Remy Ilona
I am referring to the anti-Osu discrimination as the apartheid in the Igbo society.
Today in the Igbo society there is a divide between the Igbos
known as the “free-born”, and those known as the Osu. The separation is felt most keenly in marital matters. Every
“free-born” Igbo would shrink from marrying an Osu. Every “free-born” Igbo believes that he or she is of superior
birth than the one who descended from an Osu.
Why am I writing this essay now? I am, because the Igbo people
whose culture is arguably the most egalitarian in the world stand diminished by
this contradiction. In the more purer Igbo society everybody is equal. The
richest man and the poorest man have just one voice (vote) in Igbo affairs. Yet
today we have Igbos, possibly numbering up to one million whom other Igbos view
as inferior by heredity.
The keen-minded Igbo person must feel that even though there are
no campaigns and demonstrations for equality by the descendants of the Osu, that the quiescence doesn’t
diminish the gravity or offensiveness of the situation. The discrimination is
poisoning the Igbo society; making it to lose vital energy, because a large
part of the people actually do not feel that they are a totally accepted or
acceptable part of the Igbo community. Very recently an Igbo called me from
outside Nigeria, and sought for legal advice. He wanted to know if he could be
granted asylum if he makes a case to the country that he wants to be a refugee
in, that the Igbos discriminate against the Igbos who are of Osu stock.
It is important at this stage to say who or what the Osu is, and what and who the free born Igbos are.
Who are the free-born, and who are the Osu?
The only valid answers that an Igbo can give today is that the free-born Igbo
is the one who is not of Osu, Ohu, or Ume lineages, and that one is an Osu if one is a descendant of an Osu man or woman. In other-words one is an Osu if one is a member of an Osu
family. I will deal with the Ohu and Ume
institutions in another write-up.
Osu families exist in almost
all the clans that constitute the Igbo people.
What differentiates the Osu
from the free-born Igbo? Ethnically both
are the same. They speak the same language, and observe the same customary and
cultural practices. Presently both the Osu and the free-born would more likely
than not be Christians, as the majority of Igbos have converted to
Christianity. Yet, in spite of all these commonalities every free-born Igbo
believes that he is different and superior to the Igbo who is of Osu stock. Since most present-day Igbos
would remember, the Osu is among the
Igbos an inferior Igbo. He or she could be very well educated, and super-rich;
but to the rich, educated, very religious, poorest, not educated, and
irreligious Igbo, he or she is still an inferior person. He could even be a
Christian priest, thus falling into the category of Igbos that command more respect
among the Igbos today, yet to the Igbos he is still inferior. He is still less
than a ‘normal’, ‘freeborn’ Igbo. An Osu
man would not be inducted into the ozo
society of the Igbos, nor would he be made a clan head (traditional ruler) in
any Igbo clan. Even if he shares the same faith with fellow Igbos they will
still think that he is different and inferior. I remember an Igbo Christian; a
man in his mid sixties who told me an interesting story. He said that at one gathering
of Igbos outside Igboland, that an Igbo leader/elder whom he knew to be of Osu ancestry was asked to bless the
kolanut, and that that made him to refuse to partake of the kolanut, because in
his words, “how can I, a nwa afo
(free-born) eat a kolanut that an Osu
broke, even though he is my fellow knight in the church”? And as I have observed, an Osu can hardly get a spouse of his
choice from a non Osu Igbo family. A
few Igbos; a few that can be counted off one’s fingers have tried to cross the
lines. Their families have generally disowned and ostracized them so that the
entire family would avoid the taint, and the disadvantages that follow being an
Osu.
Presently only very very few Igbos know why the Igbos treat fellow Igbos in
such a reprehensible way. Today there are many Igbos consigned to perpetual
spinster-hood and bachelor-hood because of the anti-Osu discrimination. This is because they could not get the desires
of their hearts in their own enclaves, and they would not be received well, if
they try to find spouses in the mainstream Igbo society. As well many Igbos
have been forced to marry non Igbos, and have ended up with bad marriages,
because of the wide gulf of differences separating the Igbos and their Nigerian
neighbours culturally. Well meaning Igbos; of Osu, and non Osu stocks
have tried to fight the problem, but have failed. The discrimination is getting
stronger, rather than getting weaker. Use of legislation to eradicate the ‘Osu
institution’ has been tried and it has failed. The relevant law declared that
no one is an Osu anymore and
proclaimed that no one should discriminate against fellow Igbos anymore because
they were of Osu origins. The law
failed to achieve its intended objective because it did not recognize the nature
of the problem, and thus did not address it. The Osu
were not barred from any of the formal professions. The Osu among the Igbos unlike the untouchable in India, or the lower
classes in feudal Europe, were not subjected to dehumanizing treatment. In fact
to the Igbos it is aru (abomination);
the worst transgression to cause physical bodily harm to an Osu. So nobody could ‘harm’ the Osu in a way that the law would
recognize that an injury had been done, but he (the Osu) could suffer worse harm (psychological) by being considered
unfit to marry a fellow Igbo who is designated a free-born. So the legislation
stayed where it was made; in the air-not changing anything. Church leaders have
railed against it from their pulpits, but their condemnations of the
discrimination have not made a dent on the problem. Among the Igbos is a
popular story about the bishop who delivered a great sermon against the discrimination
only to become evasive when an Osu came
to ask for his daughter’s hand in marriage. The clan associations, or town
unions as they are more popularly but wrongly addressed, and some traditional
rulers (clan heads) have also tried, but we can say that the problem persists,
and is growing stronger. We can say that it is growing, because what all the
efforts have achieved is that they are forcing the problem to go underground.
Presently it is not deemed polite to bring up discussions on the Osu matter in public. Among the Igbos
the Osu matter hardly comes up for
discussion, even in informal circles, yet it is always there; uppermost in the
minds of many Igbos. Whenever an Igbo sees a marriageable spouse, he makes
enquiries about the prospective spouse, and the first question he or she wants
cleared is the freeborn/outcast (Osu)
status of the prospective spouse.
From my findings the Igbos have failed to solve the problem
because the Igbos have forgotten who and what the Osu are. Regrettably presently most Igbos are not knowledgeable
about Igbo history, cultural practices, and institutions.
As I have observed earlier lack of accurate information is a primary reason
that made the Igbos to fail in solving
the problem. The following illustration will be helpful. Many Igbos think that
this Igbo against Igbo injustice is a consequence of what they thought they knew
and accepted as accurate about the Osu
Igbos- that is
- That the Igbos who became Osu
were people whose ancestors were sacrificed to idols, gods,
and deities (‘mmuo’, ‘agbara’ or ‘arusi’).
- People whose ancestors ran to idols,
gods, and deities (agbara or arusi which contemporary Igbos
think are the words for idols, gods, and deities), for protection.
I had similar thoughts before. I sincerely, but wrongly thought
that what I thought that I knew about the Igbos who became Osu was accurate. However with passage of time, and increasing
awareness that the Igbos have forgotten their history and culture and that
consequently what they were presenting may not be the accurate facts, I began
to doubt that the contemporary Igbo position is correct or valid. To cross the
hurdle I tried to find out what makes
the Igbos to discriminate against the descendants of the Osu.
I discovered that it is very difficult to find out why the Osus
are discriminated against. It is easy to think that the discrimination arose
because the contemporary Igbos felt that as the Osus ancestors were associated with certain idols, gods, and deities that
they deserve to be avoided and shunned as today the Igbos generally think that
they have rejected and have ceased to worship those idols, gods, and deities.
This position is not valid because the
authentic chief priests and high priests of the Igbos, and their families are
not shunned and avoided, nor considered to be inferior by any Igbo. In the
pre-Christian milieu of the Igbos there were chief priests and high priests who
superintended over community religious affairs. Contemporary Igbos gladly marry
the descendants of those men.
I think that we will achieve more if we accept that the
available evidence has not given us clues that will make us to think that
association with idols, gods, and deities
brought about the ostracism. Wrong and inaccurate designations have also
brought confusion. The Osu is described as an out-cast, which he is not. This
makes people to think that the status of the Osu is like that of the
untouchable in India. With all the foregoing it is clear that we need to dig
deeper.
With great difficulty, and at great cost I was able to get at the pre-Christian
milieu of the Igbos. Excavating into the Igbo past is extremely difficult,
because Igbo Studies is still in its infant stage. European colonialism primed the Igbos to
study European history, culture, and religion, and to shun and fear Igbo
history, culture, and religion. Also the Igbos’ experience in contemporary
Nigeria has not helped. Emerging from defeat in the Nigerian Civil (Biafran) War,
the Igbos developed feelings of inferiority which made them to scorn their own culture,
history and heritage, while striving to imitate the cultures, and to assimilate
the histories of those that triumphed over them. So, to find entry into Igbo
history is very hard. However with the
right tools, motivation, and patience I was able to find my way inside. I began
by stepping back; one step at a time. And to compile Igbo cultural practices.
As I continued stepping back, and my compilation continued to grow, my
fascination continued to grow. Querying everything, and not neglecting anything
I continued until I arrived at the source of Igbo culture: ancient Israel, and
confirmed that Igbo history is a strand of Jewish history. With this it was
possible for me to deal definitively with the Osu institution. Dealing with the subject I found out how misinformation
and ignorance created a problem that never existed before (the anti Osu discrimination); a problem that is
today an albatross on the neck of the Igbos.
As I looked at the Osu institution I
was led deeper and deeper into the Igbo religious culture which we believed
that it gave us the Osu, and the
problems associated with it, such as the discrimination which I have been
writing about. As I probed I began to see and understand things that could only
be understood if properly studied. I discovered that the Osu person was not what the contemporary Igbos think that he is,
but a different person who played a very important and religious role in Igbo
life in ancient times. I also confirmed what an European scholar suspected:
that the Osu institution must have
become misunderstood because of Igbo contact with Europeans during the European
sponsored Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade.
To find out if the Osus were actually
sacrificed to idols/deities/gods I investigated the Igbo religion. In Omenana I did not find idols or images
as objects of worship or veneration. I’ll explain very soon why I said that in
Omenana (the Igbo religion) Igbos do not worship idols. Traditionally the Igbos
do not prostrate or kneel in prayer. Also traditionally the Igbos do not kneel,
prostrate or bow to any object that has physical form. Unlike their fellow
Nigerians (from many of the other ethnic groups), the Igbo does not prostrate,
bow or kneel when saluting even human-beings. And in the Igbo religion
(Omenana), the Igbo person/adherent is onye
ogo Mmuo, worshipper of the Spirit if translated into the English language,
so there could be no doubt that he did not worship idols/images which clearly
have forms, i.e, are physical objects, and
are therefore clearly not spirits. To the Igbos God has no form, but is Mmuo (Spirit). Also I did not find
deities or gods. Diligent investigation did not unearth any. Very revealing is
the fact that the Igbos do not have a word or phrase that could be used for
gods or deities, as they have a phrase- Chi- ukwu that is used for the Supreme
Being (God). In English language ‘God’ with a capital G stands for the Supreme
Being alone, and ‘gods’ stand for ‘false’, ‘smaller’ and ‘other’ gods. This
suggests strongly that the English people knew many, or at least more than one
god. In other words, that religiously, they were/are polytheistic. In Igbo language
Chi-ukwu means ‘big/great God’, but the Igbos have no equivalent phrases like chi- nta or chi-obere (small gods) or chi-ozo
(other gods) or chi ugha/asi (false
god). So even at this stage we can rule out the falsity that any Igbo person
was sacrificed to any idols, deities or gods, because the idols, deities or
gods simply did not exist, for the Igbos. As I advanced further I found out
that there was actually an Igbo religious practice that called for persons to
be dedicated to the Supreme Being (Chi-ukwu). And, to use a favorite
phrase of my elder brother, Avraham Phil Van Riper, ‘here it comes’, I saw an
equivalent practice in ancient Israel. The Gibeonites were dedicated by Joshua,
the successor of Moses (Moshe). Samuel (Shmuel) was dedicated by Hannah his
mother. Joshua (Yehoshua) spelt out what
the Gibeonites were to do in the ‘house of God’. They were to serve/work there
forever. Clearly Samuel was an assistant
to Eli the priest in the house of God at Shiloh. And what do the Osu Igbos do in the precincts of the holy
places (now known as shrines) in Igboland? Answer: they work/serve as
assistants of the officiating priests (ndi eze Mmuo). Up-till today most Osu quarters are in the neighborhood of
the shrines in the various Igbo clans. An
Igbo took issues with me for suggesting that Joshua’s Gibeonites who were non
Israelites were akin to the Osus who
were Igbos. I did my best to explain that the biblical case shows a practice
that the ancient Israelites were familiar with.
That the Bible revealed that the Israelites dedicated people to serve in
the house of God forever. That the example we saw first was of non Israelites
being dedicated did not reduce the weight of the evidence which is that the
ancient Israelites did something very similar to what the Igbos did. In
continuation, as I did not find idols/gods/deities existing and worshipped by
the Igbos in Omenana I ruled out the
option that any person was dedicated to any phantom idol, god or deity among
the Igbos, but to Chi-Ukwu (the Supreme Being). At this stage it was easy for
me to confirm what I suspected; that it was only after the British defeated the
Igbos, and the European missionaries that took charge of Igbo education and moral instruction indoctrinated and
misled the Igbos to believe that the Igbos were idols, and ‘gods’ worshippers
that the Igbos began to think that the Osu
was dedicated to idols, deities, and gods. Presently only very few Igbos
remember that there was a time that the Igbos worshipped God, because virtually
all the Igbos passed through the educational system that portrayed and
presented the Igbos as pagans, polytheists, heathens, and savages.
Igbos also think that an Osu is
someone whose ancestors ran to an idol, a deity or a god for protection. Truly
there was an ancient Igbo practice that guaranteed immunity to anyone who fled
to Chi-ukwu for protection. As there were no idols or deities or gods among the
Igbos it is simple to understand that it was the same process that led the
Igbos to forget that it was Chi ukwu that the fearful ran to, as in the former
case, that also made them to forget, in the case in question. In ancient
Israelite culture there was automatic immunity for an Israelite that ran to the
God of Israel for protection.
Contemporary Igbos; cut-off from their culture, and history, would identify
their ancestors, mmuo, arusi or agbara with idols, gods or deities. Very
recently a prominent Igbo man called Akpu, one of the progenitors of my clan
Ozubulu, a deity. Mmuo means spirit. Arusi is an abbreviation of the
following phrase: ‘ife nkea wu si aru’ (this is abominable). Aru is abomination
in the Igbo language. Ancient Igbos regarded idolatry and image worshipping as
abominable. Anything that hints of idol or image worshipping was/is aru to the Igbos in pure Omenana.
Agbara is used to refer to
illustrious personalities; living or departed. Traditionally Igbos have much
regard for their ancestors. In some Igbo localities these ancestors are known
as ndi ichie (honorable people). In
some they are known as agbara. Some
Igbos can refer to great Igbo men like the Great Zik, Chinua Achebe, M.I
.Okpara, Emeka Ojukwu, Alex Ekwueme, F .C. Ogbalu, Uche Eni, etc, as agbara. In some Igbo communities
illustrious Igbo women like Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Dora Akunyili, Chinwe Obaji, Oby
Ezekwesili, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Irene Malizu-Ilona, Ndi Onyiuke-Okereke, Kate
Odabi, Vera Oguejiofo, Onyeka Onwenu, Uche Onwumelu-Umeokolo, my mother ‘Amaka Ilona, etc, are addressed as ‘agbara
nwanyi’ (strong women).
I am going to great lengths to prove that in Igbo culture there
are no ‘gods’, because it would not be easy for many persons (including Igbos)
at this stage to believe the truth which is that the Igbos were not pagans and
idol worshippers, and that there were/are no Igbo ‘gods’, but only the one God:
Chi-ukwu, and that the notion that there were more than the One to the Igbos was
imported from outside, and imposed by non Igbos. With common-sense one would
easily realize this; because if there were gods there would have been phrases
similar to Chi-ukwu, such as chi nta/
obere identifying them in the Igbo language.
So if we see that in Igbo culture that there is only one God-Chi-ukwu-the
Supreme Being, we would easily see that the Igbo Osu was dedicated to serve that God, and that the Igbo that ran for
protection to Chi-ukwu ran to the God that most Igbos believe that they are
worshipping today. Interested persons can learn more about the Osu institution
in my just published book: The Igbos and
Israel-An Inter-cultural Study of the Oldest and Largest Jewish Diaspora, which is available at……………………………… and
can join in discussions about it at the facebook pages of the Igbo Israel
University, the Igbo Israel International Music and Film Festival plus Book
Fair 2012, and Odinala/Omenana (Igbo Culture Defenders).
Also, on why the Osu receives the
ignoble treatment that he receives today? Here it comes again. As in ancient
Israel, the person, among the Igbos also, who was dedicated to God was not to
be killed, or molested. Violation of the law invited serious retribution in
ancient Israel, as it surely did in the traditional Igbo society. In ancient
Israel King Saul killed the Gibeonites. In King David’s time the Gibeonites
sought for a redress, and they were allowed to kill several scions of the
family of Saul in retaliation. Also as in ancient Israel, among the Igbos a
person that fled to God had automatic immunity from all pursuers. He could not
be killed, or even molested. King David’s army chief, his nephew General Joab
tried to avail himself of this immunity when King Solomon went after him for
backing one of his rivals in the tussle to succeed King David. In fact among
the Igbos it is an abomination to draw blood from an Osu; i.e, to wound him or her, and not to talk of killing one. With
all the foregoing it is easy to see that it is the fear of violating the custom
that has resulted in what we have today. A reconstruction of how the present
apartheid-like situation evolved could present the following picture: ‘I
shouldn’t hurt this priest-like personality, (that is more like the mass-server
in the Roman Catholic Church). To avoid ever doing so let me give him/her a
wide berth’. With the passage of time the reasons for giving the Osu a wide berth were forgotten, but the
giving of a ‘wide berth’ remained, and took on the present form that is
shameful. Also very disastrous is the Igbo abandonment of the Igbo religion
which gave them a privileged status in the Igbo society.
There are other Igbos that will not be given the rights and privileges
that free-born Igbos enjoy, in certain circles, even though they are free-born
too. For example an Nri priest, or an Aro merchant who resettled/resettles
outside his clan, in another clan would never be allowed to be an aka ji ofo (priest-elder) in the
family/kindred that hosted them. It is made clear to them that they are ndi obia (guests). They cannot aspire to
be traditional rulers in communities in which tradition influences the choice
of traditional rulers. Beyond these they are as free as any regular free-born.
They can inter-marry very freely with any person of their choice, unlike the Osu who can’t, because of the
afore-mentioned reason.
One could ask why all these have not occurred to most Igbos. Igbos do not know
all these because Igbo Studies is still very very undeveloped, and most Igbos
have not yet realized that there is anything worth studying about in their own
history and culture. This is because the little that the Igbos have been taught
about their history and culture, though filled with lies, inaccuracies, and
forgeries, are not edifying, but are nevertheless what the Igbos believe to be
Igbo history and culture.
For something that hints at support for my last statement I would like to
continue this article with a quote from the “Ropes of Sands” by A .E. Afigbo,
and reproduced in my book “Introduction To The Chronicles Of Igbo Israel-With
the Connections Between The African Americans And The Jews”-
“Nevertheless, every now and again, one has a sense of an older culture lying
behind what one sees, long forgotten by the people themselves, grown so faint
that it is only in certain lights that one catches a glimpse of it, but the
glimpse is of something so rich, so vital that the present sinks into
insignificance beside it. I heard it twice in a woman’s song, saw it once in a
woman’s dance, once in a ritual gesture of embrace, once in the shape and
decoration of a water-pot, once in the mural decoration of a mbari house” (Mrs. Sylvia Leight-Ross on
Igbo culture in African Women, 1939, p55).
Also because the colonialists foisted a dependency culture on
the Igbos, unconsciously the Igbos expect some invisible forces to sanitize and
improve their society. Also the indoctrination that salvation and redemption is
personal has been so internalized by the Igbos that today every Igbo seeks for
just his own good rather than the public and general good, thus the
contemporary Igbo seems unable to tackle problems that face the community. These
reasons are some of the reasons which render the Igbos helpless in the face of
major, and even minor problems.
Now, how can we solve this problem?
The Igbos can solve this problem by studying it, and
re-educating themselves about it.
Unfortunately many of the Igbos are poor now, and do not invest much of the little that they have in educating
themselves. So how costly it would be to re-educate, de-programme, and
re-indoctrinate forty million plus individuals can only be imagined. But it
could still be done. If every Igbo commits 10% of his/her annual income, and
the multimillionaires and billionaires give more in donations for Igbo
education and re-education in 5 to 10 years we would have gotten all the
information and institutions that we need to tackle the problem of general
ignorance; institutions like schools, universities, polytechnics, libraries,
newspapers and magazines with the primary objective to inform, etc. If we do
not invest in information and knowledge we will continue to reap and harvest
ignorance, suffering and poverty. There will be more on what the Igbos can do
to fight ignorance in another essay which will be coming up soon.
I have been asked if modern Jews/the Israelis practice
discrimination against Osu. My answer
is that the modern Jew has never allowed himself to be completely disconnected
from his history and culture as the Igbo is almost certainly disconnected. And
thus the Jew will never have the sort of problems that the Igbos have. The Jew
knew what the person that ran to God stood for. The Jews know and have never
forgotten that there is only one God; the Tetragrammaton (YHWH). And for
thousands of years the Jews have known that other ‘gods’ are actually illusory,
and that they do not in fact exist. He also knows that to ‘know’ about the
existence of ‘other gods’ is an aberration.
Comments
are invited.
Suggested
for further reading: M.O.E Ene’s Essay On The Osu