An open letter to the great people of Arondizougu
By Orji Ogbonnaya Orji, PhD
(Ugwu Aro, Arochukwu Kingdom)
Our Dear Kith and Kin,
Our brothers and sisters in the great Aro family, Arondizougu
The attention of the Aro Nation has been drawn to recent efforts in certain quarters to promote or institutionalize the concept of “Omu Arondizougu” in a manner capable of creating uncertainty and possible confusion around the historic, cultural, and civilizational identity represented by the revered institution of “Omu Aro”.
It is within this context that I have chosen the title “A theatre of the absurd” borrowing from the intellectual tradition popularized by Martin Esslin in his influential 1961 work — not as a term of abuse or confrontation, but as a reflective commentary on the danger of actions which, though perhaps well-intentioned in some respects, may ultimately produce outcomes contrary to the larger collective interest they seek to advance.
As a public affairs analyst, media professional, former chief executive in federal public service, and a proud son of Arochukwu Kingdom bearing the highest honour of Ugwu Aro, I consider it both a legitimate responsibility and moral obligation to speak constructively on developments capable of affecting the unity, image, cultural coherence, and historical continuity of the Aro Nation.
I, therefore, write not in anger or confrontation, but in deep concern.
I write not to divide, but to preserve unity.
I write precisely because Arondizougu occupies one of the most strategic, respected, influential, and emotionally significant positions within the larger Aro civilization.
Indeed, apart from the ancestral Kingdom of Arochukwu itself, I am not aware of any other community with a larger concentration of Aro descendants, culture, enterprise, migration history, influence, courage, and civilizational continuity than Arondizougu.
Over generations, Arondizougu has stood proudly as:
* A pillar of Aro expansion;
* A fortress of Aro resilience;
* A symbol of Aro courage;
* And one of the strongest custodians of Aro identity and culture outside the ancestral homeland.
For many of us who grew up within the rich cultural environment of Aro civilization, the arrival of Arondizougu cultural displays — especially the iconic presence of Pericomo and the legendary Ekpe performances in the 1970s & 80s — often represented the climax of Ikeji and major Aro cultural gatherings. Those moments embodied pride, identity, continuity, and collective belonging that binded all Aro together. Pericomo was an Aro legend, epitome of Aro unity,
To Arochukwu Kingdom, Arondizougu has never been viewed as separate from Aro Kingdom but a solid stone in its foundation.
You remain our own:
- Our kith and kin;
- Our extended ancestral household;
- Our strength;
- And truly our “home away from home.”
Many distinguished sons of Arondizougu — including iconic figures such as Dr. Kingsley Ozumba Mbadiwe, Mazi Mbonu Ojike, Chief Ralph Obioha, C. Moore Obioha, and Prof. O.C. Nwana — worked closely with respected Aro leaders such as Mazi Alvan Ikoku, Dr. Nwakanma Okoro, and Mazi S.G. Ikoku, under the revered leadership of Eze Aro Mazi Kanu Oji, CFR, MBE, to project shared Aro values and identity with pride in national politics, diplomacy, public service, and institutional engagements.
As a Lagos-based Political Editor of Radio Nigeria Network Service, I vividly recall the historic National Convention of the Social Democratic Party (SDP) held at the Jos Township Stadium in 1993.
At the Hill Station Hotel, where Chief Ralph Obioha, then a presidential aspirant under the SDP, anchored his campaign activities, I watched with immense pride as Aro people in Jos and surrounding areas — adorned in Omu Aro — gathered in solidarity with cultural music in unmistakable Aro cultural spirit and identity, led Chief Obioha to the stadium to the admiration of all.
At the convention itself, the stadium, which was filled to capacity, stood still when Chief Ralph Obioha mounted the podium magnificently adorned in Omu Aro. Aro people from across the South East rose in collective pride and emotional solidarity.
At that moment, Omu Aro transcended fashion or ceremony; it became a visible symbol of shared identity, collective memory, historical continuity, and cultural dignity.
That is precisely why this moment demands wisdom, restraint, historical consciousness, and collective responsibility.
Experience across the world shows that ancient kingdoms and civilizations with widely dispersed populations are increasingly pursuing:
* Stronger collaboration;
* Unified identity representation;
* Centralized cultural symbols;
* Coordinated cultural branding;
* And greater collective influence within the modern global environment.
No enduring civilization strengthens itself by fragmenting its symbolic identity structure.
Rather, great civilizations survive by protecting and strengthening universally recognized institutions and symbols capable of uniting their people across geography and generations.
The institution of Omu Aro is not merely a ceremonial designation or local title.
It is a pan-Aro civilizational symbol deeply rooted in the historical and cultural architecture of the Aro people.
Omu Aro represents:
* the Aro brand,
* Aro identity universal
* Aro womanhood,
* Aro dignity,
* Aro unity,
* Aro cultural continuity,
* and the collective historical, spiritual, and social identity of the Aro Nation.
Its significance transcends geography.
To create parallel symbolic structures capable of fragmenting that shared heritage naturally raises profound cultural and historical concerns.
Civilizations survive not merely because of wealth or population, but because they preserve the sanctity of shared institutions, collective memory, and universally respected symbols.
No great civilization sustains itself when every constituent unit begins to replicate or fractionalize central symbols of collective identity.
The strength of the Aro Nation has always rested on a delicate balance:
* strong local identities,
* but one overarching civilizational consciousness.
That consciousness enabled the historic Aro Confederacy to flourish across vast territories while maintaining a coherent sense of belonging and shared ancestry.
The challenge before us therefore is not merely semantic.
It is civilizational.
When foundational symbols become fragmented, duplicated, commercialized, politicized, or excessively localized beyond their original collective meaning, the long-term consequence may be gradual erosion of cultural coherence and weakening of national identity.
If indeed this initiative is partly inspired by business or commercial considerations, I respectfully appeal that all concerned reflect carefully on the wider implications.
The anticipated gains, if any, may never outweigh the long-term cultural confusion, institutional contradictions, avoidable tensions, and identity complications such initiatives may unintentionally create within the larger Aro Nation.
Some institutions are simply too historically significant and culturally sacred to be subjected to unnecessary proliferation.
This is why I respectfully urge our beloved brothers and sisters of Arondizougu to continue standing firmly in defense of the higher ideals that have always defined Aro greatness:
* unity over fragmentation,
* collective pride over symbolic competition,
* civilizational preservation over institutional duplication,
* and historical wisdom over temporary impulses.
Let history continue to remember Arondizougu as it has always been remembered:
* as defenders of Aro civilization,
* protectors of Aro dignity,
* custodians of Aro values,
* and pillars of Aro national cohesion.
In this regard, special appreciation must go to respected voices within Arondizougu, including Dr. Uche Ohia and distinguished traditional leaders who have already spoken constructively and courageously in support of preserving Aro unity and institutional coherence.
Their interventions reflect wisdom, maturity, historical consciousness, and deep commitment to the larger interest of the Aro Nation.
This is not the time for symbolic division.
This is the time for deeper unity, one in brotherhood, one Aro, one symbol.
This is the time to strengthen bonds between all Aro communities across Nigeria and the diaspora.
This is the time to build a stronger and globally respected Aro identity capable of speaking confidently to future generations.
The Tiv Nation today offers an instructive example.
Despite being spread across Benue, Plateau, Kogi, Nasarawa, and Taraba States, the Tiv people have consistently preserved and projected their unique black-and-white cultural identity with admirable discipline, unity, and collective consciousness — earning widespread admiration across Nigeria.
Geographical dispersion did not weaken their identity.
It strengthened it.
The Aro Nation must continue learning from such examples.
Around the world today, indigenous civilizations are struggling to preserve their institutions, memory, identity, and cultural coherence in the face of globalization, political fragmentation, and historical erasure.
The Aro Nation must not become weakened from within by avoidable internal contradictions.
I therefore respectfully call on:
* elders & leaders
* traditional institutions,
* youth organizations,
* women groups,
* intellectuals,
* cultural custodians,
* and community leaders in Arondizougu
to continue discouraging and resisting any initiative capable of creating confusion around the historic institution and universal cultural identity represented by Omu Aro.
The Aro Nation is bigger than all of us individually.
We inherited it.
We must preserve it.
And we must hand it over stronger, more united, and more dignified to generations yet unborn.
May wisdom guide us.
May unity preserve us.
May history judge us kindly.
Long live Arondizougu.
Long live Arochukwu Kingdom.
Long live the Aro Nation.
Orji Ogbonnaya Orji, PhD
(Ugwu Aro)
Arochukwu Kingdom