I am writing this article mainly for the
benefit of Southern Nigerians who have
never been to the North, and mostly
have a warped and inaccurate view of
the North. I have been driven to write
this out of my many personal
experiences, and those of friends and
family, as has been shared with me.
This is mainly an educative piece about
what Northern Nigeria is in reality; a
complete, holistic picture of this region.
To make this piece a simple read and
easy-to-follow, I am going to write it
around 5 common perceptions about
the North and
debunk them:
Religious Perception: The general
belief held by most Southerners about
the North is that the region is not just
mainly Muslim, but wholly Muslim.
Whenever I meet someone from the
South and introduce myself, I am
correctly placed as a Christian. But
once I am asked my state and I say
Borno State, the next question
becomes, ‘Are you a Muslim?’ This is
despite my name being a very common
Biblical name, Mark, which is the
second Gospel. Matter of fact, I have
been asked that question while
attending a church programme, with a
Bible conspicuously held in my hands.
You could imagine my surprise at that
question. This has also been the
experience of a lot of friends with
common names such as ‘Emmanuel’,
‘Daniel’, etc.
To start with, out of the 19 Northern
states, at least 5 have a majority
Christian population: Plateau,
Adamawa, Nassarawa, Taraba and
Benue. At least 6 more have at least
40% Christian population. These states
include Niger, Gombe, Kaduna, Kogi,
Kwara and either Borno or Bauchi. That
then leaves only Kano, Kebbi, Katsina,
Jigawa, Sokoto, Yobe and Zamfara as
having Muslim populations above 60%.
How then are we all seen as Muslims?
This misconception could be excused
when the person has an Arabic name,
as there are many Northern Christians
who bear names such as Jamila,
Habiba, Halima, Sadiq, and Yunusa and
so on. But when the person has an
obvious Christian name and is even
attends church services, you really
begin to wonder.
Ethnic Perception: Another common
perception of the North is that we are
all Hausa. My usual response to this is
to borrow the logical argument of
Simon Kolawole, the Editor-in-Chief of
THISDay Newspapers. In an article in
which he attempted to educate his
largely Southern readership base about
the North, he went thus:
“If out of the estimated 250 tribes in
Nigeria, we can say that the South-
West is mainly Yoruba with a few other
tribes around Badagry area, the South-
East wholly Igbo and the South-South
being most diverse in the South with
about 40 tribes, that still leaves the
remaining 200 tribes in the North.”
How then are we reduced to one single
ethnic group, Hausa? It is only the
North-West that is close to being
homogenous, mainly Hausa and Fulani,
but with still some minority tribes in
the Zuru area of Kebbi State and the
multi-diverse Southern Kaduna. The
North-East and North-Central is filled
with tribes, many of whom I have never
even heard of. For example, Adamawa
State is so diverse that the largest
ethnic group, the Fulani, is just 3% of
the entire population. In my home state
of Borno, there is a local government so
diverse that from one village to
another, you are likely to meet an
entirely different ethnic group. The
number of tribes there are so many
that we just address the people as
‘Gwoza people’, after the name of the
local government.
Even though we all speak Hausa as a
lingua franca in order to communicate
amongst ourselves as trading partners
over the centuries, that doesn’t make
us Hausa people as much as
communicating English doesn’t make
you and I English people. As a matter of
fact, in the North-East, Hausa people
are a minority and virtually non-
existent in the North-Central region.
Intellectual Beliefs: Now, this is one
belief that whenever I am confronted
with, it takes me a great deal of self-
control not to flip out and lose my
temper. Times without number, when I
tell people I am from Borno State, I am
asked how come I speak such good
English. What the hell? What am I
supposed to speak? Arabic? The
general expectation is that someone
from the North is not supposed to be
this learned, this well-spoken and
articulate in English, this
knowledgeable. I remember when a
friend asked me if my mother went to
school, and the surprised look on his
face when I told him that my mum
earned her masters’ degree over 20
years ago. There was also a time when
my dad met someone at the Lagos
International Airport and they got
talking. When my dad told him his
profession, the man, in a fit of surprise,
exclaimed, ‘I didn’t know that there
were professors in the North’.
I admit the fact that the North lags
behind the South educationally,
especially the North-West and the
North-East. But this is not due to our
inability to comprehend what we are
being taught, but rather due to the
incompetence of leadership in the
region to give education its premium
importance as a form of human
development. We, like every other
human being on the face of this earth,
can excel when given the opportunity.
Talent and intellect abounds
everywhere. Opportunity, however,
does not. I personally know of many
Northerners who have excelled
nationally and internationally. Daily,
the story of young men like Ahmed
Mukoshy, who is born, bred and
schooled in Sokoto, and yet, rose above
his environment to become one of the
emerging forces in IT in this country in
his early 20s inspires me. This is just
one example among many that I could
cite but for the lack of space.
I find it outright disgusting whenever
people claim that if not for federal
character and ‘zoning’, no Northerner
would be able to compete in this
country. Last week, I was shocked
when a friend said only 10% of
Northerners in the Federal Civil Service
deserved their places on merit, and
went on to add that if he had not
known me personally and I were to get
a job with the Federal Government, he
would believe that I did not earn it on
merit. The most ridiculous one I
encountered was when earlier this year,
former Minister of Finance, Dr Mansur
Mukhtar was appointed a World Bank
director. Most of the commentators on
the 234Next article announcing this
achievement for this Nigerian and
Nigeria made the ludicrous assertion
that the appointment was done to
please the North, that Dr Mukhtar did
not merit it. Little did they know that Dr
Mukhtar had worked at the World Bank
and the African Development Bank,
prior to his heading Nigeria’s Budget
Office on the invitation of the then and
present Minister of Finance, Dr Ngozi
Okonjo-Iweala and former World Bank
Managing Director, who also
recommended him for the post of
Finance Minister when she rejected
former President Umaru Yar’adua’s
invitation to join his government. What
is even worse is that they did not care
to know: their minds were already
made up and could not be confused
with the facts.
Geo-Political Beliefs: Another
common belief among Southerners and
most especially spread by Southern
newspapers is that the entire 19
Northern states act and think as one
when it comes to issues of Northern
politics. This is one of the biggest
untruths about the North. Whenever
Northern Nigeria is mentioned, the
people of Benue, Kogi and Kwara states
do not feel it refers to them.
Geographically, they are part of the
North; politically, however, they and
the entire Middle-Belt act
independently. This can be clearly in
the last elections where President
Goodluck Jonathan won in 7 Northern
states, even against his strongest
opponent, General Muhammadu
Buhari, who is a Northerner. This was
something I am sure a lot of people in
the South, save for the political savvy,
did not see coming.
One common sight of this perception
being entrenched by newspapers is
when politicians of Northern extraction
speak on national issues. I have
innumerably seen a washed-out
Northern politician, without any
influence or popularity speak regarding
an issue, and the next day,
newspapers carry bold headlines
saying, ‘North rejects this’ or ‘North
plans to do that’, quoting the same
washed-out politician as speaking for
the entire North. I have rarely seen a
Bola Tinubu speaking and being
quoted as the mouthpiece of the entire
Yoruba ethnic group, or a Chief Edwin
Clark for the Ijaw people. Methinks this
is a way of selling newspapers by
capitalizing on the image of the North
as one single, political force which
moves in a particular direction all-
together
Cultural/Social/Economic Belief:
Admittedly, as people of the same
region, we share a lot in common
culturally and socially in the general
terms: our mannerisms, modes of
dressing, traditional titles (apart from
paramount rulers with the exception of
emirates), etc. Despite that, the Jukun
in Taraba and the Kataf in Kaduna are
very different in the specifics, as even
the Bura and Marghi people of Borno/
Adamawa States. To pick the attitude
of one ethnic group in the North and
attach it to all the others, is to put it
mildly, a very short-sighted way of
knowing and understanding the people
of Northern Nigeria.
Another belief in the South is that the
entire North is but an empty land mass
with nothing but trees. I remember the
controversy of the 2006 census when
Kano State was said to have a slightly
higher population than Lagos State.
Many of my Southern friends called it
‘an impossibility’. In the words of one of
them, ‘Lagos is so populated that when
you throw grains of rice into the air,
they wouldn’t land on the ground, but
on people’. However, they all forgot to
factor in land mass, because Lagos
State is a much smaller state than
Kano State, and hence has the highest
population density in Nigeria, hence
making it look as though it was way
more populated.
There are cities in the North that have
been thriving economically, such as
Kano and Kaduna. As a matter of fact,
Kaduna State was adjudged by the
World Bank in the year 2009 as the
best place to do business.
Lastly, the most retrogressive belief
about the North in the South is that the
entire North is a hotbed for violence. As
much as we have had more than our
fair share of ethno-religious violence,
there are many states that have never
experienced one, including states such
as Zamfara, and others as Nassarawa
and Benue.
I have not written this as a criticism of
the people of Southern Nigeria, but
rather, in the hope that this will be an
enlightenment of the South about the
North. It amazes me when I see that
despite the fact that we have been a
country for almost a century, yet, a lot
of people down South know little or
nothing about their fellow Nigerians in
the North, but know about Europe and
America.
I have also realized that we as
Northerners have allowed others to say
our story for ourselves, hence have
given it distortions, deletion and
generalizations. What has happened
over time is what the writer
Chimamanda Adichie, in her TED talk in
March 2009, at Oxford, England,
describes as ‘the danger of the single
story’, where a single story of the North
as a region of poor, illiterate, lazy,
Hausa Muslims who do nothing but
connive to lord over this country
politically and kill Southerners’ has
been repeated so much that it is seen
as the truth. This is the kind of stuff
that creates stereotyping, which in her
words, ‘not that it is untrue, but that it
is incomplete’.
This is one reason I still see the
significance of our NYSC scheme,
choked with problems as it may be. We
need to know each other more. Let us
override this stereotypical mind-set and
seek to learn about each other with
open minds and seek the complete
story that gives a holistic picture of our
country.
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i had dsame problem, i currently @ enugu n wit dis boko harram isure even make it more difficult. N dey regard all northerner as wiked pple
What more can i say, i am simply impressed. Fine piece and it makes a beautiful reading too. This is a cross a lot of us have had to carry all simply bcos we are misunderstood by our fellow country men and women from the othe side of the divide. Weldone bros.
well, i don’t blame their deliberate ignorance. How many of them will spare a moment to read this article. personally, i have been to all the regions in the country i know the inexhaustible lists of misconceptions people carry around in the south. I just hope they will read this article and get some understanding of the North
sorry dude, As you rightly put it, Hausa is the lingua franca of the North, Hausa is noble Tribe, Blessed by God, yeah, Purely Hausa states might not be much, but then, they are all over the country. another thing, the northern minorities always envy us, i remember when we were at school, they used to prefer away ways, may be that is why there is complete …
Great piece, in my office d call me Hausa man despite d facts dat d knw i am a christain, a Jukun man from Taraba state. I always flare up anytime i was call a hausa or a muslim. With such write up i think d southerner wil know more about Northern Nigeria.
why take all this trouble to educate southerners, you are brilliant so dont fall the lazy stereotypes of Nigeria, didnt they do social studies in primary school? if you choose to be narrow minded then the onus is upon your ingnorant head, im proudly Bwatiye by tribe, and i do not and will not explain my identity to any ignorant Nigerian period. my character is mine, and is formed from my experiences and culture, judge me by my character and actions and stop the stereotypes
Lol!… Ma-de pokauna!, yamunada?… you are quite right my fellow stateman, despite the social studies in the primary and junior secondary school. Yet some people still claimed ignorant of the fact of the matter. Maybe their social studies Teachers dont teach the topic (Nigerian people and Culture)…
Up bwatiye! ‘ma’de’ I hail dat resort. Dat’s true but maybe some have not had it this comprehensive nd concise. Don’t 4get that even their social studies teachers might nt av known this.Ya Imburu ne, I’m 4rm Numan but an indigene of Lamurde and Chobbo by tribe
oh my God,u av just said my mind.u ar tooooo muchhhhh.i really dnt knw what to say.
I got the impression, you are trying to give us an image that, northan christian are different from the hausa northan muslims. You in person, is more intelligent than ordinary northerner. what a pity?
unfortunately you read and understand the article upside down. What a pity!!!
A pity? Once again, you missed the point. Diversity is what I’m trying to point out here. And yeah, we’re different in many ways. There are many points of similarities, and still those of difference. Even d Bauchi Hausa Muslim is different from the Katsina Hausa Muslim in many ways.
Mark thanX 4 dis piece,if dia is 1 write up dat has spoken My mind an has represented me so well is dis particular piece. It represeent Nigeria. I kno we dnt read muCh in Nigeria,I wish dis write up would b turn 2 a documentary an b aired in all major TV and Radio station. Dis is one piece dat is truely Nigerian.
That‘s a good piece brother…i thought you will speak about the fact that military era has helped to project Hausa over others,needless to mention the resultant negative effects as we esperience presently. I appretiate the Hausa people,like any other set of people. Again people should also know that while many claim to build their leadership on the likes of Sardauna(late);who embraces every northerner irrespective of ethno-religious affliation;it‘s a known fact that many especially “Nigerian Hausa‘s“ refuse to acknowledge the truth. I have been in the north-west these 6 years….may be you may help me with an answer to this question: When people say “northern elders“;are they truely projecting the interest of all other northern tribes or just that of a people? Hausa is a univeral tribe just like Swahili but the arrogance some carry with it is uncalled for. That‘s also why some people think they(Hausa‘s)“own the north“. Both the southerners and the Hausa‘s,should go back to history. Am sure they will see things;that will place them in the right school of thought just the way i‘am happy,am MARGI& I can speak both my language&Hausa.. I hope our southern brothers will see things beyond the surface. GADZAMA T.U.A.
I really appreciate ur courage and concern about that,is good that u throw light on it, because most people are confuses about that,I hope with this explanation or should I say new knowledge u. Should not judge people like that,we the northerners are educational sound
Thats what am talking about, Thumbs up Brother. The People from the other part of the country as you rigthly mentioned had written us off (the northerners). Imagine when i was serving at Kano one of my Colleage called me “Aboki” just because i’m from the north (A stereotyped word which they have ignorantly given it a meaning as an Uneducated, peasant and Barberic Person) i had to control my temper and Educate his ignorant mind as regards the noun “Aboki”. Seriosely am glad that some one has taken out time to tell and Educate this people down there that “WE AINT BUNCH OF ANIMALS” as they all thought we are…
I taught u guys are trying to express ur feelings! Then why been so aggressive ,while writing to the public?u don’t need to blame anyone by calling u an hausa man ok. Remember u are dealing with humans not animal as u said and these people has different norms and values. So my dear,blame not anyone like I said early with time they will understand the difference . Actually,I was thinking like that until the day I pay my visit to kaduna;”just like Rome”is going take time to understand that u guys are different from real hausa man. Stop feeling bad about ur tribe and be urself. I like u guys.
nice one man … keep ’em coming.
Am realy impressed at this write up hoping it creates an awareness.
I have heard similar experiences. It is even more exasperating when pple refer 2 u as ‘mallam’ or ‘aboki’. It’s pretty disguisting .Hope this article will go a long in educating fellow non-northern Nigerians.
i have these same problem here in Benin, whereby even the person am working with don’t believe that am a christian despite the fact that my name is samuel,he keep asking wether am a christian or muslim my suggestion is that this should be on paper so that it will be read all over southern Nigeria.
I was really enlightened by ur story about d northern Nigeria, but can u blame d southner pple for their blvs wen d entire picture shows dat d entire north is hausa, even d kwara pple are not left out, do not also forget d current happeninigs in d north its a cause to worry about, d north really needs to reorganise itself, else d nation “may“ sieze to be one dis i fear.
Good write up but I dare to day that all these interpretations the writer saw as misconstrued are clear facts.
I think the northern minorities should seek Identity relevance within the north. The entire north ( excluding plateAu and benue) are traditionally represented by emirs who are Muslims and Hausa as well.
If the entire north is spoken for by washed out politicians, then the minority north must be politically docile.
The revenue sharing formulae considering land mass and population is glaring injustice. If Kano and kaduna were such populated and comparatively thriving cormercial spots, why are their internally generated revenue so poor.
Pockets of educated ones within a large uneducated mass does not signify education to improve others rather it is to dominate them. The writer is among the privileged few. Down south, educating people is 80% By communal effort; so mark, blame the enlightened few like you for the dearth of education in the north.
The south have known the north well enough not trust them as a region but on individual capacity.
Ds is a most read.Even d nothernas tink dat d whole north is entirely muslim. U wl jus b hearin d entire muslim north 4rm BBC repotas n so on. 2
Ds is a most read.Even d nothernas tink dat d whole north is entirely muslim. U wl jus b hearin d entire muslim north 4rm BBC repotas n so on.
This write up abt Northern Nigeria is the best i ever read. Tanx 4 de awareness and keep it up.
This is a great writeup to educate the southerners and northerners who don’t know their country and region…. I’m from middle belt and I have met ignorant Nigerians that called me Hausa when I introduced myself! I think we need to speak more about ourselves and identity than allow some ignorant folks categorise us as Hausa!!!
I’m a middle belter, from the headquater of middle belt – Great Plateau State. We are rising again!
Chike is still stereotypical about this issues. Can u prove with facts that d entire north is headed by emirs and muslims?
It’s a nice piece from u,bro. Those of us who’ve lived most of our lives in d southern part of Nigeria have laboured in vain to correct some of those misrepresentations u raised/observed. Sometimes I even get erratic about it.
Bottomline is,Nigerians are very lazy,mentally. Even our intellectuals are bigger culprits. They hardly do any credible research b4 commenting on very serious issues. Right now,there are so many armchair analysts and commentators on Boko Haram without d slightest knowledge of d subject under review. God bless your effort,bro.
Food For taught.
The article is second to none on explaining the predicaments of the minority notherners in the hands of their compatroit Southerners, a concept that is so engraved in their minds for long. This was further compounded by our forefront politicians and elites. Time is here that things must turn around for good. We should raise the bar by fronting our tribe/ethnic no matter how few we may be and shun the complex attitude exhibited by our forefathers before now.
Hmmmmm
A good piece. Majority of them with this perception has never been to the north or even taken little interest to know much about north and it’s people. They base all their arguments on biased reports they read or hear. The so-call oil has made them feel they own this country.
Nura u r 2 narrow minded. No wnda dia r ltz of killins of our christian people bcz it seems ure ol ready 4 war. Wat a pity!
waoh, dis is really gd. i served in d southern part of nigeria n it ws frustrating, everyday i had to explain dat i’m nt hausa. thnk God sm one is educating em (dat is if they wnt to be educated).
Well said
Well said.
Nura, please read it again, may be you’ll understand better.
Even if u want to blackmail Hausa and Muslim,u are not ingrate enough to forget d contributions of d likes of Sir Ahmadu Bello,Generals Murtala,Babangida,Abacha etc did for ur emancipation as minorities who lack means of Nation formations,ur languages rarely understood by ur immediate neighbours.
The Sardauna’s generosity helped u in no small way-he accepted and treated u as fellow Northerners without showing religious sentiment or tribalism for since during that time, ur fore-fathers didnt know anything besides drinking “Ogogoro”,eating what ever come their way-human flesh,dead animals and cover their genitals with mainly leaves and live in caves.
He didnt look down upon you despite all these inhuman attitudes,he embraces u,educates u,sponsoring some of the likes of u to study abroad free,build many schools in ur areas,hospitals,Roads-all these in the name of one North,One Region,otherwise he would have use religious and tribal sentiment and deny u such things,even ur being well educated enough to write this article is an outcome of justice and fairness as demonstrated by Late Sardauna of Sokoto and now u re trying to dissociate ur self bcos of Religion-yes religion bcos the other bond u cant dissociate from it-HAUSA.for instance,if to say Northern Nigeria is dominated by Christians or Jukuns,marghi or Biroms,u will not even allow us to be educated talkless of relevance in Govt.(Plateau State as a case study)i was posted to Plateau state during my NYSC service year serving in one of d state-owned higher colleges in lower Plateau,d Registrar being a devout Christian,warmly accepted me,protect my human rights,gave nod to do my religion and cautioned me against any form of tribalism and religious bigotry when conducting my duty.i really enjoy my service in d hand of that man.
Even if u dissociate ur self from Hausa Muslims,u cant be able to make them know ur tribe.it was Hausa they(southerner)know
.and when ever northern Nigeria is Mentioned,it was HAUSA and MUSLIMS that come to the minds.
What we suppose to do is to put religious issues aside,come togather,solve our problems.Religion is a thing which suppose to be kept in d chest.lets unite and speak with common voice like before.some people are using religion in order to divide us,knowing fully that we happen to be the most religious-inclined region in Nigeria.i stand to be corrected
Even if u want to blackmail Hausa and Muslim,u are not ingrate enough to forget d contributions of d likes of Sir Ahmadu Bello,Generals Murtala,Babangida,Abacha etc did for ur emancipation as minorities who lack means of Nation formations,ur languages rarely understood by ur immediate neighbours.
The Sardauna’s generosity helped u in no small way-he accepted and treated u as fellow Northerners without showing religious sentiment or tribalism for since during that time, ur fore-fathers didnt know anything besides drinking “Ogogoro”,eating what ever come their way-human flesh,dead animals and cover their genitals with mainly leaves and live in caves.
He didnt look down upon you despite all these inhuman attitudes,he embraces u,educates u,sponsoring some of the likes of u to study abroad free,build many schools in ur areas,hospitals,Roads-all these in the name of one North,One Region,otherwise he would have use religious and tribal sentiment and deny u such things,even ur being well educated enough to write this article is an outcome of justice and fairness as demonstrated by Late Sardauna of Sokoto and now u re trying to dissociate ur self bcos of Religion-yes religion bcos the other bond u cant dissociate from it-HAUSA.for instance,if to say Northern Nigeria is dominated by Christians or Jukuns,marghi or Biroms,u will not even allow us to be educated talkless of relevance in Govt.(Plateau State as a case study)i was posted to Plateau state during my NYSC service year serving in one of d state-owned higher colleges in lower Plateau,d Registrar being a devout Christian,warmly accepted me,protect my human rights,gave nod to do my religion and cautioned me against any form of tribalism and religious bigotry when conducting my duty.i really enjoy my service in d hand of that man.
Even if u dissociate ur self from Hausa Muslims,u cant be able to make them know ur tribe.it was Hausa they(southerner)know
.and when ever northern Nigeria is Mentioned,it was HAUSA and MUSLIMS that come to the minds.
What we suppose to do is to put religious issues aside,come togather,solve our problems.Religion is a thing which suppose to be kept in d chest.lets unite and speak with common voice like before.some people are using religion in order to divide us,knowing fully that we happen to be the most religious-inclined region in Nigeria.i stand to be corrected.
Ibrahim, I don’t understand what you mean by saying I’m trying to separate northern minorities from the Hausas. Obviously, u read it with a biased mind. If you had read it properly, you will see I said we’ve a lot of similarities in culture and yet are still quite distinct.
If you read my other articles, I always applaud Sardauna for truly integrating the North. But that doesn’t mean I should deny the uniqueness of my culture from the Hausas.
This is an article to explain the diversity of the North, not to show one is better than the other.
Lastly, u need to change your superiority mindset by saying ‘our ppl were ogogoro drinkers’. If you truly desire a united North, you’ve to see others as your equals, not this condescending way you have of seeing yourself as their saviors.
Thanks brother.
Your write up is accurate.
The misconception is due to the unnecessarily docile nature of the northern non hausa-fulani tribes who over the years have swallowed whatever the Hausa fulani said on behalf of the whole north. This should not continue. The middle belt region which consists of Taraba, Adamawa, Benue, plateau, Nassarawa,Kogi, Kwara and Niger states need to stop following the far north sheepishly and carve out a distinct politically more representative identity for themselves.
arve out a politiacal ifentity for themselves.
Mark your write up is very good I have been in lagos for a long time even though I schooled in university of maiduguri you just painted the way an average southerner looks @ every person that says he is from the north I face it every day in my office.
A pity? Once again, you missed the point. Diversity is what I’m trying to point out here. And yeah, we’re different in many ways. There are many points of similarities, and still those of difference. Even d Bauchi Hausa Muslim is different from the Katsina Hausa Muslim in many ways.