opinion

We Hausa need freedom from Fulani Caliphate

We want to break away from Sarduana Legacy, not because we hate but because we love the North enough to save it

By Khaleed Yazeed,
Katsina

We need to be free from Sardauna’s legacy, not because we hate him, but because we love the North enough to save it from what he turned it into. He built institutions, yes. Ahmadu Bello University, Kaduna Polytechnic, the Nigerian Defence Academy, and numerous secondary schools across the North. These are monuments to his ambition. But ambition is not the same as liberation. He built a cage and called it unity. He built a North that fears the South more than it fears hunger. A North that values ethnic loyalty over human dignity. A North that bows to Fulani emirs while Hausa children beg on the streets.

The Sardauna’s politics were not a mistake. They were a design. A design to keep the Fulani elite in power and the Hausa masses in submission. He inherited the Fulani emirate system, a system built on the conquest of Hausaland by Usman dan Fodio in 1804. The British preserved this system under Indirect Rule, turning Fulani emirs into tax collectors for the Crown. The Sardauna did not dismantle this structure. He embraced it. He made it the bedrock of Northern Nigeria’s political identity.

He used religion to hypnotize us. He used ethnicity to divide us. He used poverty to control us. And when we try to speak the truth, we are called traitors, tribalists, haters. The same labels were used against the Hausa resistance in 1804. The same labels were used against the Hausa kings who refused to bow to the Fulani jihad. The same labels are used today against those who dare to question the Fulani domination of the North. The tactics have not changed. Only the faces.

The Pyramid of Control: How the Sardauna Built the North for the Fulani

The Sardauna built schools, yes. But who attended them? The children of the Fulani elite. The Hausa child remained an almajiri, begging on the streets, while the Fulani child became a doctor, a lawyer, a governor. The Sardauna built hospitals, yes. But who benefited from them? The same Fulani elite who could afford to travel to them. The Hausa peasant remained in his village, dying of preventable diseases, while the Fulani aristocrat received the best care in the region.

The Sardauna built a political machine that served the Fulani aristocracy while the Hausa masses were left to rot. He consolidated the emirate system that turned Hausa kings into subjects and Hausa farmers into serfs. He told the Hausa that they were one with the Fulani while his own lineage ruled over them like masters over slaves. The Hausa were not partners in the Sardauna’s Northern project. They were the product. They were the labor. They were the taxes. They were the votes.

The Sardauna’s “One North” slogan was never meant to unite the Hausa and Fulani as equals. It was meant to convince the Hausa that their conquerors were their brothers. It was meant to make them forget that the Fulani had burned their libraries, killed their kings, and enslaved their ancestors. It was meant to make them accept their subjugation as destiny.

The Architecture of Subjugation: How the Sardauna’s System Still Operates

The Sardauna’s system did not die with him. It survived. It became doctrine. It became the operating system of Northern Nigeria. Today, the same system operates through the Fulani emirs who still sit on the thrones of Hausa cities. Through the Fulani politicians who still dominate the northern political establishment. Through the Fulani clerics who still preach that the Hausa must obey their rulers.

The Almajiri crisis is not an accident. It is a policy. The Fulani elite deliberately keep the Hausa masses uneducated because an educated Hausa man is a dangerous Hausa man. He asks questions. He reads contracts. He refuses to bow. The same logic that drove the Fulani jihad in 1804 drives the educational neglect of 2026.

The banditry crisis is not an accident. It is a policy. The Fulani bandits who terrorize Hausa communities are protected by the Fulani elite who control the state. The police do not pursue Fulani criminals. They pursue those who demand justice. The state does not protect Hausa farmers. It protects the Fulani bandits who attack them.

The Betrayal of the Hausa Masses: Then and Now

The Sardauna’s politics were not a mistake. They were a design. A design to keep the Fulani elite in power and the Hausa masses in submission. He used the NPC and the slogan “One North, One People” to convince the Hausa that their conquerors were their brothers. He used Islam to hypnotize the Hausa into accepting their subjugation as divine will. He used the emirate system to ensure that the Hausa had no alternative leadership.

Today, the same tactics are used against those who speak the truth. We are called traitors, tribalists, haters. We are silenced, marginalized, and intimidated. The same state that protects Fulani criminals is punishing Hausa voices. But the truth is this: the North is not poor because Allah cursed us. The North is poor because the Sardauna’s system, and the Fulani elite who inherited it keeps us poor. The almajiri is not a victim of circumstance; he is a victim of policy. The farmer is not a victim of bandits; he is a victim of a system that protects Fulani criminals and punishes those who demand justice.

The Historical Continuity: From 1804 to 2026

The Fulani conquest of Hausaland in 1804 was not a reformation. It was a conquest dressed in religious robes. It replaced Hausa kings with Fulani emirs. It burned Hausa libraries and erased Hausa history. It enslaved millions of Hausa people. The Sokoto Caliphate held over 2.5 million slaves, the majority of whom were Hausa. That was not a by-product of war; it was a feature of the state.

The Sardauna was the inheritor of that system. He did not dismantle it. He reinforced it. He expanded it. He made sure that the Fulani elite remained in control while the Hausa masses remained in poverty. He built schools for the Fulani elite and mosques for the Hausa masses. He built hospitals for the Fulani elite and prayer mats for the Hausa masses. He built a political machine for the Fulani elite and a voting bloc for the Hausa masses.

Today, the same pattern continues. The Fulani elite still hold the levers of power. The Hausa masses still hold the burden of poverty. The Fulani elite still sit on thrones. The Hausa masses still beg on the streets. The Fulani elite still protect their own. The Hausa masses still suffer.

The Way Forward: Rebuilding the North on Truth

We cannot build a new North on the foundation of the old. We cannot heal wounds by pretending they do not exist. We must confront the rot in the past. We must name the names. We must break the chains.

The Sardauna built the North, but he built it on tribalism. Now we must rebuild it on truth. We must rebuild it on justice. We must rebuild it on the dignity of every Hausa man, woman, and child.

We must bury tribal politics. We must reject inherited bigotry. We must rise beyond the old doctrines that have only kept us behind. This is not 1960 anymore. This is not the Nigeria of coups and propaganda. This is 2026. And we must think for ourselves.

The Path to Liberation: What We Must Do

First, we must reclaim our history. The Fulani burned our libraries and erased our chronicles. We must unearth them. We must teach our children that the Bagauda Dynasty ruled Kano for 808 years before the first Fulani flag was raised. We must teach them that the Gobarau Minaret in Katsina was a center of learning before the jihad. We must teach them that Hausa kings ruled without bowing.

Second, we must reclaim our political power. The Hausa are 80 million strong across West Africa. We have the numbers. We have the land. We have the history. We have the economic muscle. What we lack is the will to organize, the courage to confront, and the patience to build. We must build a political movement that is explicitly committed to Hausa liberation within a restructured Nigeria.

Third, we must reclaim our economic power. The banditry in Dajin Rugu is not random. It is a systematic campaign to displace Hausa farmers from the most fertile lands in the Northwest. We must organize our own defense. Not vigilantes with outdated guns, but community-based security cooperatives that are trained, equipped, and coordinated across state lines.

Fourth, we must reclaim our cultural power. The Fulani did not only conquer our land. They conquered our imagination. Today, a Hausa child grows up thinking that the emir is the natural ruler. That a Fulani name in a palace is normal. That the Hausa language is for the market, not for governance. That bowing is respect. We must replace these mental images with new ones. Hausa films, music, literature, and art must tell stories of resistance, not submission.

We do not write this out of hate. We write this out of deep love for the North, for the land that raised us, for the people we still believe can rise again. But we must bury tribal politics. We must reject inherited bigotry. We must rise beyond the old doctrines that have only kept us behind.

The Sardauna built the North, but he built it on tribalism. Now we must rebuild it on truth. We must rebuild it on justice. We must rebuild it on the dignity of every Hausa man, woman, and child.

The North will rise again, not despite the Sardauna, but because we finally have the courage to say: enough is enough.

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