Chief Obafemi Awolowo in Washington, D.C.,
March 20, 1956
Image ©Jim Mahan/Bettmann/Corbis
Nigerian nationalist, politician, lawyer, statesman, and chancellor,
Chief Jeremiah Obafemi Awolowo was born on March 6, 1909 in Ogun State,
Nigeria, where he commenced his political career.
Awolowo attended various local schools in Ogun State Nigeria and later served as an editor of
The Nigerian Worker.
While working as a journalist in the 1930s, he founded many political
and economic organizations such as the Trade Unions Congress of Nigeria,
The Nigerian Produce Traders Association, The Nigerian Motor Transport
Union, and Egbe Omo Oduduwa, a Yoruba political and cultural
organization that sought to unite the Yoruba tribe of Nigeria. In 1947,
while in England studying law at the London School of Economics, he
founded The Action Group, a political party centered mostly among the
Yoruba people in the Southwestern part of Nigeria.
Upon the completion of his degree in 1949, Awolowo returned to Nigeria
and became the leader of the Action Group and the premier of the Western
Region of Nigeria which at the time was still under British colonial
control.
During the 1950s, a period in Nigerian history associated with the
struggle for independence from British rule, Awolowo used his position
as leader of the opposition to challenge the government of Abubakar
Tafawa Balewa who led the Northern People's Party, the largest political
party in the colony and the group most closely aligned with the British
colonial administration. In 1957, the British appointed Balewa Prime
Minister three years before Nigeria actually became independent to
advocate for greater political autonomy for Nigeria and its eventual
independence. Though Awolowo initially faced enormous opposition within
his Action Group party, he eventually rallied support to end party
division which he felt fueled violence and allowed continued British
domination.
As a nationalist, Awolowo campaigned not only for Nigeria’s independence
but also for its economic and social development. He thus introduced
free primary education and free health care in Western Nigeria and
facilitated the building of Nigeria’s first stadium, Liberty Stadium in
Ibadan, Oyo State, Nigeria. Awolowo wrote two books:
Voice of Wisdom and
The People’s Republic urging Nigerians to use the nation's resources to promote educational and infrastructural developments.
Obafemi Awolowo died in Ikenne, Ogun State, Nigeria at the age of 78 on May 9, 1987.
In recognition to his contribution to Nigerian statehood and
development, the Federal Government of Nigeria renamed the University of
Ife, The Obafemi Awolowo University on May 12, 1987. In addition to
this honor, the Nigerian Federal government on October 1, 2010 while
celebrating the nation’s golden jubilee in Abuja, honored Obafemi
Awolowo posthumously for his contribution to the Nigerian independence
movement.