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HAUSA Cultural Orientation TABLE OF CONTENTS CHAPTER 1: PROFILE ................................................................................................................. 1 Introduction.............................................................................................................................. 1 Area and Topography .............................................................................................................. 2 Climate..................................................................................................................................... 2 Rivers ....................................................................................................................................... 3 Niger ................................................................................................................................. 3 Benue ................................................................................................................................ 4 Cities of Northern Nigeria ....................................................................................................... 4 Kano ................................................................................................................................. 4 Kaduna .............................................................................................................................. 5 Regional History ...................................................................................................................... 6 The Hausa ......................................................................................................................... 7 Slavery .............................................................................................................................. 8 The British Conquest ........................................................................................................ 9 North and South .............................................................................................................. 11 Independence .................................................................................................................. 12 Government ........................................................................................................................... 13 Media ..................................................................................................................................... 14 Economy ................................................................................................................................ 15 Oil ................................................................................................................................... 15 Northern Nigeria ............................................................................................................. 16 Nollywood and Kanywood ............................................................................................. 18 Scam Culture .................................................................................................................. 19 Ethnic Groups ........................................................................................................................ 20 Hausa-Fulani................................................................................................................... 21 Yoruba ............................................................................................................................ 22 Igbo ................................................................................................................................. 23 Ijaw ................................................................................................................................. 24 Chapter 1 Assessment ............................................................................................................ 25 CHAPTER 2: RELIGION ............................................................................................................ 26 Introduction............................................................................................................................ 26 Major Religions ..................................................................................................................... 26 Islam ............................................................................................................................... 26 Indigenous Religions ...................................................................................................... 28 Christianity ..................................................................................................................... 29 Religion and Government ...................................................................................................... 30 Influence of Religion on Daily Life....................................................................................... 31 Gender Relations and Religion .............................................................................................. 33 Religious Holidays and Celebrations..................................................................................... 34 © D LI F LC | i HAUSA Cultural Orientation Ramadan ......................................................................................................................... 34 Buildings of Worship ............................................................................................................. 34 Behavior in Buildings of Worship ......................................................................................... 35 Mosques .......................................................................................................................... 35 Churches ......................................................................................................................... 36 Chapter 2 Assessment ............................................................................................................ 38 CHAPTER 3: TRADITIONS ....................................................................................................... 39 Introduction............................................................................................................................ 39 Greetings ................................................................................................................................ 39 Male-Female Interaction ........................................................................................................ 41 Hospitality and Gift Giving ................................................................................................... 42 Eating Habits and Types of Food .......................................................................................... 43 Types of Food ................................................................................................................. 43 Dining Etiquette.............................................................................................................. 44 Dress Codes ........................................................................................................................... 45 Non-Religious Celebrations................................................................................................... 46 Hausa Dance Festival ..................................................................................................... 46 Argungu Fish and Cultural Festival ............................................................................... 47 Dos and Don’ts ...................................................................................................................... 47 Chapter 3 Assessment ............................................................................................................ 49 CHAPTER 4: URBAN LIFE ........................................................................................................ 50 Introduction............................................................................................................................ 50 Urbanization .......................................................................................................................... 51 Water and Sanitation ...................................................................................................... 51 Crime and Violence ........................................................................................................ 51 Pollution ......................................................................................................................... 52 Urban employment ......................................................................................................... 52 Healthcare .............................................................................................................................. 53 Education ............................................................................................................................... 55 Restaurants ............................................................................................................................. 56 Markets .................................................................................................................................. 59 Money, Credit Cards, and ATMs ................................................................................... 59 Traffic and Transportation ..................................................................................................... 60 Cars ................................................................................................................................. 61 Public Transportation ..................................................................................................... 61 Street Crime, Safety, and Solicitations .................................................................................. 62 Beggars ........................................................................................................................... 63 Chapter 4 Assessment ............................................................................................................ 65 CHAPTER 5: RURAL LIFE ........................................................................................................ 66 © D LI F LC | ii HAUSA Cultural Orientation Introduction............................................................................................................................ 66 Land Tenure ........................................................................................................................... 66 Rural Economy ...................................................................................................................... 67 Ineffective Solutions ....................................................................................................... 69 Village Life ............................................................................................................................ 70 Healthcare .............................................................................................................................. 71 Rural Transportation .............................................................................................................. 73 Education ............................................................................................................................... 73 Checkpoints ........................................................................................................................... 75 ID Cards ................................................................................................................................. 76 Border Crossing ..................................................................................................................... 77 Chapter 5 Assessment ............................................................................................................ 78 CHAPTER 6: FAMILY LIFE ...................................................................................................... 79 Introduction............................................................................................................................ 79 Courtship and Weddings........................................................................................................ 80 Funerals.................................................................................................................................. 81 Seclusion ................................................................................................................................ 82 Status of Children, Adolescents, and Elders .......................................................................... 82 Marriage and Divorce ............................................................................................................ 84 Marriage ......................................................................................................................... 84 Divorce ........................................................................................................................... 85 Naming Conventions ............................................................................................................. 86 Chapter 6 Assessment ............................................................................................................ 87 FINAL ASSESSMENT ................................................................................................................ 88 FURTHER READING ................................................................................................................. 91 © D LI F LC | iii HAUSA Cultural Orientation CHAPTER 1: PROFILE Introduction The area of West Africa now known as Nigeria once was defined by natural borders: the Atlantic Ocean to the south; the arid Sahel and Sahara to the north; the Niger and the Benue rivers and the three regions they divide; and the near-impenetrable rainforest just north of the ocean. 1 Three major ethnic groups evolved within the three regions: the Yoruba in the southwest, the Igbo in the southeast, and the Hausa in the north. 2 Centuries of European territorial and economic exploitation of Africa led to the continent’s division in the late 1800s. Nigeria became a British island among French and German colonies. 3 Many disparate ethnicities combined into an uneasy national enterprise, leaving Nigeria with permanent rivalries, particularly the Muslim north versus the Christian south. A chain of historical circumstances led to dominance of the country by northerners. 4 The discovery of major oil reserves in the Niger Delta in 1956 exacerbated divisions. Much of the tremendous oil revenues disappear into the chasm of corrupt governance and patronage; little goes toward infrastructure and development. 5 A staggering 61% of Nigerians live in “absolute poverty”; it runs as high as 86% in the north. 6 Paradoxically, Nigeria is one of Africa’s richest states and one of its poorest. In 1999, Nigeria returned to civilian rule after years of northern-dominated military governments. It remains a country challenged by its “oil curse,” its rapidly rising population, and ethnic conflicts. 7 1 Patrick Karl O’Brien, ed., Atlas of World History (New York: Oxford University Press, 2007) 80–81. Marcellina Ulunma Okehie-Offoha and Matthew N. O. Sadiku, eds., Ethnic and Cultural Diversity in Nigeria (Trenton, NJ: Africa World Press, Inc., 1996). 3 Peter Duignan and L. H. Gann, eds., “Africa in 1914,” in Colonialism in Africa, 1870-1960, vol. 4, The Economics of Colonialism (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1975), 65. 4 James Minahan, “Hausas,” in Encyclopedia of the Stateless Nations: Ethnic and National Groups Around the World, vol. 2, D-K (Westport, CT: Greenwood Publishing Group, 2002), 713–718. 5 Tom O’Neill, “Nigerian Oil,” National Geographic, February 2007, http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2007/02/nigerian-oil/oneill-text 6 BBC News, “Nigerians Living in Poverty Rise to Nearly 61%,” 13 February 2012, http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-17015873 7 Martin P. Mathews, Nigeria: Current Issues and Historical Background (Hauppauge, NY: Nova Science Publishers, Inc., 2002). 2 © D LI F L C | 1 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Area and Topography Nigeria is one-third larger than Texas. It borders the Republic of Benin for 773 km (480 mi); Niger, 1,497 km (930 mi); Chad, 87 km (54 mi); and Cameroon, 1,690 km (1050 mi). Its 774 km (481 mi) coast runs along the Gulf of Guinea. A hot, humid coastal band of mangrove swamp, as wide as 96 km (60 mi), abuts a band of tropical rain forest and oil palm ranging from 80–160 km (50–100 mi). A higher, drier central plateau region with open woodland and savanna forms a third band. Semi-desert conditions distinguish the drier north. The Niger and Benue rivers shape Nigeria’s landscape. The Niger flows from far west in Guinea, follows a long arc through Mali and Niger, and enters the northwest border of Nigeria moving southeast. The Benue flows to the southwest from the Cameroon highlands. The two rivers meet near Nigeria’s broad center. The united system flows south into the Niger Delta, dispersing into the Gulf of Guinea. The river basins form broad lowlands bisected by innumerable streams and rivers that flow through wide sandy valleys. The lowlands extend across the coastal region. The Niger and Benue form a Y that divides Nigeria into three sections, within which are the high plateaus. The central plateau, north of the rivers, covers nearly one-fifth of the country. Its lower step, with an average elevation of 750 m (2,461 ft), is the High Plains of Hausaland, a broad swath of sandy plains dotted by rock outcroppings. The Jos Plateau rises above the southern central plateau averaging 1,280 m (4,200 ft). It has numerous rocky peaks in the Shere Hills; the highest is 1,829 m (6,001 ft). Many smaller hills appear “from the ground like mushrooms.” 8 Nigeria’s highest elevations are in the mountainous eastern highlands; Chappal Waddi, on the Cameroon border, rises 2,419 m (7,936 ft), Nigeria’s highest point. In the southwest section lie the rugged Yoruba Highlands. 9, 10 Climate Nigeria experiences the common West African warm and tropical climate, with relatively high temperatures throughout the year and two main seasons. The rainy season lasts from 8 Total, “About Nigeria: Geography: Natural Influences: The Landscape, Geology, and Climate of Nigeria,” n.d., http://www.ng.total.com/01_about_nigeria/0104_geography.htm 9 Eroarome Martin Aregheore, “Country Pasture/Forage Resource Profiles: Nigeria,” Food and Agriculture Organization of the UN, January 2009, http://www.fao.org/ag/AGP/AGPC/doc/Counprof/nigeria/nigeria.htm 10 Nigeria High Commission, London, “About Nigeria,” 2012, http://www.nigeriahc.org.uk/about-nigeria © D LI F L C | 2 HAUSA Cultural Orientation mid-March to November in the south, and May to October in the north. The “dry” season runs the remaining months. Rainfall ceases altogether in the north; in the south, about one-third of the annual rainfall drops in the “dry” months. Annual rainfall ranges from 379 cm (149 in) in the Niger Delta town of Brass to 63 cm (25 in) in the far northwest town of Maiduguri (2001 ests.). The temperature across Nigeria averages about 25°C (77°F), with highs of 35–38°C (95– 100°F). It becomes warmer, drier, and less humid as one moves northward. 11, 12 The tropical marine winds that blow north from the Atlantic Ocean and the dry, dusty trade winds that blow south from the Sahara from late November to midMarch influence the climate. The dry wind is called the harmattan. It often brings a haze of fine dust particles that blankets everything in its path. The harmattan’s severity may be increasing as the Sahara encroaches—a product of human settlement and deforestation. The harmattan makes outdoor activity difficult and threatens transportation safety. 13 It creates health problems ranging from respiratory ailments, to allergies, to the drying of skin and eyes. 14 Rivers Niger The Niger River, at 4,200 km (2,610 mi), is Africa’s third-longest river and traverses nine countries. Its basin is home to more than 100 million people, a figure that grows 3% annually. Nigeria has 28.3% of the hydrologically active basin area, and 67.6 million inhabitants (2004 est.), the most of the nine countries in both categories. Nigeria’s basin inhabitants represent 60% of the country’s population. (The Benue River is part of the basin complex and is reflected in the area and population statistics.) Historically, the Niger linked the Gulf of Guinea with Timbuktu and other caravan hubs 11 Eroarome Martin Aregheore, “Country Pasture/Forage Resource Profiles: Nigeria,” Food and Agriculture Organization of the UN, January 2009, http://www.fao.org/ag/AGP/AGPC/doc/Counprof/nigeria/nigeria.htm 12 E. O. Ita, “Aquatic Plants and Wetland Wildlife Resources of Nigeria: Climate,” Food and Agriculture Organization of the UN, 1994, http://www.fao.org/docrep/005/T3660E/T3660E01.htm#ch1.1 13 Lateef Lawal, “Nigeria: NCAA Warns Pilots on Hazards of Harmattan Dust Haze,” Nigerian Aviation News, 27 December 2011, http://nigerianaviationnews.blogspot.com/2010/12/ncaa-warns-pilotsairlines-onhazards-of.html 14 Christy Ajibade, “Nigeria: The Hazards of Harmattan,” AllAfrica.com, 31 January 2011, http://allafrica.com/stories/201102010921.html © D LI F L C | 3 HAUSA Cultural Orientation in the Sahel. Today, the overburdened river is an economic lifeline to some of the world’s poorest countries, providing power, irrigation, and navigation. 15 Benue The Benue River, the Niger’s major tributary, travels 1,400 km (870 mi). Its headwaters lie on the north slope of the Adamawa Plateau in Cameroon. During colonial days, it was the main route to northern Cameroon. At Lokoja, where the Benue and Niger join, the two rivers are approximately the same size, even though the Niger travels approximately three times farther. 16 Cities of Northern Nigeria Kano Kano is the largest city in northern Nigeria with some 3 million people. It is the second most populous in the country. 17 For centuries, it has been an important center for trade and Islamic studies. In 1112, a wall was built to keep out invaders. The wall crumbled, although most of the gates survive. The formerly walled area (the Old City) features numerous attractions including the Emir’s Palace, the Great Mosque, the Gidan Makama Mosque, and the Kofar Matar Dyeing Pits, where artful fabrics are produced in accordance with ancient practices. 18 The large, all-seasons Kurmi Market, one of West Africa’s oldest, dates 500 years. 19 The population of the city is 90–95% Muslim, and perhaps 1% Christian. Traditionally, the Christians lived in the Sabon Gari (Hausa for “foreigners’ town”). Such neighborhoods are common in northern Nigerian cities. 20, 21 After civilian rule was restored to Nigeria in 1999, shari’a law was instituted. Kano’s Sabon Gari, with bars, prostitution, and gambling, became a refuge and then a flashpoint for violent Muslim-Christian conflict that continues. 22, 23, 24 15 Inger Andersen et al., The Niger River Basin: A Vision for Sustainable Management, ed. Katherin George Golitzen (Washington, DC: The World Bank, 2005). 16 Inger Andersen et al., The Niger River Basin: A Vision for Sustainable Management, ed. Katherin George Golitzen (Washington, DC: The World Bank, 2005). 17 Central Intelligence Agency, “Nigeria,” in The World Factbook, 15 August 2012, https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/ni.html 18 Come to Nigeria, “Kano City Travel Guide,” 5 April 2011, http://www.cometonigeria.com/nigeriancities-and-towns/kano 19 Tadaferua Ujorha, “Kano’s 500-Year-Old Market,” 9 April 2003, http://news.biafranigeriaworld.com/archive/2003/apr/09/0301.html 20 BBC News, “Kano: Nigeria’s Ancient City-State,” 20 May 2004, http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/3708309.stm 21 GlobalSecurity.org, “Nigerian Christian/Muslim Conflict,” 27 April 2005, http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/war/nigeria-1.htm 22 Eniwoke Ibagere, “The Sharia Effect?” BBC News, 1 October 2002, http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/in_depth/africa/2002/africalive/2290354.stm © D LI F L C | 4 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Kaduna Kaduna, population 1.5 million, lies near the southern edge of Hausaland, the area of northern Nigeria (and southern Niger) where Hausa is spoken. The city straddles the Kaduna River, a major tributary to the Niger. Known as the crocodile city, Kaduna takes its name from kada—Hausa for the crocodile. 25 Crocodiles can always be seen in Gamji Park, by the river. 26 Kaduna is a railway junction and a major commercial center for northern Nigeria. Industries thrive near the junction south of the river, ranging from heavy industry— textile manufacturing, steel products, automobile assembly, construction—to agriculturesector services such as commodity collection and food production. An oil refinery is fed by a 607-km (377-mi) pipeline from the Niger Delta. Kaduna lies near the line dividing Nigeria’s Christian south and Muslim north. The city is majority Muslim with a large Christian population. Like Kano, Kaduna has experienced violent conflicts between Muslims and Christians since 1999. 27, 28 Sokoto Sokoto lies in far northwest Nigeria, near the confluence of the Sokoto and Rima rivers. The name is derived from the Arabic suq, meaning open-air market. 29 The town grew on a traditional caravan route to the Sahara. It became well known for its leather crafts, which are still a leading export. 30 The people are predominantly Muslim. During the 19th century, the town was the seat of the Sokoto Caliphate, one of the most powerful empires in sub-Saharan Africa. Sokoto 23 AbdulSalam Muhammad, “Bomb Explosion Hits Kano Again,” 15 April 2012, http://www.vanguardngr.com/2012/04/bomb-explosion-hits-kano-again/ 24 AbdulSalam Muhammad, “Insurgency: Military to Deploy More Troops to Kano,” 30 June 2012, http://www.vanguardngr.com/2012/06/insurgency-military-to-deploy-more-troops-to-kano/ 25 Daniel A. Ogbeifun, “Kaduna: The Nigerian Crocodile City,” Knoji, n.d., http://africa.knoji.com/kadunathe-nigerian-crocodile-city/ 26 Lizzie Williams, Nigeria: The Bradt Travel Guide, 2nd ed. (Guilford, CT: The Globe Pequot Press Inc., 2008), 292. 27 Dan Isaacs, “Kaduna: Nigeria’s Religious Flashpoint,” BBC News, 20 December 2002, http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/2579825.stm 28 BBC News, “Nigeria’s Boko Haram ‘Bombed Kaduna Churches,’” 18 June 2012, http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-18496285 29 National Bureau of Statistics, “Sokoto State Information,” 2011, http://www.nigerianstat.gov.ng/information/details/Sokoto 30 Encyclopædia Britannica Online, “Sokoto,” n.d., http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/552796/Sokoto © D LI F L C | 5 HAUSA Cultural Orientation remains an important center of Islamic studies. The Sultan of Sokoto, whose title is now largely ceremonial, is considered the spiritual leader of Nigerian Muslims. 31 Zaria Almost midway between Kaduna and Kano lies the historic city of Zaria. The formerly walled town, believed to have been founded in 1536, was the capital of the Hausa state of Zazzau. It was soon renamed after Queen Zaria, the successor to Zazzau’s founder, Queen Amina. During the 19th century, Zaria sat at the geographic center of the Sokoto Caliphate, under the Sultan’s jurisdiction. 32 Today, Zaria is a transportation hub, where Nigeria’s main A2 highway crosses a central railway line. It is a major collecting point for agricultural products. 33 Zaria is the educational center of the northern states, with numerous institutions. 34 In 1962, a number of colleges were reorganized as Ahmadu Bello University. It currently has 82 academic departments and 35,000 students, making it the most extensive university in sub-Saharan Africa. 35 Regional History The development of camel caravans from the second to the fifth centuries C.E. allowed travel across the Sahara and trade of products and ideas. 36 Islam spread across North Africa late in the first millennium, then south into West Africa. There was great demand in the Muslim world for West African goods, gold, ivory, and slaves; these were traded for manufactured goods from the north. But camels could not endure the humid savanna country, thus limiting the reach of the northerners. 37 The southern environmental zones allowed for different kinds of agriculture—grain crops in the savanna, root and tree crops 31 National Bureau of Statistics, “Sokoto State Information,” 2011, http://www.nigerianstat.gov.ng/information/details/Sokoto 32 Salma Khadra Jayyusi et al., The City in the Islamic World, vols, 1–2 (Leiden, The Netherlands: Koninklijke Brill NV, 2008), 672–676, 1337. 33 Encyclopædia Britannica Online, “Zaria,” n.d., http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/655972/Zaria 34 Encyclopædia Britannica Online, “Zaria,” n.d., http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/655972/Zaria 35 Ahmadu Bello University, “About Us,” 2012, http://www.abu.edu.ng/info/about.php 36 Philip D. Curtin, Cross-Cultural Trade in World History (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1984). 37 Patrick Karl O’Brien, ed., Atlas of World History (New York: Oxford University Press, 2007) 80–81. © D LI F L C | 6 HAUSA Cultural Orientation in the rainforest—leading to indigenous trading networks independent of North Africa. Transport of goods in the southernmost savanna and the dense, tsetse-ridden rainforest was mostly limited to canoe travel on streams and rivers. 38 The peoples of the northern savanna and Sahel were perfectly situated, using donkeys as pack animals, to bridge the gap between north and south. From 500–1600, their commercial prosperity created a series of societies—states, empires, and city-states, all monarchies—from the Atlantic Coast to Lake Chad (northeast Nigeria). 39 The Hausa ethnic group emerged around the 10th century, an intermingling of farmers and desert nomads in the area of modern northern Nigeria and southern Niger. 40 The Hausa Much of the early history of the Hausa is derived from the Kano Chronicle, an anonymous document of unknown origin that traces the rulers of Kano, Hausaland’s most important trans-Saharan trade center, from 1000 C.E. to 1893 (the approximate date of the existing version). 41, 42 The Chronicle mentions Bayajidda, a prince of Baghdad who, according to legend, cut off the head of a giant snake terrorizing the town of Daura, and married the local princess as his reward. Their grandson founded the seven city-states of Hausaland: Biram, Daura, Gabir, Kano, Katsina, Rano, and Zazzau (Zaria). 43, 44 Historians disagree whether Bayajidda was an actual person. Parts of Hausaland converted to Islam as early as the 12th century. 45 According to the Chronicle, traders from Mali brought Islam to Kano in the 14th century. 46 Acceptance occurred more slowly in the countryside, where traditional beliefs held. Kano’s most famous king, Mohammad Rumfa, ruler from 1463–99, established Islam in Kano for 38 Robert W. Strayer, Ways of the World: A Brief Global History with Sources (Boston: Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2011). 39 Robert W. Strayer, Ways of the World: A Brief Global History with Sources (Boston: Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2011). 40 Trudy Ring, Robert M. Salkin, and Sharon La Boda, “Kano,” in International Dictionary of Historic Places, vol. 4, Middle East and Africa, ed. Noelle Watson (Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers, 1996), 396–399. 41 John L. Esposito, ed., The Oxford History of Islam (New York: Oxford University Press, 1999). 42 Toyin Falola and Ann Genova, “Kano Chronicle,” in Historical Dictionary of Nigeria, ed. Jon Woronoff (Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press, Inc., 2009), 190–191. 43 C. Magbaily Fyle, Introduction to the History of African Civilization, vol. 1, Precolonial Africa (Lanham, MD: University Press of America, Inc., 1999). 44 Dierk Lange, “The Pre-Islamic Dimension of Hausa History,” in Ancient Kingdoms of West Africa: Africa-Centred and Canaanite-Israelite Perspectives (Dettelbach, Germany: J.H. Röll Verlag GmbH, 2004), 161. 45 John A. Shoup, Ethnic Groups of Africa and the Middle East: An Encyclopedia (Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO, LLC, 2011) 116–120. 46 John L. Esposito, ed., The Oxford History of Islam (New York: Oxford University Press, 1999). © D LI F L C | 7 HAUSA Cultural Orientation good, and he adopted shari’a law. Kano became a center of Islamic learning, visited by Arabic scholars. 47 Over the next 200 years, Hausaland was caught between two Islamic empires: the Songhai to the west and the Bornu to the east. For many years, Hausa states were under the rule of one or the other. 48 Fulani cattlemen had been moving into Hausaland for centuries. These strict Muslims believed that the Hausa practice of Islam was corrupted by pagan beliefs. Also, they were subjected to exorbitant taxation by the Hausa. Usman dan Fodio, a Fulani Muslim cleric, ignited a jihad in 1804. By the end of the Fulani War in 1810, the Hausa states were ruled by a Fulani minority and united under a single Islamic government, the Sokoto Caliphate, which reigned until the colonial British conquest. 49 Slavery Slavery in West Africa predates the transatlantic slave trade but it never approached the scale seen in later years. 50, 51 Beginning in the 16th century, for 400 years the transatlantic slave trade exported some 12.5 million persons from Africa as slaves; 3.5 million (29%) embarked from the Bights of Benin and Biafra: the coast of modern Nigeria. 52 For the first half of that era, most slaves were raided from the coastal hinterland; after about 1750, when demand exceeded supply, slaves were brought from increasingly distant interior regions, and for less discriminating reasons. 53 But relatively few Hausa were taken. Hausa traders had little direct association with European slavers; they raided to the south and traded their slaves with other Africans, who then transported the slaves to the coast. 54 47 Trudy Ring, Robert M. Salkin, and Sharon La Boda, “Kano,” in International Dictionary of Historic Places, vol. 4, Middle East and Africa, ed. Noelle Watson (Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers, 1996), 396–399. 48 Trudy Ring, Robert M. Salkin, and Sharon La Boda, “Kano,” in International Dictionary of Historic Places, vol. 4, Middle East and Africa, ed. Noelle Watson (Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers, 1996), 396–399. 49 Trudy Ring, Robert M. Salkin, and Sharon La Boda, “Kano,” in International Dictionary of Historic Places, vol. 4, Middle East and Africa, ed. Noelle Watson (Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers, 1996), 396–399. 50 Robert W. Strayer, Ways of the World: A Brief Global History with Sources (Boston: Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2011). 51 Robert W. Strayer, Ways of the World: A Brief Global History with Sources (Boston: Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2011). 52 Voyages: The Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade Database, “Assessing the Slave Trade: Estimates,” Emory University, 2009, http://slavevoyages.org/tast/assessment/estimates.faces 53 Bonnie G. Smith et al., Crossroads and Cultures: A History of the World’s Peoples, vol. B, 500– 1750 (Boston: Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2012), 606–607. 54 Trudy Ring, Robert M. Salkin, and Sharon La Boda, “Kano,” in International Dictionary of Historic Places, vol. 4, Middle East and Africa, ed. Noelle Watson (Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers, 1996), 396–399. © D LI F L C | 8 HAUSA Cultural Orientation After the Fulani War brought about the Sokoto Caliphate, slavery became intertwined with the rejuvenation of Islam. Leaders enslaved pagan populations and people who resisted jihad; the Caliphate was hostile to the transatlantic trade because it enslaved free Muslims; and annual tribute to the Sultan of Sokoto was paid with slaves. 55, 56 The majority of the new slaves were kept within the Caliphate or sold to neighboring countries. 57 In 1820, Kano was the center of the slave trade in West Africa. 58 From 1810– 70, the Caliphate and neighboring Bornu annually dispatched 3,000 to 6,000 slaves across the Sahara. 59 By end of the 19th century, the Caliphate’s slave population was 30% to 50% of the total population, and as high as 80% in major towns and along trade routes. 60 In an 1896 memoir, Hausaland, or, Fifteen Hundred Miles Through the Central Soudan, Charles Henry Robinson supplies a vivid description of the state of slavery in the region: Slaves were used as much for currency as labor. A traveler might take slaves with him—to pay for his expenses along the way. A master could legally mistreat his slaves to any extent short of killing them. In the Kano slave market, the maximum price (converted to English money) was 7–10 pounds for a 14-year-old girl; an 18-year-old male would fetch 6 pounds, with prices decreasing with greater age. Despite these circumstances, slave revolts were rare. 61 The British Conquest Englishman George Goldie formed the National African Company in 1879 to consolidate British commercial interests in the Niger basin. 62 Hundreds of treaties were made with local states and tribes (including those in Hausaland in the north) in which trading interests were exchanged for protection. 63 During the Berlin Conference (1884–85), European powers settled disputes regarding colonization in Africa, and Great Britain was declared in control of the basin; but the Niger Navigation Act opened the big river to all 55 Paul E. Lovejoy, Transformations in Slavery: A History of Slavery in Africa (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2011). 56 Hugh Thomas, The Slave Trade: The Story of the Atlantic Slave Trade: 1440–1870 (New York: Simon & Schuster, Inc., 1997). 57 Paul E. Lovejoy, Transformations in Slavery: A History of Slavery in Africa (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2011). 58 Trudy Ring, Robert M. Salkin, and Sharon La Boda, “Kano,” in International Dictionary of Historic Places, vol. 4, Middle East and Africa, ed. Noelle Watson (Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers, 1996), 396–399. 59 Paul E. Lovejoy, Transformations in Slavery: A History of Slavery in Africa (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2011). 60 Paul E. Lovejoy, Transformations in Slavery: A History of Slavery in Africa (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2011). 61 Charles Henry Robinson, Hausaland, or, Fifteen Hundred Miles Through the Central Soudan (London: Sampson Low, Marston and Company, 1896), 127–141. 62 Eric C. Loew, “Nigeria,” in Historical Dictionary of the British Empire, vol. 2, eds. James Stuart Olson and Robert Shadle (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1996), 812–813. 63 Charles Henry Robinson, Hausaland, or, Fifteen Hundred Miles Through the Central Soudan (London: Sampson Low, Marston and Company, 1896), 127–141. © D LI F L C | 9 HAUSA Cultural Orientation interests. 64 Recognizing that Goldie’s private company could not compete with France and Germany, the British government granted Goldie a charter in 1886. 65 The renamed Royal Niger Company ruled the northern regions as a surrogate British government through 1899. 66 Goldie’s two decades of effort earned him the title “the founder of Nigeria.” 67 Military campaigns against the Sokoto Caliphate were initiated in 1897 to check French imperialism; their ineffectiveness led to the establishment of the region as a British colony in 1900, the Protectorate of Northern Nigeria. (Northernmost Hausaland became part of the French colony of Niger.) After 3 more years of conflict, the overwhelming British firepower trumped the larger Muslim armies. The Caliphate’s final defeat came in 1903 when British forces killed the Sultan of Sokoto in the Battle of Burmi. 68 The abolition of slavery was the justification for the war. 69 Under British rule, the institution of slavery was dismantled, gradually, to avoid massive social disruption. The Slavery Proclamation of 1901 abolished new enslavements; the Proclamation of 1904 outlawed all transactions in slavery. 70 From 1900–10, vast numbers of emancipated slaves from the cultivated lands of Sokoto, Kano, and Zaria returned to their homes. The government encouraged the cultivation of cash crops such as cotton and peanuts in place of the slave-based economy. 71 The British governed through “indirect rule,” which it had used in India. A small number of British officials were the central authority, while local rule was held by the Fulani minority, who continued the Caliphate’s Islamic practices. 72 British military superiority 64 Olayemi Akinwumi, The Colonial Contest for the Nigerian Region, 1884-1900: A History of the German Participation (Piscataway, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 2002). 65 Barbara Harlow and Mia Carter, eds., “Royal Charter Granted to the National African Company, Later Called the Royal Niger Company,” in Archives of Empire, vol. 2, The Scramble for Africa (Durham: Duke University Press, 2003), 372–379. 66 Sir William Nevill Montgomerie Geary, Nigeria Under British Rule (London: Methuen & Co. Ltd., 1965), 177–207. 67 Stephen Gwynn, “The Making of Nigeria: A Historical Introduction” in Sir George Goldie: Founder of Nigeria, by Dorothy Violet Ashton Wellesley (New York: Arno Press Inc., 1977), 1–88. 68 Muhammad Sani Umar, Islam in Africa, vol. 5, Islam and Colonialism: Intellectual Responses of Muslims of Northern Nigeria to British Colonial Rule (Leiden, The Netherlands: Koninklijke Brill NV, 2006), 20–22. 69 Eddie Enyeobi Okafor, “Biafra, Republic of,” in Encyclopedia of Africa, vol. 1, eds. Kwame Anthony Appiah and Henry Louis Gates, Jr. (New York: Oxford University Press USA, 2010), 550–553. 70 Muhammad Sani Umar, Islam in Africa, vol. 5, Islam and Colonialism: Intellectual Responses of Muslims of Northern Nigeria to British Colonial Rule (Leiden, The Netherlands: Koninklijke Brill NV, 2006), 45–46. 71 W. B. Morgan and J. C. Pugh, West Africa (London: Butler & Tanner Ltd., 1969), 172, 369. 72 Frank A. Salamone, The Hausa of Nigeria (Lanham, MD: University Press of America, Inc., 2010). © D LI F L C | 10 HAUSA Cultural Orientation was understood to be the basis for colonial rule; resistance was met with swift brutality. 73 Indirect rule was effective enough that in 1910, there were 338 Europeans in Northern Nigeria, 120 of whom were merchants—amid a population of 8 million.74 North and South During the early years of British rule in Hausaland, Christian missionaries were restricted to zones in the south and middle belt, because the proselytizing of Muslims was considered a hindrance to smooth governance. This strengthened Islam in the north. After the British conquest, the Hausa no longer viewed Islam as the Fulani religion, but as an alternate civilization.75 During the same period the Christian movement flourished in the south. The construction of roads and the completion of major railway lines (Lagos to Kano, 1911; Port Harcourt to Kaduna, 1926), allowed easier penetration into the forested hinterlands. 76 Christian schools, both Catholic and Protestant, taught reading, writing, and Bible study. The Igbo in the southeast discovered that church membership shielded them against forced labor, which was not abolished in the south until 1916. Tens of thousands abandoned their native religions for Christianity. 77 The British had done little to unify the nation politically, believing it futile. 78 Through decades of colonial rule, the country remained divided between the Muslim north and the Christian south, and the Yoruba southwest and the Igbo southeast. The better-educated southerners modernized while northerners remained traditional. Many southerners moved into the north to take the administrative and clerical positions that northerners were illequipped for. 79 After World War II, the move toward independence began. Despite their disadvantages, the northerners had two factors to help eventually dominate an independent Nigeria. The Hausa-Fulani were the largest ethnic group in the country, and they dominated the military. 80 The 1947 Richards Constitution intended to promote national unity. But by decentralizing government into east, west, and north Regional Councils, it actually institutionalized 73 Muhammad Sani Umar, Islam in Africa, vol. 5, Islam and Colonialism: Intellectual Responses of Muslims of Northern Nigeria to British Colonial Rule (Leiden, The Netherlands: Koninklijke Brill NV, 2006), 20–21. 74 Frank A. Salamone, The Hausa of Nigeria (Lanham, MD: University Press of America, Inc., 2010). 75 Frank A. Salamone, The Hausa of Nigeria (Lanham, MD: University Press of America, Inc., 2010). 76 Bengt Sundkler and Christopher Steed, “Nigeria,” in A History of the Church in Africa (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000), 255. 77 Bengt Sundkler and Christopher Steed, “Nigeria,” in A History of the Church in Africa (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000), 224–253. 78 Jimi Peters, The Nigerian Military and the State (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1997), 48. 79 James Minahan, “Hausas,” in Encyclopedia of the Stateless Nations: Ethnic and National Groups Around the World, vol. 2, D-K (Westport, CT: Greenwood Publishing Group, 2002), 713–718. 80 James Minahan, “Hausas,” in Encyclopedia of the Stateless Nations: Ethnic and National Groups Around the World, vol. 2, D-K (Westport, CT: Greenwood Publishing Group, 2002), 713–718. © D LI F L C | 11 HAUSA Cultural Orientation regionally based politics and parochial nationalisms. 81 In 1947, Obafemi Awolowo, chief of the Yoruba, argued a commonly held view: “There are no Nigerians. Nigeria is a mere geographical expression.” As the country lurched toward independence in the 1950s, all three regions seriously considered or threatened secession, and none more than the north. 82 A 1953 compromise, intended to counter secessionist impulses, awarded the north 50% representation in the national legislature. 83 Independence The 1959 elections, to determine which parties would control the government after independence, were won by the Northern People’s Congress (NPC), which the Hausa-Fulani dominated. The NPC was forced to form a coalition government, and chose the southeastern National Council of Nigerian Citizens (NCNC) as a partner. 84 Nnamdi Azikiwe, co-founder of the NCNC, became Nigeria’s Governor-General, then President in 1963. Azikiwe had been born in the north to Igbo parents, and his father had been a clerk in the British colonial government. 85 The civilian government ruled until 1966, when a pair of military revolts left a northern Christian, General Yakubu Gowon, in charge of a military government. From 1966 to 1999, Nigeria experienced only 4 years of civilian rule (1979–83, under Alhaji Shehu Shagari, a Fulani). Northern domination extended through a series of military regimes. Several of Nigeria’s leaders were Fulani; most were Muslim. 86 After the 1966 events led to the massacre of 30,000 Igbo in the north, 2 million surviving easterners fled to Igboland, creating a refugee crisis. In 1967, the Igbos seceded to form the Republic of Biafra, leading to 3 years of civil war before Nigeria reintegrated the country. 87 81 Julius Omozuanvbo Ihonvbere and Timothy M. Shaw, Illusions of Power: Nigeria in Transition (Trenton, NJ: Africa World Press, Inc., 1998). 82 Martin P. Mathews, Nigeria: Current Issues and Historical Background (Hauppauge, NY: Nova Science Publishers, Inc., 2002), 31–35. 83 John Boye Ejobowah, Competing Claims to Recognition in the Nigerian Public Sphere: A Liberal Argument about Justice in Plural Societies (Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2001), 63–64. 84 Eghosa E. Osaghae, Crippled Giant: Nigeria Since Independence (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1998). 85 Bridgette Kasuka, ed., “Nnamdi Azikiwe,” in Prominent African Leaders Since Independence (CreateSpace, 2012), 304–311. 86 Adrian Karatnycky, “Country Reports: Nigeria,” in Freedom in the World: The Annual Survey of Political Rights & Civil Liberties, 1999–2000 (New York: Freedom House, 2000), 364. 87 Eddie Enyeobi Okafor, “Biafra, Republic of,” in Encyclopedia of Africa, Volume 1, eds. Kwame Anthony Appiah and Henry Louis Gates, Jr. (New York: Oxford University Press USA, 2010), 178–180. © D LI F L C | 12 HAUSA Cultural Orientation In five years of rule (1993–98), General Sani Abacha looted the treasury of billions before dying in office. 88 His successor, Major General Abdulsalami Abubakar, implemented rapid and dramatic reforms, transitioning the return to civilian rule. In 1999, Nigerians elected General Olusegun Obasanjo, a Yoruba who had led the military government from 1976–79 before yielding to civilian rule. He served two terms. 89 In 2007, Nigerians elected a Fulani candidate, Alhaji Umaru Yar’Adua. After he died in office in 2010, his Vice President, Goodluck Jonathan, a Christian from the Niger Delta, succeeded him. 90 Government Nigeria became independent from British rule on 1 October 1960, and declared a federal republic in 1963. 91 The 1999 Constitution currently guides the government and marks the transition from 33 years of military rule to civilian governance. 92 The capital city is Abuja, in the geographic center of the country. The United States system is the model for Nigeria’s governmental structure. 93 The popularly elected President heads the executive branch, and the constitution limits the president to two 4-year terms. The President’s cabinet includes the heads of 19 government ministries and representatives of all 36 of Nigeria’s states. 94 The 109-seat Senate (three from each state plus one from Abuja) and the 360seat House of Representatives (representing constituencies of nearly equal population within single states) compose the bicameral legislature. Legislators are popularly elected to 4-year terms. 95 The judicial system comprises a Supreme Court, with up to 21 justices appointed by the president, and state and federal lower courts. 96 Nigerian laws are a blend of English 88 Ted Dagne, “Nigeria in Political Transition,” in Politics And Economics of Africa, vol. 5, ed. Olufemi Wusu (Nova Science Publishers, Inc., 2007), 121–135. 89 Martin P. Mathews, Nigeria: Current Issues and Historical Background (Hauppauge, New York: Nova Science Publishers, Inc., 2002). 90 BBC News, “Nigeria’s Goodluck Jonathan Sworn in as President,” 6 May 2010, http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/8664150.stm 91 Charles Mwalimu, The Nigerian Legal System, vol. 1, Public Law (New York: Peter Lang Publishing, Inc., 2005). 92 International Centre for Nigerian Law, “Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria,” 1999, http://www.nigeria-law.org/ConstitutionOfTheFederalRepublicOfNigeria.htm 93 Charles Mwalimu, The Nigerian Legal System, vol. 1, Public Law (New York: Peter Lang Publishing, Inc., 2005). 94 Commonwealth Network: Nigeria, “Government Ministries,” n.d., http://www.commonwealth-ofnations.org/Nigeria/Government/Government_Ministries 95 International Centre for Nigerian Law, “Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria,” 1999, http://www.nigeria-law.org/ConstitutionOfTheFederalRepublicOfNigeria.htm 96 International Centre for Nigerian Law, “Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria,” 1999, http://www.nigeria-law.org/ConstitutionOfTheFederalRepublicOfNigeria.htm © D LI F L C | 13 HAUSA Cultural Orientation common law and customary law, plus shari’a (Islamic) law in the 12 most northern states. 97 Each of the 36 states has a Governor popularly elected to a 4-year term. A Deputy Governor and commissioners assist the Governor. Each state has a unicameral legislature, the State House of Assembly, with representatives from all local government areas. 98 Media French watchdog group Reporters Without Borders describes Nigeria’s print media as a “paradox.” The country has numerous daily newspapers—some staterun, most privately owned—that reflect a diversity of emphasis and opinion. Yet a recent 3-month survey showed that reporters were under significant threat while performing their duties: harassment, arrest, assault, and, in one case, murder. Also, the press was subjected to equipment seizures, offices were vandalized or closed, and charges were brought against reporters and organizations. In most cases, perpetrators remain unidentified, which leaves the motives for specific acts subject to speculation. Officials are suspected of wanting to suppress coverage of the current instability in the country, while the Boko Haram terrorist group openly threatens the media. Reporters Without Borders concludes that Nigeria is “one of the most dangerous countries in Africa for journalists.” 99 Despite the large number of newspapers, Nigeria’s print media is suffering the same decline seen around the world. In July 2009, an advertising industry consortium released figures indicating that, of 150 dailies audited, the combined circulation was under 300,000—in a country with over 150 million inhabitants. Publishers, who base advertising rates on circulation, complained loudly that subscriptions were not taken into account. The disparity between the audit and industry figures was vast. The industry lacks an independent audit bureau to settle the argument. 100, 101, 102 Of the broadcast media, radio remains the most popular. The state-run Federal Radio Corporation of Nigeria operates 37 stations in 15 languages. About two dozen private radio stations are licensed by the National Broadcasting Commission. 103, 104 97 Central Intelligence Agency, “Nigeria,” in The World Factbook, 25 June 2012, https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/ni.html 98 Online Nigeria, “The State Government,” n.d., http://www.onlinenigeria.com/government/?blurb=142 99 Reporters Without Borders, “Daily Abuses Suffered by Nigeria’s Journalists,” 7 May 2012, http://en.rsf.org/nigeria-daily-abuses-suffered-by-nigeria-s-07-05-2012,42570.html 100 Brandwork Nigeria, “Advertisers Body Releases Print Circulation Survey Report,” 23 July 2009, http://www.brandworknigeria.com/newsdetail.php?id=157 101 Williams Popoola, “The Solution to the Dwindling Newspaper Circulation in Nigeria,” Wow! Effect Communications, 20 August 2010, http://woweffectng.com/new/the-solution-to-the-dwindling-newspapercirculation-in-nigeria-2/ 102 Nigerian Newspapers, “Top Nigerian Newspapers,” n.d., http://www.nigeriannewspapers.org.uk/ 103 BBC News, “Nigeria Profile: Media,” 26 July 2012, http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-13949549 © D LI F L C | 14 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Nigeria has as many as 147 TV stations. Most are run by the state Nigerian Television Authority. All 36 states operate stations. About 15 private stations are licensed. 105 Coverage is concentrated in urban areas. By law, foreign programming is limited, and foreign news is banned. 106 Economy Oil Oil dominates the Nigerian national economy. The industry produces 2.5 million barrels a day and exports 2.1 million barrels. Both figures rank Nigeria in the world’s top ten oil producers. Oil provides 95% of the country’s export income. The amount fluctuates with the global oil prices, but even when it dips, earnings dwarf all other Nigerian sectors combined. The country has proven oil reserves of 37.2 billion barrels, enough for decades to come. 107 What first appeared to be a boon to Nigeria’s impoverished population is now widely considered a curse. Billions of dollars of income simply disappear every year through the invisible fingers of government corruption. Much of it is distributed through patronage networks, creating an entitled class. Little is spent for public works or improving the lives of ordinary Nigerians. Having so much income from oil allows tax rates to be kept low, but it also makes the government less accountable to its people. 108, 109 Oil’s big money tends to make other sectors of the economy irrelevant to the government. The oil industry pushes up costs throughout the economy, thus reducing the international competitiveness of other sectors. Conversely, with oil pumped directly into waiting tankers, the industry fails to influence growth in outlying sectors. Oil employs far fewer unskilled laborers than agriculture and manufacturing. 110 Ironically, because of a lack of refining capacity, Nigeria imports oil for domestic energy use. 111 Oil extraction takes a heavy toll on the region’s inhabitants. There is little safe drinking water, the land cannot be cultivated, fishing waters have deteriorated, and life expectancy 104 National Broadcasting Commission, “Radio: Private,” 2012, http://www.nbc.gov.ng/broadcast.php?menu=2&submenu=3 105 National Broadcasting Commission, “TV: Private,” 2012, http://www.nbc.gov.ng/broadcast.php?menu=1&submenu=3 106 BBC News, “Nigeria Profile: Media,” 26 July 2012, http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-13949549 107 Central Intelligence Agency, “Nigeria,” in The World Factbook, 25 June 2012, https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/ni.html 108 Tom O’Neill, “Nigerian Oil,” National Geographic, February 2007, http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2007/02/nigerian-oil/oneill-text 109 Joel Brinkley, “Nigerian Governor Runs Against Entrenched Interest,” SFGate (San Francisco Chronicle), 7 July 2012, http://www.sfgate.com/opinion/brinkley/article/Nigerian-governor-runs-againstentrenched-interest-3688771.php 110 Michael L. Ross, “Nigeria’s Oil Sector and the Poor,” United Kingdom Department for International Development, 23 May 2003, http://www.sscnet.ucla.edu/polisci/faculty/ross/NigeriaOil.pdf 111 Wayne Nafziger, “Chapter 3: The Economy,” in Nigeria: A Country Study, ed. Helen Chapin Metz (Washington, DC: GPO for the Library of Congress, 1991), http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/ngtoc.html © D LI F L C | 15 HAUSA Cultural Orientation is under 50. 112 Unemployment and poverty are the highest in the country. Inhabitants who feel they have been undercompensated inflict damage (from sabotage to siphoning oil) to the thousands of miles of pipelines that thread the region. Pipeline explosions, often caused by tampering, kill thousands. 113 A militant group, the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND), attacks pipelines and holds oil industry workers for ransom as means of rebellion. 114, 115 Because of such problems, the government is actively seeking additional sources of oil in northern Nigeria. 116, 117 Northern Nigeria From pre-colonial times to today, agriculture formed the basis of the northern economy. Most crops are droughtresistant. Nigerian dietary staples are grains: millet, rice, barley, corn, and a variety of sorghum known as guinea corn. Legumes include soybeans and groundnuts (peanuts). 118, 119 Nigeria is the world’s leading producer of two nutritious root crops, cassava and yams, most of which are grown in the broad middle belt of the country, the tall grass savanna. 120, 121 Cotton is a leading commercial crop of the north. 122 The north has produced more food than required for domestic needs, allowing the excess to be exported to the south. With the additional labor capacity, the Hausa specialized in crafts like leatherworking, silversmithing, weaving, and textile production. Trading is often done in town markets. 123, 124, 125 112 Hilary Inyang, “Environmental Pollution of the Niger Delta: Challenges and Solutions,” National Mirror (Nigeria), 23 February 2011, http://nationalmirroronline.net/features/6415.html 113 BBC News, “Niger Delta Oil Pipeline Sabotage ‘Increasing,’” 15 August 2010, http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-10982177 114 Janes’s World Insurgency and Terrorism, “Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND),” 10 May 2012, http://articles.janes.com/articles/Janes-World-Insurgency-andTerrorism/Movement-for-the-Emancipation-of-the-Niger-Delta-MEND-Nigeria.html 115 Leadership (Nigeria), “MEND’s Threat Causes Panic in Niger Delta,” 17 April 2012, http://www.leadership.ng/nga/articles/22191/2012/04/17/mends_threat_causes_panic_niger_delta.html 116 Economic Confidential, “Again Nigeria Searches for Oil in the North,” February 2011, http://economicconfidential.net/new/news/national-news/598-again-nigeria-searches-for-oil-in-the-north 117 UPI, “Northern Nigeria’s ‘Huge’ Oil Reserves,” 7 July 2011, http://www.upi.com/Business_News/Energy-Resources/2011/07/07/Northern-Nigerias-huge-oilreserves/UPI-91561310069770/ 118 Deborah Pellow, “Hausa: Economy,” Countries and Their Cultures, n.d., http://www.everyculture.com/Africa-Middle-East/Hausa-Economy.html 119 Ronald G. Parris, Hausa (New York: The Rosen Publishing Group, Inc., 1996), 28–32. 120 Fidelis Mbah, “Celebrating Nigeria’s Yummy Yams,” BBC News, 22 September 2010, http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-11385436 121 Corporate Nigeria, “The Business, Trade and Investment Guide, 2010/11: Cassava—a Multi-Purpose Plant,” 2011, http://www.corporate-nigeria.com/index/agriculture/cassava.html 122 Wayne Nafziger, “Chapter 3: The Economy,” in Nigeria: A Country Study, ed. Helen Chapin Metz (Washington, DC: GPO for the Library of Congress, 1991), http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/ngtoc.html 123 Deborah Pellow, “Hausa: Economy,” Countries and Their Cultures, n.d., http://www.everyculture.com/Africa-Middle-East/Hausa-Economy.html © D LI F L C | 16 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Raising livestock—cattle, pigs, donkeys, goats—occurs commonly in the northern half of the country. 126, 127 Despite its strengths and traditions, the northern agricultural economy is in decline. The oil industry is blamed for much of this. Northern political elites concentrate on securing their share of oil allocations from the federal government while ignoring infrastructure and development issues. Workers migrate to high-density southern cities such as Lagos looking for higher incomes. Though once self-sufficient, Nigeria imports food for its rapidly growing population. 128, 129 Roads, rail, water systems, electrical capacity, schools, and health facilities underserve the north. 130 Unemployment rates are at 28% and poverty hovers around 74%, both higher than the already-high national averages. 131 To make matters worse, the activities of the Boko Haram terrorist organization— murders, bombings, and property destruction—wreak havoc on the northern economy. An exodus of professionals and skilled labor to the south aroused concerns for the northern economy. 132, 133 Real estate values plummeted and manufacturers pulled up 124 Encyclopædia Britannica Online, “Hausa,” 2012, http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/257081/Hausa 125 Ronald Cohen and Abe Goldman, “Chapter 2: The Society and Its Environment,” in Nigeria: A Country Study, ed. Helen Chapin Metz (Washington, DC: GPO for the Library of Congress, 1991), http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/ngtoc.html 126 Mansur Ahmed, “Addressing Infrastructure Deficit in Northern Nigeria,” Infrastructure Concession Regulatory Commission, March 2011, http://www.icrc.gov.ng/wpcontent/uploads/2011/03/Northern_Economic_Summit_ICRC_March11.pdf 127 Ronald G. Parris, Hausa (New York: The Rosen Publishing Group, Inc., 1996), 28–32. 128 Washington Post, “Country Guides: Nigeria,” 2012, http://www.washingtonpost.com/wpsrv/world/countries/nigeria.html?nav=el 129 Business Day (Nigeria), “The North Can Generate Revenue through other Means,” 9 April 2012, http://www.businessdayonline.com/NG/index.php/analysis/commentary/35664-the-north-can-generaterevenue-through-other-means 130 Mansur Ahmed, “Addressing Infrastructure Deficit in Northern Nigeria,” Infrastructure Concession Regulatory Commission, March 2011, http://www.icrc.gov.ng/wpcontent/uploads/2011/03/Northern_Economic_Summit_ICRC_March11.pdf 131 Abdulrazaq Magaji, “Nigeria: The Bitter Taste of Honey,” Pambazuka News, 5 July 2012, http://allafrica.com/stories/201207060475.html 132 Business Day (Nigeria), “Boko Haram: What Cost for the Northern Economy,” 18 April 2012, http://www.businessdayonline.com/NG/index.php/news/latest/36159-boko-haram-what-cost-for-thenorthern-economy 133 IRIN Africa, “Nigeria: Violence, Curfews and Border Closures Hurt Livelihoods,” 5 July 2012, http://www.irinnews.org/Report/95808/NIGERIA-Violence-curfews-and-border-closures-hurt-livelihoods © D LI F L C | 17 HAUSA Cultural Orientation stakes. 134 For example, Julius Berger, a major construction company since 1965, suspended operations in northern Nigeria because of security concerns. 135, 136 Nollywood and Kanywood Nollywood, the video film industry, has been a surprising growth area in the economy and is one of Nigeria’s largest private-sector employers. Lagos is the Nollywood industry’s center. Movies are shot on location; there are no studios or production hubs. Genres range from comedies to historical epics to melodramatic romances. 137 Nollywood now ranks second in number of features produced, behind Bollywood; and third in revenues, behind Hollywood and Bollywood. Nollywood produces 1,000 to 2,000 films annually, with revenues of USD 250–500 million. 138, 139, 140 Nigeria has few cinemas left, and those tend to play American films. Most Nollywood films are cheaply made (budgets around USD 25,000) with digital cameras, quickly produced, distributed through street markets, and viewed at home on cheap televisions. 141, 142 The low cost and speed are largely the response to Nigeria’s rampant piracy. Filmmakers have 2 weeks to recoup expenses before counterfeit copies flood the marketplace; copyright enforcement is nonexistent. 143 The low-cost, low-revenue model hinders the capital investment that could create a visible film industry. 144 Yet a small 134 Chuka Uroko, Adeola Ajakaiye, and Blessing Olaifa, “Boko Haram Insurgence Crashes Property Prices in the North,” Business Day (Nigeria), 19 March 2012, http://www.businessdayonline.com/NG/index.php/news/76-hot-topic/34608-boko-haram-insurgencecrashes-property-prices-in-the-north 135 Business Day (Nigeria), “Julius Berger Put Operations on Hold in the North,” 23 June 2012, http://www.businessdayonline.com/NG/index.php/news/76-hot-topic/40030-julius-berger-puts-operationson-hold-in-the-north 136 Julius Berger, “Our Profile,” n.d., http://www.julius-berger.com/about-us/our-profile/ 137 Jonathan Haynes, “Nollywood in Lagos, Lagos in Nollywood Films,” Africa Today 54, no. 2 (Winter 2007), http://www.jstor.org/stable/27666895 138 UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, “Nollywood Rivals Bollywood in Film/Video Production,” 5 May 2009, http://www.unesco.org/en/creativity/dynamic-content-single-view-copy1/news/nollywood_rivals_bollywood_in_filmvideo_production/back/19123/cHash/f8233ace54/ 139 Kunbi Tinuoye, “Welcome to ‘Nollywood’: Nigerian Film Industry Entices Hollywood Stars,” 27 January 2012, The Grio, http://thegrio.com/2012/01/27/welcome-to-nollywood-nigerian-film-industryentices-hollywood-stars/ 140 Andrew Rice, “A Scorsese in Lagos: The Making of Nigeria’s Film Industry,” New York Times, 23 February 2012, http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/26/magazine/nollywood-movies.html?pagewanted=all 141 John C. McCall, “Nollywood Confidential: The Unlikely Rise of Nigerian Video Film,” Transition 95 (2004): , http://www.jstor.org/stable/3172435 142 Kunbi Tinuoye, “Welcome to ‘Nollywood’: Nigerian Film Industry Entices Hollywood Stars,” 27 January 2012, The Grio, http://thegrio.com/2012/01/27/welcome-to-nollywood-nigerian-film-industryentices-hollywood-stars/ 143 Andrew Rice, “A Scorsese in Lagos: The Making of Nigeria’s Film Industry,” New York Times, 23 February 2012, http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/26/magazine/nollywood-movies.html?pagewanted=all 144 Jonathan Haynes, “Nollywood in Lagos, Lagos in Nollywood Films,” Africa Today 54, no. 2 (Winter 2007): , http://www.jstor.org/stable/27666895 © D LI F L C | 18 HAUSA Cultural Orientation trend has begun in recent years toward films with bigger budgets (up to USD 500,000) and higher production values. 145 English is the language for about 44% of Nollywood products. 146 The films are increasingly popular in other African countries such as Kenya, Sierra Leone, and Gambia. In the Congo, they are dubbed in native Lingala to be shown on television. For countries such as Cameroon and Gabon, they are dubbed in French. The Englishlanguage films are popular among the African diaspora in Europe and North America. 147 Nigeria has a second film industry referred to as Kanywood because it is centered in Kano. Kanywood is the Hausa video industry. Its emergence was inspired by the 1999 return to civilian rule and the subsequent religious revival in the north. Filmmakers follow the same low-budget, straight-to-video model as Nollywood. Thousands of people are employed. The films are consumed by Hausa audiences throughout West and Central Africa. 148 Kanywood films are made in varied genres, but many have religious themes concerning Islamic conversion. Indian films have been popular in northern Nigeria since Lebanese exhibitors first imported them in the 1950s, so Kanywood films mimic the Bollywood custom of including song-and-dance numbers, regardless of genre. 149 Scam Culture Nigeria achieved worldwide notoriety for the depth of its corruption. The nonpartisan group Transparency International rates Nigeria in the bottom third (most corrupt) in its annual Corruption Perceptions Index of nations. 150 Much of Nigeria’s rating derives from the corrupting influence of oil money on the government. But Nigeria is also notorious for “419” email scams—named after a section of the Nigerian criminal code. These schemes, ostensibly on behalf of some wealthy individual needing help from abroad, lure naive victims to expect a windfall—typically in return for paying out advance fees or handing 145 Santorri Chamley, “New Nollywood Cinema: From Home-Video Productions Back to the Big Screen,” Cineaste, Summer 2012 146 UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, “Nollywood Rivals Bollywood in Film/Video Production,” 5 May 2009, http://www.unesco.org/en/creativity/dynamic-content-single-view-copy1/news/nollywood_rivals_bollywood_in_filmvideo_production/back/19123/cHash/f8233ace54/ 147 Independent (UK), “Nigeria’s Nollywood Eclipsing Hollywood in Africa,” 15 May 2010, http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/films/nigerias-nollywood-eclipsing-hollywood-in-africa1974087.html 148 Matthias Krings, “Conversion on Screen: A Glimpse at Popular Islamic Imaginations in Northern Nigeria,” Africa Today 54, no. 4 (Summer 2008): , http://www.jstor.org/stable/27666930 149 Brian Larkin, “Indian Films and Nigerian Lovers: Media and the Creation of Parallel Modernities,” Africa: Journal of the International African Institute 67 (1997): , http://www.jstor.org/stable/1161182 150 Transparency International, “Corruption Perceptions Index,” 2012, http://www.transparency.org/research/cpi/overview © D LI F L C | 19 HAUSA Cultural Orientation over bank account access for temporary use. Once hooked, victims are drained for all they are worth. Though it is impossible to know the full revenues generated by 419 scams because many victims are too embarrassed to report their losses, estimates in Great Britain and the United States are in the USD hundreds of millions a year. 151, 152, 153 Within Nigeria, citizens universally distrust public institutions. Everyday corruption is taken for granted. Invisible expenses pad business contracts. Quacks, charlatans, miracle workers, native healers, and fake drugs infiltrate health services. International aid is viewed as an opportunity for free money. Roadside checkpoints by police and military hassle drivers. Fraud plagues elections. Government ministries, which are built on patronage, are at best ineffective in solving these problems, and at worst complicit in creating them. 154 In the Muslim northern states, shari’a law was instituted after the return to civilian rule in 1999 in part to combat the endemic crime and corruption. 155 Ethnic Groups Estimates of distinctly identifiable ethnic groups within Nigeria range upward of 250, and actively spoken languages number 514. 156, 157 The larger groups dominate broad areas of the country. Many of the smallest live within areas of less than 10 km (6 mi) across, and number under 1,000 individuals. 158 Negotiations between Africa’s colonizing powers—Great Britain, Germany, and France—established Nigeria’s 151 Uwe Buse, “Spam Scams: Africa’s City of Cyber Gangsters,” Spiegel Online International, 7 November 2005, http://www.spiegel.de/international/spiegel/spam-scams-africa-s-city-of-cyber-gangsters-a384317.html 152 BBC News, “Nigeria Scams ‘Cost UK Billions,’” 20 November 2006, http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/6163700.stm 153 Eric Rosenberg, Hearst Newspapers, “U.S. Internet Fraud at All-Time High/‘Nigerian’ Scam and Other Crimes Cost $198.4 Million,” SFGate (San Francisco Chronicle), 31 March 2007, http://www.sfgate.com/crime/article/U-S-Internet-fraud-at-all-time-high-Nigerian-2576989.php 154 Daniel Jordan Smith, A Culture of Corruption: Everyday Deception and Popular Discontent in Nigeria (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2007). 155 William Wallis, “Sharia Pledge Raises Nigeria Unity Fears: Muslims are Delighted, Christians are Worried, and Doubts about Cohesion Grow as Islamic law is to be Introduced in the North,” Financial Times (UK), 22 June 2000 156 Central Intelligence Agency, “Nigeria,” in The World Factbook, 25 June 2012, https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/ni.html 157 M. Paul Lewis, “Languages of Nigeria,” in Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 16th ed. (Dallas: SIL International, 2009), http://www.ethnologue.com/show_country.asp?name=NG 158 M. Paul Lewis, “Languages of Nigeria: Maps of Nigeria,” in Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 16th ed. (Dallas: SIL International, 2009), http://www.ethnologue.com/show_map.asp?name=NG © D LI F L C | 20 HAUSA Cultural Orientation national boundaries. Therefore, ethnic groups, particularly the larger ones, straddle national boundaries. 159 The most populous groups within Nigeria are the Hausa-Fulani (29%), Yoruba (21%), Igbo (18%), and Ijaw (10%). No other group constitutes over 4% of the population. 160 Hausa-Fulani The Hausa, the dominant ethnic group of northern Nigeria and southern Niger, inhabit a large area called Hausaland. Historically, Hausa states ruling from walled cities were important in regional trading networks. 161, 162 The Fulani are pastoral, often nomadic, cattle-herders whose area of habitation stretches from Senegal on Africa’s far western coast to the Central African Republic in the center: a wide band that overlaps Hausaland. The Fulani live as minorities in a number of countries. 163 As the Fulani migrated east, they came under the jurisdiction of regional powers such as the Hausa, whose rulers exacted taxes and other tributes. During the 16th century, the Fulani adopted radical forms of Islam that preached rebellion against unjust rulers and the institution of Islamic society under shari’a law. One of these jihads, the 1804–10 Fulani War, brought down the loosely confederated Hausa states and replaced them with the Sokoto Caliphate, the most powerful Fulani theocracy. 164 The Caliphate fell to British conquest in 1903. 165 The Hausa and Fulani became so intermingled in Hausaland that they are often grouped as the Hausa-Fulani. Today, the Hausa people and language dominate the region. About half the Fulani speak their original Fula (or Fulfulde) language, while the other half speak 159 Toyin Falola and Ann Genova, Historical Dictionary of Nigeria (Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press, Inc., 2009). 160 Central Intelligence Agency, “Nigeria,” in The World Factbook, 25 June 2012, https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/ni.html 161 Toyin Falola and Ann Genova, Historical Dictionary of Nigeria (Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press, Inc., 2009), 147–148. 162 Kwame Anthony Appiah and Henry Louis Gates, Jr., eds., “Hausa States,” in Encyclopedia of Africa, vol. 1 (New York: Oxford University Press USA, 2010), 551–554. 163 Yaa Pokua Afriyie Oppong, “Fulani,” in Encyclopedia of Africa , vol. 1, eds. Kwame Anthony Appiah and Henry Louis Gates, Jr. (New York: Oxford University Press USA, 2010), 495–496. 164 Yaa Pokua Afriyie Oppong, “Fulani,” in Encyclopedia of Africa vol. 1, eds. Kwame Anthony Appiah and Henry Louis Gates, Jr. (New York: Oxford University Press USA, 2010), 495–496. 165 Toyin Falola and Ann Genova, Historical Dictionary of Nigeria (Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press, Inc., 2009), 147–148. © D LI F L C | 21 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Hausa. 166 The legacy of the Fulani jihad is the stronger adherence to Islam that arose in Hausaland and continues to dominate northern Nigeria. 167 Yoruba Nigeria’s second-largest ethnic group occupies the southwest quarter of the country, west of the lower Niger River. Smaller populations live across the borders of Benin and Togo. 168 City-states in Yorubaland emerged as early as the sixth century. In the 17th and 18th centuries, these walled cities and their surrounding villages were united under the Oyo Empire. 169 The Oyo dominated largely through their participation in the transatlantic slave trade with European powers. The Yoruba were one of the largest groups exported to the Americas as slaves. From the late 18th century, a philanthropic repatriation movement began returning freed slaves to Sierra Leone; some made it back to their homelands. 170 Returnees to Yorubaland (most of whom settled in Lagos to be safe from re-enslavement) were among the first agents of a Protestant missionary movement to spread Christianity and abolish slavery. 171 Over several centuries, the displacement of populations by the slave trade; internal migrations provoked by warfare; and the influences of Islam, missionary Christianity, and traditional religion combined to make ethnicity in Yorubaland a complex issue. It is unclear when the greater population of the region began to identify as members of a shared ethnicity. It has been suggested that repatriated slaves formed an educated elite within colonial society and forged a stronger sense of pan-Yoruba identity than had existed. 172 166 Encyclopædia Britannica Online, “Fulani,” 2012, http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/221697/Fulani 167 Kwame Anthony Appiah and Henry Louis Gates, Jr., eds., “Hausa States,” in Encyclopedia of Africa vol. 1 (New York: Oxford University Press USA, 2010), 551–554. 168 Encyclopædia Britannica Online, “Yoruba,” 2012, http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/653789/Yoruba 169 Natalia B. Kochakova, “Yoruba City-States (at the Turn of the Nineteenth Century),” in The Early State, eds. Henry J. M. Claessen and Peter Skalník (The Hague, The Netherlands: Mouton Publishers, 1978), 495–510. Saheed Aderinto, “Back to Africa and Volta in Africa,” in The Oxford Encyclopedia of African Thought vol. 1, eds. F. Abiola Irele and Biodun Jeyifo (New York: Oxford University Press, Inc., 2010), 123–124. 171 James Smoot Coleman, Nigeria: Background to Nationalism (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1971), 93. 172 Olatunji Ojo, “The Root Is Also Here: The Nondiaspora Foundations of Yoruba Ethnicity,” in Movements, Borders, and Identities in Africa, eds. Toyin Falola and Aribidesi Adisa Usman (Rochester, NY: University of Rochester Press, 2009), 53–80. 170 © D LI F L C | 22 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Igbo The Igbo (also called “Ibo”) homeland covers both sides of the lower Niger Delta, and the southeast corner of Nigeria circumscribed by the Niger and Benue rivers. The Igbo have a common culture and have lived in the region for thousands of years. Bronze artifacts and textiles have been dated from the ninth century. The Igbo excel in metalwork, weaving, and woodcarving. 173 Traditionally, Igbo society was decentralized. In the precolonial era, they lived in villages with complex social structures that blocked individuals from gaining disproportionate power. The common political unit was the village; the largest units were village federations with up to 5,000 people. Because of their organizational diffusion, the Igbo lacked a sense of broader ethnic identity. 174 They never developed city-states and empires or fought wars like their neighbors in Hausaland and Yorubaland. British colonists were frustrated in their attempts to establish indirect rule in Igboland (in which most civic arenas would be self-governed by natives); chiefs could not be identified. The cultural openness of the Igbo served the purposes of European missionaries; today, most Igbo are Christians. 175 Their high literacy rate led to a disproportionate number of Igbo serving as military officers and civil servants in the emerging nation. They played a central role in the independence movement. Nigeria’s first president, Benjamin Nnamdi Azikiwe, was an Igbo. 176 After independence, Igbo dispersed throughout the country to act as civil servants and administrators. Colonization and the migration of the Igbo to urban areas, where they became an upwardly mobile elite, could have created a sense of common identity. 177 But in the 1960s, the discovery of major oil reserves in Igboland had tragic consequences. Underlying the events were arguments over sharing oil revenues. A 1966 military coup masterminded by an Igbo officer was seen in the west and north as an Igbo coup. In the north, 30,000 Igbo civilians were killed. In 1967, under the leadership of a former military governor of Igboland, the region seceded as the independent Republic of Biafra. 173 David P. Johnson, Jr., “Igbo,” in Encyclopedia of Africa, vol. 1 eds. Kwame Anthony Appiah and Henry Louis Gates, Jr. (New York: Oxford University Press USA, 2010), 594–595. 174 Sun-Ki Chai, “Pan-Igbo Ethnicity in Nigeria,” in Choosing an Identity: A General Model of Preference and Belief Formation (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2001), 205. 175 Toyin Falola and Ann Genova, Historical Dictionary of Nigeria (Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press, Inc., 2009), 162–164. 176 Online Nigeria, “The Rt. Hon. Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, P.C., GCFR,” n.d., http://www.onlinenigeria.com/zik.asp 177 David P. Johnson, Jr., “Igbo,” in Encyclopedia of Africa, vol. 1 eds. Kwame Anthony Appiah and Henry Louis Gates, Jr. (New York: Oxford University Press USA, 2010), 594–595. © D LI F L C | 23 HAUSA Cultural Orientation The Nigerian Army enforced a total blockade of supplies into the region, leading to widespread famine. Surrender and reintegration came about in 1970. 178 Ijaw For many centuries, the Ijaw inhabited the tidal area of the Niger Delta. Fishing and farming the scattered patches of arable land make up their economy. The swampy land is threaded with numerous streams; many settlements can only be reached by water. 179 The challenges of the environment may explain why the Ijaw maintain a separate identity—other groups were simply unable to penetrate the area. 180 Salt was an important commodity in sub-Saharan Africa, most of it brought from the Sahara. But the Ijaw produced significant quantities by evaporating seawater, and became experienced as traders. 181 After contact with Europeans in the 15th century, the Ijaw became brokers in the transatlantic slave trade. 182 At the trade’s 18th-century peak, major Ijaw villages became slave-trading centers with populations from 5,000 to 10,000. 183 These “citystates” were powerful enough to prevent Europeans from trading directly with inlanders. With the decline of the slave trade, the Ijaw supplied Europeans with palm oil. 184 The discovery of oil in the delta in 1956 changed the region. The oil economy now dominates the region and the country. For the Ijaw, it means polluted land and water; the destruction of traditional economies; unemployment among the current Ijaw population of 8 to 15 million; and financial neglect, because little of the oil revenues are returned to the area that produces them. Since 1998, a youth-oriented militancy has opposed the oil regime with tactics ranging from protest to sabotage to kidnapping. 185, 186 178 Eddie Enyeobi Okafor, “Biafra, Republic of” in Encyclopedia of Africa, Volume 1, eds. Kwame Anthony Appiah and Henry Louis Gates, Jr. (New York: Oxford University Press USA, 2010), 178–180. 179 Philip E. Leis, “Palm Oil, Illicit Gin, and the Moral Order of the Ijaw,” American Anthropologist 66, no. 4 (August 1964): , http://www.jstor.org/stable/668179 180 John A. Shoup, Ethnic Groups of Africa and the Middle East: An Encyclopedia (Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO, LLC, 2011) 129–131. 181 Ari Nave, “Salt Trade,” in Encyclopedia of Africa, vol. 1, eds. Kwame Anthony Appiah and Henry Louis Gates, Jr. (New York: Oxford University Press USA, 2010), 345–346. 182 Kwame Anthony Appiah and Henry Louis Gates, Jr., eds., “Ijaw,” in Encyclopedia of Africa, vol. 1 (New York: Oxford University Press USA, 2010), 596. 183 Paul E. Lovejoy, “Chapter 1: Historical Setting,” in Nigeria: A Country Study, ed. Helen Chapin Metz (Washington, DC: GPO for the Library of Congress, 1991), http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/ngtoc.html 184 Philip E. Leis, “Palm Oil, Illicit Gin, and the Moral Order of the Ijaw,” American Anthropologist 66, no. 4 (August 1964):, http://www.jstor.org/stable/668179 185 Toyin Falola and Ann Genova, Historical Dictionary of Nigeria (Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press, Inc., 2009), 164–165. 186 Kwame Anthony Appiah and Henry Louis Gates, Jr., eds., “Ijaw,” in Encyclopedia of Africa, vol. 1 (New York: Oxford University Press USA, 2010), 596. © D LI F L C | 24 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Chapter 1 Assessment 1. The introduction of camels brought trans-Saharan trade into the savanna. False Camels are suitable for desert areas, but cannot endure the humid savanna. 2. Slavery was common in Hausaland. True The use of slaves, particularly as agricultural laborers, predates the transatlantic slave trade. 3. Usman dan Fodio led a jihad against Christian colonial powers. False Usman dan Fodio was a Fulani who believed that the Hausa practice of Islam was corrupted by pagan beliefs. His jihad against the Hausa resulted in a caliphate that ruled until British colonial conquest. 4. The discovery of oil reserves in the Niger Delta brought about long-term reductions in poverty. False Little of the nation’s oil revenues are used for development, and Nigeria has a high rate of poverty, particularly in the north. 5. The United States is a model for the Nigerian government. True Many aspects of Nigeria’s governmental structure were copied from the Constitution of the United States. © D LI F L C | 25 HAUSA Cultural Orientation CHAPTER 2: RELIGION Introduction The two main religions in Nigeria are Islam and Christianity. Approximately half of all Nigerians are Muslim; 40% are Christian; the remaining 10% practice indigenous religions. 187 Most of the country’s Muslims live in the north, and most Christians live in the southern regions. In the middle part of the country, the two religious groups attempt a peaceful coexistence. 188 Tensions between Islam and Christianity were held in check by the military who ruled the country until 1999. Tensions have flared since the election of a civilian government and as freedom of speech and religion expanded. Since 2001, at least 10,000 people have died because of ethnic and religious violence. 189, 190 Religious tensions are ongoing. In August 2012, the militant Islamist group, Boko Haram, demanded that Nigeria’s president, Goodluck Jonathan, convert to Islam or resign his post. This group routinely targets Christians in Nigeria’s largely Islamic north with attacks that include bombings and vows to remove all Christians from the region. 191 Boko Haram’s demand of Goodluck Jonathan followed a series of church bombings by a radical Islamic sect in Kaduna state; 50 people were killed. Other deadly attacks occur, mostly on major Christian holidays. 192, 193 Major Religions Islam The majority of people in northern Nigeria are Muslim. 194, 195, 196 Among the Hausa, nearly 90% are Muslims, most of them Sunnis who follow the Maliki school of religious 187 Central Intelligence Agency, “Nigeria: People and Society,” in The World Factbook, 31 July 2012, https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/ni.html 188 Meg Handley, “The Violence in Nigeria: What’s Behind the Conflict?” Time World, 10 March 2010, http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1971010,00.html 189 Meg Handley, “The Violence in Nigeria: What’s Behind the Conflict?” Time World, 10 March 2010, http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1971010,00.html 190 John Blake, “Religious Hatred Simmers in Terror Suspect’s Homeland,” CNN World, 30 December 2009, http://articles.cnn.com/2009-12-30/world/Nigeria.violence_1_nigerian-muslims-religious-violencenigerian-christians?_s=PM:WORLD 191 Catholic Online, “Terrorists Tell Nigerian President to ‘Convert or Resign’,” 13 August 2012, http://www.catholic.org/international/international_story.php?id=47239 192 Associated Press, “Nigeria: Dozens Killed in Christian-Muslim Strife,” CBS News, 18 June 2012, http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-202_162-57455562/nigeria-dozens-killed-in-christian-muslim-strife/ 193 Ibrahim Garba, “Christians Retaliate After Three More Churches Bombed in Nigeria,” Christian Science Monitor, 17 June 2012, http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Africa/2012/0617/Christians-retaliateafter-three-more-churches-bombed-in-Nigeria 194 Meg Handley, “The Violence in Nigeria: What’s Behind the Conflict?” Time World, 10 March 2010, http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1971010,00.html © D LI F L C | 26 HAUSA Cultural Orientation law. 197, 198 Islam was brought to Nigeria in the 9th century but was not widely accepted among the Hausa until the 14th century. It was primarily popular among the wealthy urban class until 1810. 199, 200, 201, 202 Although most Hausa are Sunni Muslims, more radical and fundamentalists sects such as the Wahhabis exist.203, 204, 205 The principles and proscriptions of Islam dominate virtually every aspect of life, including dress, food, housing, and art. 206, 207 Hausa Muslims follow the Pillars of Islam as a part of their faith. The first of these is the shahada, the declaration of faith that “There is no god but God and Muhammad is God’s messenger.” The salat is the requirement to pray five times a day. Sawm is the required fast during the month of Ramadan. Zakat is the expectation that Muslims should be generous and share their wealth. The fifth pillar is the hajj, which requires all able Muslims to make the pilgrimage to Mecca at least once in their lives. 208 Islam among the Hausa can take a variety of forms. Some are 195 Seth Kaplan, “Nigeria’s Potential for Sectarian Conflict,” Fragile States Resource Center, 29 January 2012, http://www.fragilestates.org/2012/01/29/nigerias-potential-for-sectarian-conflict/ 196 Refworld, “2011Report on International Religious Freedom: Nigeria,” U.S. Department of State, 30 July 2012, http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/country,,,,NGA,,50210598c,0.html 197 Countries and Their Cultures, “Hausa: Religion and Expressive Culture,” 2012, http://www.everyculture.com/Africa-Middle-East/Hausa-Religion-and-Expressive-Culture.html 198 Council on Foreign Relations, “Islamic Law in Nigeria [Rush Transcript; Federal News Service, Inc],” 23 February 2006, http://www.cfr.org/nigeria/islamic-law-nigeria-rush-transcript-federal-news-serviceinc/p9994 199 R. Lobban, “Hausa,” in Worldmark Encyclopedia of Cultures and Daily Life, Timothy L. Gall and Jeneen Hobby, eds., vol. 1 (Detroit, MI: Cengage Gale Learning, 2009), 273. 200 Renee Montagne, “Religious Mix a Source of Tension in Nigeria,” National Public Radio, 16 March 2006, http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5283227 201 Global Security, “Nigeria Christian/Muslim Conflict,” 11 July 2011, http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/war/nigeria-1.htm 202 Katja Werthmann, “The Example of Nana Asma’u,” Magazine for Development and Cooperation, (March 2005) http://www3.giz.de/E+Z/content/archive-eng/03-2005/foc_art3.html 203 R. Lobban, “Hausa,” in Worldmark Encyclopedia of Cultures and Daily Life, Timothy L. Gall and Jeneen Hobby, eds., vol. 1 (Detroit, MI: Cengage Gale Learning, 2009), 273. 204 Global Security, “Nigeria Christian/Muslim Conflict,” 11 July 2011, http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/war/nigeria-1.htm 205 Coleen Walsh, “Exploring Islam in Nigeria: Panel Discussion Precedes Visit by Sultan of Sokota,” Harvard Gazette, 27 September 2011, http://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2011/09/exploring-islam-innigeria/ 206 R. Lobban, “Hausa,” in Worldmark Encyclopedia of Cultures and Daily Life, Timothy L. Gall and Jeneen Hobby, eds., vol. 1 (Detroit, MI: Cengage Gale Learning, 2009), 273. 207 Moses Ochonu, “Colonialism Within Colonialism: The Hausa-Caliphate Imaginary and the British Colonial Administration of the Nigerian Middle Belt,” African Studies Quarterly: The Online Journal for African Studies 10, nos. 2 and 3 (Fall 2008), http://www.africa.ufl.edu/asq/v10/v10i2a5.htm 208 Encyclopædia Britannica Online, “Pillars of Islam,” 2012, http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/295625/Pillars-of-Islam © D LI F L C | 27 HAUSA Cultural Orientation syncretic, mixing elements of traditional indigenous practices with Islamic practices. 209, 210 More traditional forms of Islam are followed in the major urban centers. Among the 70% of Hausa living in the rural areas, Islamic and animist practices meld into a set of practices unique to Hausa culture. 211, 212, 213 For example, Muslim holy men make amulets and manipulate sand patterns to predict the future. 214 According to data from 2010, approximately 25% of Muslims believe in the evil eye; 13% believe that sacred objects and shrines provide protection; 37% have used traditional religious healers. 215 Indigenous Religions Some Hausa follow the indigenous Hausa religions, which emphasize the importance of spirits, especially those of ancestors. Prayers and rituals placate these spirits and reinforce community values. Spirits can be either good or bad, offering either protection or bringing misfortune. Shamans practice the art of divination or fortune telling. 216, 217 Maguzawa is the name given to non-Muslim Hausas. Predominantly rural, Maguzawa do not pray. Instead, they worship spirits, called bori or iskoki. 218, 219 The iskoki are the spirits or gods of specific clans; each clan’s chief acts as priest for the community. Sometimes, the iskoki is a spirit unrelated to the village and is there to create mischief. 220 209 R. Lobban, “Hausa,” in Worldmark Encyclopedia of Cultures and Daily Life, Timothy L. Gall and Jeneen Hobby, eds., vol. 1 (Detroit, MI: Cengage Gale Learning, 2009), 273. 210 Kari Bergstrom, “Legacies of Colonialism and Islam for Hausa Women: An Historical Analysis, 1804– 1960,” (paper, International Center, Michigan State University, 2002), 4–5, http://gencen.isp.msu.edu/documents/Working_Papers/WP276.pdf 211 R. Lobban, “Hausa,” in Worldmark Encyclopedia of Cultures and Daily Life, Timothy L. Gall and Jeneen Hobby, eds., vol. 1 (Detroit, MI: Cengage Gale Learning, 2009), 273. 212 Esther Moses, “The Hausa People,” 2010, http://blackethics.com/477/the-hausa-people/ 213 Eric Holmlund, “The Hausa of Nigeria,” Prayway, 2005, http://www.prayway.com/unreached/peoplegroups/279.html 214 Mariko Namba Walter and Eva Jane Neumann Fridmann, “Hausa Shamanistic Practices,” in Shamanism: An Encyclopedia of World Beliefs, Practices, and Culture, vol. 1 (Santa Barbara, CA: ABCCLIO, 2004), 923–4. 215 Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life, “Tolerance and Tension: Islam and Christianity in Sub-Saharan Africa; Nigeria,” 15 April 2010, http://features.pewforum.org/africa/country.php?c=160 216 University of Kent, “Society: Hausa,” n.d., http://lucy.ukc.ac.uk/ethnoatlas/hmar/cult_dir/culture.7844 217 Franke A. Salomone, “Hausa Concepts of Masculinity and the ‘Yan Daudu,” Journal of Men, Masculinities, and Spirituality 1, no. 1 (2007), http://www.jmmsweb.org/issues/volume1/number1/pp45-54 218 Jerome H. Barkow, “Muslims and Maguzawa in North Central State, Nigeria: An Ethnographic Comparison,” Canadian Journal of African Studies VII, no. 1 (1973), 59, http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2307/483750 219 R. Lobban, “Hausa,” in Worldmark Encyclopedia of Cultures and Daily Life, Timothy L. Gall and Jeneen Hobby, eds., vol. 1 (Detroit, MI: Cengage Gale Learning, 2009), 273. 220 Jerome H. Barkow, “Muslims and Maguzawa in North Central State, Nigeria: An Ethnographic Comparison,” Canadian Journal of African Studies VII, no. 1 (1973), 69, http://www.jstor.org/stable/483750?seq=11 © D LI F L C | 28 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Most Maguzawa villages will have some kind of an altar, often made from stone. Sacrifices, some involving wine and animal blood, are made at these sites to please the gods. During religious ceremonies, Hausas consume large amounts of a local alcoholic beverage called burukutu. 221, 222 Itinerant sorcerers, or boka, travel to villages, offering herbal concoctions for relief from various ailments. The bokas are male initiates of the bori cult, which focuses on spirit possession and exorcism.223, 224 Christianity Roman Catholicism was first brought by missionaries to Nigeria in the 15th century. By 2005, the Roman Catholic Church in Nigeria had approximately 19 million members, mostly in the south. 225 Christian churches in Nigeria today range from Roman Catholic and Anglican to many smaller Protestant denominations. 226, 227, 228 Most of Nigeria’s Christians are Protestant. 229, 230 The most successful churches are those able to blend African spiritual beliefs with Protestant traditions and practice. 231, 232 221 Paul Bush, “Report on the Maguzawa,” n.d., http://www.revivalfire.org/nigeria/report_on_the_maguzawa_people_gr.htm 222 Jerome H. Barkow, “Muslims and Maguzawa in North Central State, Nigeria: An Ethnographic Comparison,” Canadian Journal of African Studies VII, no. 1 (1973), 70, http://www.jstor.org/stable/483750?seq=12 223 Jerome H. Barkow, “Muslims and Maguzawa in North Central State, Nigeria: An Ethnographic Comparison,” Canadian Journal of African Studies VII, no. 1 (1973), 70–72, http://www.jstor.org/stable/483750?seq=13 224 R. Lobban, “Hausa,” in Worldmark Encyclopedia of Cultures and Daily Life, Timothy L. Gall and Jeneen Hobby, eds., vol. 1 (Detroit, MI: Cengage Gale Learning, 2009), 273. 225 BBC, “Factfile: Roman Catholics Around the World,” 1 April 2005, http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/4243727.stm 226 Global Security, “Nigerian Christian/Muslim Conflict,” 11 July 2011, http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/war/nigeria-1.htm 227 World Council of Churches, “Methodist Church in Nigeria,” 1 January 2006, http://www.oikoumene.org/gr/member-churches/regions/africa/nigeria/methodist-church-nigeria.html 228 Renee Montagne, “Religious Mix a Source of Tension in Nigeria,” National Public Radio, 16 March 2006, http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5283227 229 Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life, “Global Christianity: A Report on the Size and Distribution of the World’s Christian Population,” 19 December 2011, http://www.pewforum.org/Christian/GlobalChristianity-protestant.aspx 230 BBC, “Factfile: Roman Catholics Around the World,” 1 April 2005, http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/4243727.stm 231 Somini Sengupta and Larry Rohter, “Where Faith Grows, Fired by Pentecostalism,” New York Times, 14 October 2003, http://www.nytimes.com/2003/10/14/world/where-faith-grows-fired-bypentecostalism.html?pagewanted=all&src=pm 232 Donatus Pius Ukpong, “The Presence and Impact of Pentecostalism in Nigeria,” n.d., 11–14, http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=20&ved=0CFEQFjAJOAo&url=htt p%3A%2F%2Fwww.glopent.net%2FMembers%2Ffrdona%2Fpresence-and-impact-of-pentecostalism-innigeria.pdf&ei=BzgpUJStAuL7iwLys4HgCQ&usg=AFQjCNEfOE_qMXaDM_sLyACigPupe8L1hQ&sig 2=7A5QM8LjqXCnR4mDSrxB6A © D LI F L C | 29 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Anglicanism was first established in Nigeria by British missionaries in 1842. Anglican Church membership has grown steadily since. By the 1970s, membership was about 5 million. Proselytizing efforts in the late 1980s and 1990s saw membership expand to 18 million members, and membership is projected to double by 2025. As of 2012, the Anglican Church has nearly 150 dioceses, many in the northern states. 233, 234 But recent bombings have reduced church attendance by nearly 30% in the state of Kaduna. 235 Beginning in the 1980s, Pentecostal churches saw an explosion in growth. By 2006, about 60% of Nigerian Protestants were members of either Pentecostal or charismatic churches; 30% of Roman Catholics belonged to charismatic churches. 236 The ability of the Pentecostal churches to link their beliefs and practices with indigenous beliefs and traditions is at the core of their success, especially among Nigeria’s poor. 237, 238 The strength and success of Pentecostalism in Nigeria rely greatly on traditions of African nationalism, shamanism, and Western materialism. 239 Religion and Government Nigeria is a secular nation with freedom of religion guaranteed by its constitution. At the same time, each state has the power to establish its own court system, which is problematic because Islam rejects the separation of religious and political powers. Among the twelve northern states, where most Hausa reside, the courts operate under Islamic shari’a law. Not all states within the northern regions, however, apply Islamic law 233 Philip Jenkins, “Defender of the Faith,” The Atlantic, November 2003, http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200311/jenkins 234 Anglican Communion, “Provincial Directory: The Church of Nigeria (Anglican Communion), 2012, http://www.anglicancommunion.org/tour/province.cfm?ID=N 235 Christiana T. Alabi, “Nigeria: Insecurity- Church Attendance Drops by 30 Percent,” Daily Trust, 13 August 2012, http://allafrica.com/stories/201208130453.html 236 Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life, “Historical Overview of Pentecostalism in Nigeria,” 5 October 2006, http://www.pewforum.org/Christian/Evangelical-Protestant-Churches/Historical-Overview-ofPentecostalism-in-Nigeria.aspx 237 Somini Sengupta and Larry Rohter, “Where Faith Grows, Fired by Pentecostalism,” New York Times, 14 October 2003, http://www.nytimes.com/2003/10/14/world/where-faith-grows-fired-bypentecostalism.html?pagewanted=all&src=pm 238 Donatus Pius Ukpong, “The Presence and Impact of Pentecostalism in Nigeria,” n.d., 11–14, http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=20&ved=0CFEQFjAJOAo&url=htt p%3A%2F%2Fwww.glopent.net%2FMembers%2Ffrdona%2Fpresence-and-impact-of-pentecostalism-innigeria.pdf&ei=BzgpUJStAuL7iwLys4HgCQ&usg=AFQjCNEfOE_qMXaDM_sLyACigPupe8L1hQ&sig 2=7A5QM8LjqXCnR4mDSrxB6A 239 Donatus Pius Ukpong, “The Presence and Impact of Pentecostalism in Nigeria,” n.d., 14–18, http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=20&ved=0CFEQFjAJOAo&url=htt p%3A%2F%2Fwww.glopent.net%2FMembers%2Ffrdona%2Fpresence-and-impact-of-pentecostalism-innigeria.pdf&ei=BzgpUJStAuL7iwLys4HgCQ&usg=AFQjCNEfOE_qMXaDM_sLyACigPupe8L1hQ&sig 2=7A5QM8LjqXCnR4mDSrxB6A © D LI F L C | 30 HAUSA Cultural Orientation with equal force. In states such as Kano and Kaduna, application of shari’a law is more restricted; in other states, such as Zamfara, shari’a principles are more widely embraced. 240, 241 The government generally respects religious freedom, but Christian and Muslim groups must register with the Corporate Affairs Commission if they plan to construct churches or mosques. Although there are no allegations against the federal government regarding the abuse of religious freedoms, such allegations against local governments are not uncommon. 242 The Nigerian Christian Pilgrims Commission and the National Hajj Commission provides logistical arrangements for religious pilgrims, Christian or Muslim. 243 The federal constitution prohibits individual states from limiting religious activity or otherwise imposing on religious freedom. Nevertheless, restrictions on the registration of imams, denials of permits to construct religious buildings, and the destruction of existing religious structures have occurred under local state authority. Shari’a law does not apply to non-Muslims, but certain practices, including the public segregation of sexes, have been applied to all residents in some of the northern states. Sentences for non-Muslims in Islamic criminal courts are often perceived as being harsher than for Muslims. The state governments fund Hisbah (shari’a religious police) who, even among non-Muslims, enforce Muslim prohibitions against alcohol and regulations regarding public transportation for women. 244 Influence of Religion on Daily Life Nigerians are a deeply religious people, and they generally do not believe in a separation of religious and secular life. Public events are accompanied by opening and closing prayers. Virtually all that happens in the nation is attributed to divine intervention. 245 Christians and Muslims in Nigeria share a common mistrust of each other; violence and intolerance characterize relations between the two groups. 246, 247, 248 240 Global Security, “Nigeria Christian/Muslim Conflict,” 11 July 2011, http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/war/nigeria-1.htm 241 Refworld, “2011Report on International Religious Freedom: Nigeria,” U.S. Department of State, 30 July 2012, http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/country,,,,NGA,,50210598c,0.html 242 Refworld, “2011Report on International Religious Freedom: Nigeria,” U.S. Department of State, 30 July 2012, http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/country,,,,NGA,,50210598c,0.html 243 Refworld, “2011Report on International Religious Freedom: Nigeria,” U.S. Department of State, 30 July 2012, http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/country,,,,NGA,,50210598c,0.html 244 Refworld, “2011Report on International Religious Freedom: Nigeria,” U.S. Department of State, 30 July 2012, http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/country,,,,NGA,,50210598c,0.html 245 John Campbell, Nigeria: Dancing on the Brink (Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield Publishers, Inc., 2011), 43. 246 Buck Sexton, “Is Nigeria on the Brink of a Muslim vs. Christian Civil War?” The Blaze, 10 January 2012, http://www.theblaze.com/stories/is-nigeria-on-the-brink-of-a-muslim-vs-christian-civil-war/ 247 Associated Press, “Nigeria Sect Kills 15: Christians Vow Defense,” Fox News, 7 January 2012, http://www.foxnews.com/world/2012/01/07/nigeria-christians-to-defend-against-muslim-sect/ 248 Ibrahim Garba, “Christians Retaliate After Three More Churches Bombed in Nigeria,” Christian Science Monitor, 17 June 2012, http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Africa/2012/0617/Christians-retaliateafter-three-more-churches-bombed-in-Nigeria © D LI F L C | 31 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Islam is a dynamic presence in the lives of the faithful, affecting virtually every aspect of daily life. Muslims do not eat pork or drink alcohol. Pork is not served in restaurants, and alcohol is only rarely available. 249 Islamic art forms, motifs, and patterns strongly influence Hausa art. 250 In some states, businesses must close during prayer times. 251 Muslims dress in accordance with Islamic principles. Men wear long flowing gowns (baba riga) along with a robe (jalabia). Women wear brightly colored wraps and blouses, shawls, and head scarves (hijab). 252, 253 In Kano, all private-school students, regardless of religion, must wear Islamic clothing and veils. 254 Islam, as practiced in Nigeria, requires segregation of the sexes (purdah). Women must remain indoors and must wear the hijab when they go out of the home. On some occasions, they must also be escorted by a male guardian. Among the Hausa, these practices are central to Islamic identity. The enforcement of purdah, however, is less likely to occur in rural areas, where economic realities make it necessary for women to go outside the home to participate in economic activities. 255 Traditional animist religious practices are also evident in daily life. Hausa often consult diviners to learn about the future; they visit traditional healers; and they partake in prayers and rituals for ancestral spirits. These practices are not limited to the small number of Hausa who practice indigenous religions. Many Christians and Muslims engage in these practices as well. 256, 257, 258 249 John Campbell, Nigeria: Dancing on the Brink (Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield Publishers, Inc., 2011), 44. 250 R. Lobban, “Hausa,” in Worldmark Encyclopedia of Cultures and Daily Life, Timothy L. Gall and Jeneen Hobby, eds., vol. 1 (Detroit, MI: Cengage Gale Learning, 2009), 276. 251 BBC News, “‘New Sharia Law’ in Nigeria State,” 28 April 2004, http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/3667515.stm 252 Esther Moses, “The Hausa People,” 2010, http://blackethics.com/477/the-hausa-people/ 253 “A Dressing Down: The Perils of Wearing Supposedly Indecent Clothes,” Economist, 11 October 2007, http://www.economist.com/node/9946878 254 Tunde Adelakun, “Controversies Over Islamic Dress Codes in Northern Nigeria,” Helium, 9 July 2007, http://www.helium.com/items/447193-controversies-over-islamic-dress-codes-in-northern-nigeria 255 Nicola Hugo, “Purdah: Separation of the Sexes in Northern Nigeria,” Country Africa Intelligence, 4 June 2012, http://www.consultancyafrica.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1035:purdahseparation-of-the-sexes-in-northern-nigeria-&catid=59:gender-issues-discussion-papers&Itemid=267 256 Mariko Namba Walter and Eva Jane Neumann Fridmann, “Hausa Shamanistic Practices,” in Shamanism: An Encyclopedia of World Beliefs, Practices, and Culture, vol. 1 (Santa Barbara, CA: ABCCLIO, 2004), 923–4. 257 Franke A. Salamone, “Hausa Concepts of Masculinity and the ‘Yan Daudu,” Journal of Men, Masculinities, and Spirituality 1, no. 1 (2007), http://www.jmmsweb.org/issues/volume1/number1/pp45-54 258 Ulrika Andersson, “Working with Spirits Among Muslim Hausa in Nigeria: A Study of Bori in Jos,” (field study report, Department of Cultural Anthropology and Ethnology, Upsala University, Sweden, 2002), 5, 22–26, http://www.antro.uu.se/FileManager/Dokument/Working%20with%20Spirits%20among%20Muslim%20H ausa%20in%20Nigeria.pdf © D LI F L C | 32 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Gender Relations and Religion Nigerian society is patriarchal and the country’s religious traditions regard men as superior to women. 259 An increasing number of Muslim Nigerian women wear the hijab; few wear the full-body coverings. 260 But in some states, the hijab has become compulsory for schoolgirls. 261 Nevertheless, in Kano, the most conservative state in Hausaland, women drive cars and are permitted to vote. They are educated and take part in the economy. In many West African Muslim communities, women dress as their pre-Islamic ancestors did. A growing number of Nigeria’s Muslims also practice a form of strict purdah (female seclusion) in which women seldom venture outside the home, and then only when fully covered. 262, 263 For some women a life of seclusion may be more attractive than performing hard labor in the fields. 264 Segregation by sex begins early for Hausa children. By the age of 6, young girls must wear appropriate Muslim attire, and boys are prohibited from the women’s quarters in homes. Some Hausa Muslims engage in especially strict segregation, such as in the city of Kanuri where women almost never go outside their homes. In the states of Kano, Zamfara, and Kaduna, segregation by gender limits what jobs Hausa women may seek. Under shari’a law, women are at a disadvantage in matters of inheritance and child custody. 265 In rural areas where subsistence farming predominates, economics force most women out of the family compound. Those from poorer households have no choice but to seek seasonal work harvesting and threshing crops. Maintaining seclusion is difficult for 259 Celestina Omoso Isiramen, “Women in Nigeria: Religion, Culture and the AIDS Epidemic, ” International Humanist and Ethical Union, 1 November 2003, http://www.iheu.org/node/979 260 Associated Press, “In Kano, Women-only Tricycle Taxis a Symbol of Compromise,” Nigerian Village Square, 7 April 2007, http://www.nigeriavillagesquare.com/newsflash/in-kano-women-only-tricycle-taxisa-symbol-of-compromise.html 261 Anita Little, “Unveiling Oppression in Northern Nigeria,” MS. Blog, 8 March 2011, http://msmagazine.com/blog/blog/2011/03/08/unveiling-oppression-in-northern-nigeria/ 262 Emory University, “West Africa,” n.d., http://www.law.emory.edu/IFL/region/westafrica.html 263 Anita Little, “Unveiling Oppression in Northern Nigeria,” MS. Blog, 8 March 2011, http://msmagazine.com/blog/blog/2011/03/08/unveiling-oppression-in-northern-nigeria/ 264 Nicola Hugo, “Purdah: Separation of the Sexes in Northern Nigeria,” Consultancy Africa Intelligence, 4 June 2012, http://www.consultancyafrica.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1035:purdahseparation-of-the-sexes-in-northern-nigeria-&catid=59:gender-issues-discussion-papers&Itemid=267 265 Law School, Emory University, “West Africa,” n.d., http://www.law.emory.edu/ifl/region/westafrica.html © D LI F L C | 33 HAUSA Cultural Orientation women living in urban slums where unrelated families are often forced to share housing compounds. 266 Religious Holidays and Celebrations Nigeria celebrates a number of religious holidays, both Muslim and Christian. Eid al-Moulud commemorates the birthday of the Prophet Muhammad. The other two major Islamic holidays are Eid al-Fitr (celebrating the end of Ramadan) and Eid al-Adha (the Feast of Sacrifice) which occurs near the time of the hajj. Nigerian Muslims commemorate these holidays by slaughtering a ram, feasting, and exchanging gifts with family members. 267, 268 Christian religious holidays include Good Friday, Easter Monday, and Christmas Day. 269 Ramadan Ramadan, the third pillar of Islam, takes place during the ninth month of the Islamic calendar. This month-long fasting period is a time of reflection and honors the time when Allah revealed the Quran to his Prophet Muhammad. Only the sick, pregnant women, lactating mothers, and the infirm are exempt from fasting during the daylight hours. 270 Members of the Hisbah (religious police) patrol the streets to make sure that Muslims obey the fasting requirements. Those who do not obey requirements can and have been arrested. 271 Buildings of Worship There are both Christian churches and Muslim mosques in the Hausa region of northern Nigeria. Churches and mosques, however, have been the site of much of the religious violence engulfing the nation in recent years. 272, 273, 274 266 Yakubu Zakaria, “Entrepreneurs at Home: Secluded Muslim Women and Hidden Economic Activities in Northern Nigeria,” Nordic Journal of African Studies 10, no.1 (2001): 112, http://www.njas.helsinki.fi/pdf-files/vol10num1/yakubu.pdf 267 Q++ Studio, “Nigeria Public Holidays 2012,” http://www.qppstudio.net/publicholidays2012/nigeria.htm 268 R. Lobban, “Hausa,” in Worldmark Encyclopedia of Cultures and Daily Life, Timothy L. Gall and Jeneen Hobby, eds., vol. 1 (Detroit, MI: Cengage Gale Learning, 2009), 273. 269 Q++ Studio, “Nigeria Public Holidays 2012,” http://www.qppstudio.net/publicholidays2012/nigeria.htm 270 Colorado State University, “Islamic Holidays and Observances,” n.d., http://www.colostate.edu/orgs/MSA/events/Ramadan.html 271 ThisAfrica.com, “Ramadan: 20 Arrested for Refusing to Fast in Kano,” 8 August 2012, http://thisafrica.com/ramadan-20-arrested-for-refusing-to-fast-in-kano-2/ 272 Drew Hinshaw, “Nigeria Torn by Rising Religious Violence,” Wall Street Journal, 12 January, 2012, http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203436904577154894235988620.html 273 “Religious Violence Claims 52 Livens in Nigeria,” Russia Today, 18 June 2012, http://www.rt.com/news/nigeria-christian-muslim-violence-051/ 274 Associated Press, “Religious Violence Increases Despite Curfews in Nigeria,” New York Times, 20 June 2012, http://www.nytimes.com/2012/06/21/world/africa/curfews-fail-to-curb-religious-violence-innigeria.html © D LI F L C | 34 HAUSA Cultural Orientation The original Great Mosque of Kano, built in the late 15th century, was destroyed in the 1950s. It was constructed of mud and was the first tower-type mosque in West Africa. This mosque lacked minarets and a formal staircase. After its destruction in the 1950s, the British built the Central Mosque of Kano as a sign of appreciation for Nigeria’s role in World War II. 275 This mosque is closed to non-Muslims.276 Exchange 1: May I take photographs? Soldier: May I take photographs inside the mosque? Local: No. zan eya dawkan hotnaa a chekey masalaachanko? aa-aa Located in the city of Abuja, the National Mosque is a large complex that includes a main prayer hall, a library, a conference hall, a religious school, and a gold anodized, aluminum-shingled dome. 277 Built in the 1980s, this national monument is not open to non-Muslims. 278, 279 The first Christian church in northern Nigeria is at Wusasa in the state of Kaduna. Built in 1929 in the traditional architectural of the Hausa, this red-mud church is a major tourist attraction for Christians visiting the Nigerian city of Zaria. 280 The interdenominational National Church of Nigeria in Abuja is also a tourist attraction. Begun in 1984, the neo-gothic church was not completed until 2005. St. Joseph’s Catholic Cathedral, with 61,000 members, is located in Kaduna City in the state of Kaduna. Built in 1934, the church became a cathedral in 1953. 281 Behavior in Buildings of Worship Mosques Most Nigerians adhere to the Maliki school of Islam. 282, 283 Women are generally not welcome in Nigerian mosques, especially during prayers. 284 Do not enter a mosque 275 ArchNet, “Great Mosque of Kano,” n.d., http://archnet.org/library/sites/one-site.jsp?site_id=7729 World66, “Central Mosque,” n.d., http://www.world66.com/africa/nigeria/kano/sights/ 277 ArchNet, “Abuja National Mosque,” n.d., http://archnet.org/library/sites/one-site.jsp?site_id=936 278 Adeymr Adisa, “National Mosque, Abuja,” 2011, http://www.cometonigeria.com/wheretogo/nationalmosque-abuja 279 Tripmondo, “Explore Abuja in Nigeria: Sightseeing and Attractions,” 2012, http://www.tripmondo.com/nigeria/abuja-federal-capital-territory/abuja/ 280 Moses Alao, “Behold! First Church in Northern Nigeria: Established 1929,” Christ Apostolic Church France, n.d., http://www.cacfrance.org/behold-first-church-in-northern-nigeria-bullestablished-in1929.html 281 St Joseph’s Catholic Cathedral Church, Kaduna, “St Joseph’s Catholic Cathedral Church,” 2011, http://www.stjosephcatholiccathedralkaduna.org/ 282 Council on Foreign Relations, “Islamic Law in Nigeria [Rush Transcript; Federal News Service, Inc],” 23 February 2006, http://www.cfr.org/nigeria/islamic-law-nigeria-rush-transcript-federal-news-serviceinc/p9994 283 Omar Bakri Muhammad, “The Role of the Mosque,” (paper, n.d.), 27, http://www.izharudeen.com/uploads/4/1/2/2/4122615/role_of_mosque_www.izharudeen.com.pdf 276 © D LI F L C | 35 HAUSA Cultural Orientation without first asking a local if there are any specific requirements pertaining to the mosque you want to visit. Exchange 2: May I enter the mosque? Soldier: May I enter the mosque? Local: Yes. zan eyshga masalaachan? ey It is not acceptable to enter a mosque when prayers are being conducted. Once inside, the basic rules of etiquette for attending most religious or sacred institutions apply. Speak softly and respectfully and do not disturb those at prayer. 285 Do not walk in front of someone praying; doing so will invalidate his prayer. 286 Shoes must be removed and left outside. Men should wear loose-fitting pants, a loose- fitting shirt, and clean socks. Women should wear a long, loose skirt and a loose, long- sleeved top that reaches the thighs. Women should also cover their hair with a scarf. 287 Exchange 3: Do I need to wear a hijab? Soldier: Do I need to wear a hijab? Local: Yes. Exchange 4: When do you pray? Soldier: When do you pray? Local: I pray at noon. naa bukaatran saka hijaabee? ey Yawsha kakey salah? na sala da azahar Sit cross-legged; sitting with outstretched legs is considered disrespectful. 288 Churches Catholic churches generally welcome visitors. Most Catholic women wear a chapel veil in church. Avoid eating, chewing gum, or smoking while inside a church building or cathedral. Turn off cell phones. Wear clothing that is modest, clean, and neat. 289 If attending a mass, Protestants should not take part in the communion service, known as 284 Lizzie Williams, Nigeria, 2nd ed. (Bucks, England: Bradt Travel Guides, Ltd, 2008), 83, Hounslow Jamia Masjid and Islamic Centre, “Etiquettes of Visiting a Mosque,” 2009, http://www.hounslowmasjid.co.uk/page2/page10/page30/page30.html 286 Hounslow Jamia Masjid and Islamic Centre, “Etiquettes of Visiting a Mosque,” 2009, http://www.hounslowmasjid.co.uk/page2/page10/page30/page30.html 287 Hounslow Jamia Masjid and Islamic Centre, “Etiquettes of Visiting a Mosque,” 2009, http://www.hounslowmasjid.co.uk/page2/page10/page30/page30.html 288 Andrew Smith, “How to Act in a Mosque,” eHow, n.d., http://www.ehow.com/how_4443297_actmosque.html 289 Catholic Church Tours, “Etiquette,” 2012, http://www.catholicchurchtours.com/tours/etiquette/index.html 285 © D LI F L C | 36 HAUSA Cultural Orientation the Eucharist. 290 Most Catholics will bless themselves with holy water and make the sign of the cross. Non-Catholics are not obligated to do so. 291 Similar rules apply for Protestant churches. Visitors should dress conservatively. Women should avoid tank tops and tight-fitting clothing. 292 Men should remove their hats. 293 It is inappropriate to eat, chew gum, or smoke in church buildings. Be silent and respectful, especially during a mass, and turn off all cell phones. 294, 295 290 Andrew Kar, “What to Do When Visiting A different Christian Church,”, Examiner, 20 June 2009, http://www.examiner.com/protestant-in-kansas-city/what-to-do-when-visiting-a-different-christian-church 291 Suzanne Molino Singleton, “Church Etiquette Review,” Catholic Online, 13 April 2006, http://www.catholic.org/hf/family/story.php?id=19458 292 Suzanne Molino Singleton, “Church Etiquette Review,” Catholic Online, 13 April 2006, http://www.catholic.org/hf/family/story.php?id=19458 293 Fisheaters, “Attire and Etiquette,” n.d., http://www.fisheaters.com/TLMetiquette.html 294 Fisheaters, “Attire and Etiquette,” n.d., http://www.fisheaters.com/TLMetiquette.html 295 William Saunders, “Appropriate Behavior in Church,” Catholic Education Resource Center, 2003, http://www.catholiceducation.org/articles/religion/re0065.html © D LI F L C | 37 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Chapter 2 Assessment 1. Indigenous beliefs were completely wiped out as the Muslim and Christian faiths took root in Nigeria. False Animist religions retain a substantial number of adherents. Many Muslims and Christians also openly engage in practices associated with indigenous beliefs. 2. Most Muslim Nigerians are Shi’a. False Most Muslim Nigerians are Sunni. 3. The Nigerian constitution supports shari’a criminal code. False Shari’a criminal code represents a challenge to the constitutionally mandated separation of church and state. 4. Some mosques in Nigeria do not permit non-Muslims. True Most Nigerians adhere to the Maliki school of Islam religious law, which prohibits nonMuslims from entering mosques. 5. Most of Nigeria’s Muslims live in the nation’s northern states. True The majority of people in northern Nigeria are Muslim. © D LI F L C | 38 HAUSA Cultural Orientation CHAPTER 3: TRADITIONS Introduction The Hausa, West Africa and Nigeria’s largest ethnic group, live predominantly in rural areas of northern Nigeria. 296, 297, 298 The Hausa language is spoken by 40 to 50 million people throughout western and central Africa. 299 A combination of occupation, family origins, and political rank (commoner, administrator, chief) forms the basis of the complex and hierarchical system of Hausa social organization. 300, 301 Approximately 90% of Nigerian Hausa are Sunni Muslims; most adhere to the Maliki school of Islam. 302, 303 In general, Hausa people are reserved and quiet in public; they value the quality known as fara’a (calm and stoic pleasantness, no matter what the situation). The Hausa also value the ability to deny personal needs in public and endure hardship and pain without complaint. 304 Hausa greatly respect their parents and have a high regard for elders. Most maintain their communal values. Traditional Hausa culture and Islamic religious beliefs make the Hausa hospitable and generous to those in need, and kind to strangers. 305 Greetings Friendly and prolonged greetings are typical among the Hausa. Failing to greet someone is seen as disrespectful, and shaking hands is common. 306 Men often prolong a handshake throughout initial conversation and inquiries about each 296 Encyclopædia Britannica Online, “Hausa,” 2012, http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/257081/Hausa 297 Kari Bergstrom, “Legacies of Colonialism and Islam for Hausa Women: An Historical Analysis, 1804– 1960” (paper, Women and International Development Program, Michigan State University, 2002), 17, http://gencen.isp.msu.edu/documents/Working_Papers/WP276.pdf 298 National Population Commission, Federal Republic of Nigeria, “Nigeria Demographic and Health Survey, 2008,” November 2009, 31–32, http://www.measuredhs.com/pubs/pdf/Fr222/Fr222.pdf 299 Accredited Language Services, “Hausa,” 2012, http://www.alsintl.com/resources/languages/Hausa/ 300 University of Kent, “Society: Hausa,” n.d., http://lucy.ukc.ac.uk/ethnoatlas/hmar/cult_dir/culture.7844 301 Encyclopædia Britannica Online, “Hausa,” 2012, http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/257081/Hausa 302 Countries and Their Cultures, “Hausa: Religion and Expressive Culture,” 2012, http://www.everyculture.com/Africa-Middle-East/Hausa-Religion-and-Expressive-Culture.html 303 Council on Foreign Relations, “Islamic Law in Nigeria [Rush Transcript; Federal News Service, Inc.],” 23 February 2006, http://www.cfr.org/nigeria/islamic-law-nigeria-rush-transcript-federal-news-serviceinc/p9994 304 Robert Alan LeVine, Culture, Behavior, and Personality: An Introduction to the Comparative Study of Psychosocial Adaption, 2nd ed. (Piscataway, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 2009), 27. 305 O. Otitie, “Nigeria’s Identifiable Ethnic Groups,” n.d., http://www.onlinenigeria.com/tribes/tribes.asp 306 “Nigeria,” CultureGrams Online Edition, ProQuest, 2012. © D LI F L C | 39 HAUSA Cultural Orientation other’s health. If there is a difference in status between the two individuals, greetings are usually initiated by the senior person. Men often place their left hand on the other person’s shoulder as they shake hands. 307, 308 In the northern regions, a clenched fist in front of the chest is also common. 309 Upon departing, it is usual to shake hands again. 310 Exchange 5: Good morning! Soldier: Good morning! Local: Good morning! barka da asbah! barka da asbah! Exchange 6: Good afternoon! Soldier: Good afternoon! Local: Good afternoon! barka da raanaa! barka da raanaa! Shaking hands is also usual between women, particularly when first meeting. But for Muslims, physical contact between the sexes, including handshakes, is inappropriate. Close friends and family members sometimes greet each other with a kiss on the cheek or with a hug. 311 Exchange 7: How are you? Soldier: Local: How are you? Fine, very well. Yaqaya kakay? laafeeya kalo The appropriateness of eye contact depends on the situation. Hausa women, especially if they are Muslim, do not make eye contact with men during conversations. On the other hand, eye contact is usual and appropriate between members of the same sex. But persons of lower status should not make direct eye contact with those of higher status. Doing so is likely to be seen not only as rude but also as confrontational. 312 Exchange 8: Good evening! Soldier: Good evening! Local: Good evening! barka de Yamaa! barka de Yamaa! 307 Culture Crossing, “Nigeria: Greetings,” n.d., http://www.culturecrossing.net/basics_business_student_details.php?Id=7&CID=151 308 Kwintessential, “Nigeria: Meeting People,” n.d., http://www.kwintessential.co.uk/resources/globaletiquette/nigeria.html 309 Culture Crossing, “Nigeria: Greetings,” n.d., http://www.culturecrossing.net/basics_business_student_details.php?Id=7&CID=151 310 Vayama, “Nigerian Etiquette Tips,” 2012, http://www.vayama.com/etiquette/nigeria/ 311 Culture Crossing, “Nigeria: Greetings,” n.d., http://www.culturecrossing.net/basics_business_student_details.php?Id=7&CID=151 312 Culture Crossing, “Nigeria: Eye Contact,” n.d., http://www.culturecrossing.net/basics_business_student_details.php?Id=10&CID=151 © D LI F L C | 40 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Exchange 9: Good night! Soldier: Local: Good night! Good night! a kwaana lapeeya! a taashey lapeeya! Rules of politeness suggest that people, especially if they do not know each other, should address one another by title and surname. Close friends often address each other using first names or surnames only. 313 It is best to wait for permission before addressing someone by first name. 314 Exchange 10: Hi, Mr. Garba! Soldier: Hi, Mr. Garba! Local: Hello! Soldier: Are you doing well? Local: Yes. barka, malam garba! barka! kana lapeeya? lapeeya kalo Nigerians require less personal space than most Westerners and commonly stand less than an arm’s length apart. Among the Muslim Hausa, more distance is appropriate between men and women. Members of the same sex often touch each other during conversations. Men frequently walk hand in hand down the street. Touching can also indicate status. For example, a man who is senior to another will place a hand on the other person’s shoulder to reinforce the differential in status. 315 Male-Female Interaction Hausa culture is patriarchal, and men are the household heads. Women have a lower status than the men who exercise control over them. 316, 317 Some Nigerian Hausa Muslims practice a strict form of wife seclusion (kulle). Under this system, women remain at home, unless accompanied by a male guardian. Women may, in extreme cases such as a medical emergency or funeral attendance, leave their homes with their husband’s permission. 318 Such seclusion is less likely to be practiced in rural areas where women are needed for subsistence labor on family farms. 319 Segregation of the sexes begins 313 Kwintessential, “Nigeria: Meeting People,” n.d., http://www.kwintessential.co.uk/resources/globaletiquette/nigeria.html 314 Culture Crossing, “Nigeria: Titles and Business Cards,” n.d., http://www.culturecrossing.net/basics_business_student_details.php?Id=20&CID=151 315 Culture Crossing, “Nigeria: Personal Space and Touching,” n.d., http://www.culturecrossing.net/basics_business_student_details.php?Id=9&CID=151 316 Catherine Coles and Beverly Mack, “Women in Twentieth-Century Hausa Society,” in Hausa Women in the Twentieth Century, Catherine Coles and Beverly Mack, eds. (Madison, WI: The University of Wisconsin Press, 1991), 12–15, http://www.scribd.com/doc/93051818/Hausa-Women-in-the-20th-Century 317 Frank A. Salamone, The Hausa of Nigeria (Lanham, MD: University Press of America, Inc., 2010), 139. 318 Ibrahim Khaleel, “The Hausa,” in Ethnic and Cultural Diversity in Nigeria, Marcellina U. OkehieOffoha and Matthew N. O. Dadiku, eds. (Trenton, NJ: Africa World Press, Inc, 1996), 49. © D LI F L C | 41 HAUSA Cultural Orientation early, usually by the age of 7 or 8. By age 10, boys leave the female living quarters and sleep and live among the men. 320 Hospitality and Gift Giving Although the Hausa people are friendly and visiting is an important part of the culture, foreigners are unlikely to be invited to a Nigerian home. 321 Most professional socializing in cities takes place in restaurants and night clubs. 322 Guests invited to a Nigerian home are not required to bring gifts, but gifts are nonetheless appreciated. 323 When presenting a gift to Muslim hosts, always do so with the right hand. Gifts should always be wrapped; a gift is not necessarily opened in front of the giver. Appropriate gifts include fruit, nuts, chocolates, or small items for any children in the household. 324 Exchange 11: I really appreciate your hospitality. Soldier: I really appreciate your hospitality. Local: It is nothing. na Yaba da karimchinkaa ba komay Guests do not need to arrive on time, even for planned activities, but they should not arrive earlier than the specified time. Because houses are often small, larger gatherings are often held in the road in front where people live. 325, 326 Once a meal is over, guests should leave in a timely fashion, usually within half an hour. 327 319 Catherine Coles and Beverly Mack, “Women in Twentieth-Century Hausa Society,” in Hausa Women in the Twentieth Century, Catherine Coles and Beverly Mack, eds. (Madison, WI: The University of Wisconsin Press, 1991), 8, http://www.scribd.com/doc/93051818/Hausa-Women-in-the-20th-Century 320 Law School, Emory University, “West Africa,” n.d., http://www.law.emory.edu/ifl/region/westafrica.html 321 “Nigeria,” CultureGrams Online Edition, ProQuest, 2012. 322 iExplore, “Nigeria Travel Guide: Social Conventions,” 2012, http://www.iexplore.com/travelguides/africa/nigeria/travel-tips 323 iExplore, “Nigeria Travel Guide: Social Conventions,” 2012, http://www.iexplore.com/travelguides/africa/nigeria/travel-tips 324 Kwintessential, “Nigeria: Gift Giving Etiquette,” n.d., http://www.kwintessential.co.uk/resources/global-etiquette/nigeria.html 325 “Nigeria,” CultureGrams Online Edition, ProQuest, 2012. 326 Culture Crossing, “Nigeria: Views of Time,” n.d., http://www.culturecrossing.net/basics_business_student_details.php?Id=11&CID=151 327 Vayama, “Nigerian Etiquette Tips,” 2012, http://www.vayama.com/etiquette/nigeria/ © D LI F L C | 42 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Eating Habits and Types of Food Types of Food Beans, sorghum, dairy products, and rice make up the Muslim Hausa diet. Hausa enjoy meat, including lamb and goat. 328, 329 Breakfast is eaten early, often around 5 a.m., and typically consists of rice and mangoes or a dish of stewed soybeans and sometimes fried plantains (dodo). Bean cakes (kosai) are another favorite, as is funkaso, made from wheat flour soaked overnight and then fried with sugar. Porridge, or coco, is also commonly served at breakfast. 330, 331 Exchange 12: What is the name of this dish? Soldier: What is the name of this dish? Local: This is tuwo shinkafa. wanawan irin abinchey nee? tuwan shankafaa nee The main Hausa meal is midday lunch, normally eaten around 11 a.m. When possible, Hausa prefer to eat this meal together. 332, 333 Favorite dishes include stew (efo) or steamed Nigerian bean cakes wrapped in banana leaves (moin-moin). 334, 335, 336 Soups are also usual at lunchtime; they are eaten with cupped hands rather than with utensils. Egusi, a spicy soup containing meat, chilies, ground dried shrimp, and available greens, is popular. Another favorite is tuwo da miya, a thick porridge resembling a stew made with meat, chilies, tomatoes, and onions. 337, 338 Gari, a dish made from cassava, often accompanies soups. 339 328 Food in Every Country, “Nigeria,” 2012, http://www.foodbycountry.com/Kazakhstan-to-SouthAfrica/Nigeria.html 329 Richard Williams, “A Little Culture and Food Tradition of the Hausa of Nigeria,” Yahoo! Voices, 31 December 2008, http://voices.yahoo.com/a-little-culture-food-tradition-hausa-of-2370042.html?cat=22 330 Food in Every Country, “Nigeria,” 2012, http://www.foodbycountry.com/Kazakhstan-to-SouthAfrica/Nigeria.html 331 Richard Williams, “A Little Culture and Food Tradition of the Hausa of Nigeria,” Yahoo! Voices, 31 December 2008, http://voices.yahoo.com/a-little-culture-food-tradition-hausa-of-2370042.html?cat=22 332 Food in Every Country, “Nigeria,” 2012, http://www.foodbycountry.com/Kazakhstan-to-SouthAfrica/Nigeria.html 333 “Nigeria,” CultureGrams Online Edition, ProQuest, 2012. 334 Kitchen Butterfly, “Moin-Moin: Steamed Nigerian Bean Cake,” n.d., http://www.kitchenbutterfly.com/2010/09/23/moin-moin-steamed-nigerian-bean-cake/ 335 Food in Every Country, “Nigeria,” 2012, http://www.foodbycountry.com/Kazakhstan-to-SouthAfrica/Nigeria.html 336 Richard Williams, “A Little Culture and Food Tradition of the Hausa of Nigeria,” Yahoo! Voices, 31 December 2008, http://voices.yahoo.com/a-little-culture-food-tradition-hausa-of-2370042.html?cat=22 337 Food in Every Country, “Nigeria,” 2012, http://www.foodbycountry.com/Kazakhstan-to-SouthAfrica/Nigeria.html 338 Richard Williams, “A Little Culture and Food Tradition of the Hausa of Nigeria,” Yahoo! Voices, 31 December 2008, http://voices.yahoo.com/a-little-culture-food-tradition-hausa-of-2370042.html?cat=22 339 Kitchen Butterfly, “Moin-Moin: Steamed Nigerian Bean Cake,” n.d., http://www.kitchenbutterfly.com/2010/09/23/moin-moin-steamed-nigerian-bean-cake/ © D LI F L C | 43 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Exchange 13: What type of meat is this? Soldier: What type of meat is this? Local: Lamb. wanan waney irin naama nee? naaman ragoo nee Dinner is generally late and often consists of the same foods served during the midday meal. 340 Dinner may include two types of tuwo da miya and soups made with okra, spinach, and pumpkin. 341 Typically, Nigerians do not drink during meals. After a meal, tea is served in three rounds. For the first round, the tea is unsweetened; for the second, a little sugar is added. For the final round, the tea is very sweet. This pattern signifies the development of friendship. Never refuse an offer of tea and never pour your own drink. 342 Dining Etiquette Lunch and dinner are often served on communal plates. Food is shared according to gender and age. Young children often eat from their mother’s plate. Men and women and children over the age of 7 or 8 dine separately. The oldest male (or guest if present) is served first, followed by the other men, then women, and finally the children. 343, 344 In many Muslim Hausa households, people sit on the floor and eat meals placed on a mat or low table. Because utensils are not used for eating, a basin for washing may be brought out before the meal. Never use the left hand to scoop food from the plate, to pass food, or to receive food. If utensils are available, hold them in the right hand only and keep the left hand away from the table and the food. Small burps at the end of the meal are an appropriate indication of satisfaction. 345, 346 340 Food in Every Country, “Nigeria,” 2012, http://www.foodbycountry.com/Kazakhstan-to-SouthAfrica/Nigeria.html 341 Richard Williams, “A Little Culture and Food Tradition of the Hausa of Nigeria,” Yahoo! Voices, 31 December 2008, http://voices.yahoo.com/a-little-culture-food-tradition-hausa-of-2370042.html?cat=22 342 Etiquette Scholar, “International Etiquette” Nigeria,” n.d., http://www.etiquettescholar.com/dining_etiquette/tableetiquette/africa_west_dinner_etiquette/nigerian.html 343 Food in Every Country, “Nigeria,” 2012, http://www.foodbycountry.com/Kazakhstan-to-SouthAfrica/Nigeria.html 344 Etiquette Scholar, “International Etiquette” Nigeria,” n.d., http://www.etiquettescholar.com/dining_etiquette/tableetiquette/africa_west_dinner_etiquette/nigerian.html 345 Etiquette Scholar, “International Etiquette” Nigeria,” n.d., http://www.etiquettescholar.com/dining_etiquette/tableetiquette/africa_west_dinner_etiquette/nigerian.html 346 Vayama, “Nigerian Etiquette Tips,” 2012, http://www.vayama.com/etiquette/nigeria/ © D LI F L C | 44 HAUSA Cultural Orientation The Hausa believe that eating is a serious and important activity that should not be trivialized in any way. They do not normally make small talk or lighthearted remarks, even those complimenting the cook, during a meal. Doing so while eating is known as santi and is considered boorish. 347, 348, 349 Dress Codes Dress in the north, especially among the Muslims, is conservative and modest. 350 Many Muslim women wear the hijab. 351 Rather than Western-style clothing worn in the south, Hausa prefer traditional attire that is colorful and often decorated with elaborate embroidery. 352 A woman’s typical outfit is a wrapped skirt (madauri), a blouse (rigarmataor buba), and a head scarf (adiko). 353, 354, 355 A loose ankle-length dress may also be worn. 356 Muslim women in the north usually dress far more colorfully than their southern counterparts. 357 Hausa men often wear elaborate clothing, including long flowing embroidered gowns (gare, babban, gida). 358, 359 Loose trousers with extra material around the top are worn under these gowns. These trousers, called agbada, are tied at the waist, and the extra material is folded across the shoulders in layers. Most men complete the outfit with a brightly colored embroidered cap (huluna). Men of rank may also wear heavy and elaborate turbans. 360, 361, 362 347 University of California, Los Angeles, “Mai Jidda Commits Santi!” n.d., http://www.humnet.ucla.edu/humnet/aflang/Hausa%20culture/culture_frame.html 348 University of California, Los Angeles, “What is ‘Santi’?” n.d., http://aflang.humnet.ucla.edu/Hausa%20culture/Eating/santi_explanation.html 349 University of California, Los Angeles, “Answers to Questions about ‘Santi’,” n.d., http://aflang.humnet.ucla.edu/Hausa%20culture/Eating/santi_answers.html 350 “Nigeria,” CultureGrams Online Edition, ProQuest, 2012. 351 Anita Little, “Unveiling Oppression in Northern Nigeria,” Ms. Blog, 8 March 2011, http://msmagazine.com/blog/blog/2011/03/08/unveiling-oppression-in-northern-nigeria/ 352 Ronald G. Parris, Hausa (New York: The Rosen Publishing Group, 1996), 49. 353 Ronald G. Parris, Hausa (New York: The Rosen Publishing Group, 1996), 49. 354 MapsofWorld, “Nigerian Clothing,” 2011, http://www.mapsofworld.com/nigeria/culture/clothing.html 355 Misty Showalter, “Seun Gele: Master of Nigeria’s Gravity-Defying Headgear,” CNN World, 16 June 2010, http://articles.cnn.com/2010-07-16/world/segun.gele.nigeria.headgear_1_nigerian-special-occasionswedding?_s=PM:WORLD 356 Culture Vision, Nigerian: Dress,” 2011, http://nwmemorial.crculturevision.com/subscribers/groups.aspx?gid=56&cid=55 357 Lizzie Williams, Nigeria, 3rd ed. (Bucks, England: Bradt Travel Guides Ltd., April 2012), 49. 358 Countries and Their Cultures, “Hausa,” 2012, http://www.everyculture.com/wc/Mauritania-toNigeria/Hausa.html 359 Nigerian-blog, “History of Nigeria,” 2012, http://nigerian-blog.wikispaces.com/ 360 National Geographic Traveler, “Nigeria,” n.d., http://traveler.nationalgeographic.com/shoppingguide/africa-text/10 361 Countries and Their Cultures, “Hausa,” 2012, http://www.everyculture.com/wc/Mauritania-toNigeria/Hausa.html 362 Lizzie Williams, Nigeria, 3rd ed. (Bucks, England: Bradt Travel Guides Ltd., April 2012), 49. © D LI F L C | 45 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Exchange 14: How should I dress? Soldier: How should I dress? Local: Wear loose-fitting clothes that cover your body. wan irin kaaya Ya kamaata in sakaa? ka sa kaaya may walwalaa da zay rufee jikinka Men and women visiting Nigeria should dress conservatively. 363 Women should avoid wearing pants. Arms, shoulders, and legs should be covered. Shorts are appropriate only at beach resorts and for sporting events. 364, 365 Non-Religious Celebrations Secular holidays celebrated throughout Nigeria include New Year’s Day (1 January), Labor Day (1 May), Democracy Day (29 May), National Day (1 October), and Boxing Day (26 December). 366 Nigerian National Day marks the nation’s independence, established in 1960. Schools and businesses close so people can attend some of the many celebrations. Labor Day celebrations include parades and special seminars and displays of solidarity with workers around the world. 367 Democracy Day commemorates the nation’s return to democratic civilian rule. 368, 369 Boxing Day has its origins in Britain where the wealthy gave gifts to those who worked for them throughout the year. 370 It is a day for friends, families, and organizations to exchange gifts. 371 Hausa Dance Festival The Hausa festival of dance is a popular form of village entertainment. Invitations are issued in the form of kola nuts, which villagers distribute to one another. Drummers use a different beat to signal each farmer who stands up, shouts loudly, and then breaks into a 363 World Business Culture, “Nigerian Dress Code,” n.d., http://www.worldbusinessculture.com/NigerianBusiness-Dress-Style.html 364 World Travels, “Nigerian Travel Information,” n.d., http://www.wordtravels.com/Travelguide/Countries/Nigeria/Basics 365 AbujaCity, “Dress and Social Etiquette,” n.d., http://www.abujacity.com/abuja_and_beyond/dress-andsocial-etiquette.html 366 Q++ Studio, “Nigeria Public Holidays 2012,” 2011, http://www.qppstudio.net/publicholidays2012/nigeria.htm 367 Nigeria Labour Congress, “May Day! Is Workers [sic] Day!,” n.d., http://www.nlcng.org/search_details.php?id=254 368 AllAfrica, “Nigeria: Democracy Day: Balarabe, Ngige, Others Score Jonathan Low,” Moment, 29 May 2012, http://allafrica.com/stories/201205290649.html 369 AllAfrica, “Nigeria: Democracy Day: Little Joy, Some Sadness,” Daily Trust, 29 May 2012, http://allafrica.com/stories/201205290277.html 370 Debbie DeSpirit, “Origin of boxing Day,” Suite 101, 5 December 2006, http://suite101.com/article/origin-of-boxing-day-a10068 371 Comfort Onche, “Nigeria: Boxing Day: Nyanya-Gwandara Residents in Fisticuffs,” AllAfrica, 31 December 2007, http://allafrica.com/stories/200801020235.html © D LI F L C | 46 HAUSA Cultural Orientation song of gratitude. If he knows any magical tricks, he performs them for onlookers. This celebration provides entertainment and strengthens relationships between villagers who attend each other’s dance festivals. 372 Argungu Fish and Cultural Festival This four-day cultural event is held on the banks of the Sokoto River and represents a celebration of Nigeria’s cultural heritage. The highlight of the festival occurs when hundreds of fishermen jump into the river and for the next hour try to scoop the largest fish for a big cash prize. Other events at the festival include camel and donkey racing, a motor rally, musicals, and cultural dancing. 373, 374 Durbar festivals are also held in northern Nigeria. Once a military celebration showing loyalty to the emirates, these events come at the end of Eid al-Fitr and the Eid al-Adha feasts. Prayers begin early in the morning, after which horsemen parade into the public square. Groups, including the emir and his entourage, then race on horseback across the square at full gallop with swords drawn. 375, 376 Dos and Don’ts Do show respect for those older than you, even if their professional status is lower. Do ask before taking anyone’s photograph. Do lower your eyes when meeting a senior or elder person as a sign of respect. Do address people by their titles as a sign of respect. Don’t use your left hand in dealings with Muslims. Don’t discuss intimate matters. Don’t clean your plate; doing so means you want more food. Leaving a little food on the plate indicates that you are satisfied and have had enough to eat. 372 SIM, “Hausa,” 2012, http://www.sim.org/index.php/content/hausa BBC News, “Nigeria Bans Fish Festival,” 7 December 2006, http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/6216640.stm 374 Benjamine Chijioke Asogwa, Joseph Chinedu Umeh, and Victoria Ada Okwoche, “The Sociological and Cultural Significance of the Argungu International Fishing And Cultural Festival in Nigeria,” International Journal of Humanities and Social Science 2, no. 11 (June 2012): 243–45, http://www.ijhssnet.com/journals/Vol_2_No_11_June_2012/27.pdf 375 OnlineNigeria, “Festival in Nigeria,” 2012, http://www.onlinenigeria.com/festivals/ 376 CNN, “Kano Durbar Festival in Northern Nigeria,” YouTube, 23 November 2010, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RXszmEP7wTw 373 © D LI F L C | 47 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Don’t push the palm of your hand forward and spread the fingers; doing so is considered vulgar. Don’t raise trivial matters during meal conversation with Hausa. Don’t rush greetings. Take time to inquire about the person’s well-being. Don’t mistreat religious symbols, especially the Quran. © D LI F L C | 48 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Chapter 3 Assessment 1. A guest in a Nigerian home is served first. True A guest in Nigerian home is served first, followed by the oldest male. If no guest is present, the oldest male is served first, followed by other men, then women, then children. 2. The Hausa frequently eat pork . False The Hausa are Muslim and do not eat pork. They do eat kebabs made of beef or goat. 3. The Hausa are quick to show their emotions in public. False Hausa people are reserved and quiet in public and value the quality of fara’a (calm and stoic pleasantness no matter what the situation). 4. Prolonged handshakes are common among the Hausa. True Friendly and prolonged greetings are a typical part of Hausa culture. Men often prolong a handshake throughout initial conversation and inquiries about each other’s health. 5. Persons of lower status normally avoid direct eye contact with superiors. True Persons of lower status should not make direct eye contact with those of higher status. Doing so is likely to be seen not only as rude but also as confrontational. © D LI F L C | 49 HAUSA Cultural Orientation CHAPTER 4: URBAN LIFE Introduction Nigeria is one of the most urbanized African nations. Nearly half of all Nigerians live in cities. 377, 378 Nigeria’s urban growth rate is one of the fastest in the world and is not concentrated in a single city or geographic area. Nearly a dozen cities have populations over one million people. 379, 380 Many of these rapidly expanding urban centers, including Kano, Kaduna, Maiduguri, and Zaria, are in the northern regions where the Hausa live. 381, 382 Much of Nigeria’s urban growth occurred in the 1970s when millions of rural Nigerians moved to the cities in search of better jobs and a better life. Unfortunately, many of these aspirations went unfulfilled, and migrants found that life in the city was not necessarily better than the rural life they had abandoned. 383 Unprecedented urban growth has created major environmental, social, and infrastructural problems for the nation. Planning and development lag far behind growth and demand; poverty rates are high; and adequate housing is not available. 384, 385 377 C. A. Ayedun, O. D. Duroda, and O. A. Akinjare, “Towards Ensuring Sustainable Urban Growth and Development in Nigeria: Challenges and Strategies,” Business Management Dynamics 1, no. 2 (August 2011): 102, http://bmdynamics.com/issue_pdf/99_104.pdf 378 Central Intelligence Agency, “Nigeria: People and Society,” in The World Factbook, 31 July 2012, https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/ni.html 379 C. A. Ayedun, O. D. Duroda, and O. A. Akinjare, “Towards Ensuring Sustainable Urban Growth and Development in Nigeria: Challenges and Strategies,” Business Management Dynamics 1, no. 2 (August 2011): 100, http://bmdynamics.com/issue_pdf/99_104.pdf 380 John L. S. Alkali, “Planning Sustainable Urban Growth in Nigeria: Challenges and Strategies” (presentation at the United Nations Conference on Planning Growth and Sustainable Architecture, 6 June 2005), 2–3, http://www.un.org/en/ecosoc/meetings/2005/docs/Alkali.pdf 381 Geonames, “Nigeria: Largest Cities,” n.d., http://www.geonames.org/NG/largest-cities-in-nigeria.html 382 Jamila Abdullahi et al., “Rural-Urban Migration of the Nigerian Work Populace and Climate Change Effects on Food Supply: A Case Study of Kaduna City in Northern Nigeria” (paper, Fifth Urban Symposium, 2009), 3, http://siteresources.worldbank.org/INTURBANDEVELOPMENT/Resources/3363871256566800920/6505269-1268260567624/Abdullahi.pdf 383 C. A. Ayedun, O. D. Duroda, and O. A. Akinjare, “Towards Ensuring Sustainable Urban Growth and Development in Nigeria: Challenges and Strategies,” Business Management Dynamics 1, no. 2 (August 2011): 100, http://bmdynamics.com/issue_pdf/99_104.pdf 384 John L. S. Alkali, “Planning Sustainable Urban Growth in Nigeria: Challenges and Strategies” (presentation at the United Nations Conference on Planning Growth and Sustainable Architecture, 6 June 2005), 2, http://www.un.org/en/ecosoc/meetings/2005/docs/Alkali.pdf 385 Nigerian Institute of Town Planners, “Chapter 2: Issues and Challenges of Urban and Regional Planning in Nigeria” (State of Planning Report, 2010), 3, http://www.nitpng.com/pdf%20docs/soplanning.pdf © D LI F L C | 50 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Urbanization The problems of environmental degradation, poor infrastructure, and too few jobs will worsen. The population in the north is growing much faster than in the south. In northern Nigeria, many women have their first child by the age of 18, and the average woman has nearly 7 children. 386 Recently, the U.S. Ambassador to Nigeria suggested that the high rate of sectarian violence erupting in the north is directly related to poor infrastructure and a low standard of living. 387 Water and Sanitation Access to safe potable water is a major problem in Nigeria. In 2008, only 48% of urban residents had access to safe water. 388 Nationwide, over one-third of city residents get their water from tube wells or bore holes. Only about 7% have piped-in water. In the northern city of Maiduguri, 39% of residents must purchase water from vendors. 389 Access to basic sanitation facilities is also problematic. In 2009, nearly 68% of those living in Maiduguri relied on pit latrines. 390 Poor water supplies contribute to significant numbers of deaths from waterborne diseases, including cholera, typhoid, malaria, and schistosomiasis. 391 Reliable solid-waste collection is almost nonexistent. People dump refuse wherever space allows. 392 Crime and Violence Urban crime and violence are linked to high unemployment and poverty. Other factors contributing to crime are poorly planned and poorly serviced roads. Unmarked and unlit streets make police response slow and difficult. 393 Militant Islamist groups, most notably the Boko Haram, carry out much of the violence in the north. Attacks against Christians became especially bloody in 2011 and 2012. 386 Schuyler Null, “Nigeria’s Future Clouded by Oil, Climate Change, and Scarcity [Part Two, The Sahel],” New Security Beat, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, 19 November 2010, http://www.newsecuritybeat.org/2010/11/nigerias-future-clouded-by-oil-climate-change-and-scarcity-parttwo-the-sahel/ 387 James Morrison, “Embassy Row: New York and Nigeria,” Washington Times, 19 July 2012, http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2012/jul/19/embassy-row-new-york-and-nigeria/?page=all 388 Nigerian Institute of Town Planners, “Water and Sanitation in Nigeria’s Urban Settlements” (State of Planning Report, 2010), 129, http://www.nitpng.com/pdf%20docs/soplanning.pdf 389 Nigerian Institute of Town Planners, “Water and Sanitation in Nigeria’s Urban Settlements” (State of Planning Report, 2010), 126–28, http://www.nitpng.com/pdf%20docs/soplanning.pdf 390 Nigerian Institute of Town Planners, “Water and Sanitation in Nigeria’s Urban Settlements” (State of Planning Report, 2010), 128, http://www.nitpng.com/pdf%20docs/soplanning.pdf 391 Nigerian Institute of Town Planners, “Water and Sanitation in Nigeria’s Urban Settlements” (State of Planning Report, 2010), 130, http://www.nitpng.com/pdf%20docs/soplanning.pdf 392 UN Habitat, “Country Programme Document 2008–2009: Nigeria” (report, 2008), 8, http://www.unhabitat.org/pmss/listItemDetails.aspx?publicationID=2703 393 UN Habitat, “Country Programme Document 2008–2009: Nigeria” (report, 2008), 6–7, http://www.unhabitat.org/pmss/listItemDetails.aspx?publicationID=2703 © D LI F L C | 51 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Reprisals against the Muslim population have further escalated the violence. 394, 395, 396 The city of Maiduguri, in the state of Borno, is the center of the fighting between security forces and the Boko Haram. Frequent and sometimes prolonged battles between the two groups have been ongoing since the latter part of 2011. The Boko Haram are also particularly active in the cities of Kaduna and Kano. 397 Pollution Air pollution, largely caused by vehicle traffic, is a growing problem. Residents must often cover their eyes and noses to lessen irritation from the high levels of pollution. Respiratory problems and eye irritations are common. The worst levels of pollution are in the north, particularly in Kano, Sokoto, Maiduguri, Bauchi, and Kaduna. 398, 399 Water pollution is increasing. Uncollected solid waste dumped in streets creates breeding grounds for disease. The unsafe disposal of industrial toxins lowers groundwater quality. For example, heavy metals from improperly disposed-of lead batteries leach into soil and contaminate groundwater. Contamination extends into peri-urban areas and affects produce grown on urban farms. 400, 401 Urban employment In 2011, urban unemployment was around 17%, according to Nigeria’s National Bureau of Statistics. Nearly 42% of young workers (age 15–24) are unemployed; this figure represents nearly 67% of all the urban unemployed. 402, 403 Youth unemployment, aside 394 Zachary Fillingham, “Terrorism Hits Nigeria,” Geopolitical Monitor, 3 August 2009, http://www.geopoliticalmonitor.com/africa-terrorism-hits-northern-nigeria-august-3-2009-2448/ 395 Russia Today, “Religious Violence Claims 52 Lives in Nigeria,” 18 June 2012, http://rt.com/news/nigeria-christian-muslim-violence-051/ 396 Victor Ulasi, “More Clashes in Northern Nigeria After Violence Kills 101,” Google News, 20 June 2012, http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5hkNqRSpTQaHEtbb9Uxx9N0UOD2ig?docId=CN G.03a07b9823792a080c03447fb210148d.21 397 Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada, Government of Canada, “Travel Report: Nigeria,” 17 August 2012, http://www.voyage.gc.ca/countries_pays/report_rapport-eng.asp?id=218000 398 S. I. Efe, “Spatial Distribution of Particulate Air Pollution in Nigerian Cities: Implications for Human Health,” Journal of Environmental Health Research 7, no. 2 (2008), http://www.cieh.org/jehr/jehr3.aspx?id=14688 399 O. Oguntoke and A. S. Yussef, “Air Pollution Arising From Vehicular Emissions and the Associated Human Health Problems in Abeokuta Metropolis, Nigeria,” Journal of Agricultural Sciences, Sciences, Environment, and Technology 8, no. 2 (2008):121, http://www.unaab.edu.ng/journal/index.php/Agriculture_Environment/article/view/55/59 400 O. T. Oyeku and A. O. Eludoyin, “Heavy Metal Contamination of Groundwater Resources in a Nigerian Urban Settlement,” African Journal of Environmental Science and Technology 4, no. 4 (April 2010): 201, 206, http://www.ajol.info/index.php/ajest/article/viewFile/56352/44790 401 Roy Maconachie, “Surface Water Quality and Periurban Food Production in Kano, Nigeria,” Urban Agriculture Magazine, no. 20 (September 2008), 22–24, http://www.ruaf.org/sites/default/files/UAM%2020%20-%20pagina%2022-24.pdf 402 Emeka Emmanuel Okafor, “Youth Unemployment and Implications for Stability of Democracy in Nigeria,” Journal of Sustainable Development in Africa 13, no. 1 (2011): 363, http://www.jsd© D LI F L C | 52 HAUSA Cultural Orientation from the obvious economic losses and difficulties, is a concern because many turn to crime as a way of making a living. Unemployed youth are vulnerable to recruitment by various political and religious entities. In the northern states, this age group may represent a serious destabilizing force. 404 The growing preference of Nigeria’s young workers for more desirable white-collar jobs has further escalated unemployment. 405 Because high-skill professional jobs are scarce, increasing numbers of university graduates often settle for low-skill jobs, which makes it difficult for those with less education to find meaningful work. 406 A weakening and collapsing manufacturing sector in the urban area offers little hope of employment or of economic recovery, especially in the near term. 407 Healthcare Northern Nigeria’s poor healthcare infrastructure results in substandard care, which gives patients little confidence in the medical system. National life expectancy is 52 years; expectancy for women is slightly higher than for men, 55 and 49 years, respectively. 408 Only 15 countries have higher infant mortality rates and only 9 rank lower in maternal mortality. 409 Diseases such as tetanus, cholera, and polio (under control in most parts of the world) kill many Nigerians yearly. 410, 411, 412, 413 africa.com/Jsda/V13No1_Spring2011_A/PDF/Youth%20Unemployment%20and%20Implications%20For %20Stability%20of%20Democracy%20%28Okafor%29.pdf 403 House Foreign Assistance Committee, Subcommittee on African Affairs, “U.S. Policy Toward Nigeria: West Africa’s Troubled Titan” (Testimony of U.S. Agency for International Development, Assistant Administrator for Africa, Earl Gast, 10 July 2012), http://foreignaffairs.house.gov/112/HHRG-112-FA16WState-GastE-20120710.pdf 404 Emeka Emmanuel Okafor, “Youth Unemployment and Implications for Stability of Democracy in Nigeria,” Journal of Sustainable Development in Africa 13, no. 1 (2011): 367–8, http://www.jsdafrica.com/Jsda/V13No1_Spring2011_A/PDF/Youth%20Unemployment%20and%20Implications%20For %20Stability%20of%20Democracy%20%28Okafor%29.pdf 405 Business Day, “Survey Shows Nigeria’s Unemployment Rate at 23.9% in 2011,” 25 January 2012, http://businessdayonline.com/NG/index.php/economic-watch/32204-survey-shows-nigeriasunemployment-rate-at-239-in-2011406 Vincent Ochonma, “Nigeria’s Unemployment Challenge,” The Tide, 16 February 2011, http://www.thetidenewsonline.com/2011/02/16/nigeria%E2%80%99s-unemployment-challenge/ 407 Emeka Emmanuel Okafor, “Youth Unemployment and Implications for Stability of Democracy in Nigeria,” Journal of Sustainable Development in Africa 13, no. 1 (2011): 364–5, http://www.jsdafrica.com/Jsda/V13No1_Spring2011_A/PDF/Youth%20Unemployment%20and%20Implications%20For %20Stability%20of%20Democracy%20%28Okafor%29.pdf 408 Central Intelligence Agency, “Nigeria: People and Society,” in The World Factbook, 31 July 2012, https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/ni.html 409 Central Intelligence Agency, “Nigeria: People and Society,” in The World Factbook, 31 July 2012, https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/ni.html 410 Jennifer G. Cooke and Farha Tahir, “Polio in Nigeria: The Race to Eradication” (report for Center for Strategic and International Studies Global Health Policy Center, February 2012), 1, http://csis.org/files/publication/120210_Cooke_PolioNigeria_Web.pdf 411 HSBC Expat, “Healthcare in Nigeria,” 2012, http://www.expatarrivals.com/nigeria/healthcare-in-nigeria 412 United States Government Interagency Team, “Nigeria Global Health Initiative Strategy: 2010–2015” (report, 2011), 9, http://www.ghi.gov/documents/organization/175543.pdf 413 Africa on the Blog, “Healthcare in Nigeria: Medicine in a Container Clinic,” 6 July 2012, http://www.africaontheblog.com/healthcare-in-nigeria-medicine-in-a-container-clinic/ © D LI F L C | 53 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Public healthcare offered through the National Health Insurance Scheme is inadequate, so private hospitals provide most healthcare (70%). 414, 415 Northern Nigerians, including the Hausa, have less access to healthcare than southern residents. 416, 417 Healthcare standards in hospitals and clinics are low. Staff members are poorly trained, equipment is lacking, and sanitation conditions (particularly sterilization of equipment and supplies) are poor. Hospitals require payment in cash at the time services are rendered. 418, 419 Hospitals, doctors, and nurses cluster near urban centers. 420 It is difficult to get safe and reliable medications, even prescription medications, in Nigeria. Counterfeit drugs often find their way into the supply chain. Travelers should bring their own supplies of over-the-counter medicines, including aspirin and cold medications, along with any necessary prescription medications, and avoid trying to get them in Nigeria. 421 Exchange 15: Is there a hospital nearby? Soldier: Is there a hospital nearby? Local: Yes, in the center of town. akwey asibitee nan kusaa? akwey, chan TSakiyar garee Religious sensitivities hinder some preventive measures. For example, in 2003 the World Health Organization campaign came to Kano to vaccinate children against polio. The city’s Muslim religious leaders claimed doctors contaminated the vaccine with drugs that would make African women, particularly Muslims, infertile. 422, 423 414 AllAfrica, “Nigeria: Experts Score Healthcare System Low on World Health Day,” 7 April 2012, http://allafrica.com/stories/201204080162.html 415 National Health Insurance Scheme, Government of Nigeria, “What Is NHIS?” 2012, http://www.nhis.gov.ng/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=46:national-health-insurancescheme&catid=34:home 416 BBC, “Nigeria: A Nation Divided,” 4 April 2011, http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-12893448 417 Olanrewaju Olaniyan and Akanni O. Lawanson, “Health Expenditure and Health Status in Northern and Southern Nigeria: A Comparative Analysis Using NHA Framework” (paper presented at the 2010 CSAE Conference, St. Catherine College, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK, march 2010), 2–3, 6–7, http://www.csae.ox.ac.uk/conferences/2010-EDiA/papers/451-Lawanson.pdf 418 Overseas Security Advisory Council, Bureau of Diplomatic Security, U.S. Department of State, “Nigeria 2012 OSAC Crime and Safety Report: Abuja,” 16 February 2012, https://www.osac.gov/pages/ContentReportDetails.aspx?cid=12004 419 Bureau of Consular Affairs, U. S. Department of State, “Nigeria: Country Specific Information,” 16 July 2012, http://travel.state.gov/travel/cis_pa_tw/cis/cis_987.html#medical 420 United States Government Interagency Team, “Nigeria Global Health Initiative Strategy: 2010–2015,” (report, 2011), 11, http://www.ghi.gov/documents/organization/175543.pdf 421 Overseas Security Advisory Council, Bureau of Diplomatic Security, U.S. Department of State, “Nigeria 2012 OSAC Crime and Safety Report: Abuja,” 16 February 2012, https://www.osac.gov/pages/ContentReportDetails.aspx?cid=12004 422 BBC News, “Kano: Nigeria’s Ancient City-State,” 20 May 2004, http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/3708309.stm © D LI F L C | 54 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Education Few northern Nigerians are well educated. In eight northern states, the illiteracy rate for men is 54%. Female illiteracy in these states averages 80% but soars to 94% in the state of Jigawa. More than 67% of women 15 to 19 years old are unable to read a sentence. 424 In 2004, to address the alarming rates of illiteracy and provide free education to all children in the nation, the government passed the Universal Basic Education act. Nine years of education are compulsory (six years of primary school and three years of secondary school). In spite of recent attempts, only about 70% of children complete primary school; about 46% continue on to secondary school, but fewer than 30% actually complete it. 425, 426, 427 Northern Nigeria has the lowest rates of school attendance in the country; 40% to 50% of children do not attend any school. 428 Throughout Nigeria, girls are less likely to attend school. In the north, this trend is even more severe, with 60% of all school-age girls not going to school. 429, 430, 431 Of those who do attend, only 3% complete secondary school. 432 Urban children, regardless of sex, are more likely to attend secondary schools than their rural counterparts, even though there are severe shortages of schools and teachers in the 423 Schuyler Null, “Nigeria’s Future Clouded by Oil, Climate Change, and Scarcity [Part Two, The Sahel],” NewSecurityBeat, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, 19 November 2010, http://www.newsecuritybeat.org/2010/11/nigerias-future-clouded-by-oil-climate-change-and-scarcity-parttwo-the-sahel/ 424 Department for International Development, “Operational Plan 2011–2015: Nigeria Operational Plan Annex; Gender Strategy” (report, updated June 2012), 1 (of Annex), http://www.dfid.gov.uk/documents/publications1/op/nigeria-2011.pdf 425 Osei Tutu Agyeman, “ICT for Education in Nigeria” (survey, Nigeria country report, June 2007), 3, http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=4&ved=0CGUQFjAD&url=http%3 A%2F%2Fwww.infodev.org%2Fen%2FDocument.422.pdf&ei=VGIuUJbZFZTYyAHHoYGACA&usg=A FQjCNGyj6zkHVOpj9VQO6OGt6uHqJCHNQ&sig2=MjTd1cOBDvbNdjqtkG0vVQ 426 UNICEF, “Nigeria: Education,” n.d., http://www.unicef.org/nigeria/children_1937.html 427 UNESCO Institute for Statistics, “Global Education Digest 2011: Comparing Education Statistics Across the World” (report, 2011), 19, 23, 48, http://www.uis.unesco.org/Education/Documents/ged-2011en.pdf 428 Nasir Mohammed Baba, “Islamic Schools, The Ulama, and the State in Educational Development of Northern Nigeria,” Bulletin de l’APAD, 33 (2011): 1, http://apad.revues.org/4092 429 UNICEF, “Nigeria: Education,” n.d., http://www.unicef.org/nigeria/children_1937.html 430 UNESCO Institute for Statistics, “Global Education Digest 2011: Comparing Education Statistics Across the World” (report, 2011), 48, 110, 130, 140, http://www.uis.unesco.org/Education/Documents/ged2011-en.pdf 431 Department for International Development, “Operational Plan 2011–2015: DFID Nigeria” (report, updated June 2012), 2, http://www.dfid.gov.uk/documents/publications1/op/nigeria-2011.pdf 432 Department for International Development, “Operational Plan 2011–2015: Nigeria Operational Plan Annex; Gender Strategy” (report, updated June 2012), 1, http://www.dfid.gov.uk/documents/publications1/op/nigeria-2011.pdf © D LI F L C | 55 HAUSA Cultural Orientation cities. 433 These shortages, in combination with a crisis of confidence in state-sponsored education, have, however, prompted considerable growth in the numbers of Quranic schools.. 434, 435, 436 Secular subjects such as science, education, and languages make up 70% of the Nigerian national curriculum; 30% of the curriculum focuses on Arab/Islamic education. In the Quranic schools, the situation is reversed: 70% of the curriculum is dedicated to Arabic/Islamic study, with emphasis on creating a strong Islamic identity. 437, 438 Many of the students reported as being non-attendees in public schools may be enrolled in these religious schools. 439 In some cases, the curriculum of the Quranic schools is combined with the traditional Hausa folk beliefs to justify jihadist political agendas that include not enrolling in state schools, rejection of modern medical treatment such as immunization, and denial of children’s and women’s rights. 440 Restaurants Most restaurants in northern Nigeria serve local fare rather than international cuisine, although Chinese, Indian, Arabic and Turkish meals are available. 441, 442 Nigerian fast-food chains serve fried chicken, hamburgers, and meat pies. Bakeries often sell cold beverages, ice cream, and meat pies, in addition to the expected bread and cakes. 443 433 UNESCO Institute for Statistics, “Global Education Digest 2011: Comparing Education Statistics Across the World” (report, 2011), 19, 23, 48, http://www.uis.unesco.org/Education/Documents/ged-2011en.pdf 434 UNICEF, “Nigeria: Education,” n.d., http://www.unicef.org/nigeria/children_1937.html 435 Muhammad S. Umar, “Profiles of New Islamic Schools in Northern Nigeria” (paper, Department of Religious Studies, Arizona State University, n.d.), 1–3, http://www.international.ucla.edu/cms/files/Profiles_of_Islamic_Schools.pdf 436 Nasir Mohammed Baba, “Islamic Schools, The Ulama, and the State in Educational Development of Northern Nigeria,” Bulletin de l’APAD, 33(2011):14–15, http://apad.revues.org/4092 437 Muhammad S. Umar, “Profiles of New Islamic Schools in Northern Nigeria” (paper, Department of Religious Studies, Arizona State University, n.d.), 17, 21, http://www.international.ucla.edu/cms/files/Profiles_of_Islamic_Schools.pdf 438 Muhammad S. Umar, “Profiles of New Islamic Schools in Northern Nigeria” (paper, Department of Religious Studies, Arizona State University, n.d.), 14–17, http://www.international.ucla.edu/cms/files/Profiles_of_Islamic_Schools.pdf 439 Nasir Mohammed Baba, “Islamic Schools, The Ulama, and the State in Educational Development of Northern Nigeria,” Bulletin de l’APAD, 33 (2011): 23, http://apad.revues.org/4092 440 Nasir Mohammed Baba, “Islamic Schools, The Ulama, and the State in Educational Development of Northern Nigeria,” Bulletin de l’APAD, 33 (2011): 23, http://apad.revues.org/4092 441 Lizzie Williams, Nigeria, 3rd ed. (Bucks, England: Bradt Travel Guides Ltd., April 2012), 99. 442 JourneyMart, Nigeria: Eating Out in Nigeria,” 2012, http://www.journeymart.com/de/nigeria/eatingout/default.aspx 443 Lizzie Williams, Nigeria, 3rd ed. (Bucks, England: Bradt Travel Guides Ltd., April 2012), 100. © D LI F L C | 56 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Exchange 16: I would like coffee or tea. Soldier: I would like coffee or tea. Local: Sure. Exchange 17: Are you still serving breakfast? Soldier: Are you still serving breakfast? Local: Yes. inaa son gahaawa ko shaayee to har Yanz akwaree karin kumalo? ey Although prohibited under shari’a law, alcohol is available at some hotels and bars in urban centers. Establishments on federal property can also sell alcohol, and there are bars in many of the national parks. 444 Exchange 18: What ingredients are used to make tsiren? Soldier: What ingredients are used da me akey yin TSiren? to make tsiren? Local: Meat, chilies, tomato and naman rago da akey coriander. hadawa da Yajee, albasa da gishiree Exchange 19: The meal was very good. Soldier: The meal was very good. Local: Next time the food will be better. abinchin Yayee dadee abinchin na gaba maa zay fowanan dadee When ready to leave a restaurant, customers should inform the waiter by discreetly raising a hand or making eye contact. It is impolite to call waiters by their names or wave to get their attention. 445 On busy nights, waiters may bring the bill before it is requested. 446 Sharing a table with strangers is common practice. Do not feel obligated to start a conversation with tablemates. Act as if you are seated at a private table. Exchange 20: I’d like some hot soup. Soldier: I’d like some hot soup. Local: Sure. inaa son roman sha may zaapee to 444 Lizzie Williams, Nigeria, 3rd ed. (Bucks, England: Bradt Travel Guides Ltd., April 2012), 101. Etiquette Scholar, “International Dining Etiquette: Nigeria,” 2011, http://www.etiquettescholar.com/dining_etiquette/tableetiquette/africa_west_dinner_etiquette/nigerian.html 446 Punch, “Eating Out and Its Rules,” 8 July 2012, http://www.punchng.com/spice/etiquette/eating-outand-its-rules/ 445 © D LI F L C | 57 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Exchange 21: Do you have a dessert? Soldier: Do you have a dessert? Local: Yes, we have fura and nono. kana da kwalama? akwey puraa da nunoo The person extending an invitation to dine out is expected to pick up the tab. 447 A tip of 10% is acceptable; make sure that this amount is not already included in the bill. 448 Exchange 22: May I have a glass of water? Soldier: May I have a glass of water? Local: Yes, sir! Exchange 23: Can I have my total bill, please? Soldier: Can I have my total bill, please? Local: Yes, sir! ko zan samu gilaashin rowan sha? za asaamu, meygira! zaaka gayamin ko nawa nee kudin da zan beeya bakee daya? ey, meygira! Roadside stalls (buka) are the best place for finding good Nigerian food, especially suya, which is meat roasted with oil, onions, and salt on an open heat basin. 449, 450 Few individuals make suya at home because the Suya people, from the Hausa tribe, make it so well. 451 Exchange 24: Put this all on one bill. Soldier: Put this all on one bill. Local: Okay. Exchange 25: Where is your restroom? Soldier: Where is your restroom? Local: That room to your left, over there. za abya duk wana a hadee nee. ey, Yayee dadee inaa awrin bahayarku? wanchan dakin nee, daga geypin hagu 447 Etiquette Scholar, “International Dining Etiquette: Nigeria,” 2011, http://www.etiquettescholar.com/dining_etiquette/tableetiquette/africa_west_dinner_etiquette/nigerian.html 448 iExplore, “Nigeria Travel Guide: Tipping,” 2012, http://www.iexplore.com/travelguide/africa/nigeria/culture 449 Edward Popoola, “Nigerian Suya,” Global Voices, 20 September 2005, http://www.globalvoicesonline.org/2005/09/20/nigerian-suya/ 450 Margo Hermann and Roma Patel, “Nigeria,” n.d., http://www.owlnet.rice.edu/~rpatel/ 451 Chloe Diski, “Nigerian Culture Revolves Around Food,” Guardian, 10 June 2001, http://observer.guardian.co.uk/foodmonthly/story/0,,502663,00.html © D LI F L C | 58 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Markets Northern Nigeria is full of markets, rather than shopping malls. Shoppers can buy virtually anything from street vendors on nearly everywhere. Some malls and upscale shopping centers have opened up, mostly in southern Nigeria or in the capital of Abuja. 452 Exchange 26: How much longer will you be here? Soldier: How much longer will you be here? Local: Three more hours. zaaka dadee ana? zan kaara aawa ukoo Shoppers should bargain except in shops where the prices are fixed. The Hausa have their own culturally accepted methods of bargaining. Typically, Hausa sellers expect buyers to start with a price equal to about onethird of the asking price; both parties then go back and forth until they agree. If a deal cannot be struck, a buyer walks away. 453 Shops usually open around 8 a.m. and close around 5 p.m., Monday to Friday. A few may be open limited hours on Saturday. Local markets are open longer hours, from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m., and there are night markets that do not close until midnight. Friday is the Muslim day of rest, but Christian-run businesses frequently stay open on Friday. 454 Exchange 27: May I examine this close up? Soldier: May I examine this close up? Sure. zan ey duba wanan da kil? sosey manaa Exchange 28: Can I buy a carpet with this much money? Soldier: Can I buy a carpet with this wanan kudin zey eya saya much money? min dar dooma? Local: No. aa-aa Money, Credit Cards, and ATMs Nigeria’s currency is the naira (currency symbol N). In August 2012, one USD was equal to approximately N 157. 455 Foreign currency other than U.S. dollars is relatively difficult to exchange at banks. Trading money on the black market, or at unofficial exchange facilities, 452 Lizzie Williams, Nigeria, 3rd ed. (Bucks, England: Bradt Travel Guides Ltd., April 2012), 102–3. Lizzie Williams, Nigeria, 3rd ed. (Bucks, England: Bradt Travel Guides Ltd., April 2012), 103. 454 Lizzie Williams, Nigeria, 3rd ed. (Bucks, England: Bradt Travel Guides Ltd., April 2012), 103. 455 Oanda, “Currency Converter,” 16 August 2012, http://www.oanda.com/currency/converter/ 453 © D LI F L C | 59 HAUSA Cultural Orientation is illegal but mostly tolerated. Money changers are likely to be Hausa. Large hotels can also change money. 456, 457 Exchange 29: Do you accept U.S. currency? Soldier: Do you accept U.S. currency? Local: No, we only accept naira. Exchange 30: Can you give me change for this? Soldier: Can you give me change for this? Local: No. kuna karbar kudin amurka? aa-aa, naira ko muk karba zaaka ey chanja min wana? aa-aa ATMs are available in Nigerian cities. Some work with VISA cards, but using the machines is not advised because of the high rates of credit card fraud. Credit cards are not widely accepted. 458, 459 Exchange 31: Is the market nearby? Soldier: Is the market nearby? Local: Yes, over there on the right. Exchange 32: Please, buy something from me. Local: Please, buy something from me. Soldier: Sorry, I have no money left. kasuwar bajey kolin tana kusaa? ey, a chen daga daama don alah, zo ka sey wanaa abu daga wurinaa key hakuree kudina Yaa kaaree Traffic and Transportation Although buses, minibuses, and taxis operate in urban centers, Nigeria’s transportation remains underdeveloped. 460, 461 The government is working to improve and expand the public transportation infrastructure. In 2010 a mass transit project of N 10 456 Lizzie Williams, Nigeria, 3rd ed. (Bucks, England: Bradt Travel Guides Ltd., April 2012), 81. Lonely Planet, “Nigeria: Money and Costs,” 2012, http://www.lonelyplanet.com/nigeria/practicalinformation/money-costs 458 iExplore, “Nigerian Travel Guide: Shopping,” http://www.iexplore.com/dmap/Nigeria/Shopping 459 Lizzie Williams, Nigeria, 3rd ed. (Bucks, England: Bradt Travel Guides Ltd., April 2012), 82. 460 Embassy of Nigeria, “Embassy Homepage: Public Transport in Nigeria,” 2012, http://nigeria.embassyhomepage.com/nigerian_railway_nigeria_bus_abuja_airport_taxi_nigeria_domestic_ airports_nigeria_ferries_nigerian_motorway.htm 461 Lonely Planet, “Nigeria: Getting There and Around,” 2012, http://www.lonelyplanet.com/nigeria/transport/getting-around 457 © D LI F L C | 60 HAUSA Cultural Orientation billion was launched. 462 Cars Drivers in Nigeria must have a Nigerian driver’s license. The police do not recognize international driving licenses. Driving throughout Nigeria is unsafe. Police seldom enforce traffic laws, roads are in a state of general disrepair, and traffic signals often fail to work. Exchange 33: Where can I rent a car? Soldier: Where can I rent a car? Local: Downtown. inaa zan saamoo hayar mota? a tikin garee There are about 400 traffic fatalities every month. Many accidents involve buses and commercial vehicles. Gridlock in urban areas is common. Chronic fuel shortages frequently cause long lines at gasoline stations. Travel by car should always take place during daylight hours, even in cities. Drivers stopped for violations may be subject to bribes demanded by traffic officers. 463, 464 Exchange 34: Which road leads to the airport? Soldier: Which road leads to the airport? Local: The road heading east. wacha haanya ke zuwa pilin jirgin sama? haanyar da tayee gabas Public Transportation Various forms of public transportation, including buses and motorbike taxis (okadas), exist but should be avoided because of safety concerns. Taxi passengers have been driven to isolated locations and then robbed or beaten. 465, 466 462 Chinemne Okafor, “Nigeria: N10 Billion Public Mass Transit Programme Takes Off,” AllAfrica, 28 September 2010, http://allafrica.com/stories/201009290347.html 463 Overseas Security Advisory Council, Bureau of Diplomatic Security, U.S. Department of State, “Nigeria 2012 OSAC Crime and Safety Report: Abuja,” 16 February 2012, https://www.osac.gov/pages/ContentReportDetails.aspx?cid=12004 464 Bureau of Consular Affairs, U.S. Department of State, “Nigeria: Country Specific Information,” 16 July 2012, http://travel.state.gov/travel/cis_pa_tw/cis/cis_987.html#traffic_safety 465 Overseas Security Advisory Council, Bureau of Diplomatic Security, U.S. Department of State, “Nigeria 2012 OSAC Crime and Safety Report: Abuja,” 16 February 2012, https://www.osac.gov/pages/ContentReportDetails.aspx?cid=12004 466 Bureau of Consular Affairs, U.S. Department of State, “Nigeria: Country Specific Information,” 16 July 2012, http://travel.state.gov/travel/cis_pa_tw/cis/cis_987.html#traffic_safety © D LI F L C | 61 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Exchange 35: Can I share this cab with you? Soldier: Can I share this cab with you? Local: No, wait for another. zaamu eya shiga taksee din taarida key? aa-aa, ka jira wata motar Exchange 36: Can you take me there? Soldier: Can you take me there? Local: Yes, I can. zaaka ey key nee cha? ey, zan ya In the predominantly Muslim states, taxis and buses must be designated as being for men or women. Taxis for women are identified by the pictures of veiled women on the sides. 467 Plane travel also has an unsafe history. Several plane crashes and near misses have killed hundreds of travelers in recent years. Although improvements have been made, security at airfields and airports remains poor. 468 Street Crime, Safety, and Solicitations Crime rates throughout Nigeria are extremely high. Kidnappings, murder, armed robbery, carjackings, and home invasions are common. Potential victims in such situations should not resist. Attackers are known to resort to violence. Foreign nationals are often targets of criminal behavior and should be particularly vigilant. 469 Because of ongoing and escalating violence, travelers are advised to avoid most of the northern region. 470, 471 Criminal and terrorist groups make frequent threats in the northern states of Gombe, Yobe, Bauchi, Borno, and Kano. The militant Jihadist group, Boko Haram, is currently carrying out violence against Christians and is credited with a number of suicide bombings and fatal attacks at a series of churches and markets. 472, 473, 474 467 Alaine S. Hutson, “Gender, Mobility, and Shari’a,” ISIM Newsletter November 2002, https://openaccess.leidenuniv.nl/bitstream/handle/1887/16821/ISIM_11_Gender_Mobility_and_Sharica.pdf ?sequence=1 468 Overseas Security Advisory Council, Bureau of Diplomatic Security, U.S. Department of State, “Nigeria 2012 OSAC Crime and Safety Report: Abuja,” 16 February 2012, https://www.osac.gov/pages/ContentReportDetails.aspx?cid=12004 469 Overseas Security Advisory Council, Bureau of Diplomatic Security, U.S. Department of State, “Nigeria 2012 OSAC Crime and Safety Report: Abuja,” 16 February 2012, https://www.osac.gov/pages/ContentReportDetails.aspx?cid=12004 470 Overseas Security Advisory Council, Bureau of Diplomatic Security, U.S. Department of State, “Nigeria 2012 OSAC Crime and Safety Report: Abuja,” 16 February 2012, https://www.osac.gov/pages/ContentReportDetails.aspx?cid=12004 471 Bureau of Consular Affairs, U.S. Department of State, “Nigeria: Country Specific Information,” 16 July 2012, http://travel.state.gov/travel/cis_pa_tw/cis/cis_987.html#safety 472 Paul Ohia and John Shiklam, “Nigeria: Boko Haram in Possible Talks with Government,” AllAfrica, 15 August 2012, http://allafrica.com/stories/201208150298.html © D LI F L C | 62 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Both individuals and gangs engage in violent crimes. There are reports of criminals masquerading as uniformed police and military personnel. Police respond slowly, if at all, to reports of criminal activity and have been known to shake down Nigerian locals and provide little to no help to expatriate victims. 475 Exchange 37: Did these people threaten you? Soldier: Did these people threaten you? Local: No. wadanan mutaanin sun yee makaa barazaana nee? aa-aa Be aware that special permission is required to videotape or photograph any bridges, government buildings, and airports. Persons taking photos can be arrested and detained even though restricted sites may not be marked. Penalties and criminal charges can be leveled even against individuals with prior authorization from the Nigerian State Security Services. 476 Beggars In recent years, the number of beggars on the streets of the northern Nigeria has grown dramatically. Beggars frequent markets, religious centers, and intersections. 477 Many of the beggars in the Islamic north are children. Some are students in Quranic schools, sent out to beg by teachers who do not have enough money to feed them. 478, 479, 480 Statistics show that 30% of Nigerian children under the age of 14 are street beggars. 481 Not all beggars are children, however. Some are actually opportunistic criminals looking for a chance to commit a crime. Others are well473 CNN, “At Least 50 Dead in Three Nigeria Church Bombings, Reprisal Attacks,” 17 June 2012, http://articles.cnn.com/2012-06-17/africa/world_africa_nigeria-church-bombings_1_car-bomb-bokoharam-church-bombings?_s=PM:AFRICA 474 Bureau of Consular Affairs, U.S. Department of State, “Nigeria: Country Specific Information,” 16 July 2012, http://travel.state.gov/travel/cis_pa_tw/cis/cis_987.html#safety 475 Bureau of Consular Affairs, U.S. Department of State, “Nigeria: Country Specific Information,” 16 July 2012, http://travel.state.gov/travel/cis_pa_tw/cis/cis_987.html#crime 476 Bureau of Consular Affairs, U.S. Department of State, “Nigeria: Country Specific Information,” 16 July 2012, http://travel.state.gov/travel/cis_pa_tw/cis/cis_987.html#special_circumstance 477 David Victor Ogunkan, “Begging and Almsgiving in Nigeria: The Islamic Perspective,” International Journal of Sociology and Anthropology 3, no. 4 (April 2011): 128, http://www.academicjournals.org/ijsa/PDF/pdf2011/April/Victor.pdf 478 Abdullahi Muhammed, “The Almajiris: Nigeria’s Child Beggars,” African Outlook Online, 2011, http://www.africanoutlookonline.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=2942:thealmajiris-nigerias-child-beggars&catid=96:allcomers&Itemid=54 479 BBC, “Child Beggars of Nigeria’s Koranic Schools,” 23 December 2008, http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7796109.stm 480 Hassana Zubairu Dagona, “Beggars Life in the Society (Almajiranci),” Desert Herald, 9 May 2012, http://desertherald.com/?p=1285 481 Hassan Ibrahim, “Unending Plight of the Almajiri,” Nigerian Tribune, 20 April 2012, http://odili.net/news/source/2012/apr/20/604.html © D LI F L C | 63 HAUSA Cultural Orientation dressed individuals for whom begging is a profession. 482, 483 Most of the beggars are Muslims and many are Hausa who see begging as an acceptable way of life. 484 Exchange 38: Give me money. Local: Give me money. Soldier: I don’t have any. baanu kudee baana da kudee Because there are few Western tourists in Nigeria, begging is generally aimed at other Nigerians. 485 Individual responses to beggars vary. Pious Muslims believe it a religious duty to give alms to the needy. Others simply give bothersome beggars a small sum to get them to go away. 486, 487 482 O. A. Fawole, D. V. Ogunkan, and A. Omoruan, “The Menace of Begging in Nigerian Cities: A Sociological Analysis,” International Journal of Sociology and Anthropology 3, no. 1, (January 2011): 10– 11, http://www.unilorin.edu.ng/publications/fawoleoa/The%20menace%20of%20begging%20in%20Nigerian %20cities%20fawole%20et%20al.pdf 483 Aliyu A. Ammani, “Street Begging: Exposing the Bankruptcy of Blatant Paying of Lip Service,” Gamji, n.d., http://www.gamji.com/article8000/NEWS8196.htm 484 David Victor Ogunkan, “Begging and Almsgiving in Nigeria: The Islamic Perspective,” International Journal of Sociology and Anthropology 3, no. 4 (April 2011): 127, http://www.academicjournals.org/ijsa/PDF/pdf2011/April/Victor.pdf 485 Lizzie Williams, Nigeria, 3rd ed. (Bucks, England: Bradt Travel Guides Ltd., April 2012), 109. 486 David Victor Ogunkan, “Begging and Almsgiving in Nigeria: The Islamic Perspective,” International Journal of Sociology and Anthropology 3, no. 4 (April 2011): 128, http://www.academicjournals.org/ijsa/PDF/pdf2011/April/Victor.pdf 487 Lizzie Williams, Nigeria, 3rd ed. (Bucks, England: Bradt Travel Guides Ltd., April 2012), 109. © D LI F L C | 64 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Chapter 4 Assessment 1. Nigeria is one of the most urbanized African nations. True Nigeria is one of the most urbanized African nations. Nearly half of all Nigerians live in cities. Many urban centers, including Kano, Kaduna, Maiduguri, and Zaria, are located in the northern regions where the Hausa live. 2. Fewer than half of Nigeria’s city residents have access to safe water. True Access to safe water and basic sanitation facilities is a problem in Nigeria. In 2008, only 48% of urban residents had access to safe water. 3. Healthcare in urban areas is generally of good quality. False Standards of healthcare in hospitals and clinics are well below Western standards. Staff members are poorly trained, equipment is lacking, and sanitation is poor. 4. Since the passage of the Universal Basic Education act in 2004, more than half of Nigeria’s children complete secondary school. False In spite of these attempts to improve educational access and reduce illiteracy, only about 70% of Nigeria’s children complete primary school requirements; 46% continue on to secondary school, but fewer than 30% actually complete it. 5. The Hausa have an established way of bargaining. True The Hausa have their own culturally accepted methods of bargaining. Typically, Hausa sellers expect buyers to start with a price equal to about one-third of the asking price; both parties then go back and forth until they agree. © D LI F L C | 65 HAUSA Cultural Orientation CHAPTER 5: RURAL LIFE Introduction Hausaland’s rural population engages in traditional ways of life. The Hausa’s strict habits closely follow Muslim precepts. 488 They live in age-old villages surrounded by constellations of smallholder farms. Extended families work the land for subsistence, and sell their excess crops for cash. Men toil in the fields while women, following Muslim rules of seclusion, prepare food and maintain the households. 489 As the population exploded, farmers clung to traditional—and inefficient—agricultural practices. 490 Now they struggle to produce enough to support their laborers and their families. School attendance is extremely low in the rural north, and schools are predominantly Quranic: they teach religion but not occupational knowledge. 491 Government efforts to promote agricultural modernization have been ineffective, mismanaged, or undermined by corruption. 492 Thus, in spite of possessing expanses of arable land, the nation is forced to import billions of dollars of food every year. 493 The decreasing viability of the smallholder farm has led to a long-term migration of workers, generally young, from the country to the city. 494 The north is a land of gigantic, dusty cities amidst a withering rural landscape. Land Tenure The history of land tenure in northern Nigeria is complex and incompletely understood. Practices based on disparate bodies of law have evolved through distinct historical eras; and concepts of property and ownership differ in Hausa and Western traditions. 495, 496 488 Frank A. Salamone, The Hausa of Nigeria (Lanham, MD: University Press of America, Inc., 2010). Polly Hill, Rural Hausa: A Village and a Setting (London: Cambridge University Press, 1972). 490 Akinwumi Adesina, “Unlocking the Potential of Agriculture in Sub-Saharan Africa: Nigeria’s Transformation Agenda for Agriculture” (paper presented at Symposium on “Growing Food: New Places, New Technologies,” Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies, 17 April 2012): , http://www.sais-jhu.edu/agriculture/Presentation%203_Akin%20Adesina_SSA.pdf 491 Joe A. McIntyre, “An Overview of Education in Northern Nigeria: Attempted from the Perspective of Qur’anic Education,” Afrika Spectrum 17, no. 1 (1982): , http://www.jstor.org/stable/40174051 492 David Hecht, “Little Holds Nigeria Back from Food Crisis,” Washington Post, 2 August 2009, http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/08/02/AR2009080202091.html 493 Malachy Agbo, “How Nigeria Can Make Agriculture Blossom,” This Day Live, 4 Dec 2011, http://www.thisdaylive.com/articles/how-nigeria-can-make-agriculture-blossom/104218/ 494 Steve Onyeiwu, Eric Pallant, and Meredith Hanlon, “Sustainable and Unsustainable Agriculture in Ghana and Nigeria: 1960–2009,” in Ecosystems and Sustainable Development 8, eds. Y. Villacampa and C. A. Brebbia (Ashurst, Southampton, UK: WIT Press, 2011), 211–222. 495 Steven Pierce, Farmers and the State in Colonial Kano: Land Tenure and the Legal Imagination (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2005), 81. 489 © D LI F L C | 66 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Under the Muslim law observed by the Sokoto Caliphate, land belonged to the emir, and occupants effectively paid taxes in the form of tribute. 497 The British sought to substitute the Crown for the emir, and received protests from the natives. In effect, land remained community property and the rights of ordinary farmers remained unchanged. 498 Under one theory, the abolition of slavery in Hausaland in the early years of colonial rule spurred a transition from large slave-labor plantations to the smaller family farm model that still predominates. 499, 500 Increasing populations also led to the progressive subdivision of farms. 501 The Nigerian government has revised the land tenure law twice since independence (1962 and 1978). 502, 503 Under the current system, land remains community property but occupants hold long-term leases of up to 99 years. 504 Rural Economy In 1960, at independence, Nigeria’s population was 45 million. It was a major exporter of agricultural products: peanuts, palm oil, cotton, and cocoa. 505, 506 The current population 496 Abdul Raufu Mustapha and Kate Meagher, “Agrarian Production, Public Policy and the State in Kano Region, 1900–2000,” Drylands Research, 2000, http://www.drylandsresearch.org.uk/pdfs/WP_Mustapha_Policy.pdf 497 Steven Pierce, Farmers and the State in Colonial Kano: Land Tenure and the Legal Imagination (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2005). 498 Polly Hill, “From Slavery to Freedom: The Case of Farm-Slavery in Nigerian Hausaland,” Comparative Studies in Society and History 18, no. 3 (July 1976): , http://www.jstor.org/stable/178344 499 Steven Pierce, Farmers and the State in Colonial Kano: Land Tenure and the Legal Imagination (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2005), 54. 500 Abdul Raufu Mustapha and Kate Meagher, “Agrarian Production, Public Policy and the State in Kano Region, 1900–2000,” Drylands Research, 2000, http://www.drylandsresearch.org.uk/pdfs/WP_Mustapha_Policy.pdf 501 David W. Norman, David H. Pryor, and Christopher J. N. Gibbs, “Technical Change and the Small Farmer in Hausaland, Northern Nigeria,” African Rural Economy Paper No. 21, African Rural Economy Program, Department of Agricultural Economics, Michigan State University, 1979, http://archive.lib.msu.edu/DMC/African%20Working%20Papers/AREP/AREP21/AREP21.pdf 502 Online Nigeria, “Land Use Policies Since 1960,” n.d., http://www.onlinenigeria.com/land/?blurb=529 503 C. M. McDowell, “The Interpretation of the Land Tenure Law of Northern Nigeria,” Journal of African Law 14, no. 3 (Autumn 1970): , http://www.jstor.org/stable/744582 504 David W. Norman, David H. Pryor and Christopher J. N. Gibbs, “Technical Change and the Small Farmer in Hausaland, Northern Nigeria,” African Rural Economy Paper No. 21, African Rural Economy Program, Department of Agricultural Economics, Michigan State University, 1979, http://archive.lib.msu.edu/DMC/African%20Working%20Papers/AREP/AREP21/AREP21.pdf 505 Trading Economics, “Nigeria Population,” August 2012, http://www.tradingeconomics.com/nigeria/population 506 Akinwumi Adesina, “Unlocking the Potential of Agriculture in Sub-Saharan Africa: Nigeria’s Transformation Agenda for Agriculture” (paper presented at Symposium on “Growing Food: New Places, New Technologies,” Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies, 17 April 2012): , http://www.sais-jhu.edu/agriculture/Presentation%203_Akin%20Adesina_SSA.pdf © D LI F L C | 67 HAUSA Cultural Orientation of 170 million is projected to double by 2050. 507, 508 But agricultural productivity has stagnated or declined since the 1960s. 509 Despite an abundance of arable land, Nigeria imports USD $8 billion of food a year (principally wheat, rice, sugar, and fish), an amount that grew by an unsustainable 11% in one year. 510 Numerous reasons account for the continuing decline of the agricultural sector. Nigeria’s soils are not conducive to productive agriculture; overfarming and overgrazing eroded the land. Rainfall is irregular, particularly in the more agricultural north. The rainy season is shortening and total rainfall is declining, while the intensity of rainfalls is increasing and contributing to soil erosion. 511 The biggest shortcoming is Nigeria’s failure to modernize. About 90% of Nigeria’s agricultural output comes from inefficient small farms of 3 acres or less. 512, 513 Farmers still employ organic farming and rotation of crops and plots, which are time-honored and time-consuming methods that no longer generate enough income to support the requisite labor force, and often does not produce enough food to feed the laborers’ families. This fueled long-term migration to urban areas. In 1961, 83% of Nigeria’s population lived in rural areas; as of 2010, only 50% did. 514, 515 Exchange 39: Where do you work, sir? Soldier: Where do you work, sir? Local: I am a farmer, sir. aa inaa kakey aaykee? nee manomee nee Nigeria lags in most measures of agricultural competiveness. Yield per hectare, a standard metric, is 20% to 50% of that in similar developing nations; its annual growth 507 Central Intelligence Agency, “Nigeria,” in The World Factbook, 15 August 2012, https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/ni.html 508 Crusoe Osagie, “Nigeria May Not Survive 2050 Projected Population Explosion,” This Day Live (Nigeria), 28 August 2012, http://www.thisdaylive.com/articles/nigeria-may-not-survive-2050-projectedpopulation-explosion/123356/ 509 Akinwumi Adesina, “Unlocking the Potential of Agriculture in Sub-Saharan Africa: Nigeria’s Transformation Agenda for Agriculture” (paper presented at Symposium on “Growing Food: New Places, New Technologies,” Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies, 17 April 2012,): , http://www.sais-jhu.edu/agriculture/Presentation%203_Akin%20Adesina_SSA.pdf 510 Heather Murdock, “Nigeria Seeks to Become Food Exporter,” Voice of America, 29 April 2012, http://www.voanews.com/content/nigeria-seeks-to-become-food-exporter-149510825/370441.html 511 Steve Onyeiwu, Eric Pallant, and Meredith Hanlon, “Sustainable and Unsustainable Agriculture in Ghana and Nigeria: 1960–2009,” in Ecosystems and Sustainable Development 8, eds. Y. Villacampa and C. A. Brebbia (Ashurst, Southampton, UK: WIT Press, 2011), 211–222. 512 David Hecht, “Little Holds Nigeria Back from Food Crisis,” Washington Post, 2 August 2009, http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/08/02/AR2009080202091.html 513 Polly Hill, Rural Hausa: A Village and a Setting (London: Cambridge University Press, 1972). 514 Steve Onyeiwu, Eric Pallant, and Meredith Hanlon, “Sustainable and Unsustainable Agriculture in Ghana and Nigeria: 1960–2009,” in Ecosystems and Sustainable Development 8, eds. Y. Villacampa and C. A. Brebbia (Ashurst, Southampton, UK: WIT Press, 2011), 211–222. 515 Central Intelligence Agency, “Nigeria,” in The World Factbook, 15 August 2012, https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/ni.html © D LI F L C | 68 HAUSA Cultural Orientation rate in yield from 1961–2008 was an abysmal 1.2%. Nigeria’s 10 tractors per 1,000 hectares is a tiny fraction of Indonesia’s 241. Only 0.8% of Nigeria’s arable land is irrigated, compared to 28% in Thailand. Nigerian farmers utilize 13 kg of fertilizer per hectare, and 5% of their seeds are modern varieties, whereas those rates for Asia are 150 kg and 60%. 516 Ineffective Solutions The federal government underfunds initiatives that are also ineffective. 517 For example, construction of the Zobe Dam in northern Katsina State, a USD $122 million project to provide drinking water and irrigation for farming, began in the late 1970s. Irrigation from the dam would have compensated for erratic rainfall, but the dam remains uncompleted. Because of its underutilization, uncompleted channels have begun to collapse, iron structures are rusting, and the site has been “taken over by reptiles.” 518, 519 Corruption infects government initiatives. In 2008, Governor Sambo, of northern Kaduna State, purchased 70,000 tons of soil fertilizer for direct sale to smallholder farmers at a subsidized price. But most of the fertilizer fell into the hands of state officials, political party chiefs, and campaign managers; from there, it went to the farms of these individuals or onto the open market at triple the subsidized price. 520 In theory, Nigeria would evolve a large-scale, modern agribusiness commensurate with its growing population. The government has backed big farm ventures, but without success. 521 Inadequate infrastructure and a lack of big-business management talent have choked progress. 522 When Nigeria’s agricultural output has increased, it has been through farming more land rather than employing modern techniques. 523 516 Akinwumi Adesina, “Unlocking the Potential of Agriculture in Sub-Saharan Africa: Nigeria’s Transformation Agenda for Agriculture” (paper presented at Symposium on “Growing Food: New Places, New Technologies,” Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies, 17 April 2012): , http://www.sais-jhu.edu/agriculture/Presentation%203_Akin%20Adesina_SSA.pdf 517 David Hecht, “Little Holds Nigeria Back From Food Crisis,” Washington Post, 2 August 2009, http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/08/02/AR2009080202091.html 518 Salisu Na’inna Dambatta, “Obasanjo Revisits Zobe Dam,” Daily Trust (Nigeria), 25 March 2003, http://news.biafranigeriaworld.com/archive/2003/mar/25/0060.html 519 Yusha’u A. Ibrahim, “Nigeria: Katsina Farmers Urge FG to Complete Zobe Dam,” Daily Trust (Nigeria), 21 August 2012, http://allafrica.com/stories/201208210319.html 520 Ephraims Sheyin, “Kaduna Farmers Grumble, as Politicians Hijack Fertiliser Allocation,” Nation (Nigeria), 18 July 2008, http://www.thenationonlineng.net/archive2/tblnews_Detail.php?id=56238 521 David Hecht, “Little Holds Nigeria Back From Food Crisis,” Washington Post, 2 August 2009, http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/08/02/AR2009080202091.html 522 Malachy Agbo, “How Nigeria Can Make Agriculture Blossom,” This Day Live (Nigeria), 4 Dec 2011, http://www.thisdaylive.com/articles/how-nigeria-can-make-agriculture-blossom/104218/ 523 Akinwumi Adesina, “Unlocking the Potential of Agriculture in Sub-Saharan Africa: Nigeria’s Transformation Agenda for Agriculture” (paper presented at Symposium on “Growing Food: New Places, © D LI F L C | 69 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Village Life A leading researcher of the region noted, “The concept of a typical Hausa village is necessarily absurd.” The characteristics of any village vary with its proximity to natural resources such as rivers, watersheds, or marshland, or to large cities. 524 But some generalizations can be made. Villages often began as towns walled for security, although their walls have long since collapsed. The area of the old town is a set of walled or fenced compounds known as a gari; each compound is a gida. A mosque sits at the town center, because these towns observe the dictates of strict Islam, including daily prayer. Buildings for the school, which is usually Quranic, are centrally located. A network of narrow streets runs between the walled compounds. A market convenes every few days. Numerous small farms, typically under 3 acres, surround the gari and form the greater village. 525, 526 Two parallel structures of authority run the village: the secular and the religious, with occasional friction. 527 Exchange 40: Can you take me to your leader? Soldier: Can you take me to your leader? Local: Yes. ko daaka key nee wurin shugaban naaku? ey Exchange 41: Respected leader, we need your help/advice/opinion. Soldier: Respected leader, we need may girma, shugabaa, your help/advice/opinion. muna bukaatar tamakonka/shaawararka/raayinka Local: Yes. to Each gida is organized around a male head, a mai gida. His sons live on the premises; when they start their families, they live in attached quarters, or establish their own households if space is limited. (The gari tends toward overcrowding.) Sons inherit their fathers’ property, so it is not unusual for a gida to be headed by brothers. Polygamy is widespread. The Quran allows up New Technologies,” Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies, 17 April 2012): , http://www.sais-jhu.edu/agriculture/Presentation%203_Akin%20Adesina_SSA.pdf 524 Polly Hill, Rural Hausa: A Village and a Setting (London: Cambridge University Press, 1972). 525 Polly Hill, Rural Hausa: A Village and a Setting (London: Cambridge University Press, 1972). 526 Frank A. Salamone, The Hausa of Nigeria (Lanham, MD: University Press of America, Inc., 2010). 527 John A. Wiseman, “Structural and Ideological Tensions in a Rural Hausa Village,” African Studies Review 22, no. 2 (September 1979): , http://www.jstor.org/stable/523809 © D LI F L C | 70 HAUSA Cultural Orientation to four wives, as long as they are treated equally; Nigerian law does not intrude. In a gida, the mai gida has separate quarters, as does each wife. Women of child-bearing age live under strict Muslim seclusion; wives are never seen in public with their husbands. 528, 529 Farming, typically of grains and tubers, is at the heart of economic activity. Granaries are often part of the compound. The husband provides the family with grain and meat. The wives bargain for additional ingredients with other secluded women. 530 Modern trends are breaking down the old ways. Ambitious individuals, impatient with the slow pace of change, leave the village for urban centers, never to return. 531 Also, the increasing monetization of the rural economy creates the alternative of wage labor; young men achieve economic independence at an earlier age, and the extended family structure diminishes. 532 Villages become increasingly populated by older people, who are too weak to work long hours, thus leading to decreases in productivity. 533 Healthcare The government of Nigeria, in response to the poor condition of the nation’s health services, launched the National Health Insurance Scheme in 2005. A universal coverage program, it aimed to provide affordable healthcare to all Nigerians. 534 A November 2011 investigation into the program by the federal House of Representatives found that only 5 million citizens had signed up, and the majority were federal government employees and their families; it declared the program “a national embarrassment, disaster and colossal failure.” 535 528 Polly Hill, Rural Hausa: A Village and a Setting (London: Cambridge University Press, 1972). Charles Mwalimu, The Nigerian Legal System, vol. 1, Public Law (New York: Peter Lang Publishing, Inc., 2005). 530 Polly Hill, Rural Hausa: A Village and a Setting (London: Cambridge University Press, 1972). 531 John A. Wiseman, “Structural and Ideological Tensions in a Rural Hausa Village,” African Studies Review 22, no. 2 (September 1979): , http://www.jstor.org/stable/523809 532 H. A. Yusuf et al., “Socio-Economic Characteristics Influencing Farm Household Participation in Gandu System in Charanchi Local Government Area of Katsina State, Nigeria,” Journal of Agricultural Extension and Rural Development 3, no. 12 (November 2011): , http://www.academicjournals.org/jaerd/PDF/Pdf%202011/Nov/Yusuf%20et%20al.pdf 533 Steve Onyeiwu, Eric Pallant and Meredith Hanlon, “Sustainable and Unsustainable Agriculture in Ghana and Nigeria: 1960–2009,” in Ecosystems and Sustainable Development 8, eds. Y. Villacampa and C. A. Brebbia (Ashurst, Southampton, UK: WIT Press, 2011), 217. 534 National Health Insurance Scheme, “Welcome Note from Executive Secretary,” 2012, http://www.nhis.gov.ng/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=47:welcome-note-fromexecutive-secretary&catid=34:home 535 Taiwo Olanrewaju, “National Health Insurance Scheme: Of What Benefit to Nigerian Masses?” Nigerian Tribune, 21 November 2011, http://www.tribune.com.ng/index.php/features/31498-nationalhealth-insurance-scheme-of-what-benefit-to-nigerian-masses 529 © D LI F L C | 71 HAUSA Cultural Orientation The densely-populated Kano State, in the central north, provides insight into the status of healthcare in the country. There are approximately 26 government-run hospitals located in urban environments, and more than 1,000 health centers overall. 536 Despite that, distant villages still suffer from a lack of services. 537 Exchange 42: Is there a medical clinic nearby? Soldier: Is there a medical clinic nearby? Local: Yes, over there. akwey karmar asibtee nan kusaa? ey, gaata chan In northern Nigeria, traditional beliefs come into conflict with the approaches of modern medicine. Traditional medicine, which Nigerians consider safer than Western medicine, continues to be practiced in the north. Herbalists and spiritualists treat many ailments with plants. The diversity of treatments varies with local tradition. Leaves, roots, bark, fruits, bulbs, and other parts are used to treat skin cancer, chest pains, septic wounds, arthritis, hernia, bites, stings, leukemia, allergic reactions, and other ailments. 538 Exchange 43: My arm is broken, doctor, can you help me? Soldier: My arm is broken, doctor, hanoona Ya karee, likeeta, can you help me? zaaka eya taymaka min? Local: Yes, I can help you. ey, zan eya taymakonka Among much of the population, family planning is taboo; women achieve family and community status from a high birthrate, and mothers having 10 or more children are not unusual. Traditional beliefs combined with inadequate healthcare give Nigeria, particularly the north, some of the highest birthrates and infant mortality rates in the world. 539, 540 Additionally, 50% of girls in the northwest are married by age 15, and 80% by 18. Young and uneducated, they hold false ideas about the risks of HIV/AIDS, contributing to the spread of the disease and the lowering of overall life expectancy. 541 536 Kano Online, “Hospitals,” n.d., http://www.kanoonline.com/hospitals.html Maggie Fick, “The Main Causes of Maternal Death in Nigeria can be Avoided,” Poverty Matters Blog, Guardian (UK), 5 May 2011, http://www.guardian.co.uk/global-development/povertymatters/2011/may/05/maternal-health-northern-nigeria-kano 538 M. S. Abubakar et al., “The Perception and Practice of Traditional Medicine in the Treatment of Cancers and Inflammations by the Hausa and Fulani Tribes of Northern Nigeria,” Journal of Ethnopharmacology 111 (2007): , http://ww1.abu.edu.ng/publications/2011-09-29-211120_4675.pdf 539 Mark Tuschman, “Women’s Reproductive Health Care in Northern Nigeria,” Photo Philanthropy, 2010, http://photophilanthropy.org/gallery-posts/womens-reproductive-health-care-in-northern-nigeria-2/ 540 Maggie Fick, “The Main Causes of Maternal Death in Nigeria can be Avoided,” Poverty Matters Blog, Guardian (UK), 5 May 2011, http://www.guardian.co.uk/global-development/povertymatters/2011/may/05/maternal-health-northern-nigeria-kano 541 Avert, “HIV and AIDS in Nigeria,” 2011, http://www.avert.org/aids-nigeria.htm 537 © D LI F L C | 72 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Nigeria is one of four countries that still has endemic polio. It is common in Kano. Open sewers and poor sanitary conditions contribute to the problem. During a 2003 outbreak, religious and government leaders opposed a vaccination program, interpreting it as a Western conspiracy to make Muslims infertile. As a result, infections rose and the disease spread to neighboring countries. The leadership withdrew opposition after 11 months, but superstitions linger among the populace. 542, 543 Rural Transportation Only 15% of Nigeria’s roads are paved, with most of those in urban areas. Most rural roads suffer from neglect. They are unpaved, narrow, circuitous, uneven, and potholed. During the rainy season, they are barely passable, if at all. Bridges are of low quality and subject to being swept away by floods. 544, 545 The once robust railway system fell into disrepair. Since 2009, a major rehabilitation effort has been underway on Nigeria’s 3,505 km (2,178 mi) of narrow-gauge track. 546, 547 The rail network passes through a number of northern cities, including Minna, Kaduna, Zaria, Kano, Jos, and Maiduguri. 548 In many rural areas, the bicycle is the preferred mode of transportation. It is immune to gasoline shortages and bad roads; it can carry heavy loads and as many as four people. 549 Education In colonial times, the British policy of indirect rule in the Muslim north allowed the centuries-old institution of Quranic education to continue without interference. The introduction of Western education came later, but emerged steadily throughout the 20th century and led to two separate school systems. In 1974, the federal government began 542 Voice of America, “Nigeria Still Fighting False Rumors about Polio Vaccine,” 2 November 2009, http://www.voanews.com/content/a-13-2009-02-17-voa48-68672337/408600.html 543 BBC News, “Polio in Nigeria ‘Shows Big Increase,’” 21 November 2011, http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-15819797 544 Central Intelligence Agency, “Nigeria,” in The World Factbook, 31 July 2012, https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/ni.html 545 A. J. Aderamo and S. A. Magaji, “Rural Transportation and the Distribution of Public Facilities in Nigeria: A Case of Edu Local Government Area of Kwara State,” Journal of Human Ecology 29, no. 3 (2010): , http://www.krepublishers.com/02-Journals/JHE/JHE-29-0-000-10-Web/JHE-29-3-000-10-AbstPDF/JHE-29-3-171-10-2024-Aderamo-A-J/JHE-29-3-171-10-2024-Aderamo-A-J-Tt.pdf 546 This Day Live (Nigeria), “Nigerians Take to the Tracks, as Railway Chugs Back to Life,” 1 January 2012, http://www.thisdaylive.com/articles/nigerians-take-to-the-tracks-as-railway-chugs-back-tolife/106192/ 547 Central Intelligence Agency, “Nigeria,” in The World Factbook, 31 July 2012, https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/ni.html 548 Maps of World, “Nigeria Rail Map,” 2012, http://www.mapsofworld.com/nigeria/rail-map.html 549 Sam Olukoya, “Two Wheels Good in Rural Nigeria,” BBC News, 2 April 2001, http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/1256382.stm © D LI F L C | 73 HAUSA Cultural Orientation efforts toward integrating the two systems. 550 Low investment in education hinders progress, and Quranic schools remain dominant in the north. 551 School enrollment in the north is low. For example, in Jigawa State, the urban enrollment rate is 58%, but only 27% in rural environments, and lower for girls than for boys. Lagos State, in the south, has close to 80% enrollment in all categories. 552 Household or farm obligations delimit when the education of rural children is possible, and it is further limited to the hot season, when their labor is least required. 553 For poor rural children, there are many other impediments to education. Schools may be distant; families may not be able to afford uniforms and textbooks. 554 Most rural schools lack electricity, water, and toilets. Recruitment of teachers to rural areas is difficult, and pay is at poverty level. 555 For most rural students, limited access to public schools leaves Quranic schools as the only choice for their parents. 556 These schools concentrate on study and memorization of the Quran, and ignore critical-thinking skills. 557 In traditional Hausa families, boys follow in their fathers’ footsteps, so the Quranic schools provide no occupational training. 558 For these reasons, students from Quranic schools are ill-equipped for a modern workforce that requires diverse skills. Poor rural families from all over northern Nigeria send their children to the cities to live the harsh life of almajiri—roughly translated as companions of Prophet Muhammad. Almajiri live at Quranic boarding schools. After 5 a.m. prayers, they loudly beg door-to-door for 550 Joe A. McIntyre, “An Overview of Education in Northern Nigeria: Attempted from the Perspective of Qur’anic Education,” Africa Spectrum 17, no. 1 (1982): , http://www.jstor.org/stable/40174051 551 UNICEF, “Nigeria: Education,” n.d., http://www.unicef.org/nigeria/children_1937.html 552 Alice Akunga and Ian Attfield, “Northern Nigeria: Approaches to Enrolling Girls in School and Providing a Meaningful Education to Empower Change,” UN Girls’ Education Initiative, 17 May 2010, http://www.e4conference.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/06en.pdf 553 UNICEF, “Nigeria: Education,” n.d., http://www.unicef.org/nigeria/children_1937.html 554 UNICEF, “Nigeria: Education,” n.d., http://www.unicef.org/nigeria/children_1937.html 555 Alice Akunga and Ian Attfield, “Northern Nigeria: Approaches to Enrolling Girls in School and Providing a Meaningful Education to Empower Change,” UN Girls’ Education Initiative, 17 May 2010, http://www.e4conference.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/06en.pdf 556 Nasir Mohammed Baba, “Islamic Schools, the Ulama, and the State in the Educational Development of Northern Nigeria,” Bulletin de l’APAD (Euro-African Association for the Anthropology of Social Change and Development) 33 (2011): 1, http://apad.revues.org/4092 557 Lantana Usman, “Rural Nomadic Fulbe Boys’ Primary Schooling: Assessing Repertoires of Practice in Nigeria,” McGill Journal of Education 41, no. 2 (Spring 2006): , http://www.chr.up.ac.za/chr_old/indigenous/documents/Nigeria/Report/Rural%20Nomadic%20Fulbe%20B oysPrimary%20Schooling%20Assessing%20Repertoires%20Of%20Practice%20In%20Nigeria.pdf 558 Joe A. McIntyre, “An Overview of Education in Northern Nigeria: Attempted from the Perspective of Qur’anic Education,” Africa Spectrum 17, no. 1 (1982): , http://www.jstor.org/stable/40174051 © D LI F L C | 74 HAUSA Cultural Orientation food and money. They eat the food; most of the money goes to their mallams—teachers. The begging expedition happens three times a day. Between meals, the students further their religious studies. The number of almajiri is estimated in the millions. A UNICEF researcher estimated that 60% of them never return home. 559, 560 Checkpoints Police checkpoints were common throughout Nigeria and used primarily to extort money from motorists. 561 Side effects included traffic bottlenecks, traffic accidents, and extrajudicial killings resulting from confrontations between police and motorists. 562 Exchange 44: Where is the nearest checkpoint? Soldier: Where is the nearest checkpoint? Local: It’s two kilometers. inaa ne wurin binchka abubuwan hawa mapee kusaa? kamar keelomeeta byoo daga nan In January 2012, President Goodluck Jonathan ordered a complete overhaul of the nation’s police in order to fight corruption. The overhaul included the elimination of police checkpoints. 563 Nigerians were skeptical at first, but after several months the crackdown appears to have mostly succeeded. One businesswoman noted, “Recently, my husband and I drove from Lagos to Benin City [approximately 250 km (155 mi)]. Although the road wasn’t in good shape, we spent just 4 hours on the road as opposed to 6 hours or more if we have [sic] had to stop at every police checkpoint.” 564, 565 559 Christian Purefoy, “Nigeria’s Almajiri Children Learning a Life of Poverty and Violence,” CNN, 7 January 2010, http://articles.cnn.com/2010-01-07/world/nigeria.children.radicalization_1_religiousviolence-religious-clashes-kano?_s=PM:WORLD 560 Charles Kumolu, “Almajiri Education: Modern Gang Up Against Ancient Tradition?” Vanguard (Nigeria), 26 April 2012, http://www.vanguardngr.com/2012/04/almajiri-education-modern-gang-upagainst-ancient-tradition/ 561 Camillus Eboh, “Nigeria Police Chief Says Own Officers are Corrupt Killers,” Reuters, 14 February 2012, http://www.trust.org/alertnet/news/nigeria-police-chief-says-own-officers-are-corrupt-killers 562 Comfort Oseghale, “Gains, Losses of Ban on Police Checkpoints,” Punch (Nigeria), 26 May 2012, http://www.punchng.com/feature/crime-digest/gains-losses-of-ban-on-police-checkpoints/ 563 Camillus Eboh, “Nigeria Police Chief Says Own Officers are Corrupt Killers,” Reuters, 14 February 2012, http://www.trust.org/alertnet/news/nigeria-police-chief-says-own-officers-are-corrupt-killers 564 Vanguard (Nigeria), “Nigeria: Check Points—Investigations Reveal High Compliance with Inspector General’s Order,” 27 February 2012, http://allafrica.com/stories/201202271391.html 565 Comfort Oseghale, “Gains, Losses of Ban on Police Checkpoints,” Punch (Nigeria), 26 May 2012, http://www.punchng.com/feature/crime-digest/gains-losses-of-ban-on-police-checkpoints/ © D LI F L C | 75 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Exchange 45: Please get out of the car. Soldier: Please get out of the car. Local: OK. Exchange 46: Show us the car registration. Soldier: Show us the car registration. Local: OK. dan alah, ka pito daga motar to noonaa manaa takrdur rajistar motar to ID Cards In February 2003, Nigeria instituted a national ID card program. The cards include biometrics (fingerprints, photographs, and height) as well as name, address, occupation, and state of birth. The program was implemented to assist in planning for the country’s booming population, to control access to government programs, to identify aliens, and to curtail fraud and corruption. 566 Obtaining the card is voluntary. In the north, participation in the program is weak. 567 Arguments over the true size of regional populations, which a vigorous card program might settle, factor into this and other political issues. Some southerners claim that the northern population is much lower than official estimates. 568 As of May 2012, only about one-third of eligible participants received cards and were represented in the national identification database. 569 President Goodluck Jonathan set a goal of registering all eligible citizens by 2015. 570 Exchange 47: Is this all the ID you have? Soldier: Is this all the ID you have? Local: Yes. wanan ney toy takardan sheydan da kakey da she? ey 566 BBC News, “Nigerian ID Scheme Kicks Off,” 18 February 2003, http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/2775695.stm 567 Bala Muhammad Makosa, “Nigeria Begins Distributing ID Cards: Program Sees Low Turnout for Collection,” Ohmy News (Korea), 24 May 2006, http://english.ohmynews.com/articleview/article_view.asp?menu=c10400&no=293789&rel_no=1 568 BBC News, “Nigerian ID Scheme Kicks Off,” 18 February 2003, http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/2775695.stm 569 Vanguard (Nigeria), “Over 100m Nigerians Have No Official Identity—NIMC,” 9 May 2012, http://www.vanguardngr.com/2012/05/over-100m-nigerians-have-no-official-identity-nimc/ 570 Channels Television, “Every Nigerian Must Have a National Identity Card by 2015—Jonathan,” 26 June 2012, http://www.channelstv.com/home/2012/06/26/every-nigerian-must-have-national-identity-card-by2015-jonathan/ © D LI F L C | 76 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Border Crossing If one is not a member of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), crossing into Nigeria requires a passport and visa. Europeans or Americans not traveling with a Nigerian will probably be shaken down for bribes. Exhaustive searches of luggage may be made by each participating agency, such as Immigration and Customs. 571 Criminals and smugglers thwart border control in their efforts to bring weapons and contraband into the country, making the Immigration and Customs Service officers wary of potential violations. 572 Travelers should not become belligerent, because the response can be severe. 573 Exchange 48: Are you carrying any guns? Soldier: Are you carrying any guns? Local: Yes. kanaa dawkey da wasu bindigogee? ey 571 Trip Advisor, “Nigeria: Crossing the Border,” n.d., http://www.tripadvisor.com/Travel-g293824s602/Nigeria:Crossing.The.Border.html 572 Adelani Adepegba and Leke Baiyewu, “Nigeria, US, Chad Seal Pact on Counter-Terrorism,” Punch (Nigeria), 19 August 2012, http://www.punchng.com/news/nigeria-us-chad-seal-pact-on-counter-terrorism/ 573 Trip Advisor, “Nigeria: Crossing the Border,” n.d., http://www.tripadvisor.com/Travel-g293824s602/Nigeria:Crossing.The.Border.html © D LI F L C | 77 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Chapter 5 Assessment 1. As Nigeria’s population increases, so does its agricultural output. False Nigerian farming has not adopted modern techniques that would allow it to keep pace with population growth. 2. A typical Hausa village has a single authority structure. False Villages have separate civil and religious authorities, who occasionally come into conflict. 3. In Hausa villages, each wife has her own quarters within the compound. True Hausa Muslims may have up to four wives and each wife resides in private quarters. 4. Police checkpoints are a major source on inefficiency on Nigerian roads. False Checkpoints were a major problem in the past but, as of January 2012, they were abolished, with apparent success. 5. Identity cards are mandatory in Nigeria. False Though it is not obligatory for an adult to have an identity card, it is necessary for those seeking government services. © D LI F L C | 78 HAUSA Cultural Orientation CHAPTER 6: FAMILY LIFE Introduction The Hausa favor large, extended families, with most members tied to the male head of the household, the mai gida, by blood, marriage, or adoption. The mai gida, his sons, and other male members, are responsible for cultivating the land and feeding the extended family. His wives are responsible for cooking, housecleaning, and child care. Exchange 49: Do you have any brothers? Soldier: Do you have any brothers? Local: Yes. kanaa da enwaa mazaa? ey Exchange 50: Are these people part of your family? Soldier: Are these people part of your family? Local: No. wadanan mutanan suna chinka eyaalinka? aa-aa Wives are expected to live together harmoniously, especially since they divide the household work among themselves. When sons marry, their families join the extended family and live in dwellings attached to their father’s compound, until such time as they branch out on their own. Daughters marry young, just after puberty, and join their husband’s family. 574, 575, 576, 577, 578 Exchange 51: Are these your children? Soldier: Are these your children? Local: Yes. wadanan Yaayanka ney? ey 574 Polly Hill, Dry Grain Farming Families: Hausaland (Nigeria) and Karnataka (India) Compared (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1982), 59–60. 575 Steven Pierce, “Identity, Performance, and Secrecy: Gendered Life and the ‘Modern’ in Northern Nigeria,” Feminist Studies, Fall 2007, http://www.sss.ias.edu/files/pdfs/Pierce-IdentityPerformance.pdf 576 Luigi M. Solivetti, “Family, Marriage and Divorce in a Hausa Community: A Sociological Model,” Africa, 1994, http://www.jstor.org/stable/1160983 577 Frank A. Salamone, “Hausa Concepts of Masculinity and the ‘Yan Daudu” in African Masculinities: Men in Africa from the Late Nineteenth Century to the Present, Lahoucine Ouzgane and Robert Morrell, eds. (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2005), 77–83. 578 Polly Hill, Rural Hausa: A Village and a Setting (London: Cambridge University Press, 1972), 18–27. © D LI F L C | 79 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Courtship and Weddings The practice of arranged marriages is dying out. When an arranged marriage does occur, the daughter has some input into the selection of a husband, but ultimately she must follow her father’s wishes. 579 These days, the courtship follows stages prescribed by religion. In order to obtain consent to marry, a man visits the girl’s house, talks with her, and exchanges gifts. At some point, since marriage is a contract between the couple’s guardians, the man’s parents offer presents to the girl’s parents. By accepting, they consent to the marriage. Relatives and friends are informed of the betrothal. An imam leads a betrothal ceremony; the bride-price is paid. A month later, a wedding date is set. The wedding ceremony can last anywhere from three to eight days. 580 Exchange 52: Congratulations on your wedding! Soldier: Congratulations on your wedding! Local: We are honored you could attend. inaa tayaa ka murnar awrenka! munji dadee da ka sa modaman zuwa Exchange 53: Is this your wife? Soldier: Is this your wife? Local: Yes. wana matarka chi? ey In Hausa culture, the idea of falling in love against the family wishes is considered a highly selfish act; marriage is a contribution to the welfare of the extended family. In Hausa folklore, lovers are not heroes and heroines; usually they are tragic figures. 581 Exchange 54: I wish you both happiness. Soldier: I wish you both happiness. Local: We are honored. inaa eyo wa koo beyan paatar alheree mun godee Women are not welcome at Hausa weddings, not even the bride. The groom attends—if it is the bride’s first wedding. In a woman-only ceremony, the bride receives guests and 579 Luigi M. Solivetti, “Family, Marriage and Divorce in a Hausa Community: A Sociological Model,” Africa, 1994, http://www.jstor.org/stable/1160983 580 Toyin Falola, Culture and Customs of Nigeria (Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc., 2001). 581 Luigi M. Solivetti, “Family, Marriage and Divorce in a Hausa Community: A Sociological Model,” Africa, 1994, http://www.jstor.org/stable/1160983 © D LI F L C | 80 HAUSA Cultural Orientation gifts at her father’s home. She recites verses from the Quran. The female guests take cakes and treats home with them to spread news of the wedding. 582 Exchange 55: Are you married? Soldier: Are you married? Local: No. kanaa da awree? aa-aa If the husband discovers that his new bride is not a virgin, he may beat her, complain to her parents, and hang a broken calabash (gourd) by their house. 583 Funerals The Hausa mostly follow Muslim burial practices. When a Hausa man dies, his wife may wash his body, and vice versa. She dresses the body, covers it with a white cloth, and the body is transported on a stretcher to a place of prayer. An imam recites verses from the Quran. The corpse is buried with the head pointing to the south and the feet to the north. The face is turned east toward Mecca. After the burial, prayers are said. The burial and prayers are performed only by men. After the burial, the family receives well-wishers for three days. 584 Exchange 56: Please be strong. Soldier: Please be strong. Local: We will try. kada ka karayaa zama yooko karee When a man dies, his wives mourn for four months and ten days; any concubines or divorced wives he had children with mourn for half the period. During the mourning period, the widow can sing dirges. She sleeps on the floor to express her sense of loss. Custom prohibits her from wearing fancy clothes. A Muslim man who loses his wife will mourn her death, but he needs only to stay indoors for eight days. 585 582 Frank A. Salamone, “Islam and the Conventions of Friendship: The Example of the Muslim Hausa,” in Encyclopedia of Women & Islamic Cultures: Volume 2: Family, Law and Politics, Suad Joseph, ed. (Leiden, The Netherlands: Koninklijke Brill NV, 2005), 196–97. 583 Man Singh Das, ed., The Family in Africa (New Delhi: M.D. Publications Pvt. Ltd., 1993), 19–22. 584 Zainab Jerrett, “Funerary Practices: Sub-Saharan Africa: West Africa,” in Encyclopedia of Women & Islamic Cultures: Volume 3: Family, Body, Sexuality and Health, Suad Joseph, ed. (Leiden, The Netherlands: Koninklijke Brill NV, 2006), 125–27. 585 Zainab Jerrett, “Funerary Practices: Sub-Saharan Africa: West Africa,” in Encyclopedia of Women & Islamic Cultures: Volume 3: Family, Body, Sexuality and Health, Suad Joseph, ed. (Leiden, The Netherlands: Koninklijke Brill NV, 2006), 125–27. © D LI F L C | 81 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Exchange 57: I would like to give my condolences to you and your family. Soldier: I would like to give my inaa son inya maka jaajee, condolences to you and key da eyaalinkaa your family. Local: We are grateful. mun godee Seclusion Purdah is the Islamic practice of female seclusion. In northern Nigeria, strict enforcement of purdah dates to the Sokoto jihad in the early 19th century and the rejuvenation of Islam. Under purdah, the aim of which is to create a chaste society, married women remain indoors, out of public view. They may venture forth for special occasions such as a wedding, or to visit a doctor or relatives. In these instances, they cover themselves with a hijab, and in some cases, they are escorted by a man. 586 Usually, the precise terms of the seclusion are agreed upon before the marriage. 587 In the West, purdah is viewed as a form of oppression. In northern Nigeria, Hausa women consider it an expression of Muslim identity. Purdah also signifies high social status, because it shows that the man can afford a wife who works in the home. In poor rural Muslim households, women must work the fields; for them, purdah is an enviable luxury. 588 Status of Children, Adolescents, and Elders On Hausa family farms, historically, children must work four days a week. 589 School attendance is scheduled around their farm obligations. Far more boys than girls attend school. Education is often cut short for girls, since marriage and seclusion begins soon 586 Nicola Hugo, “Purdah: Separation of the Sexes in Northern Nigeria,” Consultancy Africa Intelligence, 4 June 2012, http://www.consultancyafrica.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=10 35:purdah-separation-of-the-sexes-in-northern-nigeria-&catid=59:gender-issuesdiscussion-papers&Itemid=267 587 Steven Pierce, “Identity, Performance, and Secrecy: Gendered Life and the ‘Modern’ in Northern Nigeria,” Feminist Studies, Fall 2007, http://www.sss.ias.edu/files/pdfs/Pierce-Identity- Performance.pdf 588 Nicola Hugo, “Purdah: Separation of the Sexes in Northern Nigeria,” Consultancy Africa Intelligence, 4 June 2012, http://www.consultancyafrica.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1035:purdahseparation-of-the-sexes-in-northern-nigeria-&catid=59:gender-issues-discussion-papers&Itemid=267 589 Adelaja Odutola Odukoya, “Child Labor in Nigeria: Historical Perspective” in The World of Child Labor: An Historical and Regional Survey, Hugh D. Hindman, ed. (Armonk, New York: M. E. Sharpe, Inc., 2009), 232. © D LI F L C | 82 HAUSA Cultural Orientation after puberty. 590 Because Western education is considered a threat to prevailing customs, Quranic schools are favored by many. Hausa women frequently engage in trading activity. Because the custom of purdah keeps them secluded within their homes, they use children as messengers and intermediaries for the trading of food, household items, or crafts. Thus children have an unusual degree of freedom. They learn to set up their own trading businesses, typically selling snacks to other children. The women may keep their profits. 591, 592, 593 Exchange 58: Does your family live here? Soldier: Does your family live here? Local: Yes. a nan eyaalinka sukey zoney? ey Because of the cultural practice of kunya, or modesty, many parents do not talk to their first child, or address their children by name. Some children grow up not knowing which of their father’s wives is their mother. Kunya also inhibits parents from instructing their children about sex. A limited form of sex education is taught in Quranic schools. But many Hausa boys, and most Hausa girls, leave school before reaching the age at which it is taught. 594 Thus Hausa children learn about sex primarily from their peers, media, and films. 595 Both boys and girls gain full adult status upon marriage, which cuts childhood short for girls, who marry just after puberty. 596, 597 Boys wait until they are older. Typically, they 590 Elsbeth Robson, “Exploring Dimensions of Sustainability in Nigeria” in Sustainability: Life Chances and Livelihoods, Michael Redclift, ed. (New York: Routledge, 2000), 134–36. 591 Loretta Elizabeth Bass, Child Labor in Sub-Saharan Africa (Boulder, Colorado: Lynne Rienner Publishers, Inc., 2004), 28–30. 592 William A. Corsaro, The Sociology of Childhood, 2nd ed. (Thousand Oaks, California: Sage Publications, Inc., 2005), 33–35. 593 Sam Lucy, “The Archaeology of Age” in The Archaeology of Identity: Approaches to Gender, Age, Status, Ethnicity and Religion (New York: Routledge, 2005), 57. 594 Mairo V. Bello, Rakiya Booth and Bilkisu Yusuf, “Knowledge and Education about Sexuality: B. Sexuality Among the Hausa” in The Continuum Complete International Encyclopedia of Sexuality, Robert T. Francoeur and Raymond J. Noonan, eds. (New York: The Continuum International Publishing Group Inc., 2004), 758–59. 595 Uwem Edimo Esiet and Foyin Oyebola, “Knowledge and Education about Sexuality: A. Sexuality Education” in The Continuum Complete International Encyclopedia of Sexuality, Robert T. Francoeur and Raymond J. Noonan, eds. (New York: The Continuum International Publishing Group Inc., 2004), 757–58. 596 Frank A. Salamone, “Hausa Concepts of Masculinity and the ‘Yan Daudu” in African Masculinities: Men in Africa from the Late Nineteenth Century to the Present, Lahoucine Ouzgane and Robert Morrell, eds. (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2005), 77. © D LI F L C | 83 HAUSA Cultural Orientation follow their fathers and learn the business of farming. They marry when their economic status is sufficient to support a wife. 598 In Hausa society, the elderly are revered for their experience and wisdom, and they are treated with respect, deference, and obedience. 599 They serve as an advisory group on village matters. 600 Marriage and Divorce Marriage Among the Hausa, marriage is an important institution, which virtually every person undertakes. Marriage is a manifestation of the needs of the greater extended family, not a reflection of the couple’s desire. 601Women typically marry just after puberty, when they are 12 to 14 years old. Large families are an economic necessity, and a woman’s birthing capacity a resource to be fully utilized. Early marriage for girls usually results their dropping out of school. 602 Men first marry at an older age, usually in their twenties, when they have accumulated enough capital to afford the bride-price paid the betrothed’s family. Only upon marrying does a man achieve full adult status. Most Hausa men have multiple wives. A man may have up to four, in accordance with the Quran, but he must be able to financially support his wives equally. Large families, made possible by multiple wives, increase the pool of laborers for the family farm. 603 597 Steven Pierce, “Identity, Performance, and Secrecy: Gendered Life and the ‘Modern’ in Northern Nigeria,” Feminist Studies, Fall 2007, http://www.sss.ias.edu/files/pdfs/Pierce-Identity- Performance.pdf 598 Frank A. Salamone, “Hausa Concepts of Masculinity and the ‘Yan Daudu” in African Masculinities: Men in Africa from the Late Nineteenth Century to the Present, Lahoucine Ouzgane and Robert Morrell, eds. (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2005), 77. 599 Sam Lucy, “The Archaeology of Age” in The Archaeology of Identity: Approaches to Gender, Age, Status, Ethnicity and Religion (New York: Routledge, 2005), 57. 600 Wilbur H. Watson, Stress and Old Age (New Brunswick, New Jersey, 1980), 2. 601 Steven Pierce, “Identity, Performance, and Secrecy: Gendered Life and the ‘Modern’ in Northern Nigeria,” Feminist Studies, Fall 2007, http://www.sss.ias.edu/files/pdfs/Pierce-Identity- Performance.pdf 602 British Council, “Gender in Nigeria: Report 2012: Improving the Lives of Girls and Women in Nigeria,” 2012, http://www.britishcouncil.org/africa-ng-gender-report-2012-full.pdf 603 Steven Pierce, “Identity, Performance, and Secrecy: Gendered Life and the ‘Modern’ in Northern Nigeria,” Feminist Studies, Fall 2007, http://www.sss.ias.edu/files/pdfs/Pierce-Identity-Performance.pdf © D LI F L C | 84 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Exchange 59: Is this your entire family? Soldier: Is this your entire family? Local: Yes. wanan sunee eyakachin eyaalinkaa bakey daya? ey Husbands and wives limit daily interactions. Husbands rarely enter their wives’ quarters. Husbands and wives avoid visible intimacy. Wives do not address their husbands by name. They do not eat with their husbands. The Hausa view married life as two people holding complementary positions. The distance between the husband and his wives is thought to help manage the complexities of polygamous life. Any favoritism displayed might lead to household discord. 604, 605 Notwithstanding the above generalizations, Hausa marriages vary in accordance with the habits and personalities of the individuals involved. 606 Divorce Given the strict moral codes the Hausa live under, one might expect their marriages to last until “till death do them part.” On the contrary, divorce is a surprisingly common event in Hausa society. Between 30 and 50% of marriages end in divorce. The average Hausa woman may be married up to four times before menopause, after which her value as a wife greatly diminishes; for a man, the number of marriages may be higher. 607 The prevalence of divorce reflects the complexities of polygamy. 608 An unwanted or unhappy wife can be removed from the extended family in service of the greater harmony. 609 Under Islamic law, divorce is a simple procedure that only the man can initiate. He does this by repeating an Arabic formula in the presence of witnesses. The strategy for a woman wanting divorce is to provoke the husband into taking that step. 610 Under other circumstances, the man must make a written statement listing cause, whereas the wife must show cause in court. Valid causes may include physical abuse, refusal of 604 Frank A. Salamone, “Islam and the Conventions of Friendship: The Example of the Muslim Hausa,” in Encyclopedia of Women & Islamic Cultures: Volume 2: Family, Law and Politics, Suad Joseph, ed. (Leiden, The Netherlands: Koninklijke Brill NV, 2005), 196–97. 605 Luigi M. Solivetti, “Family, Marriage and Divorce in a Hausa Community: A Sociological Model,” Africa, 1994, http://www.jstor.org/stable/1160983 606 Steven Pierce, “Identity, Performance, and Secrecy: Gendered Life and the ‘Modern’ in Northern Nigeria,” Feminist Studies, Fall 2007, http://www.sss.ias.edu/files/pdfs/Pierce-Identity-Performance.pdf 607 Man Singh Das, ed., The Family in Africa (New Delhi: M.D. Publications Pvt. Ltd., 1993). 608 Luigi M. Solivetti, “Family, Marriage and Divorce in a Hausa Community: A Sociological Model,” Africa, 1994, http://www.jstor.org/stable/1160983 609 Steven Pierce, “Identity, Performance, and Secrecy: Gendered Life and the ‘Modern’ in Northern Nigeria,” Feminist Studies, Fall 2007, http://www.sss.ias.edu/files/pdfs/Pierce-Identity-Performance.pdf 610 Steven Pierce, “Identity, Performance, and Secrecy: Gendered Life and the ‘Modern’ in Northern Nigeria,” Feminist Studies, Fall 2007, http://www.sss.ias.edu/files/pdfs/Pierce-Identity-Performance.pdf © D LI F L C | 85 HAUSA Cultural Orientation companionship, prolonged absence, failure to support, lack of religiousness, leprosy, impotence, or madness. Whatever the cause, child custody remains the prerogative of the father’s family, as long as the children can do without their mother’s care. 611 Tradition dictates divorcées (or widows) who are still fertile should marry again. If they resist, their peers regard them as prostitutes. 612 Naming Conventions Hausa children receive their names seven days after birth in a special naming ceremony, the Muslim bikin suna. Men convene at the mosque in the early morning. The baby receives its name, a ram is slaughtered, and prayers are said. 613 Later in the morning, women convene for a loud and festive party that lasts the rest of the day. There is music, and women dance with each other. Men perform ceremonial drumming, despite the usual rules of female seclusion (purdah). 614 Hausa names are usually Arabic. Sometimes they indicate the gender of the child and the day of birth: Lantana (Monday child, female); Danjuma (Friday child, male). They may be Biblical: Musa (Moses); Yusef (Joseph); Adamu (Adam). Names may refer to Islam: Khadijah (wife of prophet Muhammad); Bilal (companion of the prophet). They may describe some quality of character: Faisal (decisive); Nabilah (noble). 615 611 Luigi M. Solivetti, “Family, Marriage and Divorce in a Hausa Community: A Sociological Model,” Africa, 1994, http://www.jstor.org/stable/1160983 612 Luigi M. Solivetti, “Family, Marriage and Divorce in a Hausa Community: A Sociological Model,” Africa, 1994, http://www.jstor.org/stable/1160983 613 Philip J. Jaggar, Hausa (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2001), 36. 614 Frank A. Salamone, “Islam and the Conventions of Friendship: The Example of the Muslim Hausa,” in Encyclopedia of Women & Islamic Cultures: Volume 2: Family, Law and Politics, Suad Joseph, ed. (Leiden, The Netherlands: Koninklijke Brill NV, 2005), 196–97. 615 Motherland Nigeria, “Names and Origins: Hausa Names,” n.d., http://www.motherlandnigeria.com/names.html#Hausa © D LI F L C | 86 HAUSA Cultural Orientation Chapter 6 Assessment 1. The Hausa favor large, extended families. True Extended families include parents, adult children, their spouses, grandchildren, and other relatives; all live under one roof or within one compound. 2. Nigerian law prevents women from marrying before age 15. False Most girls marry just after puberty, when they are 12 to 14 years old. 3. Divorce is rare in Hausa society. False Divorce is commonplace. It is thought to help manage the complexities of polygamous life. 4. Most Hausa children receive names that are African in origin. False Most Hausa names are Arabic in origin; indigenous names are seldom given. 5. Hausa children have an unusual degree of freedom. True Secluded Hausa women frequently engage in trading activities; they need the children of their households to act as intermediaries and messengers. © D LI F L C | 87 HAUSA Cultural Orientation FINAL ASSESSMENT 1. The discovery of oil in the Niger Delta has made the native Ijaw the country’s wealthiest ethnic group. True / False 2. The 19th-century Sokoto Caliphate came about when the Hausa defeated the minority Fulani in a jihad. True / False 3. Nollywood, Nigeria’s largest film industry, has sparked an explosion in new theater construction. True / False 4. The unification of Nigeria as a single British colony resulted in the immediate abolition of slavery. True / False 5. Hausaland is home to the largest university in sub-Saharan Africa. True / False 6. Non-Muslim Hausa are referred to as Maguzawa. True / False 7. Most of Nigeria’s Christians are Roman Catholic. True / False 8. Nigerians, regardless of their religion, are quite religious. True / False 9. Hausa Muslims generally do not practice purdah, segregation of the sexes True / False 10. Violence between the Christians and Muslims in Nigeria is subsiding. True / False 11. Gifts should always be wrapped. True / False 12. The Hausa enjoy making small talk during meals. True / False © D LI F L C | 88 HAUSA Cultural Orientation 13. For the Hausa, evening dinner is the main meal of the day. True / False 14. Titles followed by first names should normally be used to address Hausa individuals. True / False 15. The Hausa prefer to wear their traditional clothing rather than Western-style clothing. True / False 16. The curriculum in the Quranic schools essentially parallels the national curriculum. True / False 17. It is easy to exchange currency at banks in Nigeria. True / False 18. Public transportation is generally regarded as unsafe and should be avoided. True / False 19. Native Nigerians rarely give beggars money or food. True / False 20. Terrorist activities carried out by the Boko Haram represent a serious safety concern in the cities of northern Nigeria. True / False 21. Nigerian farmers have made significant increases in agricultural output through the use of fertilizer. True / False 22. Nigeria imports USD 8 billion in food annually. True / False 23. Quranic schools in the north tailor their curriculum for agricultural occupations. True / False 24. In 2009, Nigeria became the final nation to eradicate endemic polio. True / False 25. In northern Nigeria, the bicycle is the preferred form of transportation. True / False © D LI F L C | 89 HAUSA Cultural Orientation 26. Weddings are the only events at which Hausa men and women mingle. True / False 27. For Hausa children, farmwork takes priority over school. True / False 28. Falling in love is highly regarded in Hausa society. True / False 29. Most Hausa women view their strictly secluded lives as a form of oppression. True / False 30. Many Hausa women do not pursue education because of early marriage. True / False © D LI F L C | 90 HAUSA Cultural Orientation FURTHER READING Lemieux, Diane. Nigeria-Culture Smart!: The Essential Guide to Customs and Culture. Minneapolis: Kuperard, 2011. Salamone, Frank A. The Hausa of Nigeria. Landam, MD: University Press of America, 2010. Shaihua, Maalam. Hausa Folk-Lore: Customs, Proverbs, Etc. Charleston, SC: Forgotten Books, 2007. Forafricanart.com. “Yoruba: Nigeria.” 2006. http://www.forafricanart.com/Yoruba_ep_35-1.html Williams, Richard. “A Little Culture and Food Tradition of the Hausa of Nigeria.” 31 December 2008. http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/1317414/a_little_culture_and_food_tra dition.html?cat=22 PowerHouseMuseum.com. Hausa Man’s Embroidered Tunic, West Africa.” ND http://www.powerhousemuseum.com/collection/database/?irn=198484 Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada. “Nigeria: Levirate Marriage Practices among the Yoruba, Igbo and Hausa-Fulani; Consequences for a Man or Woman who Refuses to Participate in the Marriage; Availability of State Protection.” 16 March 2006. http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/topic,463af2212,469f2ea82,45f1478811,0.html © D LI F L C | 91