Tag: Maradona

  • Five most expensive football jerseys ever sold

    Five most expensive football jerseys ever sold

    Football shirts are no longer just for fans—they’ve become valuable collectibles worth thousands, and sometimes even millions, of pounds. These jerseys, worn during famous games, remind people of big wins, legendary goals, and unforgettable moments.

    One of the most recent examples is a set of six shirts worn by Lionel Messi during Argentina’s 2022 World Cup win. The set sold for an incredible £6.1 million ($7.8 million) at a Sotheby’s auction. But even that wasn’t the most expensive jersey ever sold.

    Here are the five most expensive football shirts ever sold:

    1. Diego Maradona – Argentina (1986 World Cup)

    Sold for: £7 million

    This shirt was worn by Maradona when Argentina played England in the 1986 World Cup quarter-final. That match is famous for his “Hand of God” goal and the “Goal of the Century.” England’s Steve Hodge, who traded shirts with Maradona after the game, later sold it at auction in 2022. It is the most expensive football jersey ever sold.

    2. Lionel Messi – Argentina (2022 World Cup)

    Sold for: £6.1 million

    Messi wore these six shirts during Argentina’s 2022 World Cup run, from the group stages to the final against France. The shirts were sold in 2023, and the money helped support sick children through the UNICAS Project. Sotheby’s called them part of the greatest moment in Messi’s football career.

    3. Pelé – Brazil (1970 World Cup Final)

    Sold for: £157,000

    Pelé wore this shirt during the 1970 World Cup final when Brazil beat Italy 4–1. He scored the first goal and became the only player to win three World Cups. The shirt was sold in 2002 and is a lasting symbol of Pelé’s greatness.

    4. Sir Geoff Hurst – England (1966 World Cup Final)

    Sold for: £91,750

    This shirt was worn when England beat West Germany in the 1966 World Cup final. Hurst scored three goals—the only player to ever score a hat-trick in a World Cup final. The jersey was sold in 2000 and remains a key part of England’s football history.

    5. Cristiano Ronaldo – Manchester United (2008 Champions League Final)

    Sold for: £39,000

    Ronaldo wore this shirt when Manchester United won the Champions League against Chelsea in 2008. Even though he missed his penalty, the team won in a shootout. The jersey was sold in 2023 and is one of the most valuable linked to Ronaldo’s career.

  • Maradona’s Golden Ball trophy goes to auction

    Maradona’s Golden Ball trophy goes to auction

    Diego Maradona’s Golden Ball trophy won for being named the best player at the 1986 World Cup will be auctioned in France in June, the Aguttes auction house has  said.

    This is the first Golden Ball to go for auction and while the value is still to be confirmed, the auction house expects it to fetch millions on June 6.

    Maradona, who died in 2020, won the award after leading Argentina to World Cup victory in Mexico, scoring five goals at the finals where he captained his country and played every minute of the tournament.

    That tournament is probably best remembered for Maradona’s two goals against England in the quarter-finals.

    Maradona out jumped England keeper Peter Shilton as he thumped in the first goal with a raised fist, which he later dubbed as being scored by the “Hand of God”.

    The second was an incredible mazy slalom run from his own half, when he dribbled past five English outfield players, and was voted as the “Goal of the Century”.

    Read Also: Corona, Riverbank, Grange shine at Zenith Bank  Inter-School Swimming

    The jersey he wore that day, along with the ball from the match, have both previously been sold at auction.

    After his display against England, Maradona went on to score the two goals which defeated Belgium in the semi-final and Argentina won a thrilling final 3-2 against West Germany.

    The Golden Ball award was introduced at the 1982 World Cup, and its list of winners include Italy’s Paolo Rossi, Romario and Ronaldo of Brazil, Zinedine Zidane of France, while Argentine great Lionel Messi is the only player to have won the accolade twice.

    Maradona’s award had disappeared before resurfacing among several trophy lots in an auction room.

    Recently it was entrusted to Aguttes, which carried out an investigation into its provenance and managed to authenticate it as Maradona’s Adidas Golden Ball trophy.

  • Baba Lekki curses Maradona

    The ripples over the exit of the Green Eagles from the World Cup currently winging its way to a brilliant climax in Russia have not quite subsided. The recriminations have been fierce and unrelenting. Not even the coach, the dour and dutiful German, Herr Gertnor Rohr, has been spared the occasional bombardment. His tactical naivety, concerning the last ten minutes of the match against the Argentines, has come up for stringent and severe scrutiny.

    Nothing spoil—as they say, well except some people’s Estacode and holiday in the sizzling land of Vodka and iconic Tsars. A book has actually been written by a professorial killjoy that demonstrates with exacting statistics that the four-yearly soccer extravaganza actually contributes nothing to a country’s GDP or the overall wellbeing of its people. Soccer is the opiate of poor people and poor nations.

    Snooper is very sure that his bosom friend, Segun Odegbami, aka Mathematical, will be up in arms against this academic sourpuss. Mathematical has been sending snooper some dispatches from Stalingrad full of soccer gems and wisdom. But with Messi and co mercilessly upending the party, the great No7 will now have to find his way back to his rural domains of Orile Wasinmi.

    Your columnist has nothing to add, except a small poser. When will Nigerians and Africans learn the lesson that African magic is no match for scientific football? At the 1974 World Cup, a cynical western commentator observed thus of the Congolese team: “Despite their witchdoctor and a generous supply of monkey meat from home, they succumbed to a 9-0 drubbing by Poland”.

    At the 1982 World Cup in Spain, an observer noted thus of the Cameroonian team: “Since their goalkeeper [the great Thomas N’kono ] was the hero of their qualifying matches, not much is expected of them.” And so it came to pass. Eight years later at Italy 1990, Baba Bamenda, the Cameroonian witchdoctor, spread his grisly fare on a mat hilariously insisting that Cameroon was winning even at the closing seconds of the match when it was obvious that England had prevailed.

    In Nigeria, it is now obvious that the fear of Argentina is the beginning of football wisdom. For many Nigerians, Argentina has become enemy number one when it comes to world cup ousters. Snooper can attest to the fact that the last encounter was not just a physical contention, it was also a metaphysical and occult duel.

    Baba Lekki was in his mystical elements.  Snooper sat glued to the television as the old contrarian shambled in, pole-hugging drunk and swigging from a huge bottle of local whiskey with Okon in tow wildly cheering on the ancient codger.

    “Na today today I go show dem Pampas people dem mothers’ hind and behind”, the old man swore as he headed for the abandoned garage. The television began beaming images of a corpulent but gamey Diego Amanda Maradona waltzing with a delectable Nigerian lady who appeared to be having a swell time with the jowly rogue from the old inner city of Buenos Aires.

    “Dat one na our Moremi who go show dem fat boy say Soponna still dey Nigeria”, Baba Lekki crooned with a sadistic grin.

    Very soon, a huge bale of smoke billowed from the garage as fumes of native frankincense filled the air. This was the nearest you can ever get to a sorcerers’ sortie. Baba Lekki was exultant directing the smoke in the direction of Argentina with a primitive wind vane even as some fancifully attired musicians materialized from the interior.

    In an infamous echo of Baba Eleran, the redoubtable witchdoctor of the great IICC “Shooting Star” team of the eighties, the old wizard began chanting.

    Balubalu nta’dan, balubalu nta’dan

    Y’obale y’obale ni labalaba fi wo’gbo lo

    Amubo amubo ni t’adete.

    Agbejule niti igi oyin

    By this time, the drummers had begun panning out their subversive lyrics, hinting at the disorientation awaiting purblind bats that choose to fly by daytime.

    Messi, gbabi ma gba be

    Gbabe ma gba bi.

    Everything ended in tears and much gnashing of teeth. The surreal party dissolved in disarray as a loud shriek of despair accompanied the final whistle. Once again, Argentina has taught Nigeria a memorable soccer lesson. A crowd of hustlers broke through the area demanding for their money.

    “You see everthin na by lucky lucky, today Nigeria no get lucky”, a tall sprightly Alhaji with a golden voice observed, trying to calm the crowd.

    “Shut up!” an irate urchin shouted at the man as Okon collared an absconding Baba Lekki.

    “Baba, wetin happen now? Sebi you say we go win dem Argentina six tororo?”

    “Ha Okon dis one pass African magic. Na dat mad boy dem dey call Maradona or Manradana. Na him come charm dem yeye girl. Moremi come become Maarele. Na God go punish him mama”, the old crook whimpered as Okon tightened his grip.

    “Baba he get something I be wan ask. How come dem Argentina no get even one black player?”

    “Ha Okon, black no dey dem dictionary for Maradona land oo. Dem don genocide dem dudu people. Dem Argentina don finis all dem black people. Dem kaput dem patapata. If to say na Brazil dem Africa magic go dabaru dem brain”, Baba Lekki sighed.

    “So, how we go win dem when dem no get dem black people?” Okon said as he relaxed his hold on the old man. Baba Lekki promptly disappeared into an adjoining bush.

  • Maradona ‘fine’ after scare, chided for obscene gesture

    Argentina great Diego Maradona said he was fine after appearing to take ill during the South Americans’ World Cup win over Nigeria on Tuesday, but found himself in hot water again after making an obscene gesture at the game.

    “I want to let you know I’m fine. I’m not nor was I hospitalised,” the 57-year-old said via Instagram on Wednesday.

    Maradona, who was seen being helped to walk from his seat amid the excitement of Tuesday’s game in St. Petersburg, said a doctor had suggested he left at halftime after his neck hurt and he felt he might faint.

    “But I wanted to stay, because it was all or nothing. How could I leave?” he said.

    “A kiss for you all, sorry for the fright, thanks for putting up with me, Diego is around for a bit longer!”

    During the game, Maradona drew attention with his antics in the stands lapping up the adulation from fans, unveiling a poster of himself and seemingly falling asleep at one point.

    Then, after Marcos Rojo’s 86th minute winner secured Argentina’s place in the last 16, he made a middle-finger gesture with both hands.

    Read Also: Nigeria match was a difficult game -Messi

    “From the hands of God, to the fingers of shame”, read one headline in Latin America, referring to Maradona’s “Hand of God” goal against England at the 1986 World Cup.

    The Argentine is no stranger to controversy, having once shot at journalists with an air rifle, and has battled cocaine and alcohol addictions.

    Gary Lineker, who played for England in the 1986 game and is now a pundit for the BBC, said Maradona had gone too far with the gesture.

    “Diego Maradona perhaps let himself down with his celebration,” he said. “You understand how he’s euphoric, that’s for sure, but this kind of reaction, really Diego?”

    Argentine journalist Daniel Arcucci later released on Twitter audio of a purported conversation he had with Maradona, during which he denied anything major had happened at the match but sounds slurred in parts.

    “I swear on my mother … absolutely nothing happened,” he says.

    “They were only serving white wine in our box. Ok, we had two wines … At the end, we went to eat …

    “I like red wine, but there was white wine. Each to his own.”

  • Maradona does it again

    SIR: Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida, Nigeria’s self styled Military President and self confessed  “Evil Genius”, is a sly character, gifted with cunning, famous for prevaricating on national issues, skillful at issuing vague and ambiguous statements, and master of doublespeak. He was at it again. This time it is a press statement issued by his spokesperson, Prince Kassim Afegbua penultimate Sunday, in which he commented on the state of affairs in the nation and allegedly asked President Muhammadu Buhari not to seek a second term in 2019. Hours after the release of the statement, another statement allegedly emanating from the gap-toothed General was released denouncing the initial press statement issued by Afegbua.

    I have read both press statements and the only difference between them is where IBB allegedly asked Buhari not to seek a second term. I must say though that in the initial statement, IBB made a subtle, veiled and indirect call on President Buhari not to contest in 2019, while in the second statement there was nothing of such. In comparison to the press statement issued by former President Olusegun Obasanjo, calling on Buhari not to contest in 2019, IBB’s press statement lacked direct, brutally frank, concise, and precise words. He seemed to be making suggestions rather than definitive statements unlike OBJ who employed more of the latter than the former. Arguably, the difference in the choice of words is a reflection of the difference in their personalities.

    Is it possible for Afegbua to release a press statement on his own without authorization from his principal? Did Babangida make a complaint to the IGP about the altering or the unauthorized release of a press statement in his name by Afegbua? On whose instruction did the Inspector General of Police (IGP) declare Afegbua wanted?

    The release of a press statement by General Babangida barely two weeks after Obasanjo’s missive to Buhari, both counselling him not to seek reelection in 2019 could be indicative of something fishy. Perhaps, it is reflective of the outcome of the meeting held last year by Generals OBJ, IBB, and Abdulsalami Abubakar at Babangida’s hilltop mansion in Minna, Niger State, while Buhari was battling with his health in a London hospital.

    I am really not surprised at this whole brouhaha over IBB’s press statement. He has done similar things in times past. I fear Afegbua could be the fall guy in this latest episode. I think that the time has come for Prince Kassim Afegbua to sever his relationship with a General who has manifested more of cowardice than courage in civil life. A man who cannot deliver himself from the hands of his friends. The same friends who piled pressure on him to annul the June 12,1993 Presidential Elections, Nigeria’s freest and fairest, since independence in 1960 till date. The IGP is a meddlesome interloper in this issue. It is curious that he was quick to act on Afegbua but is lethargic on the issue of killings by Fulani herdsmen.

     

    • Peter Ovie Akus,

     Ifo, Ogun State.

  • ‘MARADONA’ IS  MY EXPERIENCE WITH  CHEATING LOVER

    ‘MARADONA’ IS MY EXPERIENCE WITH CHEATING LOVER

    After finishing third-runner up in Project Fame West Africa in 2013, singer and songwriter Niniola Apata is revving up her musical career. Recently out with a spanking new single, Maradona, which has been gaining favourable reactions from fans and her colleagues, Niniola, 30, tells JOE AGBRO Jr in this interview how she started music and how she is ready to compete in Nigeria’s music space. Excerpts. 

    WHERE did you grow up and how was growing up like?

    I grew up in Lagos, Nigeria and that will be Isolo to be precise. Well Growing up for me was fun as I lived in a house with a large family. My late dad was married with three wives and we all lived in a big house with my siblings and other relatives. I was my dad’s favourite, so it made everything kind of easy as no one could lay a finger on me (laughs). It was fun and we all loved each other.

    What is your educational background?

    I attended Apata Memorial Schools from primary to secondary, then went on to the University of Lagos where I bagged a Bachelors Degree in Biology Education.

    How did music start for you?

    Well, I started music from when I was young and it was because of passion, My love for music knows no bounds. As a kid, I used to listen to my dad’s collections and then he had a camcorder. He would use it to record me whenever I was dancing. And in school then, I also had something like a request show. My friends would mention a song and then I will sing it to them. So, I guess you can see it was right from when I was little (laughs).

    Your parents started Apata Memorial School which is famed for discipline. Did your parents resent you going into music?

    Oh yes. Initially, my parents didn’t support it but as I grew older and showed them how determined I was, they put their weight behind me and supported me. Now, they are happy with how far I have come.

    What informed your singing style as it is different from many other singers?

    I guess I will credit that to my musical influences and versatility. But then, Sarz was also influential because he directed it with the first single, Ibadi.

    ‘Maradona’ is a term used for dribblers. What was the motivation for singing ‘Maradona’?

    Yes, Maradona was written for the players (laughs). And it was inspired by my experience and other peoples experiences pieced together. As a songwriter you need to know how to paint the right picture when creating.

    2Baba tweeted that ‘Maradona’ is his ‘jam for years and years’. How does that make you feel?

    Oh, I am really humbled, because coming from someone you idolize, it’s very very encouraging. I can tell you all through that day till now I still have a huge smile on my face. It really made me very happy.

    How are you dealing with the competition amongst female artists?

    Competition? I always say this and I will say it again here, there is room for everyone to succeed. If the boys can have more than six of them topping at the same time, I don’t see why we the ladies can’t. But you guys are always quick to make it look like the ladies can’t do the same. We are all doing good in our individual lanes.

    When is your debut album dropping?

    My album should be dropping this year by the grace of God.

    Are you featuring other artistes on the album?

    Oh sure there will be features.

    Which local artist would you love to do a collabo with?

    Ah they are plenty. You will see some on the album.

    How about in the international scene as many Nigerian artistes now feature foreign stars on their songs?

    Well, when it’s time for that, we will do that. At least, I was featured by a BET Award winner Eddy Kenzo from Uganda and we won an award with the song. I also featured Drastic from the Virgin Island on the remix of my song, Shaba. More will come.

    How rewarding has music been for you?

    I thank God because it has been and I am very sure it will bear more fruits in the future.

    Do you do anything aside music?

    I have a scholarship foundation “Adopt-A-Childs-Education”, and right now I have two students on it. So that’s what I do and I am also trying to make it bigger.

    What do you love doing for leisure?

    Singing to myself and playing games on my phone.

    What is something people don’t know about you?

    That I am an Introvert.

    Many stars take alcohol, marijuana and other intoxicants, what do you indulge in?

    Just water and juice.

    Are you married or in a relationship?

    I am not married but in a relationship.

    What qualities do you expect in your man?

    Well my man has them already so I am not expecting.

  • Maradona cost twice as much as Ronaldo

    Maradona cost twice as much as Ronaldo

     

     

     

    Former Napoli president Corrado Ferlaino claims Diego Maradona cost the club “double what Cristiano Ronaldo would cost today” after the star joined from Barcelona in 1984.

    The Serie A outfit splashed out a then-world record transfer fee of £5 million to acquire the mercurial Argentine, who had previously broken the same record when arriving at Camp Nou.

    Maradona provided the inspiration for a remarkable era of success in Naples, as two Italian league titles and the UEFA Cup were captured.

    He also led Argentina to World Cup glory in 1986, with his legacy as one of the all-time greats firmly cemented.

    Many, though, had raised their eyebrows when Napoli spent big on luring him away from Catalonia.

    Ferlaino insists he always knew what he was getting and believes the deal required to land Maradona would eclipse any transfer involving the global superstars of today, such as Real Madrid talisman Ronaldo.

     

    “The intellectuals criticised me – they said Napoli was a poor city and it was immoral. But it was my money, and I wanted to spend it that way.

    Comparisons to the iconic Maradona are drawn every time a fresh face bursts onto the scene, with Ronaldo and Barcelona forward Lionel Messi competing for their own place in the history books.

    Ferlaino feels it would be wrong to put the Portuguese in the same bracket as Maradona, but admits Messi still has work to do if he is to enjoy a standing alongside his illustrious countryman in the years to come.

    He added: “A comparison with Cristiano makes no sense as they play in different positions.

  • Maradona undergoes facelift, shows off new look

    Maradona undergoes facelift, shows off new look

    Diego Maradona, Argentine World Cup-winning football legend, has undergone a facelift, local Argentine media reports.

    Maradona, who has always been in the news in his native Argentina, has also released pictures of his fresh-face, posing with his girlfriend Rocio Oliva.

    The 54year-old ex-footballer has had some problems with the woman, who is 24year-old (30 years his junior), but they appear to be happily back together.

    According to Gerard Couzins of the Daily Mirror, the legend posed for a photograph alongside his on-off girlfriend Rocio Oliva, 24, after reportedly going under the knife to rid bags under his eyes and complete laser treatment to soften his skin.

    Argentine media claim he agreed to the makeover so he could look younger for Rocio, who he is now back with after getting her arrested last summer over claims she stole hundreds of pounds worth of jewelry and watches from his mansion in Dubai.

    Certainly, he seems happy that the “Hand of Surgeon” has come to his aid.

  • FIFA 2014 WORLD CUP: Maradona boasts; Argentina’ll be too strong for Nigeria

    FIFA 2014 WORLD CUP: Maradona boasts; Argentina’ll be too strong for Nigeria

    • Bosnia, Iran too

    Argentine’s football legend, Diego Armando Maradona believes the will be too strong for Nigeria’s Super Eagles in next year’s FIFA World Cup in Brazil.

    The South American giants are expected to parade the likes of Lionel Messi, Aguero, Di Maria amongst other top players and the 53-year-old former Argentina international has no doubts that Messi and company will beat the Eagles, and other group F opponents – Bosnia-Herzegovina and Iran.

    “I do not see any team in Group F beating us. We are too strong for them.

    “We are going to win our third World Cup. It is going to happen again in Brazil. Argentina will be champions of the world, but they are going to have to fight against the ‘Morochos’ (Brazil). “They (Brazil) are very tough. The success of 1986 will be repeated and it will be in Brazil,” he said.

    Speaking further, Maradona considers host Brazil alongside Germany and the Netherlands to be difficult opponents.

    “Germany and Holland are in good shape, Italy not so much and Spain are getting bored of their own tactics. They go forward and forward, but cannot convert,” Maradona was quoted as saying by tycsports.com.

    Argentina won all previous three matches against Nigeria at World Cup.

    The Eagles will clash with Argentina in one of the final matches of Group F on June 25.

  • Salvation on earth: Two  exemplary paradigms (1)

    Salvation on earth: Two exemplary paradigms (1)

    The Argentines are having a ball. This column sees no reason why they shouldn’t. In Diego Amanda Maradona and Lionel Messi, they have two of the greatest footballers that the world has ever produced. The mesmerising Messi is currently the world’s best footballer, and like the prodigious Maradona at his prime, he could waltz or blitz his way through a battalion of defenders with the ease and facility of a goldfish in water. The sheer ecstasy of watching these two is the ultimate in orgiastic visual pleasure.

    But there are even more profound reasons why the Argentines should feel cool with themselves. The Catholic world has just elected its first ever Argentine Pope. Ninety five per cent of Argentines may be devout Catholic, but before now moving the headship of the papacy to the pampas or the whole of Latin America for that matter appeared a long shot in the dark. Now it has happened.

    In addition to this is the economic and political transformation going on in Argentina . Slowly but quite discernibly, Argentina is turning the political and economic corner. In recent decades, Argentines could only live on the glory of the country’s golden age in the last quarter of the nineteenth century leading to early twentieth century. Decades of brutal military misrule and grinding economic misfortune had sapped the energy and confidence of the people.

    It is also perhaps wondrously and intriguingly symbolic that Margaret Thatcher, Argentina’s greatest modern tormentor, should choose to answer the final call at the very moment of Argentinean revival and renaissance. The boulevards of Buenos Aires flared up in jubilation and ululation as the news broke that the nemesis of the nation had joined her ancestors. Famously libeled as a nation of Italians who speak Spanish but think they are English living in Paris, the Argentines appear to be finally rediscovering themselves.

    But it is not just the Argentines who are headed for a starry ascent. Virtually the entire continent of South America seemed to be witnessing a continental rebirth and rejuvenation. From Panama to Peru, an entire continent is being shaken and dragged off its rutted and gutted grooves of complacency and sloth. Leading the pack is Brazil which in a decade has lifted more than 50 million people out of poverty into middle class self-sufficiency.

    Brazil’s dramatic economic transformation and looming ascendancy as a global power have won grudging respect and concession from the USA. Brazil’s president, a pragmatic disciple of the iconic Lula, has been invited for a full state visit to America, the first time in about two decades that a Brazilian leader is being accorded such a honour by the US.

    The entire world is watching the developments in Latin America with curiosity and bated breath. This prodigious human emancipation and stunning optimisation of humanity’s capacity for self-transformation is not the result of a sudden religious conversion or the benevolence of some ancient Aztec or Inca god or goddess. Neither is it as a result of a slavish and sterile imitation and uncreative adaptation of other people’s culture. It is a tribute to the power of visionary and original ideas to re-engineer human society.

    Anywhere in the ancient and modern world where human society has taken a huge leap forward, we can be sure that some original and transformative ideas are behind the stunning advancement on behalf of all humanity. This was what happened with ancient forms of writing in ancient Egypt and old Babylon, the idea of democracy and revolutionary warfare in the Greek and Roman empires, seafaring in Ancient China, the concept of nation-state in the Iberian peninsula, the Industrial Revolution in England, modern philosophy in France, modern warfare in Germany and the revolutionary refinement of the nation-state paradigm in the US.

    We can add modern exemplars like Singapore which broke the binary spatial distinction between the First and Third worlds through the brilliant ideas of one exceptional individual and of course the new experiment in the brotherhood of all humanity irrespective of race and religion in post-apartheid South Africa which owes its inspiration to the humane intellectual genius of a man called Nelson Mandela.

    As armies of contending ideas wage relentless battle, all that is solid often melts into thin air. The ideas that finally lifted the Dark Age for Europe came from the Muslim world in its most visionary period and in particular from the conquest of Constantinople by the Ottoman Turks which led to the exodus of philosophers, thinkers, writers and other cutting-edge contrarians to mainland Europe. In their dark and devious schema, Western historians and intellectuals often project the Dark Age as a period of global human degeneration. But this is not so. It is a clever attempt to foist a unique European fiasco on the rest of the world.

    By the beginning of the tenth century, the Chinese nation was arguably the leading human society. Its sea-going vessels were described as huge clouds in the sky as a result of the size and sophistication of their masts. Extant artifacts in the Mombasa Museum in modern day Kenya suggest that Chinese sailors had visited the place around the sixth and seventh centuries. But it was around the tenth century that a vicious power struggle lasting for centuries broke out between the mandarinate and the Imperial Chinese feudal court.

    At the very period when China should have opened itself to receive fresh ideas from the rest of the world, it closed itself off. A long period of national decline ensued. Chinese eyes finally opened when the British, from about eight thousand miles away, seized Hong Kong. The Japanese Imperial Army added insult to injury when it invaded and subjected the Chinese to atrocious cruelties. The Boxers’ Uprising was a protest against national humiliation as well as an incipient rebellion against the feudal order. The turmoil eventuated in the Chinese Revolution.

    We must now return to our original quarry. Why is it that Latin America is experiencing an economic and political resurgence and rejuvenation while African countries, with the exception of a notable few, are gripped by stark stasis and collective retrogression? We need to establish two historical theses. First is that the religious standing and spiritual state of any society is a reflection of its intellectual stage and mental development and not the other way round. Except in moments of revolutionary crisis, all religions rely on the power of faith rather than the power of ideas. Just stick to your belief system and forget about fancy stuff which may be the handiwork of Lucifer. Unfortunately as Norman Mailer, the rogue American novelist and thinker, famously posited, there may be some devils working for God.

    See where Martin Luther and the discovery of printing dragged the old Church? And see where the Latin American Liberation theologists were dragging the whole concept of salvation before the Imperial Catholic church pulled the plug in a brilliant intellectual counter-insurgency coordinated by the inevitable and cannily cerebral Cardinal Ratzinger, the first modern Pope on pension.

    The second thesis is so simple and self-evident that it amounts to an intellectual scandal when it escapes our intellectuals. It is that the mode of conquest and colonial rationalisation also conditions and in the last instance determines the fate of human emancipation from the ravages of colonialism. Colonisation also has its rich and dark ironies. The first wave of Iberian modernity which allowed the Portuguese and the Spaniards to seize the South American continent was merely a dress rehearsal for the full blown Euro-American modernity that was to follow.

    So is it that while the Iberians could match the later day colonial masters in the department of colonial cruelty and physical coercion, they were mere toddlers when it came to intellectual sophistication and sheer capacity for psychological intimidation. For example, the Spaniards relied on raw firepower and epochal physical cruelty in their conquest and subjugation of the old Indian empires. At that point in time, only superior technology in armaments separated the two civilisations. In fact the Incas were ahead in terms of social order even though they practiced human sacrifice on a Fordist scale.

    But neither the Spaniards nor the Portuguese could come up with the sociological cum philosophical intimidation behind the French concept of the colonial subject as an “evolué”, or the intellectual coercion behind Lord Lugard’s infamous “dual mandate” which forcibly steamrolled the economy of the colonised into the metropolitan orbit in a crude rehearsal of modern globalisation. And this is not discounting the intellectually ordered millennial messianism that informs the very notion of American Exceptionalism.

    With this background in mind, one can now see why it was easier for the Latin Americans to overcome the contradictions of Iberian colonisation. Raw physical conquests often beget raw physical resistance. It is easier to acquire knowledge of firearms than to acquire the firearms of modern knowledge in a context of unequal exchange. The Iberian conquest spawned several armed rebellions which began almost immediately and became the bloody trademark of the continent for the next 300 years and still counting. In the process, the people developed a heroic culture of militant self-belief and zero tolerance for tyrannical rule.

    We can also see why intellectual subjugation is the worst and most deadly form of conquest. It leads directly to spiritual, economic, cultural and political enslavement. With his old religion gone, his culture subverted, his traditional institutions decimated, his modes of knowledge production devastated, the African , unlike the Chinese, the Japanese and the Indians, requires a complete makeover to even minimally function. But even to achieve this requires that he must first overcome the massive inferiority complex engendered by centuries of intellectual slavery in which he has been made to realise that he is surplus to the requirement of humanity. It is akin to being faced by a circular firing squad.

    The foregoing also explains why Latin America has thrown up an original riposte to Roman Catholic orthodoxy in the form of Liberation Theology while Nigeria and Africa have come up with an even more showy and stagy version of American prosperity preaching. Both are variants of Liberation theories. But while Liberation Theology preaches individual striving on behalf of communal salvation which is achievable in this world through relentless struggle, Pentecostal/Prosperity doctrine preaches individual salvation through self-liberation from want and poverty which is also achievable in this world through the cultivation of the right attitude. Both have their uses and points of convergence and divergence.

    With due respect, the Pentecostal theory of human liberation cannot begin to compare in classical erudition, intellectual rigour and sheer philosophical élan with Liberation Theology. But that is neither here nor there. Both have their practical values and ideological efficacy. While Liberation Theology is in strategic alliance with insurgent groups hoping to bring down unjust and tyrannical states in Latin America, the Pentecostal Church, at least in Nigeria, appears to be in alliance with a delinquent state which it helps to maintain order and stability by transferring to itself part of the state function of providing solace and succour to its citizens. For the fanatical adherents, this is not just an opiate but the oxygen of life itself. Needless to add that it is also an anti-revolutionary carbon monoxide.

    This column does not pretend to enjoy a monopoly of wisdom. It remains an interactive session in which readers are encouraged to talk back. Since this is a very weighty matter which involves the destiny of the Black race, readers are invited to ventilate their views before the matter is brought to conclusion in a few weeks’ time.