HOW MARRIAGE CHANGES YOU
1. Marriage makes you selfless, you start to think about another person/people who make up your family
2. Marriage makes you more financially responsible and you look for more ways of making money. You want to give your family the best
3. Marriage changes your fashion. You realize in public you need to represent your union well, in private you need to dress in an appealing way for your spouse
4. Marriage makes you more considerate, you have to involve another person in making decisions. Not just what you want
5. Marriage makes you naked. All those things you hide from the public, your spouse will see; especially the not so pleasant ones. Nakedness allows you to be real and to fix yourself
6. Marriage makes you settle, you find that one person to focus and build with, making you more effective because you invest in it a hundred percent
7. Marriage makes you learn to express yourself, you realize that in order for your spouse to understand you have to communicate. Your spouse doesn't read minds
8. Marriage makes you grow faster. When you have a spouse who challenges you, you naturally sharpen each other. Iron sharpens iron
9. Marriage brings you rest. There is something about having a home with someone that makes you feel safe and you belong
10. Marriage makes you think about purpose and legacy. You two don't just want to exist but to leave a mark as a couple
11. Marriage makes you glow. When you are loved right, you naturally shine
12. Marriage helps you make better decisions, you have someone who means well to bounce off ideas with and improve
13. Marriage is good for your emotional well being. Having a companion to open up to and lean on, eases the burden
14. Marriage adds more meaning to s*x. You realize how special and sacred it is to celebrate what you have through pleasure
15. Marriage makes you a better person, you have someone who cares about your progress correcting you
16. Marriage gives you reason to fight storms. When you have someone to stand beside you, it encourages you to keep going
Elegwah's planet consortium
Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Elegwah's planet consortium, Education, .
Operating as usual
"What you see in this picture is not happening in Africa!
We are in the United States in the state of Georgia, and that is not enough to say: we are in an American university (Georgia Gwinnett).
The Black woman you see is no ordinary person on the street. She is indeed a Professor of Biological Sciences at this university. Her name: Ramata Sissoko. She has a Doctorate and more (obtaining a Doctorate in Science in North America is to be at the pinnacle of planetary knowledge in her field). It should be added that she is from Africa, from Mali đ˛đą.
Let's get back to the facts, now that the context is well established. This Professor had hit the headlines in the United States by his beautiful gesture, gesture relayed by thousands on Twitter.
That day, a student mother who could not find a babysitter for her baby had to come to class with the child. The Malian teacher, instead of sending the student to the door for the child's crying, was rather taken with compassion ... like a real African woman.
She took the baby from the student, put the baby on her back in a typical African style and taught the lesson for three hours.
The child, very comfortable on her back, did not make a single noise during the three hours she gave the lesson. All the students could not believe this magic. Yes, it is magic in this part of the world.
But this Malian professor was unaware that this gesture, for her harmless, was going to make her much more popular than her status as professor of biological sciences.
Indeed, she had just taught two African values ââto students and to the world: sympathy and maternal character.
Sympathy because it was kind enough to allow the student to enter class with a baby who cries every second. Other teachers would have applied the rules by showing the door to the student.
As for the maternal character, it is fully reflected in the carrying of the baby on the back, a practice absent in North America.
YOU WILL NEVER LEARN THIS IN SCHOOL â
° Africa area = 30,37 million km2
° China area = 9,6 million km2
° US area = 9,8 million km2
° Europa area = 10,18 million km2
â Africa is bigger than all of Europe, China and the United States of America together.
â Africa is represented in downsize in maps đşď¸
This is deliberately done to create the visual effect of a small Africa to manipulate, brainwash, and deceive Africans wherever they are.
⢠Africa has 60% arable land.
⢠Africa owns 90% of raw material reserve.
⢠Africa owns 40% of the global gold reserve.
⢠Africa, 33% of diamond reserve.
⢠Africa has 80% of coltan's global reserve (mineral for telephone and electronics production), mainly in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
⢠Africa has 60% of global cobalt reserve (mineral for car battery manufacture).
⢠Africa is rich in oil and natural gas.
⢠Africa (Namibia) has the world's richest fish coastline.
⢠Africa is rich in manganese, iron and wood.
⢠Africa is three times the area of China, three times the area of Europe, three times the United States of America.
⢠Africa has thirty-half million km2 (30 875 415 km2);
⢠Africa has 1.3 billion inhabitants (China has 1.4 billion inhabitants in 9.6 million km2) which means Africa is SUB POPULATED.
⢠The arable lands of the Democratic Republic of Congo are capable of feeding all of Africa. And all of Africa's arable land is a cord to feed the whole world.
⢠The Democratic Republic of Congo has important rivers that can illuminate Africa. The problem is that the CIA, western companies and some African puppets have destabilized DRC for decades.
⢠Africa is a culturally diverse continent in terms of dance, music, architecture, sculpture, etc.
⢠Africa accommodates 30,000 medicinal recipes and herbs that the West modifies in its laboratories.
⢠Africa has a young global population that should reach 2.5 billion by the year 2050.
â AFRICA REPRESENTS THE FUTURE OF HUMANITYâ
Š African Voice
This picture teaches us one important lesson. Today you are flying up the sky, tomorrow you will need someone on the ground to carry you. So be humble, love people and invest in people.
MORAL LESSONS: Don't underestimate people below you, carry them above if you can but donât push them down. Happy Blessed weekend Africans đŻđ
EDUCATION IS THE PASSPORT TO THE FUTURE
In 1946, Malcolm X was convicted of a crime and sent to prison. He spent seven years in prison. When he went in, he could not even write his name. He was frustrated about this; he wrote, "I became increasingly frustrated. at not being able to express what I wanted to convey in letters that I wrote⌠It was sad. I couldn't even write in a straight line."
Malcolm X had never gone beyond the eighth grade. If there was a person that could typify rascal, hustler, illiterate, and living a wasteful life, it was Malcolm X before his prison years. He regretted this himself.
But if that were all Malcolm X did, we would not know him today. Malcolm X refused to allow these realities to dampen him. He took a definite step.
"I saw that the best thing I could do was get hold of a dictionary - to study, to learn some words. It was both ideas together that moved me to request a dictionary along with some tablets and pencils from the Norfolk Prison Colony school."
He didn't need to go back to school; he used what he had- books. He read every single day from that day forward.
By the time he left prison, he was the most eloquent person amongst them. He would use his oratory to advocate for equal rights for blacks in the US and worldwide. This man who once was a nobody had become someone of worldwide reputation with his words. Reading had changed him. Reading had built him. Reading had helped him discover himself and his potential. Just before his death, a commentator said Malcolm X was the only person in the US whose words could cause a riot or stop a riot. He was that influential.
He once said, "Education is the passport to the future, for tomorrow belongs to those who prepare for it today."
If Malcolm X could do this while in prison, what more of you who are accessible in the 21st Century with a smartphone that allows you to do Facebook? You are limitless.
Get your passport to the future. Make the best of the internet. Study. Learn. Grow.
I wish you the best, my friend.
THINK OF WHAT YOU CAN ADD MORE THAN WHAT YOU CAN TAKE
There was a circulated photo of a vulture waiting for a starving Sudanese girl to die and feast on her during the 1993 famine in Sudan.
The photo was taken by Kevin Carter, a South African photojournalist who later won the Pulitzer Prize for this 'amazing' shot (edited and left out here because of its inhumane posture).
Kevin however lived just a few months to enjoy his supposed achievement because he later got depressed and took his own life!
He was savoring his feat and he was being celebrated on major news channels and networks worldwide for such an 'exceptional' photographic skill.
His depression started when, during one of the interviews he granted (a phone-in program), someone phoned in and asked him what happened to the child.
Kevin replied, "I didn't wait to find out after this shot as I had a flight to catch..."
And the person replied, "I put it to you that there were two vultures on that day; one had a camera."
His constant thought of that statement led to depression and his ultimate su***de.
So, are you too a vulture?
In whatever we do, we should let humanity come first before what we can gain out of the situation.
Kevin Carter could have been alive today and even be more celebrated if he had just picked that little girl up and taken her to the United Nations Feeding Center where she was attempting to reach.
In all we do, let us always think of others and how we can be of benefit to humanity.
How we can lend a helping hand and wipe tears?
And when we seek knowledge, wealth, or even elective office, let us think of how we can use it to benefit the people most.
A New You is possible.
THINK OF WHAT YOU CAN ADD MORE THAN WHAT YOU CAN TAKE
Quote of the day...
Learn more: https://www.ancient-origins.net/
Learn to be silent. Let your quiet mind listen and absorb.â
â Pythagoras
âA liar will not be believed, even when he speaks the truth.â
â Aesop
âA fool is known by his speech, and a wise man by silence.â
â Pythagoras
SIX LEADERSHIP PRINCIPLES TO LEARN FROM AN EAGLE. đŚ
1. Eagles fly Alone and at High Altitudes - They don't fly with sparrows, ravens, and other small birds.
MEANING - Stay away from narrow-minded people, those that bring you down. Eagle flies with Eagles. Keep good company.
2. Eagles have an Accurate Vision - They have the ability to focus on something as far as 5km away. No matter the obstacles, the eagle will not move his focus from the prey until he grabs it.
MEANING - Have a vision and remain focused no matter what the obstacles and you will succeed.
3. Eagles do not Eat Dead things - They Feed only on Fresh Prey.
MEANING - Do not rely on your past success, keep looking for new frontiers to conquer. Leave your past where it belongs, in the past.
4. Eagles Love the Storm - When clouds gather, the eagle gets excited, the eagle uses the storm's wind to lift itself higher. Once it finds the wind of the storm, the eagle uses the raging storm to lift itself above the clouds. This gives the eagle an opportunity to glide and rest its wings. In the meantime, all the other birds hide in the branches and leaves of the tree.
MEANING - Face your challenges head on knowing that these will make you emerge stronger and better than you were. We can use the storms of life to rise to greater heights. Achievers are not afraid to rise to greater heights. Achievers are not afraid of challenges, rather they relish them and use them profitably.
5. Eagles Prepare for Training - They remove the feathers and soft grass in the nest so that the young ones get uncomfortable in preparation for flying and eventually flies/ when it becomes unbearable to stay in the nest.
MEANING - Leave your Comfort Zone, there is No Growth there.
6. When the Eagle Grows Old - His feathers becomes weak and cannot take him as fast and as high as it should. This makes him weak and could make him die. So he retires to a place far away in the mountains. While there, he plucks out the weak feather.
WOMEN: A group of tourists was visiting a crocodile farm and they were in a floating structure in the middle of a crocodile lake.
The owner of the farm shouted: "Whoever jumps into the water and swims to shore, will receive 10 million dollars. The silence was deafening.
Suddenly, a man jumped into the water. He was chased by crocodiles, but with great luck he was unharmed. The owner announced: "We have a winner!!!".
After receiving their reward, the man and his wife returned to the hotel room. The man tells his wife: "I did not jump in myself ... Someone pushed me !!!"
His wife smiled and said coldly: "It was me!"
Moral of the story: "Behind every successful man, there is always a woman to give him a little push" .đ
WISDOM QUOTES
1. âKnowing yourself is the beginning of all wisdom.â â Aristotle
2. âIt is better to remain silent at the risk of being thought a fool, than to talk and remove all doubt of it.â â Maurice Switzer
3. âThe only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing.â â Socrates
4. âIn a good bookroom you feel in some mysterious way that you are absorbing the wisdom contained in all the books through your skin, without even opening them.â â Mark Twain
5. âCount your age by friends, not years. Count your life by smiles, not tears.â â John Lennon
6. âIt is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it.â - Aristotle
7. âThe secret of life, though, is to fall seven times and to get up eight times.â â Paulo Coelho
8. âTurn your wounds into wisdom.â â Oprah Winfrey
9. âLet no man pull you so low as to hate him.â â Martin Luther King Jr
10. âI'm not young enough to know everything.â â J.M. Barrie
11. âGod will not look you over for medals, degrees or diplomas but for scars.â â Elbert Hubbard
12. âAngry people are not always wise.â â Jane Austen
13. âThe only way to get through life is to laugh your way through it. You either have to laugh or cry. I prefer to laugh. Crying gives me a headache.â â Marjorie Pay Hinckley
14. âKnowing others is intelligence; knowing yourself is true wisdom. Mastering others is strength; mastering yourself is true power. If you realize that you have enough, you are truly rich.ââ Lao Tzu
15. âKnowledge speaks, but wisdom listensâ â Jimi Hendrix
16. âThe only way to get through life is to laugh your way through it. You either have to laugh or cry. I prefer to laugh. Crying gives me a headache.â
â Marjorie Pay Hinckley
17. âIt is better to remain silent at the risk of being thought a fool, than to talk and remove all doubt of it.â â Maurice Switzer
18. âThink before you speak. Read before you think.â â Fran Lebowitz
Most of all, listen inwardly for that still small voice that doesn't use words...
Brief History Of Northern Nigeria Before Amalgamation
To understand Nigeria you need to know the history to explain the politics.
When the British arrived in what became Northern Nigeria, there were by then lets say for arguments sake two nations ruling the North predominantly the Fulani and then also the Indigenous Hausa, the latter of which the Hausa kingdoms were constantly being attacked by the Fulani who are conquers by nature. The British to keep a balance assisted the Hausa and with their help confronted the Fulani.
The Fulani understanding conquest took to their new masters the British and in return for their new found compliant attitude Lord Lugard made every Emir in every town in the north a Fulani, inadvertently giving power back to the Fulani. (I wonder if this is where the phrase âthe only thing Nigeria understands is warâ stems from).
Then in 1914 for financial reasons the British amalgamated the Northern Nigeria Protectorate with the Southern Protectorates, now these were entirely two very different regions, as the southern protectorate wasnât a conquered region it was a democratic area of many nations that had been developed over thousands of years of trading with foreign lands (the southern protectorate agreed upon to protect trading) and was religiously predominantly Judea Christian and in every sense was far more developed than the north in every aspect; education, standard of living etc.. following the amalgamation there was a great need in the north for jobs only the southerners could really do for development of the country like railways, education etc..
So they were sent to the north, however they were still the foreigners and they could never fit in, understandably deep seated bad feelings embedded itself as the Northerners felt the Southerners were lauding their social standing over them and the Southerners could never fit into the social/political system as it was not designed to do so. (Oil doesnât mix with water). Now the British have left following independence the Fulani are still conquering as is there nature by political means.
To explain in full detail one must read: Historical background of Northern Nigeria in the Report of the Justice G.C.M Onyiuke Tribunal 1966.
For a century before the advent of British administration in Nigeria, the Fulani provided the ruling class of most of Northern Nigeria.
The notable exception is the Bornu Emirate to the north/east which is inhabited by the Kanuri. What we now know as the provinces of Sokoto, Gwandu, Katsina, Kano, Zaria, Bauchi, Adamawa, Plateau and Niger fell under varying degrees to the influence of the Fulani aristocracy. Northern Nigeria was by no means a void nor was it without history. We do not propose to delve into ancient history. This is hardly a useful exercise here. Suffice it to say that British expansion met established Hausa states at varying levels of development and prosperity.
They were in all at this stage 14 Hausa states which comprised, Darua, Kano, Zaria, Gobir, Katsina, Rono and Biram (the Hausa Bakwai or legitimate 7 states); Zamfara, Kebbi, Nupe, Gbagyi, Gauri, Ilorin (Yoruba) and Kwararafa (the banza Bakwai or upstart seven which developed to the south and west of the original group). Each state had its own traditions and legends of origin and at varying degrees had embraced or come under the influence of Islam. It had been said that it would be strictly incorrect to refer to these Hausa states as if they belong to the same ethnic group. They were people who spoke the Hausa language and adopted the Hausa mode of dress and life generally.
When the 19th century opened, the Fulani appeared to be the predominant race in the Sudan. Fulani is the Hausa name for the people who call themselves Fulbe. They themselves made a distinction between the Cattle Fulani and the Town Fulani; The latter included the aristocratic families such as Torobe. The origin of these people is less than clear. What is more certain, however is that by the 16th century, there was a steady movement of those Fulani people from the region now known as Senegal towards the East through Messina and the Hausa states toward Chad and Adamawa and beyond.
From the rank of the Fulani the great religious leaders of the 18th and 19th centuries came in the Sudan to launch a series of religious movements which, as often happened in Islam, passed into political wars. We are here concerned with the religious movement that affected Northern Nigeria.
Usman Dan Fodio who was subsequently known as Shehu or Sheikh was born a Fulani in the Hausa state of Gobir about 1750. He was brought up with his brother Abdullahi as a strict Muslim and after studying for some years in Agades he felt the call to dedicate his life to teaching the faith. On his return from Agades, Dan Fodio acted as a tutor to the Sarkin Gobirâs two sons in Alkaluwa. One of these was Yunfa who was later to succeed to the throne.
In the interval before his accession Dan Fodio felt obliged to withdraw from Alkaluwa giving his reason the reversion to pagan practices by the court on the hostility shown towards the Muslim faith. When Yunfa finally became king, he sort out his old tutor and encouraged him to resume his itinerant preaching. Dan Fodio soon fell out with the new king and in 1804 was driven to flight. A party rallied to him, defeated the king, and proclaimed Dan Fodio, (now their leader) Sarkin Musulmi Commander of the Faithful, a title which is still held by his successor, the Sultan of Sokoto. A general movement broke out all over the area which later became Northern Nigeria.
The line of cleavage did not run clear between the Fulani and the Hausas but the Fulani who provided the energy and ambition to the apparent religious cause. Everywhere followers of the Shehu, appointed or self-appointed, received flags from his hands. They called upon the faithful to drive out the old Hausa or as they were called the Habe dynasties and then set themselves up in turn as rulers subject to Sokoto which had become the seat of the Fulani authority in 1810. Not only was this change accomplished in the old Hausa kingdoms but in the impetus of the movement, Fulani leaders pushed the boundaries of Islam south, incorporating in varying degrees many pagan tribes.
As indicated earlier the movement for religious revival degenerated into a political war of conquest. Consequently the son of the Shehu, Bello, who succeeded him became more interested in the military and political results of the religious revival than in spreading the faith.
The record for Fulani success had some important exceptions. The ancient Kanuri kingdom of Bornu with its capital near Lake Chad and itself Moslem, threw back the Fulani invaders. The holy man of Bornu, El-Kanemi, taunted Shehu Usman Dan Fodio with having turned a war of religion into one of conquest and with attacking his co-religionists.
El-Kanemi frankly admitted that some of his Chiefs had relapsed into heathenism, that the Alkalis or Moslem judges sometimes took bribes and women went unveiled; but he argued that this was not sufficient excuse for war. This opposition from Bornu, as we shall see when we come to consider the pattern and the spread of the atrocities in the 1966 program, seems to appear its head once again in 1966. Bello in his defense of his fathers action justified mainly on the ground of proselytism. Said he:
the second reason for our Jihad was that they were heathens, the people of Hausa. A further reason for the war was that we sought to aid truth against falsehood and to strengthen Islam. For to make war on the heathen from the beginning, if one has the power is declared a duty. So also it is itâs a duty to make war on those heathen who have converted to Islam and later have reverted to heathenism, if one has the power. In truth we stated at the beginning of this that the Hausa chiefs, their people and their mallams were evil doersâ.
At the beginning of the present century, the British administration emerged in Northern Nigeria. They based their title on conquest. Sir Frederick Lugard, the first British governor of Northern Nigeria asserted in one of his early reports as follows:- âThe Fulani hold their suzerainty by right of conquest. I can myself see no injustice in the transfer of the suzerainty thus acquired to the British by the same right of conquestâ.
The Fulani caste seemed to have accepted their masters without much resistance. The explanation of this, it is said, was due in part to the insecurity of the Fulani position in relation to their subjects who had shown little loyalty to the Fulani during the period of their confrontation with the British.
The British, by force of arms, broke the Fulani ascendancy in the north, but by twist of irony, restore that supremacy under the system of indirect rule. Once the suzerainty of the British was accepted by the Fulani, the British were content to allow an even to support and consolidate the authority of the Fulani Emirs in their various Emirates.
The Fulani Emir was left as the head of the native administration, the head of the native judiciary, the religious head, and practically the head of everything in his emirate. Offices in the native administration, in the native administration police, in the native judiciary, what filled by appointees of the emirs. These appointees were invariably the relations of the Emir or his courtiers. Moslem religion preempted every aspect of life in the Emirates. This society became a âclosed shopâ. Strangers especially non-Moslems, had no place in the society.
It is generally accepted that in 1966 there were over 2 million Easterners in Northern Nigeria. Their presence in the north it was all connected with the amalgamation of northern and southern Nigeria in 1914 by the British. Unfortunately, although they were there in such large numbers and for so long and filled a very important position in the economic and political development of Northern Nigeria, they were never fully integrated into the mainstream of life in society. They became what sociologist call a privilege pariah class- âprivilegedâ because participating in and benefiting from the modernizing sectors of the economy to which the northern Muslims had been induced to turn their back.
Their standard of living was higher than the normal run of life of most northerners. They were âpariahâ because they were kept outside the rank system of society. Because of the attitude of northern Muslims to modern education, the administrators of the day were compelled to employ these Easterners though they disliked having them. It cut across the policy of the day of separating the north from the south.
âDivide and ruleâ is a clichĂŠ which is grown odious by being frequently used for all situations weather appropriate or not; but it really enshrined an important gem of British colonial policy. The north and south were amalgamated in 1914 ostensibly under One government yet the âwritâ of the legislative Council in Lagos did not run into Northern Nigeria. The British colonial administrator reserved the right to legislate alone for the north until the Richards constitution of 1946.
Easterners is and in fact other non-northerners were restricted in most of the towns to strangers quarters called Sabon Gari. In these circumstance the Easterners and Northerners grew up a separate communities. Dissimilarities were accentuated and old prejudices hardened. Since 1950 attempts, especially by southerners, were made to bridge the gap but such attempts were regarded by the northern aristocracy as an imposition from the south and were smashed.
The emergence of political parties in Nigeria did not improve matters in the north either. As far as the north was concerned it did not succeed in breaking down the old barriers. The dominant political party in the north (the Northern Peopleâs Congress) started off as a party of native administration functionaries and appointees of the Emirâs and never really went beyond that.
It is our view that the foundation of Nigeria contain the seeds of her own destruction.
Cc: Gossip House
How Idi Amin Renamed Colonial Roads, Lakes & Mountains So As To Decolonise Uganda
Article by Faustin Mugabe, Daily Monitor Researcher/Historian.
On December 17, 1972, former president Idi Amin made a proclamation that led to the renaming of some of Ugandaâs physical features such as national parks, lakes and roads.
The promulgation was made on national radio and television following a campaign he had started codenamed âUgandaâs economic warâ in which he expelled Indians, Israelis and the British. Amin told the nation that he had decided to rename those physical features because their colonial names were insignificant to independent Ugandan.
âI have decided that Queen Elizabeth National Park shall henceforth be known as Rwenzori National Park and the Murchison Falls as well as the Murchison Falls National Park shall henceforth be known as Kabalega Falls and Kabalega National Park,â he announced.
âKabalega is a name that is very important. The king of Bunyoro determinedly fought the British who were advancing into Uganda from Sudan and several battles routed them. It was only after the British had been on alliance with a neighbouring local king that Kabalega was finally subdued. Names like Kabalega have much more meaning for the people of Uganda than names like Murchison which are foreign and of whose origin and significance not many people in Uganda are aware of.â
Lake Albert was renamed Lake Idi Amin Dada while Lake Edward was renamed after his friend the president of Zaire, Mubutu Sese Seko. Lake Victoria was given back its Kiganda name, Nalubaale.
âIn addition, we have decided to change the names of a number of roads in Kampala as follows,â Amin said.
â1. Prince Charles Drive becomes 25 January Avenue to signify the date of the birth of the second Republic of Uganda. You are aware that the battle for our nation was commanded from the command post which lies on the new 25 January Avenue and it is only fitting that a place that important in our country should be served by a road whose name has a real meaning in our national history.
2. Queenâs Road becomes Lumumba Avenue. As the people of Uganda and Africa know, Patrice Lumumba is one of the greatest Africans that have ever lived. He strongly fought against the imperialists and Zionists for the freedom of Africa. It was due to his courageous and uncompromising stand against these evils that he was assassinated. He was a strong national and international leader. It would be a good thing for all Africans to follow the teachings, practices and principles of Patrice Lumumba.
3. Salisbury Road becomes Nkrumah Road. Kwame Nkrumah as again you will be aware was another great African who tirelessly struggled against imperialism for the liberation of the whole of Africa. He was a firm advocate of African Unity and a great pan-Africanist. He greatly contributed to the founding of the Organisation of African Unity. We must honour his memory.
4. Rosebury Road becomes Nasser Road. Gamel Abdul Nasser fought the imperialists and Zionists until his death and that is why they always hated and feared him. We know that the fire of his teachings and beliefs still blaze strong in the whole of Africa, the Arab world, Asia and Latin America. We must remember his courageous stand for the freedom of Africa and the Arab world.
5. Hunter Road in Bugolobi becomes Luthuli Avenue. The late chief Albert Luthuli also courageously fought against the racists of South Africa and they kept him in jail for many years. He died an unnatural death and the circumstances of his death are still a mystery. He was awarded the Noble Prize in 1961.
6. Borup Avenue becomes Malcolm X Avenue. Malcolm X was a strong Afro-American political leader who bravely exposed and resisted the activities of the imperialists. He was assassinated because of his beliefs.
7. Kings Road in Nakasero will be Sukano Road. Dr Sukano was for many years president of Indonesia having guided that nation to independence. He was a strong anti-imperialist leader and he convened the first non-aligned conference which was held at Bandung.
8. Kings Avenue becomes Nehru Avenue. Pandit Nehru was the first prime minister of India which he led to independence in 1947.
He was imprisoned by the British rulers of Indian.
9. Harcourt Avenue becomes Kimathi Avenue. Dedan Kimathi was a very courageous nationalist and freedom fighter who as a Mau-Mau leader physically and for many years fought imperialism in Kenya until he was slain in battle.
10. Stanley Road becomes Akii-Bua Road: John Akii-Bua as you know was the first Ugandan to get a gold medal at the Olympic Games when he completed first in Munich in august this year. His performance was a world record. Which I know will stand for a long time.â
At the official renaming of Queenâs Road to Lumumba Avenue on January 18, 1973, Amin said: âIt is time we took stock of ourselves with a view to restoring our cultural heritage, human dignity and respect which has hitherto been denied to us by forces of imperialism and their agents.â
âTo fight against the forces of imperialism and Zionism; and to succeed in this fight, we must believe and practice true nationalism as our guiding principle.â
He also warned Africans never to forget that imperialists were in Africa for their own selfish interests and not for African interests.
âIn addition, we have decided that subject to consultations with Kenya, Mt Elgon will be known as Mt Masaba. Although most of Lake Victoria is in Uganda, we shall make immediate consultations with our neighbours Kenya and Tanzania with a view to agreeing on a new name for Lake Victoria,â he said.
Because of that technicality, the name Lake Victoria remained unchanged. But later when the Kenyan government accepted Aminâs proposal, Mt Elgon was changed to Masaba Mountain.
âThe changes in the names of roads, national parks and mountain I have announced tonight are only the beginning of what must be a concerted campaign to make similar changes in respect of all roads, institutions, etc. bearing colonial and imperial names in Uganda,â he said.
âI want to ask all urban and local authorities and institutions to make immediate arrangements to change meaningless foreign names of roads, streets etc. in their areas and to replace them with meaningful African or other names as indicated above. The proposal should be submitted to the Cabinet for approval before any road or institution is renamed.â
As a result of this decree, districts such as Rukungiri, Mbale and Arua have a road named Republic road or street after the Second Republic of Uganda.
It was also after this decree that roads in Uganda were named after Ugandans. In Rukungiri District, for instance, a road was named after Karegyesa, a former minister and Member of Parliament.
In Jinja District, many roads such as Nadiope, Luba (Lubas) and Gabula were named after local leaders and politicians.
Unfortunately, when Amin fell in 1979, most of the colonial names were reinstated.