Igbo Daily Drops
She went to the market. He went to the market. The grammar was identical. The day they lived was not. In this episode of Igbo Daily Drops, you'll learn 3 essential past-tense phrases — the sentences that let you narrate what you did, where you went, and what happened — while uncovering why the person who writes the diary is not always the person who understood what was there. Set in Onitsha in 1902, this episode follows Ezinne — housekeeper and interpreter to a Church Missionary Society reverend — on a single market day that reveals one of the most consequential blind spots in colonial history: the Igbo had no kings not because they lacked civilisation, but because they had built something better. Her translation of a single word across a ugba stall contains more political philosophy than his diary page. This episode documents Igbo oral tradition, women's market intelligence, and the decentralised governance systems that Western administration systematically failed — and failed — to understand. One of the five UNESCO domains of intangible cultural heritage is social practices and governance systems. Igbo women's market councils are exactly that. This episode is the record. Research in this episode draws on A.E. Afigbo, University of Nigeria Nsukka, whose 1972 landmark The Warrant Chiefs: Indirect Rule in Southeastern Nigeria documented how British administrators invented governance structures to replace ones they lacked the framework to see. 📖 Today's proverb: E zie m ozi zie ogaranya, e zie m ya; ma asị m were ajụ bute ya, e sere m isi — If you ask me to carry a message to a great man, I will carry it. But if you ask me to carry him — I withdraw my head. 🗣️ Sentences practised today: 1. A gara m ahịa zụọ nri — I went to the market to buy food 2. E riri m nri hie ụra — I ate and slept 3. Ha lara ụlọ — They went home 📥 Free Speaking Workbook: learnigbonow.com 🏛️ By every measure UNESCO uses to assess a language's vitality — intergenerational transmission, community attitudes, government support — Igbo is vulnerable. This podcast documents Igbo intangible cultural heritage — oral traditions, social practices, rituals, and knowledge systems — while teaching conversational Igbo to diaspora learners worldwide. Every episode is part of the Igbo Daily Drops Living Archive. Hosted by Yvonne Chioma Mbanefo — Heritage Futurist and Daughter of the Soil. ▶️ Watch the visual version on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@LearnIgbo/podcasts 🎧 Spotify: https://tinyurl.com/iddspot 🎧 Apple Podcasts: https://tinyurl.com/iddapple 🌐 learnigbonow.com Every sentence you learn is a drop. Every drop feeds Oké Osimiri Mmụta Igbo — the Ocean of Igbo Knowledge. This has been Igbo Daily Drops with Yvonne Mbanefo. FREE RESOURCES: - Igbo Heritage Family Kit: https://learnigbonow.com [https://www.learnigbonow.com/] - Main Channel: @learnigbo on YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/learnigbo] Kids' Channel: @learnigboforkids on YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@LearnIgboforKids] Our Mission: Raise 10,000 more next-generation Igbo speakers by next year. Be one of them. Every sentence you learn is a drop. And every drop feeds Oké Osimiri Mmụta Igbo — the Ocean of Igbo Knowledge. Subscribe now. Foundation episodes begin today.
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