Nigeria Law
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Chapter V · People · Hero H072

Chief J.F. Odunjo

Author of the Alawiye — Father of Yoruba Children's Literature

Summary

Chief Joseph Folahan Odunjo (1904–1980) was a Nigerian educator, poet, playwright, novelist, historian, statesman, and the author of the Alawiye series — the most widely used Yoruba language textbooks in Nigerian primary schools from 1943 to the present day. Born in Ibara, Abeokuta, Odunjo taught at St Augustine's Catholic Primary School before entering politics, serving as the Minister of Lands and Labour in Western Nigeria (1952–1956) under Premier Obafemi Awolowo. His Alawiye series (first published 1943), a six-volume reader drawing on Yoruba folklore, proverbs, and oral tradition, shaped the literacy and cultural identity of generations of Yoruba-speaking Nigerians.

Record

Born

1904

Died

1980

State / origin

Ogun (Ibara, Abeokuta)

Category

education

Era

colonial

Legal link

s.18 — right to education; s.39 — freedom of expression and cultural identity; indigenous language education policy

Documented contributions

  • 01Authored the Alawiye Yoruba language textbook series (first published 1943) — still in use in schools today
  • 02Served as Minister of Lands and Labour, Western Nigeria (1952–1956) under Premier Awolowo
  • 03Member of the Yoruba Orthography Committees of 1966 and 1969 — helped standardise written Yoruba
  • 04Founded the Federal Association of Catholic Teachers (1936) and served as president until 1951
  • 05Awarded the Papal honour Knight of St Gregory by the Pope (1966)
  • 06Honoured with the Chieftancy title of Asiwaju of Egbaland

Sources

DAWN Commission; Opera News; Opinion Nigeria; Amazon book records

https://dawncommission.org/chief-joseph-folahan-odunjo/

Era context

The political and economic reality

The governments, economies and national crises that shaped Odunjo's public life — from roughly 1924 to 1980.

British colonial administration

Sir Frederick Lugard → Sir James Robertson

1900–1960

National reality

Amalgamation of the Northern and Southern Protectorates (1914) under indirect rule. Marketing boards extracted cocoa, palm oil and groundnut surpluses; political agitation built through the press and the trade union movement.

Crises of the period

  • Aba Women's War (1929)
  • Iva Valley shooting of striking miners (1949)
  • Kano riots (1953)

GDP (World Bank)

Pre-independence; no national accounts series

Cabinet (selected portfolios)

Full ministerial roster being compiled.

Government administered by Governors-General and Residents. The first indigenous federal ministers were appointed under the 1954 Lyttelton Constitution.

Source: Toyin Falola, A History of Nigeria (CUP, 2008)

Prime Minister · First Republic

Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa

1960–1966· NPC

National reality

Independence on 1 October 1960. Regional rivalries (NPC, NCNC, AG) dominated politics. Awolowo treason trial (1962–63). Western Region crisis (1962–65) and the disputed 1964 federal election destabilised the Republic.

Crises of the period

  • Action Group crisis (1962)
  • Western Region election violence (1965)
  • January 15, 1966 coup — Balewa, Ahmadu Bello and Akintola killed

GDP (World Bank)

≈ $4.2 bn (1960, World Bank)

Cabinet (selected portfolios)

  • Finance

    Festus Okotie-Eboh

  • Justice (AGF)

    Dr. Taslim Olawale Elias

  • Defence

    Sir Muhammadu Ribadu

  • Foreign Affairs

    Jaja Wachuku

  • Education

    Aja Nwachukwu

Source: Federal Gazette 1960–66; Falola & Heaton (2008)

Head of State · Military

Gen. Yakubu Gowon

1966–1975

National reality

Counter-coup of July 1966, Biafran War (1967–70), then the oil-boom expansion. Twelve-state structure (1967) replaced the four regions. Three Rs (Reconciliation, Reconstruction, Rehabilitation) and indigenisation began.

Crises of the period

  • Biafran Civil War 1967–70 (1–3 million dead)
  • 1973 OPEC oil shock + boom
  • FESTAC '77 preparations

GDP (World Bank)

$12.5 bn (1970) → $27.7 bn (1975, oil boom)

Cabinet (selected portfolios)

  • Finance (Commissioner)

    Chief Obafemi Awolowo (1967–71)

  • Education (Commissioner)

    A.Y. Eke (c.1967)

Federal Executive Council of commissioners; full roster being compiled.

Source: Federal Military Government records; World Bank WDI

Head of State · Military

Gen. Murtala Muhammed → Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo

1975–1979

National reality

Murtala assassinated 13 February 1976; Obasanjo completed the transition. Universal Primary Education launched 1976. Land Use Act 1978. 1979 Constitution and handover to the Second Republic.

Crises of the period

  • Dimka coup attempt + Murtala assassination (1976)
  • 'Ali Must Go' student protests (1978) — students killed over a 50-kobo fee increase

GDP (World Bank)

$28 bn (1975) → $47 bn (1979)

Cabinet (selected portfolios)

  • Education

    Col. Ahmadu Ali (1975–78)

  • Education

    J.O.J. Okezie (1978)

Source: Federal Gazette; Constitution Drafting Committee records (1976–78)

President · Second Republic

Alhaji Shehu Shagari

1979–1983· NPN

National reality

First executive presidency. Oil-price crash from 1981 destroyed the boom. Ghana Must Go expulsion of West African migrants (1983). Disputed re-election in 1983, then the Buhari/Idiagbon coup on 31 December 1983.

Crises of the period

  • Oil price collapse 1981–83
  • Maitatsine riots Kano (1980)
  • Ghana Must Go (1983)
  • 31 December 1983 coup

GDP (World Bank)

$64 bn (1980, oil peak) → $30 bn (1983, bust)

Cabinet (selected portfolios)

  • Finance

    Sunday Essang → Onaolapo Soleye

  • Education

    Sylvester Ugoh; later others (being compiled)

Source: Federal Gazette 1979–83; CBN Annual Reports

Methodology

Tier 1 · primary

Courts. Gazettes. National archives.

Tier 2 · corroborating

OCCRP. HRW. BudgIT. TheCable.

Redline

Wikipedia is never a source.