Did You Know Naija

Did You Know Naija Everything you thought you knew

12/02/2026

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*SERIOUS WARNING*I guess most of us have seen the updates about staying away from the Blue Rail Line Tracks.But for thos...
08/09/2023

*SERIOUS WARNING*

I guess most of us have seen the updates about staying away from the Blue Rail Line Tracks.

But for those wondering What is under the DANGER ELECTROCUTION sign 🤔

This is for you:

An electric conductor covered with Yellow insulator.

It's called the Third Rail. This component enables the train to run on electricity.

It carries 750 Volts DC. *If you touch it, you will get roasted alive!*⚡⚡🔥🚆🚆🚆⚡⚡🔥

IMPORTANT INFORMATION!!!. UPGRADE YOUR STS PREPARED METER TODAY!!!
24/08/2023

IMPORTANT INFORMATION!!!.
UPGRADE YOUR STS PREPARED METER TODAY!!!

09/08/2023

This insane 21-foot tall Giant Hummer is bigger than my apartment 🤣

Menstruation is a Religion now 😭
24/07/2023

Menstruation is a Religion now 😭

When you get your visa…Have enough money that can sustain you for, at least, 2 weeks before you move. Because, it’s not ...
22/07/2023

When you get your visa…

Have enough money that can sustain you for, at least, 2 weeks before you move. Because, it’s not always easy to get a job in a new country. You don’t know how the system works and will be discomforted for a while. So prepare well.

If you meet people from your country, they will be more than willing to help you settle down. But they will disappear if you can’t even pay for your meals.

Nobody abroad needs more bills and extra luggage. They have plenty headache already, don’t add to it. Come prepared.

If you’re going on a student visa, use LinkedIn to look up other international students in the school and people living around that town… contact them and ask relevant questions.

You can also contact the office of international student affairs in the school and request them to connect you with other students from your home country.

The people you meet first when you enter a country matters a lot. Be careful the details and private information you share. Be open so people can relate with you but be smart.

Be prepared to learn and unlearn. Some of the things you value in your home country is nothing abroad, and vice versa.

Land in a popular airport if it’s your first time. You may have a connecting flight to airport closest to your destination, but it’s better to land in a popular airport.

Port of Entry is where your fate will be decided. Your visa is just valid for you to get to that port of entry.

Carry African food. Don’t worry about rice and noodles , you will find them abroad.

Accomodation. If possible, sort it before moving. But you can sleep in hotels for a few days as you look for a place. Be sure about where you will sleep that first day of arrival.

Agents or your friend that said they would pick you from the airport may switch off their phones when you land or they’re busy, so plan for that emergency.

I wish you good luck in your travels. ✅🍀

If you find this post interesting, shārè so others can learn.
Did You Know Naija

THE FIRST AND ONLY FEMALE OONI OF IFEWhen you hear of females who have played vital role in the ancient time, the likes ...
21/07/2023

THE FIRST AND ONLY FEMALE OONI OF IFE

When you hear of females who have played vital role in the ancient time, the likes of Queen Amina, Mary Slessor etc. Yoruba land is also blessed with those female heroines who have written their name on the marble of history...

Of such heroines is OONI LUWO GBAGIDA the only female who ruled Ile-Ife as the 21st ruler of the ancient city of Yoruba cradle..

OONI LUWO GBAGIDA is the mother of Adekola Telu who eventually founded Iwo kingdom..

Most accounts have stated that a female, Ooni Luwoo, was the 21st Ooni of Ife, the supreme traditional ruler of Ile Ife. She succeeded Ooni Giesi and was succeeded by Ooni Lumobi.

The legacy of Ooni Luwoo

In some accounts, she is referred to as Lúwo Gbàgìdá, a descendant of Otaataa from Owode compound, Okerewe. She was said to have been married to Chief Ọbalọran of Ilode and became the mother of Adekola Telu, the founder of Iwo town.

She was the first and only female to take the crown as Ooni after the demise of Ooni Giesi.

Ooni Luwoo was a beautiful woman who took great pride in her physical appearance and that of her surroundings. For this reason, she put the whole town of Ife hard at work at keeping the whole town clean and beautiful — both men and women.

She was also known to commission the unique Yoruba custom of construction of decorative pavements and open-air courtyards paved with pottery shreds. The streets of Ile-Ife were paved with quartz pebbles and broken pottery as punishment for anyone who committed an offence. The offenders were ordered to bake the clay, and afterwards use their bare hands to break it into pieces and then lay it on the floor for the queen to walk on.

When next anyone says Yoruba women are not exposed, tell them about OONI LUWO GBAGIDA..

𝗟𝗶𝘃𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝘀𝗮𝗰𝗿𝗶𝗳𝗶𝗰𝗲 𝗮𝗺𝗼𝗻𝗴 𝘁𝗵𝗲 𝗜𝗴𝗯𝗼The Igbo is one of the three major tribes occupying the Both half of the Niger River, wit...
21/07/2023

𝗟𝗶𝘃𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝘀𝗮𝗰𝗿𝗶𝗳𝗶𝗰𝗲 𝗮𝗺𝗼𝗻𝗴 𝘁𝗵𝗲 𝗜𝗴𝗯𝗼

The Igbo is one of the three major tribes occupying the Both half of the Niger River, with a larger population living in the southeast geopolitical zone. They have cultural traditions and customs, which help in maintaining their society. Just like the belief systems of other cultural groups; man has designed various institutions and webs of customs that regulate and order his social life. Hunter and Whitten (1976:294) note that “belief systems deal with everything man can imagine.”
Through belief systems, they observed, human beings give meanings to their experiences. Two kinds of belief systems have been identified: Instrumental (rational, technical); and transcendental. The former is concerned primarily with practical life; day-to-day subsistence activities, travel, nourishment, health etc, providing people with practical guidelines by which they can structure their day-to-day behavioural patterns, such as what to do about a sick relative, what to and what not to eat etc.
Transcendental belief systems, on the other hand, provide the structure through which human beings give meaning and purpose to existence. Among the Igbos, sacrifice is the most ancient and essential part of every ceremony when worship is made to the gods, minor deities or the ancestors. The offering of sacrifice to the gods is a tradition well respected and maintained by the Igbos.

𝗙𝗼𝗿𝗺𝘀 𝗼𝗳 𝘀𝗮𝗰𝗿𝗶𝗳𝗶𝗰𝗲
Sacrifices (Arinze, 1970:30-34) are in two forms: popular or personal sacrifice; as well as ritual sacrifice. The popular or personal sacrifice is made in form of renunciation for a motive of sin committed while the ritual sacrifice is done, either in the shrine or any of the worship place. In other words, sacrifice is any physical or spiritual thing we do to affect our union with God.

● For atonement/purification
An Igbo man believes that when he commits sin; he offends the gods and will make some necessary sacrifice for atonement and to purify the land. Sacrifices are made for some abomination and taboos such as in**st, stealing of yam from yam farm, a woman becoming pregnant within a year of husband’s death, giving birth to twin etc. It is believed that abominations defile the land and sacrifice purifies the land. It is called (Ipku ala) meaning removing abomination from the land.

● To ward off molestation from unknown evil spirit
Sacrifice can ward of malignant spirits. For instance, when a person is sick or feels he is being tormented by unknown powers, a goat is carried by the native doctor seven times from left to right and right to left round the victim, family or group of people concerned and it’s then thrown into the bush or river so that the evil spirits may accept it and leave the people in peace.

●For petition
An Igbo man believes that his heart desires can be obtained if he has the proper recourse to the ancestors, the spirits or God in rare cases. The prayer he makes is tied up with a sacrifice for petition.
● Funeral sacrifice
In Igbo land, this is done with goat, cow and at times, human beings in the case of a chief. Just like the burial chamber that was excavated in Igbo Ukwu where humans on standing position were seen buried along with a chief, other grave goods were also seen in the chamber. The essence of this sacrifice is to announce the person’s arrival to the ancestral world and for his or her acceptance into the spirit world. It is also for the ancestors to overlook any of his past misdeeds and to show that the deceased still wants happiness in the future. It is also called the rites of separation (Aja ozu).

●For thanksgiving
When a petition is granted, you give sacrifice of thanksgiving. For instance, during the new yam festival celebrated among the Igbo. During this festival, sacrifices are made to appreciate the god of ‘ala’ for a good harvest.

● Living sacrifice
This is where or when some objects or victims are offered to a deity without being killed. At times, they are left to roam the streets, thrown into the river or in the forest and they will become the property of the spirit.

● Objects used as living sacrifice
Objects used as living sacrifice are in form of animals or human beings. Dedicated animals are symbolically sacrificed and left alive as belonging to the spirit. This type of sacrifice was seen in the old testament of the Bible in the Book of Leviticus, chapter 16 verse 21 and 22. This sacrifice was performed without spilling the blood of the animal making it a living sacrifice. Another instance is where the animal is bound hand and leg, and the chest is laid before the shrine or it will be thrown alive into the bush or river with a piece of cloth tied to it or a special mark will be given to the animal for people to know that the animal has been consecrated to a deity.
It could also be one of the ears that will be cut off, or both ears may be splited or one of the animal’s te**es will be removed, this is because it is male animals that are usually used for this kind of sacrifice. This ceremony is called (ichu anu na mmuo) which means consecrating an animal to a spirit. Such animal is left to go in liberty but remains the property of the spirit. It is not killed and when it dies, it is buried ceremoniously. The dedicated animal could be offered as a scapegoat for sin, sickness and disease.
However, animals were used to remove evil from the land. At times during pestilence, palm fronds, an animal or a human being will be tied at the entrance of the town with hope that the disease will enter into these objects and spare the inhabitants. To be attacked by such animal is regarded as ill luck and these living sacrifices are not eaten by anyone. In the past, two living beings were buried along side chiefs as servants to serve him in the spirit world. Slaves were usually used for this.

Another form of human living sacrifice is the Osu caste system among the Igbo where a human being is consecrated to a deity or shrine and his generation automatically belong to the deity. This group was set aside, isolated or confined to specific areas in the community. It was a taboo to have any social interaction with an Osu.

●Who performs these sacrifices?
These sacrifices are offered to the deity by:
A priest who could be a witch doctor who cures those who have been be-witched.
A herbalist who knows the powers of many roots and herbs.
A diviner who tells fortune, he is consulted before any sacrifice is offered.
The chief priest (Eze mmuo)- He is an official servant of a deity or oracle, who offers sacrifice to the spirits and generally ministers at the shrine.

●Religion and living sacrifice
The coming of Islam and Christianity into Africa had much influence on the African traditional religion in its entirety. The coming of Christianity into Igbo land in 1846 altered the act of living sacrifice most especially the human sacrifice. The Christian Missionaries were able to stop the burying of chiefs with living beings and the act of using human beings as scapegoats. Although some people still offer sacrifices but it’s no longer being celebrated as in the past.

Photo: Onitsha Province; Nri 1909 - 1913
Photographer Northcote Whitridge Thomas
Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, Cambridge UK P.31075.NWT

Here are some facts about the Moors in Europe: They ruled Spain and Portugal 754 years before the fall of the Mali Empir...
20/06/2023

Here are some facts about the Moors in Europe: They ruled Spain and Portugal 754 years before the fall of the Mali Empire.

1. The Moors brought a wide variety of new fruits and vegetables to Europe.
The Moors brought many new fruits and vegetables to Spain and Europe that were considered exotic novelties at the time. These products included pomegranates, peaches, lemons, oranges, saffron, cotton, rice, silk, sugar cane, and a variety of other fruits and vegetables. Even though they are commonplace today, the Spanish at the time considered these objects to be almost alien. Several centuries later, they are still important components of Spanish food and production.

2. The Moors Developed Far More Rapidly Than Medieval Europe
The Arabs had an advanced civilization known for its architecture, science, mathematics, and exploration when they conquered the Iberian Peninsula. When the Moors arrived in Spain, they brought with them architectural innovations that astounded European stonemasons. The Alhambra, a fortress and palace complex in Granada, Spain, is one of the most stunning examples of Moorish architecture. Its construction started in 1238, and its grandeur and beauty far outstripped those of any comparable palace. It is still one of the palaces of the Islamic world that has been preserved the best today.

3. Chess Became Popular Across Europe Because of the Moors
Chess has been played for more than 1,500 years, but the Moors brought the game in its present form to Europe. The Moors brought chess to Spain after it had spread from India to the Arabic world. It spread through Europe's courts and society very quickly after it gained popularity. Chess was a well-liked game of strategy and endurance in medieval Spain. Chess was first mentioned in writing in Spain in the Catalan Testament in 1010 AD.

4. The Moors Took Their Hygiene Very Seriously.
A Moor, according to a catchphrase, "would rather go without bread than without soap." The Moors were known for their love of cleanliness. Due to their customs and the demands of their religion, the Moors valued cleanliness and often bathed; in the Moorish town of Cordoba, there were about 900 public baths. This made it possible to maintain proper hygiene at a time when plumbing and running water were still uncommon. Some sources also assert that the Moors introduced some kind of soap to Europe, ushering in a new era of hygiene.

5. The Moors Placed a High Value on Education
The Moors placed a high value on education and made sure that everyone in their realm had access to it. This was in stark contrast to medieval Europe, where education was only available to the richest nobles and clergy and where 90% of the populace was still illiterate. In fact, there have even been instances of European Kings who are illiterate. The Moors founded 17 prestigious universities in Spain, including ones in Cordoba, Malaga, Granada, Seville, Toledo, and Almeria.

6. Many Moorish Words Are Still Used Today in Spanish and English
The Moors introduced new ideas and words to Europe after they arrived, and these quickly assimilated into the common language. Up to 4,000 words in the Spanish language have Arabic roots, including algebra, checkmate, and influenza. Cipher, alcohol, chemistry, typhoon, orange, alkaline, cable, and nadir are additional examples.

7. The Moors Were Very Resourceful
The old Roman irrigation systems that the Moors discovered in Iberia had great potential, so they quickly adopted, improved, and revived them. This increased agricultural productivity and boosted the economy. Additionally, they were able to grow new crops they had brought, including figs, dates, apricots, lemons, and oranges. Thanks to the Moors' creative irrigation methods, Spain quickly rose to become one of Europe's top producers of crops.

8. The Moors brought significant Changes to Spanish Cuisine
For Europeans, spices were an uncommon commodity, and their cuisine was frequently regarded as bland. By bringing over hundreds of unusual spices, fresh recipes, and cutting-edge cooking techniques, the Moors altered that. We still eat a variety of wonderful dishes as a result of this culinary revolution. The spice markets of the Moors were renowned for their variety and provided options for chefs of all types. These medieval markets must have had the most amazing sights and smells.

It is very clear that if there was football in the garden of Eden, mens would not have fallen so easily. Now it’s too la...
20/06/2023

It is very clear that if there was football in the garden of Eden, mens would not have fallen so easily. Now it’s too late— we are finished…

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