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Nnamdi Azikiwe

Nnamdi Benjamin Azikiwe, GCFR PC (16 November 1904 – 11 May 1996),[2][3] usually referred to as "Zik", was a Nigerian statesman and political leader who served as the first President of Nigeria from 1963 to 1966.[4] Considered a driving force behind the nation's independence, he came to be known as the "father of Nigerian Nationalism".[5][6][7]

Nnamdi Azikiwe
Nnamdi Azikiwe circa 1963
1st President of Nigeria
In office
1 October 1963 – 16 January 1966
Prime MinisterSir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa
Senate PresidentNwafor Orizu
Preceded byPosition established (Elizabeth II
(as Queen of Nigeria)
Succeeded byJohnson Aguiyi-Ironsi
3rd Governor-General of Nigeria
In office
16 November 1960 – 1 October 1963
MonarchElizabeth II
Preceded byJames Robertson
Succeeded byPosition abolished
1st President of the Senate of Nigeria
In office
1 January 1960 – 1 October 1960
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byDennis Osadebay
Premier of Eastern Nigeria
In office
1954–1959
Preceded byEyo Ita
Succeeded byMichael Okpara
Personal details
Born(1904-11-16)16 November 1904
Zungeru, Northern Nigeria Protectorate
Died11 May 1996(1996-05-11) (aged 91)
Enugu, Enugu State, Nigeria
Political party
Spouses
Children
7
  • Chukwuma Azikiwe
  • Emeka A. Azikiwe
  • Nwachukwu Azikiwe
  • Ngozi Azikiwe
  • Molokwu Azikiwe
  • Uwakwe Azikiwe
  • Jayzik Azikiwe
Alma mater

Born to Igbo parents from Anambra State, Eastern Nigeria in Zungeru in present-day Niger State, as a young boy he learned to speak Hausa (the main indigenous language of the Northern Region).[8] Azikiwe was later sent to live with his aunt and grandmother in Onitsha (his parental homeland), where he learned the Igbo language.[citation needed] A stay in Lagos exposed him to the Yoruba language; by the time he was in college, he had been exposed to different Nigerian cultures and spoke three languages (an asset as president).[9]

Azikiwe travelled to the United States where he was known as Ben Azikiwe and attended Storer College, Columbia University, the University of Pennsylvania and Howard University. He contacted colonial authorities with a request to represent Nigeria at the Los Angeles Olympics.[10] He returned to Africa in 1934, where he began work as a journalist in the Gold Coast.[3] In British West Africa, he advocated Nigerian and African nationalism as a journalist and a political leader.[11][12]

Early life and education

Azikiwe was born on 16 November 1904 in Zungeru, Northern Nigeria. His first name means "my father is alive" in the Igbo language, as his parents were Igbo. His father, Obed-Edom Chukwuemeka Azikiwe[13](1879–3 March 1958), a native of Onitsha, was a clerk in the British Administration of Nigeria,[14] who traveled extensively as part of his job. Azikiwe's mother was Rachel Chinwe Ogbenyeanu (Aghadiuno) Azikiwe (1883–January 1958),[15] who was sometimes called Nwanonaku and was the third daughter of Aghadiuno Ajie.[13][16] Her family descended from a royal family in Onitsha, and her paternal great-grandfather was Obi (Ugogwu) Anazenwu.[16] Azikiwe had one sibling, a sister, named Cecilia Eziamaka Arinze.[16]

As a young boy, Azikiwe spoke Hausa, the regional language.[17] His father, concerned about his son's fluency in Hausa and not Igbo, sent him to Onitsha in 1912 to live with his paternal grandmother and aunt to learn the Igbo language and culture.[18] In Onitsha, Azikiwe attended Holy Trinity School (a Roman Catholic mission school) and Christ Church School (an Anglican primary school).[19] In 1914, while his father was working in Lagos, Azikiwe was bitten by a dog; this prompted his worried father to ask him to come to Lagos to heal and to attend school in the city.[20] He then attended Wesleyan Boys' High School, now known as Methodist Boys’ High School, Broad Street Lagos.[21] His father was sent to Kaduna two years later, and Azikiwe briefly lived with a relative who was married to a Muslim from Sierra Leone.[22] In 1918, he was back in Onitsha and finished his secondary education at CMS Central School.[23] Azikiwe then worked at the school as a student-teacher,[20] supporting his mother with his earnings.[22] In 1920, his father was posted back to southern Nigeria in the southeastern city of Calabar. Azikiwe joined his father in Calabar, beginning tertiary education at the Hope Waddell Training College.[24] He was introduced to the teachings of Marcus Garvey,[9] Garveyism, which became an important part of his nationalistic rhetoric.

After attending Hope Waddell,[25] Azikiwe was transferred to Methodist Boys' High School in Lagos and befriended classmates from old Lagos families such as George Shyngle, Francis Cole and Ade Williams (a son of the Akarigbo of Remo). These connections were later beneficial to his political career in Lagos.[20] Azikiwe heard a lecture by James Aggrey, an educator who believed that Africans should receive a college education abroad and return to effect change.[26] After the lecture, Aggrey gave the young Azikiwe a list of schools accepting black students in America.[22] After completing his secondary education, Azikiwe applied to the colonial service and was accepted as a clerk in the' treasury department. His time in the colonial service exposed him to racial bias in the colonial government.[27] Determined to travel abroad for further education, Azikiwe applied to universities in the U.S. He was admitted by Storer College, contingent on his finding a way to America.[28] To reach America, he contacted a seaman and made a deal with him to become a stowaway.[29] However, one of his friends on the ship became ill and they were advised to disembark in Sekondi. In Ghana, Azikiwe worked as a police officer; his mother visited, and asked him to return to Nigeria. He returned, and his father was willing to sponsor his trip to America.[30]

Azikiwe attended Storer College's two-year preparatory school in Harpers Ferry, West Virginia. To fund his living expenses and tuition, he worked a number of menial jobs before enrolling in Howard University in Washington, D.C. in 1927 to obtain a bachelor's degree in political science. In 1929, he transferred from Howard University to Lincoln University to complete his undergraduate studies and graduated in 1930 with a BA in political science.[31][32] Azikwe took courses with Alain Locke.[33] Azikiwe was a member of Phi Beta Sigma.[34] He then enrolled at Lincoln University in Pennsylvania and in the University of Pennsylvania simultaneously in 1930, receiving a master's degree in religion from Lincoln University and a master's degree in anthropology from the University of Pennsylvania in 1932.[35][36] Azikiwe became a graduate-student instructor in the history and political-science departments at Lincoln University, where he created a course in African history.[37] He was a candidate for a doctoral degree at Columbia University before returning to Nigeria in 1934.[38] Azikiwe's doctoral research focused on Liberia in world politics, and his research paper was published by A. H. Stockwell in 1934. During his time in America, he was a columnist for the Baltimore Afro-American, Philadelphia Tribune and the Associated Negro Press.[39] Azikiwe was influenced by the ideals of the African-American press, Garveyism and pan-Africanism.[40]

Newspaper career

Personally, I believe the European has a god in whom he believes and whom he is representing in his churches all over Africa. He believes in the god whose name is spelt Deceit. He believes in the god whose law is "Ye strong, you must weaken the weak". Ye "civilised" Europeans, you must "civilise" the "barbarous" Africans with machine guns. Ye "Christian" Europeans, you must "Christianise" the "pagan" Africans with bombs, poison gases, etc.

— Excerpt from May 1936 African Morning Post article which led to sedition trial[41]

He applied as a foreign-service official for Liberia, but was rejected because he was not a native of the country.[42] By 1934, when Azikiwe returned to Lagos, he was well-known and viewed as a public figure by some members of the Lagos and Igbo community.[43] He was welcomed home by a number of people, as his writings in America evidently reached Nigeria.[44] In Nigeria, Azikiwe's initial goal was to obtain a position commensurate with his education; after several unsuccessful applications (including for a teaching post at King's College), he accepted an offer from Ghanaian businessman Alfred Ocansey to become founding editor of the African Morning Post (a new daily newspaper in Accra, Ghana).[29][45] He was given a free hand to run the newspaper, and recruited many of its original staff.[20] Azikiwe wrote "The Inside Stuff by Zik", a column in which he preached radical nationalism and black pride which raised some alarm in colonial circles.[46] As editor, he promoted a pro-African nationalist agenda.[29] Yuri Smertin described his writing there: "In his passionately denunciatory articles and public statements he censured the existing colonial order: the restrictions on the African's right to express their opinions, and racial discrimination.[47] He also criticized those Africans who belonged to the 'elite' of colonial society and favoured retaining the existing order, as they regarded it as the basis of their well-being."[48] During Azikiwe's stay in Accra he advanced his New Africa philosophy later explored in his book, Renascent Africa.[49] The philosophic ideal is a state where Africans would be divorced from ethnic affiliations and traditional authorities and transformed by five philosophical pillars: spiritual balance, social regeneration, economic determinism, mental emancipation and risorgimento nationalism. Azikiwe did not shy away from Gold Coast politics, and the paper supported the local Mambii party.[37]

The Post published a 15 May 1936 article, "Has the African a God?" by I. T. A. Wallace-Johnson, and Azikiwe (as editor) was tried for sedition.[29] He was originally found guilty and sentenced to six months in prison, but his conviction was overturned on appeal.[50] Azikiwe returned to Lagos in 1937 and founded the West African Pilot, a newspaper which he used to promote nationalism in Nigeria. In addition to the Pilot, his Zik Group established newspapers in politically- and economically important cities throughout the country.[51] The group's flagship newspaper was the West African Pilot, which used Dante Alighieri's "Show the light and the people will find the way" as its motto. Other publications were the Southern Nigeria Defender from Warri (later Ibadan), the Eastern Guardian (founded in 1940 and published in Port Harcourt), and the Nigerian Spokesman in Onitsha.[52] In 1944, the group acquired Dusé Mohamed Ali's The Comet. Azikiwe's newspaper venture was a business and political tool.[53] The Pilot focused less on advertising than on circulation, largely because expatriate firms dominated the Nigerian economy.[54] Many of Azikiwe's newspapers emphasized sensationalism and human-interest stories; the Pilot introduced sports coverage and a women's section, increasing coverage of Nigerian events compared with the competing Daily Times (which emphasized expatriate and foreign-news-service stories).[55] The Pilot's initial run was 6,000 copies daily; at its peak in 1950, it was printing over 20,000 copies.[56] Azikiwe founded other business ventures (such as the African Continental Bank and the Penny Restaurant) at this time, and used his newspapers to advertise them.[57]

Before World War II, the West African Pilot [58] was seen as a paper trying to build a circulation base rather than overtly radical. The paper's editorials and political coverage focused on injustice to Africans, criticism of the colonial administration and support for the ideas of the educated elites in Lagos.[57] However, by 1940 a gradual change occurred. As he did in the African Morning Post, Azikiwe began writing a column ("Inside Stuff") in which he sometimes tried to raise political consciousness.[59] Pilot editorials called for African independence, particularly after the rise of the Indian independence movement.[60] Although the paper supported Great Britain during the war, it criticized austerity measures such as price controls and wage ceilings.[61] In 1943 the British Council sponsored eight West African editors (including Azikiwe), and he and six other editors used the opportunity to raise awareness of possible political independence. The journalists signed a memorandum calling for gradual socio-political reforms, including abrogation of the crown colony system, regional representation and independence for British West African colonies by 1958 or 1960.[62] The memorandum was ignored by the colonial office, increasing Azikiwe's militancy.[63]

He had a controlling interest in over 12 daily, African-run newspapers. Azikiwe's articles on African nationalism, black pride and empowerment dismayed many colonialist politicians and benefited many marginalized Africans.[64] East African newspapers generally published in Swahili, with the exception of newsletters such as the East African Standard. Azikiwe revolutionized the West African newspaper industry, demonstrating that English-language journalism could be successful. By 1950, the five leading African-run newspapers in the Eastern Region (including the Nigerian Daily Times) were outsold by the Pilot. On 8 July 1945, the Nigerian government banned Azikiwe's West African Pilot and Daily Comet for misrepresenting information about a general strike.[65] Although Azikiwe acknowledged this, he continued publishing articles about the strike in the Guardian (his Port Harcourt newsletter). He led a 1945 general strike, and was the premier of East Nigeria from 1954 to 1959.[66] By the 1960s, after Nigerian independence, the national West African Pilot was particularly influential in the east. Azikiwe took particular aim at political groups which advocated exclusion. He was criticized by a Yoruba faction for using his newspaper to suppress opposition to his views. At Azikiwe's death, The New York Times said that he "towered over the affairs of Africa's most populous nation, attaining the rare status of a truly national hero who came to be admired across the regional and ethnic lines dividing his country."[67]

Political career

Azikiwe became active in the Nigerian Youth Movement (NYM), the country's first nationalist organization.[68] Although he supported Samuel Akisanya as the NYM candidate for a vacant seat in the Legislative Council in 1941, the NYM executive council selected Ernest Ikoli.[69]

Azikiwe resigned from the NYM, accusing the majority Yoruba leadership of discriminating against the Ijebu-Yoruba members and Igbos. Some Ijebu members followed him, splitting the movement along ethnic lines.[70] He entered politics, co-founding the National Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons (NCNC) with Herbert Macaulay in 1944. Azikiwe became the council's secretary-general in 1946.[71]

Conspiracy allegations and Zikist movement

As a result of Azikiwe's support for a general strike in June 1945 and his attacks on the colonial government, publication of the West African Pilot was suspended on 8 July of that year.[72] He praised the striking workers and their leader, Michael Imoudu, accusing the colonial government of exploiting the working class.[73] In August, the newspaper was allowed to resume publication.[74] During the strike, Azikiwe raised the alarm about an assassination plot by unknown individuals working on behalf of the colonial government.[73] His basis for the allegation was a wireless message intercepted by a Pilot reporter.[55] After receiving the intercepted message, Azikiwe went into hiding in Onitsha. The Pilot published sympathetic editorials during his absence, and many Nigerians believed the assassination story.[75][76] Azikiwe's popularity, and his newspaper circulation, increased during this period. The allegations were doubted by some Nigerians, who believed that he made them up to raise his profile.[77] The skeptics were primarily Yoruba politicians from the Nigerian Youth Movement, creating a rift between the factions and a press war between Azikiwe's Pilot and the NYM's Daily Service.[citation needed]

A militant youth movement, led by Osita Agwuna, Raji Abdalla, Kolawole Balogun, M. C. K. Ajuluchukwu and Abiodun Aloba, was established in 1946 to defend Azikiwe's life and his ideals of self-government.[73] Inspired by his writings and Nwafor Orizu's Zikism philosophy, members of the movement soon began advocating positive, militant action to bring about self-government.[78] Calls for action included strikes, study of military science by Nigerian students overseas, and a boycott of foreign products.[79] Azikiwe did not publicly defend the movement, which was banned in 1951 after a failed attempt to kill a colonial secretary.[citation needed]

Opposition to Richards constitution

In 1945, British governor Arthur Richards presented proposals for a revision of the Clifford constitution of 1922.[60] Included in the proposal was an increase in the number of nominated African members to the Legislative Council. However, the changes were opposed by nationalists such as Azikiwe.[64] NCNC politicians opposed unilateral decisions made by Arthur Richards and a constitutional provision allowing only four elected African members; the rest would be nominated candidates.[80] The nominated African candidates were loyal to the colonial government, and would not aggressively seek self-government. Another basis of opposition was little input for the advancement of Africans to senior civil-service positions. The NCNC prepared to argue its case to the new Labour government of Clement Attlee in Britain.[81] A tour of the country was begun to raise awareness of the party's concerns and to raise money for the UK protest.[82] NCNC president Herbert Macaulay died during the tour, and Azikiwe assumed leadership of the party. He led the delegation to London and, in preparation for the trip, traveled to the US to seek sympathy for the party's case. Azikiwe met Eleanor Roosevelt at Hyde Park, and spoke about the "emancipation of Nigeria from political thralldom, economic insecurity and social disabilities".[83] The UK delegation included Azikiwe, Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti, Zanna Dipcharima, Abubakar Olorunimbe, P. M. Kale, Adeleke Adedoyin and Nyong Essien.[84][85] They visited the Fabian Society's Colonial Bureau, the Labor Imperial Committee and the West African Students' Union to raise awareness of its proposals for amendments to the 1922 constitution. Included in the NCNC proposals was consultation with Africans about changes to the Nigerian constitution, more power to the regional House of Assemblies and limiting the powers of the central Legislative Council to defense, currency and foreign affairs.[86] The delegation submitted its proposals to the colonial secretary, but little was done to change to Richards' proposals. The Richards constitution took effect in 1947, and Azikiwe contested one of the Lagos seats to delay its implementation.[citation needed]

1950–1953

Under the Richards constitution, Azikiwe was elected to the Legislative Council in a Lagos municipal election from the National Democratic Party (an NCNC subsidiary).[87] He and the party representative did not attend the first session of the council, and agitation for changes to the Richards constitution led to the Macpherson constitution.[64] The Macpherson constitution took effect in 1951 and, like the Richards constitution, called for elections to the regional House of Assembly. Azikiwe opposed the changes, and contested for the chance to change the new constitution. Staggered elections were held from August to December 1951.[88] In the Western Region (where Azikiwe stood), two parties were dominant: Azikiwe's NCNC and the Action Group. Elections for the Western Regional Assembly were held in September and December 1951 because the constitution allowed an electoral college to choose members of the national legislature; an Action Group majority in the house might prevent Azikiwe from going to the House of Representatives.[89] He won a regional assembly seat from Lagos, but the opposition party claimed a majority in the House of Assembly and Azikiwe did not represent Lagos in the federal House of Representatives. In 1951, he became leader of the Opposition to the government of Obafemi Awolowo in the Western Region's House of Assembly. Azikiwe's non-selection to the national assembly caused chaos in the west.[90] An agreement by elected NCNC members from Lagos to step down for Azikiwe if he was not nominated broke down. Azikiwe blamed the constitution, and wanted changes made. The NCNC (which dominated the Eastern Region) agreed, and committed to amending the constitution.[91]

Azikiwe moved to the Eastern Region in 1952,[92][93] and the NCNC-dominated regional assembly made proposals to accommodate him. Although the party's regional and central ministers were asked to resign in a cabinet reshuffle, most ignored the request.[94] The regional assembly then passed a vote of no confidence on the ministers, and appropriation bills sent to the ministry were rejected.[72] This created an impasse in the region, and the lieutenant governor dissolved the regional house. A new election returned Azikiwe as a member of the Eastern Assembly. He was selected as Chief Minister, and became premier of Nigeria's Eastern Region in 1954 when it became a federating unit.[citation needed]

Presidency and later life

Azikiwe became governor-general on 16 November 1960, with Abubakar Tafawa Balewa as prime minister, and became the first Nigerian named to the Privy Council of the United Kingdom.[25] When Nigeria became a republic in 1963, he was its first president. In both posts, Azikiwe's role was largely ceremonial.[95]

He and his civilian colleagues were removed from office in the 15 January 1966 military coup, and he was the most prominent politician to avoid assassination after the coup. Azikiwe was a spokesman for Biafra and advised its leader, Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, during the Biafran War (1967–1970).[96] He switched his allegiance back to Nigeria during the war, and appealed to Ojukwu to end the war in pamphlets and interviews. The New York Times said about his politics, "Throughout his life, Dr. Azikiwe's alliance with northerners put him at odds with Obafemi Awolowo, a socialist-inclined leader of the Yoruba, the country's other important southern group."[67]

After the war, Azikiwe was chancellor of the University of Lagos from 1972 to 1976. He joined the Nigerian People's Party in 1978, making unsuccessful bids for the presidency in 1979 and 1983. He left politics involuntarily after the 31 December 1983 military coup.

Azikiwe died aged 91 on 11 May 1996 at the University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital in Enugu after a long illness, and is buried in his native Onitsha.[97]

Honours

Places named after Azikiwe include:

His picture appears on Nigeria's 500 banknote since 2001.[99]

Achievements

Azikiwe was inducted into the Agbalanze society of Onitsha as Nnanyelugo in 1946, a recognition for Onitsha men with significant accomplishments. In 1962, he became a second-rank red cap chieftain (Ndichie Okwa) as the Oziziani Obi.[96] Chief Azikiwe was installed as the Owelle-Osowa-Anya of Onitsha in 1972, making him a first-rank hereditary red cap nobleman (Ndichie Ume) in the Igbo branch of the Nigerian chieftaincy system.[92]

He established the University of Nigeria, Nsukka in 1960,[100] and Queen Elizabeth II appointed him to the Privy Council of the United Kingdom.[101] He was made Grand Commander of the Federal Republic (GCFR), Nigeria's highest national honour, in 1980.[citation needed]

Sports

Azikiwe competed in boxing, athletics, swimming, football and tennis.[31]

Football was brought to Nigeria by the British as they colonized Africa.[102] However, any leagues that were formed were segregated. Nnamdi saw this as an injustice and he emerged as a leader in terms of connection sports and politics at the end of the colonial period.[103] In 1934 Zik was denied the right to compete in a track and field event because Nigeria was not allowed to participate. This happened another time because of his Igbo background, and Zik had decided that enough was enough, and wanted to create his own club. Nnamdi founded Zik's Athletic Club (ZAC) which would open its doors to sportsmen and women of all races, nationalities, tribes, and classes of Nigeria.[104] In 1942 the club went on to win both the Lagos League and the War Memorial Cup. After these victories, Nnamdi opened up more ZAC branches throughout Nigeria. During the war years ZAC would go on tours.[105] They would usually play a match in front of a couple thousand fans and after the match, they would speak out about the injustices that was brought about by the British colonization. ZAC matches would happen all over the country, and it made the people of Nigeria feel a sense of unity and nationalism that would help them fight for freedom.[106] In 1949 some ZAC players participated in a tour of England. On the return from the tour they stopped in Freetown, Sierra Leone, and Nigeria defeated the locals by 2 goals. This victory was more than a decade before Nigerian independence, but it marked the birth of Nigeria's National Team.[107] Finally, after years of struggle, in 1959 the last British official left the NFA, and on 22 August 1960, a few weeks prior to its formal independence, Nigeria joined the world football body of FIFA.[108] None of this would have been possible if it was not for Nnamdi Azikiwe. He united Nigeria through sport and brought about a sense of nationalism that was referred to as ‘Nigerian-ness’.[109][110]

Works

  • Zik (1961)
  • My Odyssey: An Autobiography (1971)
  • Renascent Africa (1973)
  • Liberia in World Politics (1931)
  • One Hundred Quotable Quotes and Poems of the Rt. Hon. Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe (1966). ISBN 978-2736-09-0
  • Political Blueprint for Nigeria (1943)
  • Economic Reconstruction of Nigeria (1943)
  • Zik: A Selection of the Speeches of Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe (1961)
  • Assassination Story: True or False? (1946)
  • Before Us Lies the Open Grave (1947)
  • The Future of Pan-Africanism (1961)
  • The Realities of African Unity (1965)
  • Origins of the Nigerian Civil War (1969)
  • I Believe in One Nigeria (1969)
  • Peace Proposals for Ending the Nigerian Civil War (1969)
  • Dialogue on a New Capital for Nigeria (1974)
  • Creation of More States in Nigeria, A Political Analysis (1974)
  • Democracy with Military Vigilance (1974)
  • Reorientation of Nigerian Ideologies: lecture on 9 December 1976, on the eve of the launching of the UNN Endowment Fund (1976)
  • Our Struggle for Freedom; Onitsha Market Crisis (1976)
  • Let Us Forgive Our Children. An appeal to the leaders and people of Onitsha during the market crisis (1976)
  • A Collection of Poems (1977)
  • Civil War Soliloquies: More Collection of Poems (1977)
  • Themes in African Social and Political Thought (1978)
  • Restoration of Nigerian Democracy (1978)
  • Matchless Past Performance: My Reply to Chief Awolowo's Challenge (1979)
  • A Matter of Conscience (1979)
  • Ideology for Nigeria: Capitalism, Socialism or Welfarism? (1980)
  • Breach of Trust by the NPN (1983)
  • History Will Vindicate The Just (1983)

See also

References

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Notes

  • Orji, John (2013). "Chapter 2: The Triumph of Knowledge". In Chuku, Gloria (ed.). The Igbo Intellectual Tradition: Creative Conflict in African and African diasporic thought. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 67–89.
  • Tonkin, Elizabeth (1990). "Chapter 2: Zik's Story". In Chuku, P. F. de Moraes (ed.). SelfAssertion and Brokerage: Early Cultural Nationalism in West Africa. Birmingham University African Studies Series. pp. 35–45.
  • Idemili, Samuel Okafor (1980). The West African Pilot and the Movement for Nigerian Nationalism, 1937–1960 (Thesis). University of Wisconsin-Madison.
  • Olusanya, Gabriel (1964). The impact of the Second World War on Nigeria's political evolution (PhD Thesis). University of Toronto.

Further reading

  • Igwe, Agbafor (1992). Nnamdi Azikiwe: The Philosopher of Our Time. Enugu, Nigeria: Fourth Dimension Publisher. ISBN 978-978-156-030-9.
  • Ikeotuonye, Vincent (1961). Zik of New Africa. P.R. Macmillan.
  • Jones-Quartey, K. A. B. (1965). A Life of Azikiwe. Baltimore: Penguin.
  • Olisa, Michael S. O.; M., Ikejiani-Clark, eds. (1989). Azikiwe and the African Revolution. Onitsha, Nigeria: Africana-FEP. ISBN 978-978-175-223-0.
  • Ugowe, C. O. O. (2000). Eminent Nigerians of the Twentieth Century. Lagos: Hugo Books.

External links

Political offices
Preceded by
Position created
Senate President of Nigeria
1960–1960
Succeeded by
Preceded by Governor-General of Nigeria
1960–1963
Succeeded by
Position abolished
Preceded by President of Nigeria
1963–1966
Succeeded by

nnamdi, azikiwe, azikiwe, redirect, here, other, uses, disambiguation, disambiguation, nnamdi, benjamin, azikiwe, gcfr, november, 1904, 1996, usually, referred, nigerian, statesman, political, leader, served, first, president, nigeria, from, 1963, 1966, consid. Azikiwe and Zik redirect here For other uses see Nnamdi Azikiwe disambiguation and Zik disambiguation Nnamdi Benjamin Azikiwe GCFR PC 16 November 1904 11 May 1996 2 3 usually referred to as Zik was a Nigerian statesman and political leader who served as the first President of Nigeria from 1963 to 1966 4 Considered a driving force behind the nation s independence he came to be known as the father of Nigerian Nationalism 5 6 7 The Right HonourableNnamdi AzikiweGCFR PCNnamdi Azikiwe circa 19631st President of NigeriaIn office 1 October 1963 16 January 1966Prime MinisterSir Abubakar Tafawa BalewaSenate PresidentNwafor OrizuPreceded byPosition established Elizabeth II as Queen of Nigeria Succeeded byJohnson Aguiyi Ironsi3rd Governor General of NigeriaIn office 16 November 1960 1 October 1963MonarchElizabeth IIPreceded byJames RobertsonSucceeded byPosition abolished1st President of the Senate of NigeriaIn office 1 January 1960 1 October 1960Preceded byPosition establishedSucceeded byDennis OsadebayPremier of Eastern NigeriaIn office 1954 1959Preceded byEyo ItaSucceeded byMichael OkparaPersonal detailsBorn 1904 11 16 16 November 1904Zungeru Northern Nigeria ProtectorateDied11 May 1996 1996 05 11 aged 91 Enugu Enugu State NigeriaPolitical partyNational Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons Nigerian People s PartySpousesFlora Ogoegbunam m 1936 died 1983 wbr Uche Ewah m 1973 wbr 1 Children7 Chukwuma AzikiweEmeka A AzikiweNwachukwu AzikiweNgozi AzikiweMolokwu AzikiweUwakwe AzikiweJayzik AzikiweAlma materStorer College Howard University Lincoln University University of PennsylvaniaBorn to Igbo parents from Anambra State Eastern Nigeria in Zungeru in present day Niger State as a young boy he learned to speak Hausa the main indigenous language of the Northern Region 8 Azikiwe was later sent to live with his aunt and grandmother in Onitsha his parental homeland where he learned the Igbo language citation needed A stay in Lagos exposed him to the Yoruba language by the time he was in college he had been exposed to different Nigerian cultures and spoke three languages an asset as president 9 Azikiwe travelled to the United States where he was known as Ben Azikiwe and attended Storer College Columbia University the University of Pennsylvania and Howard University He contacted colonial authorities with a request to represent Nigeria at the Los Angeles Olympics 10 He returned to Africa in 1934 where he began work as a journalist in the Gold Coast 3 In British West Africa he advocated Nigerian and African nationalism as a journalist and a political leader 11 12 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Newspaper career 3 Political career 3 1 Conspiracy allegations and Zikist movement 3 2 Opposition to Richards constitution 3 3 1950 1953 3 4 Presidency and later life 4 Honours 5 Achievements 6 Sports 7 Works 8 See also 9 References 10 Notes 11 Further reading 12 External linksEarly life and education EditAzikiwe was born on 16 November 1904 in Zungeru Northern Nigeria His first name means my father is alive in the Igbo language as his parents were Igbo His father Obed Edom Chukwuemeka Azikiwe 13 1879 3 March 1958 a native of Onitsha was a clerk in the British Administration of Nigeria 14 who traveled extensively as part of his job Azikiwe s mother was Rachel Chinwe Ogbenyeanu Aghadiuno Azikiwe 1883 January 1958 15 who was sometimes called Nwanonaku and was the third daughter of Aghadiuno Ajie 13 16 Her family descended from a royal family in Onitsha and her paternal great grandfather was Obi Ugogwu Anazenwu 16 Azikiwe had one sibling a sister named Cecilia Eziamaka Arinze 16 As a young boy Azikiwe spoke Hausa the regional language 17 His father concerned about his son s fluency in Hausa and not Igbo sent him to Onitsha in 1912 to live with his paternal grandmother and aunt to learn the Igbo language and culture 18 In Onitsha Azikiwe attended Holy Trinity School a Roman Catholic mission school and Christ Church School an Anglican primary school 19 In 1914 while his father was working in Lagos Azikiwe was bitten by a dog this prompted his worried father to ask him to come to Lagos to heal and to attend school in the city 20 He then attended Wesleyan Boys High School now known as Methodist Boys High School Broad Street Lagos 21 His father was sent to Kaduna two years later and Azikiwe briefly lived with a relative who was married to a Muslim from Sierra Leone 22 In 1918 he was back in Onitsha and finished his secondary education at CMS Central School 23 Azikiwe then worked at the school as a student teacher 20 supporting his mother with his earnings 22 In 1920 his father was posted back to southern Nigeria in the southeastern city of Calabar Azikiwe joined his father in Calabar beginning tertiary education at the Hope Waddell Training College 24 He was introduced to the teachings of Marcus Garvey 9 Garveyism which became an important part of his nationalistic rhetoric After attending Hope Waddell 25 Azikiwe was transferred to Methodist Boys High School in Lagos and befriended classmates from old Lagos families such as George Shyngle Francis Cole and Ade Williams a son of the Akarigbo of Remo These connections were later beneficial to his political career in Lagos 20 Azikiwe heard a lecture by James Aggrey an educator who believed that Africans should receive a college education abroad and return to effect change 26 After the lecture Aggrey gave the young Azikiwe a list of schools accepting black students in America 22 After completing his secondary education Azikiwe applied to the colonial service and was accepted as a clerk in the treasury department His time in the colonial service exposed him to racial bias in the colonial government 27 Determined to travel abroad for further education Azikiwe applied to universities in the U S He was admitted by Storer College contingent on his finding a way to America 28 To reach America he contacted a seaman and made a deal with him to become a stowaway 29 However one of his friends on the ship became ill and they were advised to disembark in Sekondi In Ghana Azikiwe worked as a police officer his mother visited and asked him to return to Nigeria He returned and his father was willing to sponsor his trip to America 30 Azikiwe attended Storer College s two year preparatory school in Harpers Ferry West Virginia To fund his living expenses and tuition he worked a number of menial jobs before enrolling in Howard University in Washington D C in 1927 to obtain a bachelor s degree in political science In 1929 he transferred from Howard University to Lincoln University to complete his undergraduate studies and graduated in 1930 with a BA in political science 31 32 Azikwe took courses with Alain Locke 33 Azikiwe was a member of Phi Beta Sigma 34 He then enrolled at Lincoln University in Pennsylvania and in the University of Pennsylvania simultaneously in 1930 receiving a master s degree in religion from Lincoln University and a master s degree in anthropology from the University of Pennsylvania in 1932 35 36 Azikiwe became a graduate student instructor in the history and political science departments at Lincoln University where he created a course in African history 37 He was a candidate for a doctoral degree at Columbia University before returning to Nigeria in 1934 38 Azikiwe s doctoral research focused on Liberia in world politics and his research paper was published by A H Stockwell in 1934 During his time in America he was a columnist for the Baltimore Afro American Philadelphia Tribune and the Associated Negro Press 39 Azikiwe was influenced by the ideals of the African American press Garveyism and pan Africanism 40 Newspaper career EditPersonally I believe the European has a god in whom he believes and whom he is representing in his churches all over Africa He believes in the god whose name is spelt Deceit He believes in the god whose law is Ye strong you must weaken the weak Ye civilised Europeans you must civilise the barbarous Africans with machine guns Ye Christian Europeans you must Christianise the pagan Africans with bombs poison gases etc Excerpt from May 1936 African Morning Post article which led to sedition trial 41 He applied as a foreign service official for Liberia but was rejected because he was not a native of the country 42 By 1934 when Azikiwe returned to Lagos he was well known and viewed as a public figure by some members of the Lagos and Igbo community 43 He was welcomed home by a number of people as his writings in America evidently reached Nigeria 44 In Nigeria Azikiwe s initial goal was to obtain a position commensurate with his education after several unsuccessful applications including for a teaching post at King s College he accepted an offer from Ghanaian businessman Alfred Ocansey to become founding editor of the African Morning Post a new daily newspaper in Accra Ghana 29 45 He was given a free hand to run the newspaper and recruited many of its original staff 20 Azikiwe wrote The Inside Stuff by Zik a column in which he preached radical nationalism and black pride which raised some alarm in colonial circles 46 As editor he promoted a pro African nationalist agenda 29 Yuri Smertin described his writing there In his passionately denunciatory articles and public statements he censured the existing colonial order the restrictions on the African s right to express their opinions and racial discrimination 47 He also criticized those Africans who belonged to the elite of colonial society and favoured retaining the existing order as they regarded it as the basis of their well being 48 During Azikiwe s stay in Accra he advanced his New Africa philosophy later explored in his book Renascent Africa 49 The philosophic ideal is a state where Africans would be divorced from ethnic affiliations and traditional authorities and transformed by five philosophical pillars spiritual balance social regeneration economic determinism mental emancipation and risorgimento nationalism Azikiwe did not shy away from Gold Coast politics and the paper supported the local Mambii party 37 The Post published a 15 May 1936 article Has the African a God by I T A Wallace Johnson and Azikiwe as editor was tried for sedition 29 He was originally found guilty and sentenced to six months in prison but his conviction was overturned on appeal 50 Azikiwe returned to Lagos in 1937 and founded the West African Pilot a newspaper which he used to promote nationalism in Nigeria In addition to the Pilot his Zik Group established newspapers in politically and economically important cities throughout the country 51 The group s flagship newspaper was the West African Pilot which used Dante Alighieri s Show the light and the people will find the way as its motto Other publications were the Southern Nigeria Defender from Warri later Ibadan the Eastern Guardian founded in 1940 and published in Port Harcourt and the Nigerian Spokesman in Onitsha 52 In 1944 the group acquired Duse Mohamed Ali s The Comet Azikiwe s newspaper venture was a business and political tool 53 The Pilot focused less on advertising than on circulation largely because expatriate firms dominated the Nigerian economy 54 Many of Azikiwe s newspapers emphasized sensationalism and human interest stories the Pilot introduced sports coverage and a women s section increasing coverage of Nigerian events compared with the competing Daily Times which emphasized expatriate and foreign news service stories 55 The Pilot s initial run was 6 000 copies daily at its peak in 1950 it was printing over 20 000 copies 56 Azikiwe founded other business ventures such as the African Continental Bank and the Penny Restaurant at this time and used his newspapers to advertise them 57 Before World War II the West African Pilot 58 was seen as a paper trying to build a circulation base rather than overtly radical The paper s editorials and political coverage focused on injustice to Africans criticism of the colonial administration and support for the ideas of the educated elites in Lagos 57 However by 1940 a gradual change occurred As he did in the African Morning Post Azikiwe began writing a column Inside Stuff in which he sometimes tried to raise political consciousness 59 Pilot editorials called for African independence particularly after the rise of the Indian independence movement 60 Although the paper supported Great Britain during the war it criticized austerity measures such as price controls and wage ceilings 61 In 1943 the British Council sponsored eight West African editors including Azikiwe and he and six other editors used the opportunity to raise awareness of possible political independence The journalists signed a memorandum calling for gradual socio political reforms including abrogation of the crown colony system regional representation and independence for British West African colonies by 1958 or 1960 62 The memorandum was ignored by the colonial office increasing Azikiwe s militancy 63 He had a controlling interest in over 12 daily African run newspapers Azikiwe s articles on African nationalism black pride and empowerment dismayed many colonialist politicians and benefited many marginalized Africans 64 East African newspapers generally published in Swahili with the exception of newsletters such as the East African Standard Azikiwe revolutionized the West African newspaper industry demonstrating that English language journalism could be successful By 1950 the five leading African run newspapers in the Eastern Region including the Nigerian Daily Times were outsold by the Pilot On 8 July 1945 the Nigerian government banned Azikiwe s West African Pilot and Daily Comet for misrepresenting information about a general strike 65 Although Azikiwe acknowledged this he continued publishing articles about the strike in the Guardian his Port Harcourt newsletter He led a 1945 general strike and was the premier of East Nigeria from 1954 to 1959 66 By the 1960s after Nigerian independence the national West African Pilot was particularly influential in the east Azikiwe took particular aim at political groups which advocated exclusion He was criticized by a Yoruba faction for using his newspaper to suppress opposition to his views At Azikiwe s death The New York Times said that he towered over the affairs of Africa s most populous nation attaining the rare status of a truly national hero who came to be admired across the regional and ethnic lines dividing his country 67 Political career EditAzikiwe became active in the Nigerian Youth Movement NYM the country s first nationalist organization 68 Although he supported Samuel Akisanya as the NYM candidate for a vacant seat in the Legislative Council in 1941 the NYM executive council selected Ernest Ikoli 69 Azikiwe resigned from the NYM accusing the majority Yoruba leadership of discriminating against the Ijebu Yoruba members and Igbos Some Ijebu members followed him splitting the movement along ethnic lines 70 He entered politics co founding the National Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons NCNC with Herbert Macaulay in 1944 Azikiwe became the council s secretary general in 1946 71 Conspiracy allegations and Zikist movement Edit As a result of Azikiwe s support for a general strike in June 1945 and his attacks on the colonial government publication of the West African Pilot was suspended on 8 July of that year 72 He praised the striking workers and their leader Michael Imoudu accusing the colonial government of exploiting the working class 73 In August the newspaper was allowed to resume publication 74 During the strike Azikiwe raised the alarm about an assassination plot by unknown individuals working on behalf of the colonial government 73 His basis for the allegation was a wireless message intercepted by a Pilot reporter 55 After receiving the intercepted message Azikiwe went into hiding in Onitsha The Pilot published sympathetic editorials during his absence and many Nigerians believed the assassination story 75 76 Azikiwe s popularity and his newspaper circulation increased during this period The allegations were doubted by some Nigerians who believed that he made them up to raise his profile 77 The skeptics were primarily Yoruba politicians from the Nigerian Youth Movement creating a rift between the factions and a press war between Azikiwe s Pilot and the NYM s Daily Service citation needed A militant youth movement led by Osita Agwuna Raji Abdalla Kolawole Balogun M C K Ajuluchukwu and Abiodun Aloba was established in 1946 to defend Azikiwe s life and his ideals of self government 73 Inspired by his writings and Nwafor Orizu s Zikism philosophy members of the movement soon began advocating positive militant action to bring about self government 78 Calls for action included strikes study of military science by Nigerian students overseas and a boycott of foreign products 79 Azikiwe did not publicly defend the movement which was banned in 1951 after a failed attempt to kill a colonial secretary citation needed Opposition to Richards constitution Edit In 1945 British governor Arthur Richards presented proposals for a revision of the Clifford constitution of 1922 60 Included in the proposal was an increase in the number of nominated African members to the Legislative Council However the changes were opposed by nationalists such as Azikiwe 64 NCNC politicians opposed unilateral decisions made by Arthur Richards and a constitutional provision allowing only four elected African members the rest would be nominated candidates 80 The nominated African candidates were loyal to the colonial government and would not aggressively seek self government Another basis of opposition was little input for the advancement of Africans to senior civil service positions The NCNC prepared to argue its case to the new Labour government of Clement Attlee in Britain 81 A tour of the country was begun to raise awareness of the party s concerns and to raise money for the UK protest 82 NCNC president Herbert Macaulay died during the tour and Azikiwe assumed leadership of the party He led the delegation to London and in preparation for the trip traveled to the US to seek sympathy for the party s case Azikiwe met Eleanor Roosevelt at Hyde Park and spoke about the emancipation of Nigeria from political thralldom economic insecurity and social disabilities 83 The UK delegation included Azikiwe Funmilayo Ransome Kuti Zanna Dipcharima Abubakar Olorunimbe P M Kale Adeleke Adedoyin and Nyong Essien 84 85 They visited the Fabian Society s Colonial Bureau the Labor Imperial Committee and the West African Students Union to raise awareness of its proposals for amendments to the 1922 constitution Included in the NCNC proposals was consultation with Africans about changes to the Nigerian constitution more power to the regional House of Assemblies and limiting the powers of the central Legislative Council to defense currency and foreign affairs 86 The delegation submitted its proposals to the colonial secretary but little was done to change to Richards proposals The Richards constitution took effect in 1947 and Azikiwe contested one of the Lagos seats to delay its implementation citation needed 1950 1953 Edit Under the Richards constitution Azikiwe was elected to the Legislative Council in a Lagos municipal election from the National Democratic Party an NCNC subsidiary 87 He and the party representative did not attend the first session of the council and agitation for changes to the Richards constitution led to the Macpherson constitution 64 The Macpherson constitution took effect in 1951 and like the Richards constitution called for elections to the regional House of Assembly Azikiwe opposed the changes and contested for the chance to change the new constitution Staggered elections were held from August to December 1951 88 In the Western Region where Azikiwe stood two parties were dominant Azikiwe s NCNC and the Action Group Elections for the Western Regional Assembly were held in September and December 1951 because the constitution allowed an electoral college to choose members of the national legislature an Action Group majority in the house might prevent Azikiwe from going to the House of Representatives 89 He won a regional assembly seat from Lagos but the opposition party claimed a majority in the House of Assembly and Azikiwe did not represent Lagos in the federal House of Representatives In 1951 he became leader of the Opposition to the government of Obafemi Awolowo in the Western Region s House of Assembly Azikiwe s non selection to the national assembly caused chaos in the west 90 An agreement by elected NCNC members from Lagos to step down for Azikiwe if he was not nominated broke down Azikiwe blamed the constitution and wanted changes made The NCNC which dominated the Eastern Region agreed and committed to amending the constitution 91 Azikiwe moved to the Eastern Region in 1952 92 93 and the NCNC dominated regional assembly made proposals to accommodate him Although the party s regional and central ministers were asked to resign in a cabinet reshuffle most ignored the request 94 The regional assembly then passed a vote of no confidence on the ministers and appropriation bills sent to the ministry were rejected 72 This created an impasse in the region and the lieutenant governor dissolved the regional house A new election returned Azikiwe as a member of the Eastern Assembly He was selected as Chief Minister and became premier of Nigeria s Eastern Region in 1954 when it became a federating unit citation needed Presidency and later life Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it June 2018 Azikiwe became governor general on 16 November 1960 with Abubakar Tafawa Balewa as prime minister and became the first Nigerian named to the Privy Council of the United Kingdom 25 When Nigeria became a republic in 1963 he was its first president In both posts Azikiwe s role was largely ceremonial 95 He and his civilian colleagues were removed from office in the 15 January 1966 military coup and he was the most prominent politician to avoid assassination after the coup Azikiwe was a spokesman for Biafra and advised its leader Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu during the Biafran War 1967 1970 96 He switched his allegiance back to Nigeria during the war and appealed to Ojukwu to end the war in pamphlets and interviews The New York Times said about his politics Throughout his life Dr Azikiwe s alliance with northerners put him at odds with Obafemi Awolowo a socialist inclined leader of the Yoruba the country s other important southern group 67 After the war Azikiwe was chancellor of the University of Lagos from 1972 to 1976 He joined the Nigerian People s Party in 1978 making unsuccessful bids for the presidency in 1979 and 1983 He left politics involuntarily after the 31 December 1983 military coup Azikiwe died aged 91 on 11 May 1996 at the University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital in Enugu after a long illness and is buried in his native Onitsha 97 Honours EditPlaces named after Azikiwe include Azikiwe Nkrumah Hall the oldest building on the Lincoln University campus 98 Nnamdi Azikwe Hall University of Ibadan Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport in Abuja Nnamdi Azikiwe Stadium in Enugu Nnamdi Azikiwe University in Awka Anambra State Nnamdi Azikiwe University Teaching Hospital in Nnewi Nnamdi Azikiwe Library at the University of Nigeria Nsukka Nnamdi Azikiwe Press Centre Dodan Barracks Obalende Ikoyi Lagos Azikiwe Avenue in Dar es Salaam Tanzania CRDB Azikiwe Branch in Dar es SalaamHis picture appears on Nigeria s 500 banknote since 2001 99 Achievements EditAzikiwe was inducted into the Agbalanze society of Onitsha as Nnanyelugo in 1946 a recognition for Onitsha men with significant accomplishments In 1962 he became a second rank red cap chieftain Ndichie Okwa as the Oziziani Obi 96 Chief Azikiwe was installed as the Owelle Osowa Anya of Onitsha in 1972 making him a first rank hereditary red cap nobleman Ndichie Ume in the Igbo branch of the Nigerian chieftaincy system 92 He established the University of Nigeria Nsukka in 1960 100 and Queen Elizabeth II appointed him to the Privy Council of the United Kingdom 101 He was made Grand Commander of the Federal Republic GCFR Nigeria s highest national honour in 1980 citation needed Sports EditAzikiwe competed in boxing athletics swimming football and tennis 31 Football was brought to Nigeria by the British as they colonized Africa 102 However any leagues that were formed were segregated Nnamdi saw this as an injustice and he emerged as a leader in terms of connection sports and politics at the end of the colonial period 103 In 1934 Zik was denied the right to compete in a track and field event because Nigeria was not allowed to participate This happened another time because of his Igbo background and Zik had decided that enough was enough and wanted to create his own club Nnamdi founded Zik s Athletic Club ZAC which would open its doors to sportsmen and women of all races nationalities tribes and classes of Nigeria 104 In 1942 the club went on to win both the Lagos League and the War Memorial Cup After these victories Nnamdi opened up more ZAC branches throughout Nigeria During the war years ZAC would go on tours 105 They would usually play a match in front of a couple thousand fans and after the match they would speak out about the injustices that was brought about by the British colonization ZAC matches would happen all over the country and it made the people of Nigeria feel a sense of unity and nationalism that would help them fight for freedom 106 In 1949 some ZAC players participated in a tour of England On the return from the tour they stopped in Freetown Sierra Leone and Nigeria defeated the locals by 2 goals This victory was more than a decade before Nigerian independence but it marked the birth of Nigeria s National Team 107 Finally after years of struggle in 1959 the last British official left the NFA and on 22 August 1960 a few weeks prior to its formal independence Nigeria joined the world football body of FIFA 108 None of this would have been possible if it was not for Nnamdi Azikiwe He united Nigeria through sport and brought about a sense of nationalism that was referred to as Nigerian ness 109 110 Works Edit Scholia has a topic profile for Nnamdi Azikiwe Scholia has an author profile for Nnamdi Azikiwe Zik 1961 My Odyssey An Autobiography 1971 Renascent Africa 1973 Liberia in World Politics 1931 One Hundred Quotable Quotes and Poems of the Rt Hon Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe 1966 ISBN 978 2736 09 0 Political Blueprint for Nigeria 1943 Economic Reconstruction of Nigeria 1943 Zik A Selection of the Speeches of Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe 1961 Assassination Story True or False 1946 Before Us Lies the Open Grave 1947 The Future of Pan Africanism 1961 The Realities of African Unity 1965 Origins of the Nigerian Civil War 1969 I Believe in One Nigeria 1969 Peace Proposals for Ending the Nigerian Civil War 1969 Dialogue on a New Capital for Nigeria 1974 Creation of More States in Nigeria A Political Analysis 1974 Democracy with Military Vigilance 1974 Reorientation of Nigerian Ideologies lecture on 9 December 1976 on the eve of the launching of the UNN Endowment Fund 1976 Our Struggle for Freedom Onitsha Market Crisis 1976 Let Us Forgive Our Children An appeal to the leaders and people of Onitsha during the market crisis 1976 A Collection of Poems 1977 Civil War Soliloquies More Collection of Poems 1977 Themes in African Social and Political Thought 1978 Restoration of Nigerian Democracy 1978 Matchless Past Performance My Reply to Chief Awolowo s Challenge 1979 A Matter of Conscience 1979 Ideology for Nigeria Capitalism Socialism or Welfarism 1980 Breach of Trust by the NPN 1983 History Will Vindicate The Just 1983 See also Edit Nigeria portal Biography portal Politics portalAfrican nationalism Zikist philosophyReferences Edit Nuhu Musa Jamila Flora Azikiwe Nigeria maiden First Lady at a glance People s Daily Archived from the original on 17 October 2015 Retrieved 15 July 2015 wahab bayo 18 January 2018 Here s why OAU is believed to be the best university in Nigeria Pulse Nigeria Retrieved 27 February 2022 a b Nnamdi Azikiwe president of Nigeria Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 26 March 2022 Dr Azikiwe To Be First President The Times London England 17 September 1963 p 8 via The Times Digital Archive Heroes of the struggle for Nigeria s independence pioneer political The Guardian Nigeria News Nigeria and World News 1 October 2020 Retrieved 24 May 2022 On this day in 1904 Dr Benjamin Nnamdi Azikiwe was born in Zungeru Niger State North Central Nigeria Jay FM 16 November 2017 Archived from the original on 5 August 2020 Retrieved 29 May 2020 Crowcroft Barnaby 2020 Kumarasingham H ed The Radical Nationalist as Constitutional Head of State Nigeria 1960 66 Viceregalism The Crown as Head of State in Political Crises in the Postwar Commonwealth Cambridge Imperial and Post Colonial Studies Series Cham Springer International Publishing pp 179 202 doi 10 1007 978 3 030 46283 3 7 ISBN 978 3 030 46283 3 S2CID 226564363 Omotola Balogun 11 December 2017 BIOGRAPHY OF DR BENJAMIN NNAMDI AZIKIWE Diamond Boat Consult Retrieved 29 May 2020 a b Nnamdi Azikiwe The Times London England 14 May 1996 p 19 via The Times Digital Archive Flint John E 1999 Managing nationalism The colonial office and Nnamdi Azikiwe 1932 43 The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 27 2 143 158 doi 10 1080 03086539908583061 35 Azikiwe fights for Africa New York Amsterdam News 7 January 1950 via ProQuest a b The International Who s Who 54 ed Europa Publications 1990 p 75 ISBN 978 0 946653 58 4 Royal African Society 1983 African affairs 82 Oxford University Press 62 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help I My Genealogy and Nativity Nnamdi Azikiwe My Odyssey Spectrum Books 1970 p 4 a b c Mother of Nnamdi Azikiwe dies at 75 Philadelphia Tribune 22 February 1958 Aguolu and Aguolu C C and L E 1997 Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe 1904 1966 first president of Nigeria A force in Library development in Nigeria World Libraries 7 2 Retrieved 29 May 2020 Oha Obododimma Heroes of knowledge versus dragons of ignorance language identity construction and intertextuality in Nnamdi Azikiwe s My Odyssey motspluriels arts uwa edu au Retrieved 8 July 2016 Accord concodiale The continuous search for Nigeria s elusive unity and indivisibility 2 The Sun Nigeria 14 December 2016 Retrieved 29 May 2020 a b c d Orji 2013 p 68 history MGHS Retrieved 11 September 2022 a b c Tonkin 1990 p 37 Benjamin Nnamdi Zik Azikiwe 1904 1996 9 May 2009 Retrieved 11 September 2022 Reminiscing The Founding Fathers Nnamdi Azikiwe 3 February 2019 Retrieved 26 March 2022 a b Nigeria Year Book 1962 Daily Times 1962 p 112 Esele Amos 21 November 1994 Ninety hearty cheers The Week Lagos Nigeria via ProQuest Orji 2013 p 69 Commencement address at Storer delivered by African alumnus New Journal and Guide 14 June 1947 via ProQuest a b c d Reminiscing The Founding Fathers Nnamdi Azikiwe Leadership News Nigeria News Breaking News Politics and more 3 February 2019 Retrieved 19 October 2021 Heroes of the Past Nnamdi Azikiwe Everything But Coffee Archived from the original on 5 August 2020 Retrieved 29 May 2020 a b Azikiwe Nnamdi January 1966 Ivy James W ed A teacher remembered Crisis New York The Crisis Publishing Company Inc 73 1 54 55 Biography of Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe www onlinenigeria com Retrieved 5 September 2007 Getachew Adom 2019 Worldmaking after Empire The Rise and Fall of Self Determination Princeton University Press p 7 doi 10 2307 j ctv3znwvg ISBN 978 0 691 17915 5 JSTOR j ctv3znwvg Politics and Leadership Phi Beta Sigma Archived from the original on 2 May 2007 Retrieved 7 November 2018 Alumni Faculty and Trustees of the University of Pennsylvania Who Have Served as Heads of State or Government University Archives and Records Center University of Pennsylvania Archived from the original on 5 February 2007 Retrieved 5 September 2007 Nigeria Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe www onlinenigeria com a b Tonkin 1990 p 41 AZIKIWE MAY ACCEPT POSITION IN LIBERIA The New York Amsterdam News 21 July 1934 via ProQuest Azikiwe N 1 January 1965 Nigerian pioneer The New York Times via ProQuest Nnamdi Azikiwe Nigeria News Update Retrieved 25 May 2020 Anti god editorial jails two in Africa Afro American 1 August 1936 via ProQuest Nnamdi Azikiwe African Philosopher scholar and eminent journalist The Journalist Retrieved 29 May 2020 DR NNAMDI AZIKIWE www ekwendigbo com Retrieved 29 May 2020 Tonkin 1990 p 38 Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe our history 7 January 2013 Retrieved 26 March 2022 African graduate of Lincoln creates stir in his native land New Journal and Guide 22 August 1936 Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe our history 7 January 2013 Retrieved 29 May 2020 Yuri Smertin Kwame Nkrumah Moscow Progress 1977 p 9 Long awaited Zik s Day preps in Anambra National Light 14 November 2019 Retrieved 29 May 2020 Nnamdi Azikiwe and the vision of a united Africa The Citizen Retrieved 30 May 2020 Uche Luke Uka 1989 Mass Media People and Politics in Nigeria Concept Publishing Company p 95 Idemili 1980 p 204 Idemili 1980 p 195 Idemili 1980 p 199 a b Idemili 1980 p 200 Idemili 1980 p 203 a b Tonkin 1990 p 42 Times Premium 29 November 2022 The Sage and his Jewel A society wedding in Ikenne Remo By Tayo Agunbiade Premium Times Nigeria Retrieved 26 December 2022 Idemili 1980 p 221 a b Sun News 2017 Accord concondiale The continuous search for Nigeria s elusive unity and indivisibility 4 Sun News Online Retrieved 30 May 2020 Idemili 1980 p 220 Idemili 1980 pp 230 231 Idemili 1980 p 233 a b c Nnamdi Azikiwe DREAM WORLD PIONEERS VENTURES Retrieved 30 May 2020 Nnamdi Azikiwe African Philosopher scholar and eminent journalist The Journalist Retrieved 30 May 2020 Azikiwe Benjamin Nnamdi Infoplease www infoplease com Retrieved 30 May 2020 a b French Howard W 14 May 1996 Nnamdi Azikiwe the First President of Nigeria Dies at 91 The New York Times Retrieved 8 November 2018 The Nigerian Youth Movement 1934 1951 3 May 2011 Retrieved 26 December 2022 Sklar Richard L 2004 Nigerian Political Parties Power in an Emergent African Nation Africa World Press pp 53 54 ISBN 978 1 59221 209 5 Sklar Richard L 2004 Nigerian Political Parties Power in an Emergent African Nation Africa World Press pp 53 54 ISBN 978 1 59221 209 5 Sklar Richard L 2004 Nigerian Political Parties Power in an Emergent African Nation Africa World Press pp 57 58 ISBN 978 1 59221 209 5 a b DR BENJAMIN NNAMDI AZIKIWE ilannews Retrieved 30 May 2020 a b c Orji 2013 p 79 Idemili 1980 p 255 Nnamdi Azikiwe A True National Hero The Guardian Nigeria News Nigeria and World News 16 November 2018 Retrieved 11 September 2022 Nwafor Emmanuel Mordi 2018 The role of the press in the democratic process The example of Nigeria s First Republic 1960 1966 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Idemili 1980 p 258 University Nnamdi Azikiwe 16 November 2021 PROFILE OF NNAMDI AZIKIWE Zik s Lecture Series Retrieved 14 June 2022 Idemili 1980 p 262 Seng Michael P 1985 Democracy in Nigeria PDF National Black Law Journal 9 2 144 166 via escholarship org The National Archives Clement Attlee and union links NationalArchives gov uk Retrieved 30 May 2020 Olusanya 1964 p 246 Babatunde Gbenga Bode 2018 Benjamin Nnamdi Azikiwe Our Father Is Still Alive with His Libertarian Philosophy International Journal corner Retrieved 30 May 2020 Asiodu Philip C 2017 Nigeria in distress Is there a way forward to a great future Vanguard Retrieved 30 May 2020 Chioma Unini 1 January 2017 Buhari Shekau and Sambisa Forrest TheNigeriaLawyer Retrieved 30 May 2020 Olusanya 1964 p 247 Accord concondiale The continuous search for Nigeria s elusive unity and indivisibility 4 2017 Retrieved 30 May 2020 Adekoya Dr Remi 2019 The 1951 elections How Awolowo forced Azikiwe out of western Nigeria Business Day Retrieved 30 May 2020 ONYIOHA K O K date 20 November 1951 Ben Azikiwe key figure in long Nigerian poll Philadelphia Tribune 1912 2001 Retrieved via Proquest Olusanya 1964 p 303 Olusanya 1964 pp 303 305 a b A brief walk into the life of Nigeria s first president Pulse Nigeria 20 September 2017 Retrieved 30 May 2020 Nnamdi Azikiwe and the vision of a united Africa II The Citizen Retrieved 30 May 2020 Ejobowah John Boye 1999 THE POLITICAL PUBLIC AND DIFFERENCE THE CASE OF NIGERIA PDF tspace library utoronto ca Retrieved 30 May 2020 Nigeria s Forgotten Heroes Nnamdi Azikiwe Father of the Nation Part 2 a b Omotola Balogun 11 December 2017 BIOGRAPHY OF DR BENJAMIN NNAMDI AZIKIWE Diamond Boat Consult Retrieved 30 May 2020 Victor Umeh weeps at Zik s Grave The Sun 30 October 2014 Archived from the original on 5 January 2015 Azikiwe Nkrumah Hall Lincoln University www lincoln edu Retrieved 1 June 2018 Nigeria 500 Naira 2001 2019 Bank note museum Bhekithemba Richard Mngomezulu 2012 Politics and Higher Education in East Africa AFRICAN SUN MeDIA p 4 ISBN 978 1 920 3821 17 Lynch Hollis R 2012 Lynch Hollis R ed Elder Politician and Statesman 1970 1990 K O Mbadiwe A Nigerian Political Biography 1915 1990 Palgrave Macmillan US pp 233 254 doi 10 1057 9781137002624 11 ISBN 978 1 137 00262 4 Nnamdi Azikiwe Nigeria News Update Retrieved 30 May 2020 Olusegun Obasa 2015 Sports and the Modernity of Leisure in Nigeria Stadium Space and the Symbolisms of Expressions 1930 1980 PDF repositories lib utexas edu Nationalist Period Sports and Politics in British West Central Africa Retrieved 30 May 2020 Nnamdi Azikiwe Facts biography yourdictionary com Retrieved 30 May 2020 Abioye Joseph Adegboyega 1980 THE ESTABLISHMENT AND THE ACHIEVEMENTS OF THE NATIONAL SPORTS COMMISSION IN NIGERIA etd ohiolink edu Nigerians Love For Football is it too much Soccernet ng 23 March 2015 Retrieved 30 May 2020 PICTURES amp DOCUMENTS FIFA AT 114 HOW NIGERIA BECAME A MEMBER Sports Village Square 21 May 2018 Retrieved 30 May 2020 Alegi Peter 2010 African Soccerscapes How a Continent Changed the World s Game Ohio University Press ISBN 978 0 89680 278 0 BEFORE JOINING FIFA AND CAF NIGERIA FA WAS AFFILIATED TO THE FA IN ENGLAND Sports Village Square 21 August 2018 Retrieved 30 May 2020 Notes EditOrji John 2013 Chapter 2 The Triumph of Knowledge In Chuku Gloria ed The Igbo Intellectual Tradition Creative Conflict in African and African diasporic thought Palgrave Macmillan pp 67 89 Tonkin Elizabeth 1990 Chapter 2 Zik s Story In Chuku P F de Moraes ed SelfAssertion and Brokerage Early Cultural Nationalism in West Africa Birmingham University African Studies Series pp 35 45 Idemili Samuel Okafor 1980 The West African Pilot and the Movement for Nigerian Nationalism 1937 1960 Thesis University of Wisconsin Madison Olusanya Gabriel 1964 The impact of the Second World War on Nigeria s political evolution PhD Thesis University of Toronto Further reading EditIgwe Agbafor 1992 Nnamdi Azikiwe The Philosopher of Our Time Enugu Nigeria Fourth Dimension Publisher ISBN 978 978 156 030 9 Ikeotuonye Vincent 1961 Zik of New Africa P R Macmillan Jones Quartey K A B 1965 A Life of Azikiwe Baltimore Penguin Olisa Michael S O M Ikejiani Clark eds 1989 Azikiwe and the African Revolution Onitsha Nigeria Africana FEP ISBN 978 978 175 223 0 Ugowe C O O 2000 Eminent Nigerians of the Twentieth Century Lagos Hugo Books External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Nnamdi Azikiwe Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nnamdi Azikiwe Nnamdi Azikiwe Respect for Human Dignity an Inaugural Address at World Digital LibraryPolitical officesPreceded byPosition created Senate President of Nigeria1960 1960 Succeeded byDennis OsadebayPreceded byJames Wilson Robertson Governor General of Nigeria1960 1963 Succeeded byPosition abolishedPreceded byElizabeth II as Queen of Nigeria President of Nigeria1963 1966 Succeeded byJohnson Aguiyi Ironsi Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nnamdi Azikiwe amp oldid 1147341134, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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