them with his licence. They released his goods, and his slaves.

“The white people apologised to him,” my father said.

Slave trade in the 20th Century

Acclaimed Igbo historian Adiele Afigbo described the slave trade in south-eastern Nigeria which lasted until the late 1940s and early 1950s as one of the best kept secrets of the British colonial administration.

While the international trade ended, the local trade continued.

“The government was aware of the fact that the coastal chiefs and the major coastal traders had continued to buy slaves from the interior,” wrote Afigbo in The Abolition of the Slave Trade in Southern Nigeria: 1885 to 1950.

He added that the British tolerated the ongoing trade on political and economic grounds.

They needed the slave-trading chiefs for effective local governance, and for the expansion and growth of legitimate trade.

Sometimes, they also turned a blind eye rather than jeopardise a useful alliance, as seems to have been the case when they returned Nwaubani Ogogo’s slaves.

That incident deified Nwaubani Ogogo among his people. Here was a man who successfully confronted the white powers from overseas. I have heard the story from relatives, and have read about it.

It was also the beginning of a relationship of mutual respect with the colonialists that led to Nwaubani Ogogo being appointed a paramount chief by the British administration.

He was the government’s representative to the people in his region, in a system known as indirect rule.

Records from the UK’s National Archives at Kew Gardens show how desperately the British struggled to end the internal trade in slaves for almost the entire duration of the colonial period.

They promoted legitimate trade, especially in palm produce. They introduced English currency to replace the cumbersome brass rods and cowries that merchants needed slaves to carry. They prosecuted offenders with prison sentences.

“By the 1930s, the colonial establishment had been worn down,” wrote Afigbo.

“As a result, they had come to place their hope for the extirpation of the trade on the corrosive effect over time of education and general civilisation.”

Working with the British

As a paramount chief, Nwaubani Ogogo collected taxes on behalf of the British and earned a commission for himself in the process.

He presided over cases in native courts. He supplied labourers for the construction of rail lines. He also willingly donated land for missionaries to build churches and schools.

The house where I grew up and where my parents still live sits on a piece of land that has been in my family for over a century.

It was once the site of Nwaubani Ogogo’s guest house, where he hosted visiting British officials. They sent him envelopes containing snippets of their hair to let him know whenever they were due to arrive.

Nwaubani Ogogo died sometime in the early 20th Century. He left behind dozens of wives and children. No photographs exist of him but he was said to have been remarkably light-skinned.

In December 2017, a church in Okaiuga in Abia State of south-eastern Nigeria was celebrating its centenary and invited my family to receive a posthumous award on his behalf.

Their records showed that he had provided an armed escort for the first missionaries in the area.

My great-grandfather was renowned for his business prowess, outstanding boldness, strong leadership, vast influence, immense contributions to society, and advancement of Christianity.

The Igbo do not have a culture of erecting monuments to their heroes – otherwise one dedicated to him might have stood somewhere in the Umuahia region today.

“He was respected by everyone around,” my father said. “Even the white people respected him.”

Real Madrid kits 24-2025 For Dream League Soccer 2025
Tools

Real Madrid kits 24-2025 For Dream League Soccer 2025

Tools

First Touch Soccer 2025 (FTS 25) Mod Apk Obb Data Download

Tools

GTA 5 Apk Obb Data Latest Download For Android

ShareTweetPinSend
Previous Post

Drama As 50 People Caught Partying At Ilorin Night Club Are Arrested And Detained At COVID-19 Isolation Centre (Photo)

Next Post

Is Magu Going To Sue Buhari’s Government For Detaining Him? Check Out What He Has To Say

Shiz

Shiz

Related Posts

Filling stations, fuel trucks exempted from COVID-19 lockdown —NNPC

Filling stations, fuel trucks exempted from COVID-19 lockdown —NNPC

What I experienced in Lebanon, I pray even not for Satan to experience it.” – Nigerian lady cautions young women against going abroad

What I experienced in Lebanon, I pray even not for Satan to experience it.” – Nigerian lady cautions young women against going abroad

Top 10 biggest dam in South Africa

Top 10 biggest dam in South Africa

Nigeria’s COVID-19 Cases Near 60,266 As NCDC Confirms 163 New Cases

Nigeria’s COVID-19 Cases Near 60,266 As NCDC Confirms 163 New Cases

Eat’N’Go Foundation Strengthens Support in The Fight Against COVID-19…reaches over 6500 essential workers across Nigeria

Eat’N’Go Foundation Strengthens Support in The Fight Against COVID-19…reaches over 6500 essential workers across Nigeria

Nigeria Immigration nabs 5 stowaways inside vessel en route Spain

Nigeria Immigration nabs 5 stowaways inside vessel en route Spain

Comments 2

  1. Dr Nwafor says:
    6 years ago

    Kidnapping is done by riff raffs…

    Reply
  2. Dr Nwafor (A free born Ibo man) says:
    6 years ago

    Adaobi Patricia Nwaubani,
    Your forebear kidnapped and sold fathers, mothers, brothers, sisters, cousins, nieces and other kinsmen including other people’s children for money and you are not ashamed of yourself. Truly, you are worse than him. Can you imagine how it hurts to be kidnapped and sold. Have you considered that you have blood on your hands ‘tricia’. Do you know how many of your kinsmen whom your family sold that died on the way? How do you justify your family’s action to Black Americans and others globally who are suffering the consequences (of your family’s ill advised occupation) till date.
    Kidnapping is done by riff-rafts and the lowest of the low in the society; it takes a shameless, senseless, Godless, conscienceless, mean, cheap, and outrightly stupid person to trade on fellow human. I guess it runs in the bloodline for someone to gloat over this unspeakable evil. Shame!!!
    You need to study more and be better informed because your basic degree in Psychology from the University of Ibadan is obviously insufficient. Your outburst on BBC today is a disgrace to Igboland and an embarrassment to those who trained you.
    You claim to be a journalist but you are simply; a simple noise maker without morals.

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

No Result
View All Result

Recent Posts

DOWNLOAD Kabex – Thank You Lord ft. Hotkeed mp3

DOWNLOAD Kabex – Thank You Lord ft. Hotkeed mp3

DOWNLOAD Berri-Tiga – Dis Year mp3

DOWNLOAD Berri-Tiga – Dis Year mp3

DOWNLOAD oSHAMO – Shina Rampe mp3

DOWNLOAD oSHAMO – Shina Rampe mp3

DOWNLOAD Kemuel – Ovah mp3

DOWNLOAD Kemuel – Ovah mp3

DOWNLOAD Nuno Zigi – Total Dominance Album mp3

DOWNLOAD Nuno Zigi – Total Dominance Album mp3

Trending Posts

Benefits of Migrating to Canada I Bet You Didn’t Know
Jobs

Benefits of Migrating to Canada I Bet You Didn’t Know

Many people want to migrate to Canada because the country offers many opportunities for new immigrants. People can enjoy several...

Read moreDetails
Jobs : Unskilled Jobs in Canada for Foreigners 2023 | With VISA Sponsorship
Jobs

Jobs : Unskilled Jobs in Canada for Foreigners 2023 | With VISA Sponsorship

Jobs : Unskilled Jobs in Canada for Foreigners 2022 | With VISA Sponsorship Looking For  Highly paid careers for unskilled...

Read moreDetails
Scholarship :Fully Funded Maynooth University Departmental Doctoral Scholarship Grants 2023-2024
Scholarship

Scholarship :Fully Funded Maynooth University Departmental Doctoral Scholarship Grants 2023-2024

Scholarship :Fully Funded Maynooth University Departmental Doctoral Scholarship Grants 2023-2023 Are you looking for a Fully Funded scholarship to pursue...

Read moreDetails
NPC Recruitment Portal 2023 Is Open
Jobs

NPC Recruitment Portal 2023 Is Open

NPC Adhoc Staff Recruitment 2023 Application Form Portal (Apply Now) NPC Recruitment Portal 2023 Is Open: 2023censusadhocrecruitment.nationalpopulation.gov.ng Are you in...

Read moreDetails
Jobs

See Immigration Procedures for Canada’s Federal Skilled Worker Program

See Immigration Procedures for Canada’s Federal Skilled Worker Program Canada established the Federal Skilled Worker Program (FSWP) in 1967 to...

Read moreDetails
Pet Store Salesperson Need in Canada up to $3000 – Apply Now
Jobs

Pet Store Salesperson Need in Canada up to $3000 – Apply Now

If you are a lover of pets and want to make money, migrate to Canada Visa Free and work over...

Read moreDetails
NPC Adhoc Staff Recruitment 2023 Application Form Portal (Apply Now)
Jobs

NPC Adhoc Staff Recruitment 2023 Application Form Portal (Apply Now)

NPC Adhoc Staff Recruitment 2023 Application Form Portal (Apply Now) NPC Adhoc Staff Recruitment 2023 Application Form Portal (Apply Now)...

Read moreDetails
See the Sector paying $12,000 or more a month in the United States
Jobs

See the Sector paying $12,000 or more a month in the United States

See the Sector paying $12,000 or more a month in the United States In the midst of a huge and...

Read moreDetails
Discover Why Toronto is an Ideal City For Immigrants to Work and Live
Jobs

Discover Why Toronto is an Ideal City For Immigrants to Work and Live

Toronto is a financial city, district, city of theatres, sports, and more. This article provides an overview of the attractions...

Read moreDetails
Canada Jobs : See The 4 Steps of the Job Search Process in Canada
Jobs

Canada Jobs : See The 4 Steps of the Job Search Process in Canada

Canada Jobs : See The 4 Steps of the Job Search Process in Canada Note, According to The Daily’s Labour...

Read moreDetails
  • About Us
  • Submit Songs
  • DISCLAIMER
  • DCMA
  • PRIVACY POLICY
  • Contact us

© 2026 illuminaija

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Music
  • Foreign Music
    • All Songs
    • Download
    • DOWNLOAD MP3
  • Nigerian Songs
  • Videos
    • Comedy Videos
    • Movies
  • Biography
  • Net Worth
  • Relationship lifestyle
  • Dj Mix
  • Instrumentals
  • Albums
  • DCMA
  • Contact us

© 2026 illuminaija