This article explores why many Igbo choose to build mansions in their villages even
when they don’t own houses in towns and cities where they fully reside
The one-storey building at Uga Village in
Aguata Local Government Area of Anambra State belonging to Mr. Cosmas
Obiukwu is a beauty to behold. The duplex has all known modern trappings
of a building- fully equipped with gadgets like air conditioners,
swimming pool, a big Lister generator and above all, a big wall marked
off by an electric fence.
The building also has two security men,
one who guards the house during the day and another who monitors
movements around the compound at night.
Curiously, in spite of all these
provisions, the building is virtually empty. There is no life in the
compound as nobody stays in the building almost all-year round. The only
time that there is sign of life in the premises is when the owner and
members of his family visit home for one ceremony or another.
This is usually during festive periods
like Christmas or Easter and even at that, Obiukwu and his family have
never stayed more than a week on each visit. In other words, in this massive
structure, except for the intermittent whimpering of insects and animals
as well as the whispering sounds from surrounding trees, there is no
significant human activity in the compound in a greater part of the
year.
Interestingly, Obiukwu, who owns this
edifice, occupies just one-bedroom flat at his Surulere, Lagos
residence. Besides his immediate family-his wife and three boys- he has
other “big squatters,” whose Lagos residence offers a kind of refuge. In
fact, one of the squatters, Obiukwu’s cousin, a banker in Lagos, also
has an unoccupied five-bedroom apartment at his Awka, Anambra State
hometown.
You would find them in virtually every
village in Anambra State; imposing edifices with what could be
considered stupefying perimeter fencing and costly gatehouses. These
are homes or villas, as they are commonly referred to locally, of
absentee owners, who though are indigenous to the villages, earn their
living in far flung places like Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt and
overseas.
For most of the year, the homes are
locked, and in some cases, for many years as the owners hardly return to
live in them. They are inhabited by security guards who act like dogs
in a manger. In fact, some of the houses are completely uninhabited by
human beings and are open only to reptiles and rodents.
From Nmiata Anam on the Northern bank of
the Anambra River to Ogwuikpele on the southern fringes of Ogbaru along
the River Niger, the well anointed homes are not difficult to locate.
They indeed draw attention to themselves with their exotic looks and
well-chosen locations.
You might get it wrong if you think that
the home owners are well known political office holders and prominent
businessmen. No! Majority of them are young enterprising businessmen
toiling on the streets of Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt, South Africa,
Europe and other overseas countries to make ends meet.
There is a case of one young man, who
lives in Abuja but built an expansive mansion in his village at Nibo in
Awka South Local Government Area. He brought in a bishop from Abuja to
dedicate the house way back in 2008. But till date he has never passed a
night in that house, even though he has stocked it full with provisions
for visitors.
Such similar stories and circumstances
abound in the South-East. Cases and sights of large edifices lying
fallow, as it were, are common in many parts and communities in the
east, particularly in Anambra, Enugu, Imo and Abia states.
Again, such circumstances are not limited
to Lagos, across the country- be it in Kaduna, Kano, Niger or
Sokoto-many persons of Igbo extraction prefer to occupy small rented
accommodation where they eke their living to building houses in the
cities.
For an Enugu indigene, Mr. Eugene Ufele,
who plies his business at the Trade Fair Centre, Lagos, the development
is a reminder of the 1967-70 Civil War. According to the 48-year-old
businessman, 43 years after the war, his family has yet to come to terms
with the loss of their uncle’s property in Lagos and Port Harcourt.
Following the experience that befell his
uncle, he added that no member of his family, at least for now, would
think of building or owning a large property outside of their home
state. Therefore, for the Ufeles, they are still “viewing” the Nigerian
project with suspicion.
Ufele said he had no intention of building or even renting a ‘big’ house in Lagos.
“For what? Why would I even think of
building a house in Lagos, a place that is not my village? I don’t mind
that I am staying in a two bedroom apartment. I would rather use the
money to build a mansion in my village than a kitchen line in Lagos or
elsewhere,” Ufele said.
Ufele said he is not likely to forget
what is happening in the North where many Igbo citizens had to return
home ‘empty handed’ because of the crisis in the area.
“I am sure all of them built mansions in
those places. Now that they have come home, did they carry the mansions
on their heads? And now, these people don’t even have a ‘store’ in the
village, yet they went all out to build ‘skyscrapers’ in another man’s
home.”
Ufele said he believes in ‘one Nigeria’ but he cannot rule out the fact that ‘home is always the best.’
“I know I don’t live in the village but I
know I will retire one day. I am not ready to spend the rest of my life
in the city. Will I be sharing my father’s old house with him when I
retire? It is ideal for any normal Igbo man to build a house in his
village even before building in the city,” he said.
Some others
said the insults they received in 1966 when they returned home from the
North and had no place to lay their heads forced them into taking such
steps.
President of the Igbo Youth Movement,
Rev. Elliot Ukoh, described the situation as not only a direct product
of the pogrom of 1966, but also a hangover effect.
“It also shows a lack of faith in Nigeria, as every year they (the Igbo) are slaughtered in their hundreds,” said Ukoh.
He said, “So, at the back of their
minds, they know that Nigeria will certainly implode and everybody will
run back home. So, they need to have somewhere to run to.”
He also said, “Nobody is killed in
Nigeria like the Igbo. A cartoon in Denmark resulted in the slaughter of
over 300 Igbo in northern Nigeria.
“There are several issues that have led
to the deaths of Ndigbo, which culminated in the need to return home.
Was it the beauty pageant article on a national daily in 2002, or the
announcement that the Independent National Electoral Commission had
announced Dr. Goodluck Jonathan as having defeated Mohammadu Buhari in
an election, among others?”
He added, “With all these, the Igbo long
realised that it is a wiser decision to first build a house in the
village, rather than build in another man’s land or waste the money
renting big apartments in the cities.”
A trader at the Main Market, Enugu, Mr.
Chimezie Okoli, said aside the experience of the 1966 pogrom, “There
were several other issues that made Ndigbo realise the need to have a
shelter at home first, before building on any other soil.”
He said, “Another major reason is to
avoid misunderstandings with relatives when you have to put up with
them, as the communal life of those days is fast becoming non-existent.
“Take the June 12, 1993 crisis as an
example, when most Igbo had to return home. Yet most of them had to
squat in homes of relatives and siblings, thereby often resulting to
quarrels and misunderstandings.”
He said, “We also build mansions not
because we are so rich, but because we must accommodate our parents and
siblings who are not yet financially buoyant to build a house.
“For instance, as the first son of my
family, I am currently building a house in my village in Ndiowu, Anambra
State. I would have loved to build a small house, but I am building a
duplex so that there would be enough rooms for virtually all my
siblings, and one or two close relatives.”
Interestingly, some abroad-based Igbo think alongside Okoli.
Such people even live in squalors, asylums and shelters abroad but have mansions in their villages.
Mrs. Iruka Nodim, a nurse who lives in Maryland, USA, said that she couldn’t think of getting a mortgage in the US but was better
off building a seven-bedroom duplex in her home town in Orlu, Imo State.
“In the US, my accommodation is very
small. There is no way I will suffer, make the money and spend it
abroad. I know I don’t intend to live in the US all my life. You might
see it as an ‘Igbotic’ mentality, but the truth is that I am a full blooded Igbo woman and that I live abroad will not make me change my roots.”
Mr. Anthony Okafor, a councillor at
Anaocha Local Government Area of Anambra State, said he sees nothing
wrong with anybody building a mansion in his village even when he is not
inhabiting it. “The best thing should be in your village, including
your house.
“In Igboland, there is an expression, Akul’uno. It is a title as well as a saying. It means wealth has to go home.
“Culturally, it is believed that the
home in the village is the last place the man will be both in retirement
and in death, so it is obligatory for him to build himself a house to
his taste.”
He wondered why it should bother other
people why a man should build a house he feels is befitting of him. “Are
they complaining? It is wrong to say they don’t live there. If you are
not there, you may invite your relations to ‘warm’ the house for you. He
will go outside and one day come back home.”
Another indigene, Mr. Okechukwu Ogwu,
said building a magnificent house in the village gives a man a sense of
accomplishment. “Even if your father has a good house and you don’t have
your own in the village, your age mates will taunt you. Where do you
host your visitors during Christmas?” he asked.
Chief Alponsus Eze, an Onitsha-based
businessman said where a man is buried is vital to him. “The man
believes that ultimately, he will be buried there. If you build
skyscraper in London and you don’t have a house in your village, Igbo
people believe you don’t have a house,” he said.
But as Ukoh, Ufele, Nnodim and others
hold this view, some others see the idea of building large houses in
their villages from a different prism. In the thinking of Mr. Emeka
Iwuagwu, there can be no faulting the proverb that east or west, home is
the best. This, he said, explained why he first built a bungalow at his
Mbaise, Imo State hometown. He said building first in his hometown had a
socio-cultural implication. For instance, he notes that he stands in a
better stead of being considered for marriage than one who claims that
he has “unseen skyscrapers” overseas, just as it is a measure of success
among one’s peers.
Mr. Vincent Madu, a civil servant, said
it is expected of every Igbo on the attainment of manhood to have his
own house. “But it is not mandatory that you must make it exotic. As you
grow old, you discover that you do not really need the mansion, that
you had wasted money building it when you could have built a smaller and
more comfortable house,” he said.
Chief Rommey Ezeonwuka, proprietor of
Rojenny Games Village, Oba, whose state-of-the-art residence is complete
with a conference centre looked back at when he built the house in the
1970s and said he regretted it. “If it is now, I would not have built
this house. I would have built a simpler house. I was just a young man
then.”
However, Okechukwu Okwudili differs with
the Iwuagwu and the Ufeles. Okwudili, who owns a three-storey building
at Ikorodu, said he considers business interest first before embarking
on any housing project.
He said, “I wonder the kind of arguments
some people usually put up. If for example, I sited this building in my
village, do you think that my children will ever recoup the money I put
into it. It does not make any economic sense to build big houses in the
village only for rats and other rodents to occupy them.”
Interestingly, Mrs. Oluchi Anyanwu, an
architect, said that it is not always ideal to leave a house uninhabited
for a long period.
“It is only when you live in a house that
you would know if there is a leakage somewhere. The leaking roof would
spoil the POP, the walls would become damp and before you know it, there
would be foundation crack. Just like that, it would start looking like
dilapidated structure. Some of these people have leather chairs in their
homes. These chairs need airing. If you lock up your house for a long
period of time, you come back and you would find that the chairs have
peeled. Constant cleaning and dusting lengthens the life span of a
building.
“Natural air that brings in life wouldn’t
come into a house that is locked up. It would make the building to look
dead. You wouldn’t even know how rodents get into the house. You would
notice that any house that is locked up for a while has a kind of
unpleasant smell,” Anyanwu said.
By ’Nonye Ben-Nwankwo
PENNYWISE POUND FOOLISH
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ReplyDeleteYou don't know the average Igbo if you think he does not know his village. Despite what you see of them all over the country outside the South East, you have not seen anything until you go to their home villages. The average Igbo does not believe in erecting residential buildings at Owerri, Aba, Enugu, Umuahia etc. They put up some of the best residential buildings in the country in their remote villages.
Building mansions in villages makes no sense if the houses are used only during the festive seasons.
ReplyDeleteLife is for the living. Why would u dump an empty comfortable mansion in ur village and live in an uncomfortable dump in town? It doesn't make sense at all.
ReplyDeleteBuild a mansion in the village if u so wish but also build a comfortable house in the city where u reside.
ReplyDeleteI tell you, you need such mansions in the village more than in the township 'cos good accommodation during festivities is usually a huge problem. Good hotels are not easily available in most villages but are in cities. Besides, aku ga eru ulo
ReplyDelete