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Welcome to our Mission in Nigeria!
Our Communities in Nigeria PDF Print E-mail

1. FI Ijebu-Igbo, Nigeria


Marian Friary "Our Lady of Perpetual Help"

Brief History:

In 1996, the bishop of Ijebu-Igbo, Mons. Albert Ayinde Fasina met personally the co-founder Fr. Gabriel M. Pellettieri in our mission in Allada, Benin, and invited the friars to come to Nigeria. The bishop gave a positive response and in 1997 Fr. Gabriel arrived in Nigeria with the first two missionary friars, Fr. Alphonse M. Salazar and Friar John Joseph M. Borja (died Oct. 4, 2003 in Nigeria). The parish of Ijebu-Igbo was entrusted to the friars and at that time vocations arrived. Other friars came to help the mission and one of these was Fr. Jose M. Adan the actual superior, and Friar Francis M. Campo who died on June 11, 2003 in the mission. Along with the parish work, the care of those with leprosy beagn, and also assistance to the villages in their material and spiritual needs. They also organized the MIM along with a “Day with Mary.”




2. FI Sagamu, Nigeria


Marian Friary of Our Lady, the Coredemptrix

Brief History:

With the start of the construction of the City of the Immaculate in 2003, the need of a community was necessary after the construction. In July 16, 2004 the first community was created with Fr. Alphonse as the guardian. During Sunday, the community carries out an apostolate for the children. The community is now composed of two priests, Fr. Alphonse M. Salazar and Fr. Giuseppe M. Ortiz, and one lay brother, Friar Jude Thaddeus M. Agu.

 
Nigeria: History of the Nation PDF Print E-mail

P
eople have lived in what is now known as Nigeria since at least 9000 BC, and evidence indicates that since at least 5000 BC some of them have practiced settled agriculture. In the early centuries AD, kingdoms emerged in the drier, northern savanna, prospering from trade ties with North Africa. At roughly the same time, the wetter, southern forested areas yielded city-states and looser federations sustained by agriculture and coastal trade. These systems changed radically with the arrival of Europeans in the late 15th century, the rise of the slave trade from the 16th through the 19th century, and formal colonization by Britain at the end of 19th century. Nigeria achieved independence in 1960 but has since been plagued by unequal distribution of wealth and ineffective, often corrupt governments.

A. Precolonial History of the Savanna

The Nok culture, which flourished between 500 BC and AD 200, is the earliest identifiable civilization in Nigeria’s north; the Nok are also the earliest of West Africa’s known ironworkers. (Their real identity unknown, the Nok are named for a village where miners first unearthed their artifacts.) Their famous figurines—finely crafted people and animals in terra-cotta—have influenced centuries of central Nigerian sculpture. Today the art of several central Nigerian peoples continues to reflect Nok style.

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The People of Nigeria PDF Print E-mail

N
igeria has not held a census since 1991. In 2007 Nigeria’s estimated population was 135,031,164, yielding an average density of 148 persons per sq km (384 per sq mi). With a birth rate of 40.2 per 1,000 and a death rate of 16.7 per 1,000, Nigeria’s population is growing at an average of 2 percent annually—a rapid pace, and little changed from the 1970s. The average Nigerian woman gives birth 5 times in her lifetime, although among more educated women the rate is somewhat lower. Nearly half of Nigerians are younger than 15 years. By 2025 the population is projected to grow to 206 million.

The highest population densities are in the Igbo heartland in southeastern Nigeria, despite poor soils and heavy emigration. The intensively farmed zones around and including several major cities of the Hausa ethnic group—especially Kano, Sokoto, and Zaria in the north—are also packed with people. Other areas of high density include Yorubaland in the southwest, the central Jos Plateau, and the Tiv homeland in Benue State in the south central region. Densities are relatively low in the dry northeast and in most parts of the middle belt. Ecological factors, including the prevalence of diseases such as sleeping sickness, carried by the tsetse fly, and historical factors, especially the legacy of precolonial slave raiding, help explain these low densities.

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Nigeria: Its Land and Resources PDF Print E-mail

I. Introduction

Nigeria, republic in western Africa, with a coast along the Atlantic Ocean on the Gulf of Guinea. Most of Nigeria consists of a low plateau cut by rivers, especially the Niger and its largest tributary, the Benue. The country takes its name from its chief river. Until 1991, the capital was the largest city, Lagos, on the southwestern coast; at that time, the city of Abuja, in the country’s interior, became capital.

Map of Nigeria

Nigeria is by far the most populated of Africa’s countries, with more than one-seventh of the continent’s people. The people belong to many different ethnic groups. These groups give the country a rich culture, but they also pose major challenges to nation building. Ethnic strife has plagued Nigeria since it gained independence in 1960.

Nigeria has a federal form of government and is divided into 36 states and a federal capital territory. The country’s official name is the Federal Republic of Nigeria. Lagos, along the coast, is the largest city and the country’s economic and cultural center, but Abuja, a city in the interior planned and built during the 1970s and 1980s, is the capital. The government moved from Lagos to Abuja in 1991 in the hope of creating a national capital where none of the country’s ethnic groups would be dominant.

Nigeria long had an agricultural economy but now depends almost entirely on the production of petroleum, which lies in large reserves below the Niger Delta. While oil wealth has financed major investments in the country’s infrastructure, Nigeria remains among the world’s poorest countries in terms of per capita income. Oil revenues led the government to ignore agriculture, and Nigeria must now import farm products to feed its people.

The area that is now Nigeria was home to ethnically based kingdoms and tribal communities before it became a European colony. In spite of European contact that began in the 16th century, these kingdoms and communities maintained their autonomy until the 19th century. The colonial era began in earnest in the late 19th century, when Britain consolidated its rule over Nigeria. In 1914 the British merged their northern and southern protectorates into a single state called the Colony and Protectorate of Nigeria. Nigeria became independent of British rule in 1960. After independence Nigeria experienced frequent coups and long periods of autocratic military rule between 1966 and 1999, when a democratic civilian government was established.

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Facts and Figures


Playing: National Anthem

Official name: Federal Republic of Nigeria
Capital: Abuja
Area: 923,768 sq km;
356,669 sq mi

People
Population 135,031,160 (2007 estimate)

Largest cities, with population
Lagos 11,100,000 (2005 estimate)
Ibadan 1,731,000 (2000 estimate)
Ogbomosho 711,900 (1995 estimate)
Kano 657,300 (1995 estimate)
Oshogbo 465,000 (1995 estimate)

Ethnic groups
Hausa, Fulani, Yoruba, and Igbos 71 percent
NOTE: The Hausa and Fulani live mostly in the north, the Yoruba in the southwest, and the Igbos in the southeast.
Other groups 29 percent

Languages
English (official), Hausa, Yoruba, Igbo, Fulfulde, other indigenous languages

Religion
Muslim 50 percent
Christian 40 percent
Indigenous beliefs 10 percent

Literacy rate
Total 70.7 percent (2005 estimate)
Female 63.8 percent (2005 estimate)
Male 77.8 percent (2005 estimate)

Government
Form of government: Federal Republic; An elected president took office on 29 May 1999, ending 15 years of military rule in Nigeria.
Head of state President
Head of government President
Legislature Bicameral legislature
House of Representatives: 360 members
Senate: 109 senators

Constitution 5 May 1999
Highest court Supreme Court

Economy
Gross domestic product (GDP, in U.S.$) $99 billion (2005)
GDP per capita (U.S.$) $752.30 (2005)

GDP by economic sector

Agriculture, forestry, fishing 23.3 percent (2005)
Industry 56.8 percent (2005)
Services 19.9 percent (2005)

Employment
Number of workers 47,868,360 (2005)

Workforce share of economic sector
Agriculture, forestry, fishing 3 percent (1995)
Industry 22 percent (1995)
Services 75 percent (1995)

Unemployment rate 3.2 percent (1997)

Monetary unit 1 naira (N), consisting of 100 kobo

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