The Biafra tribe is better known as the Igbo people. The Igbo’s land first came to contact with Portugal in the 15th centuries. There was a major market for buying and selling Igbo slaves. For the first time in 1928, …show more content…
The Yoruba was one of the largest tribe in the Sahara Desert, in the western part of Nigeria. Their language family belonged to the Congo-Kordo. An article written by Countries and their Cultures conducted a study and it turns out that only 20 percent of Yoruba still practice the traditional religions of their ancestors (Yoruba 1). Think of a western girl what would she be wearing; it would be a long dress that would reach the ground, this is the style that Yoruba women were. The Yoruba tribe will still wear traditional clothing but only on important occasions like holidays (Yoruba 1). The Yoruba fought with the Hausa-Fulani in the civil …show more content…
The civil war happened because Nigeria was imperialized by Great Britain. Britain took what they wanted and left. But when they left they gave the power to the Hausa-Fulani. When the Igbo got their independence from Britain that is when the war started (Nigerian Civil War 1). This war was also known as Nigerian-Biafran war but it is more commonly know as a Nigerian Civil War. In three years more than one million people died. The Nigerian Civil War started May 30, 1967, during this time the US was in the Vietnam War. The groups were the Igbo going against the Hausa- Fulani and the Yoruba (Ryan 1). After the Biafran “Igbo” got their independence the war started but 3 years later the war stopped. This conflict was both because of religion and ethnic. The Igbo was Christian but the bigger group the Hausa was Muslim (Nigerian Civil War (Nigerian-Biafran war). There was almost three thousand to five thousand Igbos died daily from just starvation. Less than 2 months after the Igbo had independence the government launched an invasion on the Igbo people. The Nigerian army made sea blockades to stop, food, medicine, weapons, and support for the Igbo (Hurst 1). The war had a lot of effect on the people of Nigeria. The war cost a lot of lives and money. Up to a million people died of starvation and disease. The reconstruction was difficult but help from the oil made it easier. But old ethnic and