14:58
Nigeria's Story: A Nation was Born Nearly 100 Years Ago
The story of Nigeria's pre-colonial and early post-colonial history. It chronicles the ama...
published: 24 Feb 2013
author: Nigeriahistory
Nigeria's Story: A Nation was Born Nearly 100 Years Ago
Nigeria's Story: A Nation was Born Nearly 100 Years Ago
The story of Nigeria's pre-colonial and early post-colonial history. It chronicles the amalgamation of the Northern and Southern Protectorates in 1914, as we...- published: 24 Feb 2013
- views: 5080
- author: Nigeriahistory
20:58
Challenge In Nigeria, 1948
A report from the British "The Modern Age" series about reforms in the British colony of N...
published: 23 Jun 2010
author: travelfilmarchive
Challenge In Nigeria, 1948
Challenge In Nigeria, 1948
A report from the British "The Modern Age" series about reforms in the British colony of Nigeria. Released June,1948. To purchase a DVD of this film for pers...- published: 23 Jun 2010
- views: 1753
- author: travelfilmarchive
10:01
Our World - Nigeria - The Legacy Of Empire_001
Documentary of Nigeria 50 years ago and now....
published: 04 Nov 2010
author: apenor
Our World - Nigeria - The Legacy Of Empire_001
Our World - Nigeria - The Legacy Of Empire_001
Documentary of Nigeria 50 years ago and now.- published: 04 Nov 2010
- views: 2008
- author: apenor
3:40
Life - Pre-Colonial Nigeria
The Emire of Kano. Oba Akintoye, of Lagos Governor Generals : Sir Bernand Sir Aurthur Rich...
published: 05 Sep 2012
author: NTA2Lagos
Life - Pre-Colonial Nigeria
Life - Pre-Colonial Nigeria
The Emire of Kano. Oba Akintoye, of Lagos Governor Generals : Sir Bernand Sir Aurthur Richard Sir Macpherson Sir James Robbinson Sir Maze Independence Sir Ab...- published: 05 Sep 2012
- views: 1351
- author: NTA2Lagos
13:13
Part 2 of 4: Journey to Nationhood | The Colonial Legacy
This is the first programme in a series of films produced for the Government of the Federa...
published: 03 Oct 2010
author: 419Positive
Part 2 of 4: Journey to Nationhood | The Colonial Legacy
Part 2 of 4: Journey to Nationhood | The Colonial Legacy
This is the first programme in a series of films produced for the Government of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. This episode charts the British Empire's tak...- published: 03 Oct 2010
- views: 23408
- author: 419Positive
1:32
Nigeria's first colonial prison converted into beautiful Lagos Garden
(Lagos Garden) It was once one of the most notorious places in Nigeria - Broad Street Pris...
published: 11 Jan 2013
author: BattaBox
Nigeria's first colonial prison converted into beautiful Lagos Garden
Nigeria's first colonial prison converted into beautiful Lagos Garden
(Lagos Garden) It was once one of the most notorious places in Nigeria - Broad Street Prison - but has now been converted into a beautiful Lagos garden. And ...- published: 11 Jan 2013
- views: 3410
- author: BattaBox
1:43
Commercial for Pre-Colonial Nigeria
A commercial advertising pre-colonial Nigeria. This was a school project earlier this year...
published: 14 Jun 2010
author: porcupine325Q
Commercial for Pre-Colonial Nigeria
Commercial for Pre-Colonial Nigeria
A commercial advertising pre-colonial Nigeria. This was a school project earlier this year.- published: 14 Jun 2010
- views: 711
- author: porcupine325Q
1:26
100 YEARS OLD COLONIAL OFFICE IN EPE,NIGERIA - FESTOUR
Epe is a town and Local Government Area (LGA) in Lagos State, Nigeria,located on the north...
published: 21 Jan 2013
author: Wintv Microres
100 YEARS OLD COLONIAL OFFICE IN EPE,NIGERIA - FESTOUR
100 YEARS OLD COLONIAL OFFICE IN EPE,NIGERIA - FESTOUR
Epe is a town and Local Government Area (LGA) in Lagos State, Nigeria,located on the north side of the Lekki Lagoon. This video features a short history of t...- published: 21 Jan 2013
- views: 744
- author: Wintv Microres
14:52
Customs Boss Blames 'Colonial Masters' For Nigeria's Porous Borders - Part 1
The Assistant Comptroller General of the Nigerian Customs Services (NCS), Musa Tahir has b...
published: 24 Jun 2013
author: Channels Television
Customs Boss Blames 'Colonial Masters' For Nigeria's Porous Borders - Part 1
Customs Boss Blames 'Colonial Masters' For Nigeria's Porous Borders - Part 1
The Assistant Comptroller General of the Nigerian Customs Services (NCS), Musa Tahir has blamed the colonial administration for the prevalence of porous bord...- published: 24 Jun 2013
- views: 445
- author: Channels Television
6:57
Quick Introduction to Colonialism in Africa
An introduction to the colonization of Africa by European imperial powers such as France a...
published: 17 Aug 2009
author: RoyalHistoricSociety
Quick Introduction to Colonialism in Africa
Quick Introduction to Colonialism in Africa
An introduction to the colonization of Africa by European imperial powers such as France and Great Britain, and an explanation of how the "Scramble for Afric...- published: 17 Aug 2009
- views: 84064
- author: RoyalHistoricSociety
4:34
Nigerian Colonial History 1
This is the culled from a series of films produced for the Government of the Federal Repub...
published: 07 Mar 2014
Nigerian Colonial History 1
Nigerian Colonial History 1
This is the culled from a series of films produced for the Government of the Federal Republic of Nigeria titled "The Colonial Legacy, Journey to Nationhood.- published: 07 Mar 2014
- views: 2
10:08
Nigeria: A Failed Colonial Experiment - part 1 of 3 District 9
Nigeria is a Failed Sate A documentary on Nigeria colonialism The scramble for Africa Nige...
published: 21 Jul 2009
author: Okoroman
Nigeria: A Failed Colonial Experiment - part 1 of 3 District 9
Nigeria: A Failed Colonial Experiment - part 1 of 3 District 9
Nigeria is a Failed Sate A documentary on Nigeria colonialism The scramble for Africa Nigerian Leaders Obama in Ghana speech district 9 obasanjo yab Dora Aku...- published: 21 Jul 2009
- views: 9381
- author: Okoroman
8:16
Nigeria: A Failed Colonial Experiment - part 2 of 3
Nigeria is a Failed Sate A documentary on Nigeria colonialism The scramble for Africa Nige...
published: 22 Jul 2009
author: Okoroman
Nigeria: A Failed Colonial Experiment - part 2 of 3
Nigeria: A Failed Colonial Experiment - part 2 of 3
Nigeria is a Failed Sate A documentary on Nigeria colonialism The scramble for Africa Nigerian leaders.- published: 22 Jul 2009
- views: 2578
- author: Okoroman
12:36
Part 4 of 4: Journey to Nationhood | The Colonial Legacy
This is the first programme in a series of films produced for the Government of the Federa...
published: 03 Oct 2010
author: 419Positive
Part 4 of 4: Journey to Nationhood | The Colonial Legacy
Part 4 of 4: Journey to Nationhood | The Colonial Legacy
This is the first programme in a series of films produced for the Government of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. This episode charts the British Empire's tak...- published: 03 Oct 2010
- views: 7086
- author: 419Positive
Vimeo results:
1:37
New Year Countdown - 2014
New Years Eve Countdown - an installation created for a client in Nigeria to welcome 2014....
published: 06 Jan 2014
author: Michael Kimani
New Year Countdown - 2014
New Years Eve Countdown - an installation created for a client in Nigeria to welcome 2014.
Credits
Agency: New Colony Studio
Design : Barbara Muriungi
Animation: Michael Kimani
Production: Isioma & Ola Olowu
3:48
RE-EMERGING: The Jews of Nigeria - Official Trailer
From a young age growing up in Nigeria, Shmuel consistently heard that the Igbo people wer...
published: 28 Feb 2012
author: Jeff Lieberman
RE-EMERGING: The Jews of Nigeria - Official Trailer
From a young age growing up in Nigeria, Shmuel consistently heard that the Igbo people were Jews. Elders told the story of the Igbo originating in the foreign land of Israel and descending from a forefather named Eri. Yet, two centuries of Christian Colonialism prevented him and many other Igbo from exploring that connection further.
A few years ago, the Internet arrived in Shmuel's town and using an old, dial-up computer, he began comparing Igbo traditions with Hebrew traditions. What he found was a multitude of similarities between culture, ritual, language, worship and history. It set him off on a journey to discover his true identity, but like many Igbo, often led him down the wrong path into the worlds of Messianic Judaism and Sabbatarianism.
Today, as Igbos all over Nigeria shake off the strong hold of British Colonialism and Pentecostal Christian influence, they are returning to their native ways & embracing Judaism in that equation. Synagogues are sprouting up across the nation, and the unique sounds of Hebrew prayer mixed with African music can be heard emanating out of villages, over-crowded neighborhoods and palm tree-covered forests.
As Shmuel finally discovered a community of rich Igbo Jewish culture, he faced another challenge – his family. In this fervently religious country divided equally among Muslims and Christians, the emergence (or re-emergence) of a Jewish community has been met with scorn, family rejection and often violence. Seeking solace from the Western Jewish world has been fruitless. But, with an Igbo population of over 25 million people, and a continuing stream of individuals embracing Judaism, this movement has the potential to re-define Judaism. It also has already begun to raise questions of cultural identity for countless African-Americans, a large percentage who were once Igbo.
Years after Shmuel's initial discovery, life changed dramatically when an American rabbi came to visit. Having heard of this congregation, Rabbi Howard Gorin brought Judaica and a Torah. Yet, the most enduring gift was simply the love and acknowledgement of a revered brother. Inspired by the rabbi, Shmuel now pursues a chance to attend rabbinical school, hoping to one day lead his people in the teachings of his ancestors.
The film will premiere in Spring 2012.
More info at www.re-emergingfilm.com
7:50
How do we turn Brain Drain to Brain Gain? - Philip Emeagwali
How Do We Reverse the Brain Drain?
Keynote speech by Emeagwali [emeagwali.com] delivered ...
published: 25 Jan 2008
author: Philip Emeagwali
How do we turn Brain Drain to Brain Gain? - Philip Emeagwali
How Do We Reverse the Brain Drain?
Keynote speech by Emeagwali [emeagwali.com] delivered on October 24, 2003, at the Pan-African Conference on Brain Drain, Elsah, Illinois USA. The entire transcript, letters and photos are posted at http://emeagwali.com/speeches/brain-drain/to-brain-gain/reverse-brain-drain-from-africa.html. Permission to reproduce is granted.
Thank you for the pleasant introduction as well as for inviting me to share my thoughts on turning “brain drain” into “brain gain.”
For 10 million African-born emigrants, the word “home” is synonymous with the United States, Britain or other country outside of Africa.
Personally, I have lived continuously in the United States for the past 30 years. My last visit to Africa was 17 years ago.
On the day I left Nigeria, I felt sad because I was leaving my family behind. I believed I would return eight years later, probably marry an Igbo girl, and then spend the rest of my life in Nigeria.
But 25 years ago, I fell in love with an American girl, married her three years later, and became eligible to sponsor a Green Card visa for my 35 closest relatives, including my parents and all my siblings, nieces and nephews.
The story of how I brought 35 people to the United States exemplifies how 10 million skilled people have emigrated out of Africa during the past 30 years.
We came to the United States on student visas and then changed our status to become permanent residents and then naturalized citizens. Our new citizenship status helped us sponsor relatives, and also inspired our friends to immigrate here.
Ten million Africans now constitute an invisible nation that resides outside Africa. Although invisible, it is a nation as populous as Angola, Malawi, Zambia or Zimbabwe. If it were to be a nation with distinct borders, it would have an income roughly equivalent to Africa’s gross domestic product.
Although the African Union does not recognize the African Diaspora as a nation, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) acknowledges its economic importance. The IMF estimates the African Diaspora now constitutes the biggest group of foreign investors in Africa.
Take for example Western Union. It estimates that it is not atypical for an immigrant to wire 00 per month to relatives in Africa. If you assume that most Africans living outside Africa send money each month and you do the math, you will agree with the IMF that the African Diaspora is indeed the largest foreign investor in Africa.
What few realize is that Africans who immigrate to the United States contribute 40 times more wealth to the American than to the African economy. According to the United Nations, an African professional working in the United States contributes about 50,000 per year to the U.S. economy.
Again, if you do the math, you will realize that the African professional remitting 00 per month to Africa is contributing 40 times more to the United States economy than to the African one.
On a relative scale, that means for every 00 per month a professional African sends home, that person contributes 2,000 per month to the U.S. economy.
Of course, the issue more important than facts and figures is eliminating poverty in Africa, not merely reducing it by sending money to relatives. Money alone cannot eliminate poverty in Africa, because even one million dollars is a number with no intrinsic value.
Real wealth cannot be measured by money, yet we often confuse money with wealth. Under the status quo, Africa would still remain poor even if we were to send all the money in the world there.
Ask someone who is ill what “wealth” means, and you will get a very different answer than from most other people.
If you were HIV-positive, you would gladly exchange one million dollars to become HIV-negative.
When you give your money to your doctor, that physician helps you convert your money into health - or rather, wealth.
Money cannot teach your children. Teachers can. Money cannot bring electricity to your home. Engineers can. Money cannot cure sick people. Doctors can.
Because it is only a nation’s human capital that can be converted into real wealth, that human capital is much more valuable than its financial capital.
A few years ago, Zambia had 1,600 medical doctors. Today, Zambia has only 400 medical doctors. Kenya retains only 10% of the nurses and doctors trained there. A similar story is told from South Africa to Ghana.
I also speak from my family experiences. After contributing 25 years to Nigerian society as a nurse, my father retired on a 5-per-month pension.
By comparison, my four sisters each earn 5 per hour as nurses in the United States. If my father had had the opportunity my sisters did, he certainly would have immigrated to the United States as a young nurse.
The “brain drain” explains, in part, why affluent Africans fly to London for their medical treatments.
Furthermore, because a significant percentage of African doctors and
6:44
Mad Dogs and Cameramen: The Story of Colonial Film (taster reel v.2)
The British Colonial Film Unit was founded in 1939 to produce propaganda films that would ...
published: 13 Jun 2012
author: Hidden Picture Productions
Mad Dogs and Cameramen: The Story of Colonial Film (taster reel v.2)
The British Colonial Film Unit was founded in 1939 to produce propaganda films that would maintain support for wartime Britain in the colonies. People were dispatched across the Empire to make these films. Some were colonial administrators; some were film directors.
The most successful colonial film units were in West Africa, in Ghana and Nigeria, where competing ideologies produced very different films. In Nigeria, unit head William Sellers advocated using simple film techniques that could be understood by "primitive" viewers. In Ghana, film director Sean Graham believed that all films should be good films, no matter the audience. Graham went on to produce the first feature length drama with an all-African cast. It was a popular and critical success, and was nominated for a BAFTA.
But in the aftermath of WWII the notion of empire was being questioned; the filmmakers in West Africa found themselves swept along by a tide of change as Africa agitated for independence. In the space of a decade these filmmakers went from producing films that upheld the empire to making films reflecting an increasingly self-sufficient, independent Africa.
This is the story of colonial filmmakers in Africa. They went to Africa to tell the story of Empire but ended up telling the story of African independence. Along the way they produced a treasure trove of remarkable films and in doing so laid the groundwork for the biggest film industries in Africa today. This is their story.
Youtube results:
5:47
Nigeria and the Colonial Past, Dr. Ade Adefuye, Ambassador1
Comments With Dr. James Haney Presents*Nigeria and the Colonial Past, with Dr. Ade Adefuye...
published: 12 Aug 2012
author: james haney
Nigeria and the Colonial Past, Dr. Ade Adefuye, Ambassador1
Nigeria and the Colonial Past, Dr. Ade Adefuye, Ambassador1
Comments With Dr. James Haney Presents*Nigeria and the Colonial Past, with Dr. Ade Adefuye, Ambassador to the United States from Nigeria, talks about the col...- published: 12 Aug 2012
- views: 11
- author: james haney
2:37
History Book Review: Colonial Meltdown: Northern Nigeria in the Great Depression (New African His...
http://www.HistoryBookMix.com This is the summary of Colonial Meltdown: Northern Nigeria i...
published: 27 Jul 2012
author: HistoryBookMixCom
History Book Review: Colonial Meltdown: Northern Nigeria in the Great Depression (New African His...
History Book Review: Colonial Meltdown: Northern Nigeria in the Great Depression (New African His...
http://www.HistoryBookMix.com This is the summary of Colonial Meltdown: Northern Nigeria in the Great Depression (New African Histories) by Moses E. Ochonu.- published: 27 Jul 2012
- views: 35
- author: HistoryBookMixCom
9:37
Tony Allen 70 Nigeria 50 Colonial Mentality.mp4
Tony Allen 70 Nigeria 50, 06/10/2010 Barbican Hall, London. Featuring: Tony Allen, Pee Wee...
published: 23 Oct 2011
author: duckworthwatching
Tony Allen 70 Nigeria 50 Colonial Mentality.mp4
Tony Allen 70 Nigeria 50 Colonial Mentality.mp4
Tony Allen 70 Nigeria 50, 06/10/2010 Barbican Hall, London. Featuring: Tony Allen, Pee Wee Ellis, Keziah Jones, Seun Kuti, Cheikh Lo, Eska Mtungwazi, Dele So...- published: 23 Oct 2011
- views: 676
- author: duckworthwatching
1:03
Nigerian Colonial History 4
This is the culled from a series of films produced for the Government of the Federal Repub...
published: 07 Mar 2014
Nigerian Colonial History 4
Nigerian Colonial History 4
This is the culled from a series of films produced for the Government of the Federal Republic of Nigeria titled "The Colonial Legacy, Journey to Nationhood.- published: 07 Mar 2014
- views: 1