By
Arthur Agwuncha Nwankwo
There is no doubt that the Igbo race is the single largest group inNigeria  comparable
only to the Nile  valley in terms of population
density. Yet it is the avowed goal of certain forces in Nigeria 
There is no doubt that the Igbo race is the single largest group in
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| *Dr. Nwankwo | 
As a group of people, created and ordained by God Almighty, no person or group in Nigeria  is capable of wiping out the Igbo. It is not possible. In the legends of Buddhism, the Vajra is the most important ritual implement of Vajrayana Buddhism. In Sanskrit, the word vajra is defined as something hard or mighty, as in a diamond. It symbolizes an impenetrable, immovable and indestructible state of knowledge and enlightenment. Without the Vajra, the strength of the gods of Buddhism will cease to exist. 
This pristine Sanskrit philosophy of the indestructibility of
the Vajra was alluded to by Jesus Christ himself when he compared the Hebrew
children as the salt of the earth noting that the earth would be worthless
without its salt. Just as the vajra is the meat of the gods of Buddhism and the
children of light the salt of the earth, so are the Igbos the salt of Nigeria Nigeria 
will lose its taste and Nigeria 
In terms of adaptation, J.P Clark had once referred to the Igbo as soldier ants that came relatively late to the Nigerian political scene but as soon as they emerged they seized the floor and dictated the pace of nationalism. Ndigbo are the only group in
Nnamdi Azikiwe had remarked that it would appear that God had specially created the Igbo people to suffer persecution and be victimized because of their resolute will to live and survive where others had failed. Since suffering appears to be the label of the Igbo race, we have come to the conclusion that we have sacrificed enough for the unity of
If any person goes through the records of Nigerian history that person will not find an occasion when the Igbo have failed to rise from the ashes of brutality to mount on wings like the eagle.
In ancient
history, there is no record where another tribe has either marched across Igbo
territory or subjected the Igbo nation to a humiliating conquest. Instead,
there is record to show that the martial prowess of the Igbo, at all stages of
human history, has rivaled them not only to survive persecution, but also to
adapt themselves to the role thrust upon them by history, of preserving all
that is best and most noble in our culture and tradition. Placed in this high
estate, the Igbo cannot shirk from the responsibility conferred on it by its
manifest destiny. Having undergone a course of suffering in Nigeria 
 
 




