Homeland of the Magi in Nigeria

The Dream East Where the Biblical Magi came from

Dominic Onyeji
5 min readOct 6, 2023

Cultural Trip is a popular blog that helps humankind to discover immersive epic trips. There are historic articles published in the blog. A guide to the Indigenous People of Nigeria is part of the titles.

According to the reporter, the Igbo people are descendants of the Nri Kingdom, the oldest in Nigeria. They have many customs and traditions and can be found in southeast of Nigeria, consisting of about 18% of the federal population. This tribe differs from the others in that there is no hierarchical system of governance. Instead, a traditional republican system exists with a consultative assembly of people, which guarantees equality to citizens. The reporter in Cultural Trip went further to say that the Igbo people also had their traditional beliefs, but after colonization, the majority (more than 90%) converted to practice Christianity, with a large number becoming Catholic. “The Igbo people also play an important part in the Nigerian oil trade since most of this natural resource is found within Igbo land,” said the reporter.

Once upon a time, a certain erudite seer had an in-depth vision concerning the colonial era. It was a historic revelation, which gave the seer to understand why the year 1914 remains remarkable in the history of Nigeria.

The erudite seer was not in a state of sleep when he saw the vision of the historic events. It came as a clear revelation during the day when he was busy having mental connection in his closet. He saw it vividly that the year 1914 was notable for the national foundation that was created by the colonial masters. The vision proceeded from divinity, and it gave the seer to appreciate the significance of the foundation that was built in the realm. He saw the activities of the colonial masters in the revelation, and the happenings gave him to know that Lord Lugard of the Great Britain was divinely directed to create the homeland of the Magi in Nigeria.

Come to think of it, the National Portrait Gallery said that Lord Frederick Lugard was a British soldier combining several positions of authority both in Africa and Europe. He worked as an explorer of Africa and colonial administrator during the same period when he was the Governor of Hong Kong and the Governor-General of Nigeria. The report in the National Portrait Gallery describes him as a Britain’s most famous African Colonial Governor in the age of empire and a pre-eminent colonial thinker in the inter-war years (1858–1945). The global history told humankind that Lord Lugard came to Africa with great wealth and wisdom.

In the revelation, the erudite seer was a prominent figure working with Muse and other forces as a dream Lord of the Igboland. The vision featured Lugard as a prudent exotic farmer who came in disguise as a ducal fraudsters to make goods, and being the foreign lord that he was, his wealth and influence gave the African minds to subject themselves under his leadership. He became a great lord over the entire land and so, the souls of men together with the tribes and culture became like a gigantic farm owned by the foreign lord, called Frederick Lugard of the Great Britain, a kingly colonial master of great renown.

American Historical Association has historical publications concerning Nigeria and her four regions at the time of independence. One of the articles went straight to the point stating that the four regions were created before the independence: “As Nigeria prepared for independence, the British worked out an arrangement which divided Nigeria into four regions. The Hausa-Fulani were dominant in the north, the Yoruba in the west and the Igbo in the east. In this way each of the major ethnic groups would control its “home region.” At the same time the British determined that 52% of the delegates to the national legislature would come from the Northern Region as the price of getting northerners to support independence,” said the reporter.

Nowadays, many are people in Nigeria who know little or nothing about the colonial era. When the erudite seer had the in-depth vision, he deemed it nice to share his experience for everybody to understand why Lugard was regarded as a pre-eminent colonial thinker in the inter-war years (1858–1945).

According to the erudite seer, Muse and Intuition were having dealings with the Magi in a certain proverbial garden when they saw Lugard coming as a thinking mind to have consultation with the wise concerning Igboland. The erudite seer was the dream lord of the Igbo land, hosting the Magi and the divine forces in the realm. They received Lugard as an august visitor and when he presented his reason for coming, everyone in the proverbial garden appreciated the fact that he was truly a historic figure from the above. He said that the colonial masters deemed it nice to employ skillful manpower because the public administration called for the integration of the people with diplomacy. “Now that the independence is at hand, the British Colonialism has decided to fulfil the Biblical prophecy that told humankind that the Magi came from the East. We know for sure that Igbo land is the true homeland of the Magi. That is why I have to come to the proverbial garden to receive the go-ahead for the Colonialism to create the dream East in Nigeria,” said Lugard in the vision.

One truth that remained hidden to Nigerians was the fact that Lord Lugard was an insightful missionary. He had dealings with Muse, Intuition and the Magi in the realm, and they knew that he was a wise one from the above. The revelation showed that the Magi and the erudite seer were historic figures like the Nazarene Jesus who told the Jew that before Abraham he was. That was why the British Colonialism could identify Igbo land as the East. This might sound strange to many. But the rational minds understand that Igbo is truly the East in the Bible.

--

--

Dominic Onyeji

I am a Nigerian contractor. Writing is my calling. I bear philosophic pen power, serving as an explicator, poet and songwriter. https://sweet.pub/@onyeji.dsage