The African Human Rights Perspectives Through the Lense of Oral Narratives
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Date
2025
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Journal ISSN
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Publisher
East African Journal of Arts and Social Sciences
Abstract
Human rights existed in African tradition for societal order and for
community responsibility of success and failures. People enjoyed freedom
and preserved freedom according to community beliefs and customs.
Advocacy was expressed through singing, drama, storytelling and assignment
of roles based on age gender and ability. This paper unfolds human rights
advocacy oral narratives. Hausa dated as far as BC 14th or 15th Century Arabic
writing with the first poets Ibn al- Sabbagh and Muhammadual- Barnawi,
other writers of the time were Abdullahi Sikka and Shekh Jibril ibn Umar.
The first novels written in Hausa were the result of a competition launched in
1933 by the Translation Bureau in northern Nigeria. One year later the bureau
published Muhammadu Bello’s Gandoki, in which its hero, Gandoki,
struggles against the British colonial regime. Bello does in Gandoki what
many writers were doing in other parts of Africa during this period: he
experiments with form and content. His novel blends the Hausa oral tradition
and the novel, resulting in a story patterned on the heroic cycle; it also
introduces a strong thread of Islamic history. Didactic elements, however,
were awkwardly interposed and severely dilute Gandoki’s aesthetic content
(as often happened in other similarly experimental African novels). But
Bello’s efforts would eventually give rise to a more sophisticated tradition of
novel writing in Hausa. His experimentation found its most successful
expression in Amos Tutola’s English-language novel The Palm-Wine
Drunkard (1952). The Oral narratives understudy Include: Falsehood is More
Profitable than Truth (translated from Hausa) One cannot Help an Unlucky
Man (translated from Hausa) Wacici and her Friends (translated from
Kikuyu). The selected oral narratives experiences displayed injustice of belief in telling lies and trickery, jealousy against the natural beauty and the bad
lack aspect due to ignorance and inability to make right judgment for personal
benefit. The study was aimed at unfolding antisocial behaviour that existed
in in Africa as portrayed in the selected oral narratives. The expression of
reaction and action taken to bring social order were represented in the Hausa
selected narratives. The study used qualitative method and textual analysis to
arrive at the injustice and measures used to condemn injustice as a means to
preserve social order.
Description
Keywords
African, Human Rights, Oral Narratives.
Citation
https://journals.eanso.org/index.php/eajass/article/view/2164
