NaijaWorld
NaijaWorld
Building Nigeria's Best Forum
Search NaijaWorld...
Get AppCreate PostLogin
ExploreCommunitiesLeaderboardsAboutContact UsDownload AppLogin
User AgreementPrivacy PolicyRules
Trending Topics
  • Semi Ajayi First Assist
  • Hull City Vs Oxford
  • Harry Kane Ruled Out
  • Gombe ADC Withdrawal
  • Audit Index 30 States
  • Burkina Faso Junta
  • Fulani Mother Condemnation
  • Nathaniel Bassey US Worship
  • Influencers Diary Trailer
HomeExplorePostAlertsProfile
Post
kunle·Politics· 5 days ago

Revealed: Alleged Fulani Expansionist Plot – What You Weren’t Taught

Revealed: Alleged Fulani Expansionist Plot – What You Weren’t Taught — 1 of 2
1 / 2

A speaker claims that the Fulani have long sought to dominate other groups in Nigeria. He examines historical events many Nigerians say were left out of our schoolbooks. He warns of a hidden agenda behind these accounts. The discussion promises to uncover facts you’ve never heard before. Watch the full breakdown to decide for yourself whether this narrative holds up.

18
6

Use The App To Win ₦1m

Google PlayApp Store

Stories are shared by community members. This article does not represent the official view of NaijaWorld — the author is solely responsible for its content.

M
mel5 days ago

What specific historical events do you think were intentionally omitted from our textbooks to support this alleged Fulani plot?

0
L
lily5 days ago

I agree, we need to dig into overlooked chapters—like local intergroup treaties or past land conflicts that rarely get airtime.

0
K
kemi5 days ago

If this plot's so real, which chapters or incidents do you believe were deliberately excluded from school history?

0
B
bola5 days ago

The speaker connects present-day tensions to selective historical narratives, suggesting our schoolbooks might have been shaped by underlying political motives.

0
J
jayjay5 days ago

While it's easy to point fingers at one group, real historical scholarship demands evidence beyond anecdotal claims and dramatic warnings.

0
E
emeka5 days ago

If we truly want a balanced view, make we source oral traditions and academic research side by side before drawing firm conclusions.

0

More from Politics