Her Royal Highness,
Erelu Kuti IV of Lagos, Erelu Abiola Dosunmu, in this interview, shares her
perspective on the controversy over the ‘ownership’ of Lagos and declares that
the former federal capital was an extension of Benin Kingdom. She explains that
there are no ambiguities regarding the ancestry of the aborigines of Lagos,
saying they are predominantly Benin. Abiola Dosumu maintains that the Awori
,after settling in Lagos, paid royalties to Benin people. Excerpts:
Erelu
Abiola Dosunmu Are you not concerned about the controversy over the true
aborigines of Lagos?
I would not say I am
concerned because I know the truth. The history of Lagos is not obscure, it is
very clear. If people are going to say the truth, we all know what the truth
is. A friend was saying to me if I was not sure there is no third party trying
to take the rights of Lagos through this raging controversy. We all know the
story of Lagos from childhood. Even a play was staged about the beginning of
Lagos last year. I just know that the truth will surface after this raging
controversy because a lot of the gladiators are being miserly in some of their
discussions.
Can
you give clarity on some of the things you consider not to be factual among
those that have been said so far?
The territory of Lagos
has always been an extension of the Benin Kingdom in the sense that they used
it as a passage to the port for their trading and interaction with foreigners.
We all know that foreigners visited the Benin Empire long before colonialism
and signing of the treaty of Lagos.
This is their passageway and hunting ground. As soon as strangers came
to settle down, they would pounce on them and make them pay royalties. Like all
human beings, when you settle in a place for a long time, it is expected that
you will have the right of ownership. And the foreigners were not ready to be
subservient and refused to pay Isakole (royalty) and the Benin king did not
take kindly to that. He sent an expedition and subjugated the foreigners and
set up his own administration in form of a kingdom. Therefore, when I say that
we are purely and predominantly Benin, it is the truth. The royalty of Lagos is
predominantly Benin. But we have all intermingled and have since inter-married
with people from Yoruba land and people from other places. And we are enjoying
the two cultures. We are even enjoying more because we now have Igbo, Hausa and
other tribes settling in Lagos. We are not enjoying the Yoruba influence alone,
we are also enjoying other influences.
Prior
to the institution of the royalty with Oba Ado as the first king, who were the
people that the Benin met on the ground?
The Benin has always
known about Lagos because they considered it as part of their territory and
they used it for many purposes. And when the Awori came from Ife to settle in
the areas of Lagos, the Benin quickly got them to pay royalties. Benin was
landlocked but, as Benin Empire, they were interacting with people from other
parts of the world. It was Benin Empire and, when the Portuguese and others
came, they also had to pass through the Kuramo waters to get there. They had
already laid claim to the land called Lagos. Whether they gave it a name or
not, it was an extension of their playground. And when another group of people
came to settle there, the Benin said they already had authority over the
palace. That was what informed their decision to make the Awori pay royalties. And after paying the Isakole for a while,
they (Awori) decided not to pay anymore. That made the Benin to decide not to
leave a vacuum anymore and set up an administration. That is why I am saying
that there is no ambiguity in the history of Lagos if we are going to tell the
truth. All these people, who have been talking, never mentioned that they paid
Isakole but we all know that. It is written in books that they paid Isakole.
That was the main reason the Benin came and took Olofin away. He refused to be
subservient to them. The Benin came here because it is their territory. There
is evidence that an expedition was sent from Benin, there is evidence that they
were conquered because there was an obaship in place. Even if they did not have
anything and just sent an expedition to conquer, when someone conquers, he
takes over the land and property of the conquered territory. Now, we want to
unify our views and have a consensus so that those people, who are trying to
take our rights away, can be confronted to see if we can get some kind of
compensation for our children. This is not the first time such controversy is
raging.
What
do you think is responsible for its recurrence?
What I did at NIIA was
to state that Oba Dosumu was an unsung hero. It was to state that the treaty
for which he was being castigated was a masterstroke. He was a forward-looking
king who had the interest of his people at heart. He did not allow his position
to go into his head by allowing his subjects to be destroyed in a meaningless
battle. He found a way to a roundtable discussion and was able to retain
integrity for his kingdom, while still retaining the friendship of the colonial
people. There are many countries in Africa where people don’t remember their
culture but he found a way to get a concession by which he was allowed to
remain a king and sustain the culture and pride of his people as independent
human begins. And the people actually enjoyed the benefits because they were
able to carry British passports and get scholarships to study abroad. That is
why a lot of early educated people were the indigenous people of Lagos. For
example, people like the late Justice Elias, Justice Junaidu, and Prince Ajose
were among the early educated people. Our fathers and grandfathers were all products
of King’s College, they were either great bankers, doctors, pharmacists, etc.
It is wrong to think that Lagos people are lazy. It is not the indigenous
people of Lagos, who are lazy, it is those who come from other places. This
kind of controversy happened before and it is here again.
In
the light of that, how can the issue be resolved because oral history is easily
distorted and told to suit individual and group interests?
If you don’t talk about
issues, solutions may not be found. I think it is appropriate that we should
discuss it. There should be this kind of conversation going on but, at the end
of the day, a superior argument will carry the day. It is okay to take a story
from wherever, but it is right to take it from the beginning and analyse it in
a sensible way based on what our ancestors told us, what other people have written and what we
learnt from our researches. That is the best instead of the jaundiced way it is
being done now. We will get there. It is healthy that conversations will be
going on, at the end of the day we will sit at a roundtable and harmonise our
views. And whatever that is not clear, we will address it and come up with a
consensus. We have had this kind of issue before on the story of the Eyo.
The story is so clear but
when the conversation started, people were attributing it to a princess from
Badagry, but, at the end of the day, it was confirmed that the fetish came from
the palace of the father of Queen Olugbani, wife of King Ado of Lagos. But the
colourful Aga is a creation of Oba Akisemoye of Lagos, the fetish was to protect them from the curious gaze of
the people of Lagos. Strong young men in the neigbourhood were clad in white
and given a stick to ward off anybody that wanted to interfere and they were
called the Laba. That is why the Laba will always say that they are the head of
the Eyo because they were the ones guarding the fetish until the early 1950s
when the fetish felt they were not guarded properly by the Laba. Otherwise,
Eyo, in the past, instead of the yellow Aga, was always red. They were
protecting the fetish but when the fetish felt the Laba was not protecting them
anymore, they started having their own people to protect them with different
colours of Aga. From there it expanded to the palaces of the white chiefs who
started having their groups. It also expanded to groups formed by the Eyo Omo
Oloku because, whenever there is an Eyo, it is always to honour departed obas. The
Eyo Omo Oloku can also come out in subsequent Eyos. So it kept getting bigger
and definitely more colourful but it was a creation of the Oba of Lagos. The
fetish was what was brought and the first Eyo was performed at the funeral of
Queen Olugbani from where the fetish came from. But before we settled that
matter, people told different stories. I believe this one will be resolved. The
problem is even not with the indigenous people of Lagos, it is being caused by
people who want to claim ownership by default. They are the ones who are
actually fueling the controversy. The Benin Kingdom is always a central factor
in the history of Lagos and Oba Akiolu even acknowledged the place of the
kingdom recently.
Are
there still some cultural activities that take place between the Lagos royalty
and Benin royalty?
There is nothing
stringent but there are still some courtesies that are exchanged between the
palaces. For instance, at the coronation of a new king in Lagos, the Oba of
Benin will, at some point, come over to welcome the new king into the fold of
royalty and remind the king that he has a father in him. That means that we
still have those social courtesies that are exchanged between the two kingdoms.
And if a new king is being crowned in Benin, the Oba of Lagos will have a
vantage position as a son of the soil within the context of the ceremony. Apart
from that, everybody is independent in his own right but we enjoy a lot of
goodwill. Whatever is between us now is ceremonial and more of courtesies.
Since all these started, have you reached out
to the dramatis personae?
I decided to talk
because many people have called that, as the person who seems like a custodian
of history and culture of Lagos for over 40 years, I should make a statement
and reach out to everybody. I am talking because I want us to speak with one
voice and not allow other people to take advantage of the situation. I am
reaching out and hope that my views will throw more light on the issues. We are
going to reach out to more people and iron these out behind closed doors rather
than on the pages of newspapers.
On oral history When
people talk about oral history, they also have to think of logic because if
people rely on what they hear, they can never have a consensus. But logic must
prevail. Time must also prevail because things are time bound. If, for
instance, they are saying that a certain people were paying royalties to the
Benin Kingdom and others said they had been there centuries before the Benin
came, but the same person who was said to have landed first was the same person
that the Benin captured, how many centuries can that be?
How long do human
beings live? If they are saying the same person who came the first time was
captured by the Benin and then returned, how long can it be? A lifetime! Okay,
he came as a young man and was captured as an old man? How many years are we
talking about? I have read stories where they said some had been here for
centuries and they are talking about the same original settlers. Therefore,
common sense and time factor should also come into play when saying things
based on oral history.
Comments
Post a Comment