Urhobo Historical Society |
The Historic Contributions of Urhobo
Progress
By Peter P. Ekeh
Chairman, Urhobo Historical
Society
A
Lecture at the 2008 Urhobo National Day Celebrations, PTI Conference
Centre, Effurun. |
Olorogun Felix
Ibru, President-General,
Urhobo Progress
Your Majesties,
Ivie of
Urhoboland
Beloved Members of
Urhobo
Progress
Distinguished
Ladies and
Gentlemen
The historic roots
of Urhobo
Progress Union run back to the turmoil that ensued from the beginnings
of
British colonial rule in Urhoboland in the first three decades of the 20th
century. Although many Urhobo communities had signed the so-called
�Treaties of
Protection� with the British Imperial Government in the 1890s, actual
British
colonial rule did not begin until a dispute concerning colonial
jurisdiction in
Urhoboland was settled between two agencies of British Government,
namely,
Royal Niger Company and Niger Coast Protectorate Government. In 1900
the Royal
Niger Company lost its bid to rule Urhobo territories as a surrogate of
the
British Government. Thenceforth, colonial rule in Urhoboland began in
earnest.
The first three
decades of
colonial rule were hard times in Urhoboland. The Urhobo had eagerly
awaited the
coming of the famed white man about whom they had heard so much. For
four
centuries, from the 1480s to the 1890s, the Urhobo people were involved
in
international trade in which they supplied palm produce, pepper and
other
agricultural products that were shipped to
The prime reason
for the
difficulties that arose between the Urhobo people and the new British
Colonial
Government was that the Urhobo felt that the Government had instituted
policies
that punished the Urhobo people and that disfavoured them. On the other
hand,
British colonial officers had difficulties in dealing with Urhobo
clan-based
chieftains. These bad relations were unresolved by the 1920s when
several
Urhobo organizations began to emerge in diverse attempts to redress
grievances
felt by Urhobo communities. Most of these associations were organized
by young
Urhobos from towns and clans that were fractions of the Urhobo whole.
Two
examples will illustrate them. Chief T. E. A. Salubi has cited the
formation of
the Association of Okpara Young Men in 1925 as a notable example of the
ferment
of that age. But the motives of this association were suspected by the
colonial
Government and by the Chiefs. Like many other clan and town
associations of
that period, it failed. The most successful clan association of that
era was
Okpe Union, which was formed in 1930. Its success was probably due to
the fact
that Okpe Chiefs cooperated with young literate men.
While Clan and Town
Unions,
such as the Okpe Union, did some good for their narrow segments of the
Urhobo
whole, the new age ushered in by the European presence required a large
platform for expressing the needs of the Urhobo people. Until the
colonial era,
each clan could take care of the needs of its people. Matters were
quite
different in the early decades of the 20th century. The
problems
facing Urhobo people in the 1920s could only be addressed by an
association of
all Urhobos. It was in this vein that Urhobo Brotherly Society was
formed in
1931 in Warri by insurgent Urhobo nationalists. It spread rapidly
throughout
Urhoboland and its Diaspora in colonial
It must not be
imagined that
Urhobo Progress Union attained its fame on a platter of gold. In the
1930s, the
British Colonial Government was suspicious of nationalist
organizations, such
as Urhobo Progress Union. UPU�s signal moment came from events that
began in
1934. In arguing for the revival of Itsekiri kingship, which had been
defunct
since 1848, a group of Itsekiri insulted the Urhobo by employing an
epithet,
which we need not repeat here, in a publication in the Daily
Times of 13th June 1934. The British authorities
were displeased with this publication and apparently put pressure on
Itsekiri
Native Authority which duly entered a disclaimer with an apology to the
Urhobo
people for the wanton attack from this group of Itsekiri.
That insult
crystallized
Urhobo resentment and sentiments and dramatically led to an event that
surprised the British Colonial Government. Urhobo Progress Union and
heads of
several clans in
Urhobo
General Meeting and the Maturation of Urhobo
Progress
Urhobo Progress
Union earned
precious premium from Urhobo General Meeting of the 1930s. First, its
interaction with older and experienced clan chieftains allowed the
relatively
younger members of the UPU to gain a great deal of experience. Second,
Urhobo
General Meeting provided Urhobo Progress Union a platform for the
formulation
of an agenda for promoting Urhobo welfare. As Adogbeji Salubi
acknowledged in
his presidential address to the UPU Congress of 1965, although many of
these
Chiefs were not members of the UPU, they assisted the younger members
of the
Perhaps, the most
remarkable
achievement of Urhobo Progress Union from the sessions of Urhobo
General
Meeting at Orerokpe was that the
It was in the 1930s that the UPU gained the trust and
respect of ordinary Urhobo people as an organization that they could
rely on.
Urhobo Progress Union achieved extraordinary feats in the 1930s that
shaped
Urhobo affairs into the future. Above all else, UPU represented and
protected
the interests of the Urhobo people before the Colonial Government.
Urhobo
Progress
Beginning with its
activities
under the platform of Urhobo General Meeting, Urhobo Progress Union
undertook a
large number of activities that shaped Urhobo�s destiny under British
colonial
rule and that helped the Urhobo people to overcome what looked like
overwhelming challenges from 1900-1930s. It is best to categorize the
First, Urhobo
Progress Union
was able to reverse adverse British colonial policies that were in
place in the
1930s. The pernicious policies hurt the Urhobo people. The UPU
successfully
persuaded the British Colonial Government to change its wrongful
colonial
policies.
Second, Urhobo
Progress Union
fought hard to protect Urhobo lands and interests against alien powers
that
sought to poach Urhobo assets.
Third, Urhobo
Progress Union
embarked on the development of the Urhobo people -- inside Urhoboland
and its
Diaspora -- in those instances where it was clear that the Urhobo
people could
not wait for the British Colonial Government and its allied Christian
Missionaries to bring change to the Urhobo people.
Fourth, a major
development
of Urhobo history in the modern era, beginning with colonial times, was
that
Urhobos migrated to other lands inside
Fifth, while
promoting the
welfare of Urhobo people, Urhobo Progress Union was fully engaged in
building
up a positive image for the Urhobo nation. UPU�s regime of image
management
included a tough fight against those Urhobo people who were doing
damage to the
good name of the Urhobo people.
I will now proceed
to analyze
each of these categories of achievements of Urhobo Progress Union, from
the 1930s
well unto the 1980s.
Reversing Bad Colonial Policies
Urhobo Progress
Union changed
the way the Urhobo people dealt with the new Colonial Government. In
previous
decades, before the 1930s, Urhobo grievances against British colonial
policies
were settled in violent ways, resulting in a score of riots and arrests
of
several local Urhobo leaders. The new way of Urhobo Progress Union was
to
persuade the British of the wrongfulness of their colonial policies and
to make
positive suggestions of alternative policies. This new methodology was
tried
out with respect to several major wrongful colonial policies.
Of immediate
urgency for the
Urhobo in the 1930s was the wrongful name by which the British called
them.
Unable to handle the compound consonant �rh� in Urhobo language, the
British
conveniently changed it to �s.� Thus, the British colonizers called the
Urhobo
�Sobo,� just as they changed Urhiapele to Sapele and Urhonigbe in
Such persuading
prowess was
employed by Urhobo Progress Union to great effect in a tougher area of
interrogation that challenged core colonial policies regarding the
allocation
of Urhobo clans to colonial administrative divisions. Well up to the
1930s,
several Urhobo clans were allocated by British colonial policies to a
variety
of administrative divisions outside of Urhoboland. Abraka and Orogun
were
assigned to Aboh Division. Idjerhe (misnamed as Jesse by the British)
was part
of Benin Division in
Of these instances
of
misallocation, that of Idjerhe was the most threatening. That was so
for two
reasons. First, Idjerhe was assigned to
Second, Urhobo
Progress Union
doggedly fought against the fusion of Urhobo affairs with Itsekiri
politics in
the so-called Jekri-Sobo Division. The issue involved in this instance
was a
lot more sinister than most people recognize. Although Itsekiri
chieftains
liked this arrangement, its origin did not come from Itsekiri pressure.
On the
contrary, it was in a nasty British colonial experimentation of
marrying what
many colonial officers saw as the wisdom of the Itsekiri with what they
perceived as the dynamism of the Urhobo people. Many of them argued
that
bringing the Itsekiri and Urhobo together under the same government
would
overcome the leisurely ways of the Itsekiri and the inexperience of the
Urhobo
while matching Urhobo dynamism with Itsekiri experience in government.
Urhobos
rejected this logic and craved a separation from the Itsekiri. Urhobo
Progress
Union pursued its campaign for separation in two stages. First, the UPU
persuaded the colonial officers to separate Urhobo Treasury from
Itsekiri
Treasury. This was accomplished in September 1937. Second, Urhobo
Progress
Union pressed for the separation of the government of the Itsekiri from
that of
the Urhobo. This was achieved in June 1950 when Itsekiri Division was
created
and Udu, Uvwie, Okpe, Agbon, Idjerhe, and Oghara were transferred to
Urhobo
Division.
Finally, the
transfer of
Orogun and Abraka from Aboh Division to Urhobo Division in January 1951
completed the campaign by Urhobo Progress Union for the grouping of all
Urhobo
clans under a single Colonial Division. The only exception was the
unique
instance of Okere and Agbarha-Ame whose lands constitute the Provincial
headquarters at Warri.
It is important to
stress
that in successfully campaigning for the transfer of these misallocated
clans
back to the Urhobo fold, Chief Mukoro Mowoe and his colleagues of
Urhobo
Progress had achieved what few organizations could boast of in the
colonial
history of Africa. We will realize the enormity of this achievement by
posing
the following question: What if Urhobo Progress Union had not fought
for the
wholeness of the Urhobo nation during the 1930s and 1940s? It was
entirely
possible that Idjerhe might have wrongfully been assigned to
Protecting
There was a
dramatic
difference between the peaceful circumstances of the lands that were
termed
Eastern Urhobo and the threats to Urhobo lands in
In the 1930s,
Urhobo Progress
Union boldly stood behind the Idjerhe, Okpe and Oghara people to ward
off fresh
attempts to poach their lands in northwestern Urhobo. As already
indicated,
mature discussions on Idjerhe-Benin boundaries led to an amicable
resolution of
the land relations between the
The most dramatic
success
scored by Urhobo Progress Union was unquestionably on the Sapele land
case.
With the help, and at the urging, of Urhobo Progress Union, the Okpe
people
went to court to claim ownership of
The struggle to
protect
Urhobo lands dragged on unto the 1970s when major Itsekiri chieftains
and the
King of Itsekiri took Chief Daniel Okumagba to court to lay claims to
Okere
lands in Warri. Daniel Okumagba was a key member of Urhobo Progress
Union,
having once served as its Secretary. He took for his lawyer another UPU
devotee, Dr. Mudiaga Odje. In many senses, therefore, Urhobo Progress
Union was
wholly involved in this important case. As in the Sapele case of the
1940s, the
Itsekiri lost their legal claim to Okere-Warri in a judgement of the
Mid-Western High Court sitting at Warri and delivered by Mr. Justice
Ekeruche.
In 1974, the Supreme Court of Nigeria upheld this judgement that
awarded
ownership of the relevant Warri lands to the Okere people.
I have chosen to
highlight
these cases because the history of
Development of Urhobo People and
Urhoboland
From the above
catalogue of achievements
by Urhobo Progress Union, it might appear that this organization was
well
endowed from the 1930s through the 1950s. Nothing could be farther from
the
truth. On the contrary, the hard reality that confronted the UPU in the
1930s
was that it had very little to work with. It was very clear to the
leaders of
Urhobo Progress Union that in the new era of European colonialism,
Urhobo
people were seen as backward in comparison to other ethnic
nationalities.
An example of the
hardship
that confronted the Urhobo people could be illustrated from an event
from one
of the several meetings that UPU leaders held with colonial officers in
the
1930s. At a meeting with the Resident, the highest Colonial Officer of
It was clear to
Urhobo
Progress Union in the 1930s that the Urhobo people could not wait for
the
Government or the Christian Missions to train the personnel that the
Urhobo
people needed in order to function adequately in the new colonial era.
By 1936,
the Lagos Branch of the
Today, no one
doubts the
wisdom of this initiative that was originally conceived by Apolo
Ikutegbe of
the Lagos Branch in 1935. We need not delay in assessing the
significance of
However, it would
be a
mistake to limit the contributions of Urhobo Progress Union in the
sphere of
educational development in Urhoboland to the Union�s extraordinary
achievements
in the founding and management of
In addition to its
sponsorship of the coming of Western missions, schools and hospitals to
Urhoboland, Urhobo Progress Union must be credited with a successful
campaign
for the enhancement of the indigenous institution of kingship in
Urhoboland. At
the onset of British colonial rule in the Western Niger Delta in the
1890s and
1900s, kings were rare in the region. The Itsekiri and Ijaw had no
kings. In
Urhobo country, the Ovie of Ughelli and Ovie of Ogor existed to
represent the
traditional practice of clan kingship in Urhoboland. It was not until
1936 that
the Itsekiri revived their kinship which had been suppressed by
powerful
merchants in Itsekiri affairs since 1848. In the later half of the
1930s,
Urhobo Progress Union mounted major campaigns to create kings in
Urhoboland.
When the Okpe people decided to ask for the revival of their kingship,
which
had been vacated, probably for centuries, they found a powerful ally in
the
Urhobo Progress Union in the attempt to persuade the British Colonial
Government to allow the revival of the royal title of Orodje of Okpe.
The
installation of Esezi II in 1945 was celebrated not only in Okpe, but
by
numerous UPU branches, especially in the Urhobo Diaspora. Today, when
we see
our galaxy of kings, in whom we take great pride, we must be reminded
that we
see in their glory the vision of Urhobo Progress Union from the 1930s.
All in all, Urhobo
Progress
Union saw itself as the agency of progress in Urhoboland. It invested
most of
its capital in the development of a future generation of Urhobo men and
women.
In one way or the other, we who are assembled here today � kings and
commoners,
professors and students, wealthy men and women and the poor, etc.,
etc., -- we
all are the bearers of the progress which the visionaries of the Urhobo
Progress Union wrought in the decades of the 1930s and 1940s and well
beyond.
Urhobo Progress
Until the arrival
of colonial
rule in the 1890s, Urhobos were largely confined to their homeland in
the
rainforests and creeks of the Western Niger Delta, with occasional
forays to
fishing grounds of the Ijaws and sometimes to Ukwuani country for those
who
dared to pursue livelihoods outside Urhobo country. By 1893, the
British
colonizers had penetrated Yoruba country. Following British conquest of
Similarly, hundreds
of
Urhobos poured into colonial townships where they plied several types
of
occupation, including trading in agricultural produce. Some worked in
the
colonial service. In the Yoruba towns of
In both of these
instances,
the welfare of Urhobo migrants was endangered. Until the 1930s, there
was no
organized way of handling the rapid growth of Urhobo immigrants in
Yoruba
country and elsewhere. Exploitation by host communities was not
uncommon. In
addition, quarrels among Urhobos were also common. The rise of Urhobo
Progress
Union in the 1930s came as a blessing to these migrants, both in rural
areas and
the new colonial townships. The rapid growth and popularity of Urhobo
Progress
Union among migrants of the Urhobo Diaspora owed their urgency to the
functions
which this new organization performed in the Diaspora.
Urhobo Progress
Union was
responsible for the welfare of Urhobo people in the Diaspora. Moreover,
the UPU
served as the custodian of Urhobo culture in many fragments of the
Urhobo
Diaspora. Thus, the UPU assumed essential cultural roles in marriages,
deaths,
and indeed socialization of children. In instances of undue hardship,
individual Urhobo migrants turned to the UPU for help. Urhobo Progress
Union
helped Urhobo migrants who were unfairly taken to colonial courts. The
UPU also
played quasi-legal roles. For instance, in many fragments of the Urhobo
Diaspora, the UPU handled cases of divorce between Urhobo couples.
Perhaps, a sense of
the
pervasive role of Urhobo Progress Union in the affairs of Urhobo
migrants may
be captured from the extraordinary history of one Urhobo leader in
It needs to be
added that
these roles of Urhobo Progress Union were unique to the Urhobo
Diaspora. In
other words, other traditional structures assumed these roles in the
Urhobo
homeland. However, away from the Urhobo homeland, away in distant
lands, Urhobo
migrants relied on Urhobo Progress Union to perform roles that their
extended
families attended to in the safety and traditions of their homeland.
Urhobo Progress
Any fair and
fulsome
assessment of the contributions of Urhobo Progress Union must include
the
critical role played by the
Urhobo Progress
Union barred
many of these people from membership of the
Let me cite two
instances of
disputes between Urhobo Progress Union and the payan groups in
The first incident
occurred
in 1935-36. The Lagos Branch of the UPU was opened in November 1934.
Shortly
thereafter in 1935, the Lagos Branch began its campaign for scholarship
funds
for Urhobo youngsters. In an attempt to raise good funds, the Lagos
Branch of
the UPU decided to bring stilt Ikenike
dancers from the Ilaje area to
The second dispute
was even
more deadly. In 1943, the Welfare Officer of Lagos Colony was making
moves
against prostitutes who were accused of corrupting under-age girls into
their
trade. The Government authorities had sought the help of Adogbeji
Salubi, who
was then an Assistant Labour Officer in
I have narrated
these
incidents of UPU�s confrontation with those they considered as unsavory
characters
and whom the
The fact remains,
however,
that the overall positive image that the Urhobo nation enjoys today
owes a
great deal to the work of Urhobo Progress Union. It fought relentlessly
against
evil efforts to malign the Urhobo people by outsiders. It also had the
internal
fortitude to fight against fellow Urhobos whose behaviours had given a
bad name
to the Urhobo people.
Some
Concluding Thoughts
I suppose there are
some in
this audience who will wonder whether we have not exaggerated the
contributions
and achievements of Urhobo Progress Union. They may well ask: Are there
no
other associations that have achieved as much for their people
elsewhere in
I believe that is a
fair
question. My answer would be that in terms of African history of the
colonial
period, Urhobo Progress Union ranks quite high in comparison to the
most
celebrated of the indigenous associations. I am aware that Urhobo
Progress
Union has been compared to the African National Congress of South
Africa in
terms of their achievements. But the ANC is quite different from the
UPU.
Nelson Mandela�s African National Congress was from its beginning a
multi-racial and multi-ethnic association that was empowered by the
ideals and
ideologies that were long in existence in the West. In an important
sense, the
African National Congress was not an indigenous organization. On the
other
hand, Urhobo Progress Union was an indigenous association whose ideals
were
homegrown.
Among
The Urhobo people
owned
Urhobo Progress Union in at least two senses. First, its prime goals
were for
the advancement of ordinary Urhobo people. From its inception, Urhobo
Progress
Union was primarily concerned about the welfare of the ordinary Urhobo
person.
The
There is a second
sense in
which the ordinary man and woman owned Urhobo Progress Union. They
contributed
their share to the resources of the
Let me cite an
event from the
era of Chief T. E. A. Salubi as President-General of the
The uniqueness of
Urhobo
Progress Union also arose from the remarkable character of those who
led the
I thank
you for listening to me. Wa ko b� iruo.