The history of alhaji abubakar tafawa balewa

Mallam Aminu Kano

Mallam Aminu Kano (1920 – 1983) was a Muslim politician from northern Nigeria. He symbolized democratization, women’s empowerment and freedom of speech. He also proposed a fiscal system that favors heavy taxation of the rich in the region and was notably one of the few leading Nigerian politicians that supported equal rights for women. Mallam Aminu Kano joined the Northern Elements Progressive Union as a political platform to challenge what he felt was the autocratic and feudalistic actions of the Native Northern Government. In the 1940s he led a socialist movement in the northern part of the country in opposition to British rule.

Interesting facts about Mallam Aminu Kano

  • Kano was often at loggerheads with the colonial government. He attacked it for its misuse of taxes as well its exploitation of Nigeria for Britain’s advantage. His staunch opposition led to the British devising different methods in order to silence him. One such tactic was the offer of a scholarship to study in England. He returned to Nigeria with more entrenched a

    Aminu Kano

    Summary

    Aminu Kano was born into the family of Mallam Yusufu and Malama Rakaiya of the Sudawa quarters of Kano city in 1920. He obtained Islamic education and attended various local Western schools before serving as a teacher at the Bauchi Provincial Middle School. After leaving Bauchi, he attended the University of London, where he became more politically active. Upon returning to Nigeria from London, Kano served in different capacities, but mainly as a politician, a statesman-parliamentarian, and a cabinet minister. In the context of serving in these capacities, he was primarily committed to attacking the corruption and oppression of the emirate system, fighting for the liberation of women, fighting for Nigeria’s independence, promoting the democratization of Northern Nigeria, and fighting for Nigeria’s unity. By 1980, Kano’s focus on such issues had led to some important victories including the weakening of the emirate system. By this same date, Kano had had many wives even though he never embraced polygamy. In 1983, Kano died of a stroke. However, his ideas and

    Mallam Aminu Kano was a highly respected Nigerian politician, reformist and teacher. He worked vigorously in support of democratisation, women's empowerment and freedom of speech. In the 1940s, he led an Islamic movement in the north of the country in opposition to British rule.

    Early Life
    Aminu Kano was born in 1920 to the family of Mallam Yusuf, an Islamic scholar of the scholarly Gyanawa Fulani clan and a mufti at the Alkali court in Kano. He attended Sheuchi Primary School and Kano Middle School between 1930 and 1937. He enrolled at the Kaduna College (formerly Katsina College, now Barewa College) in 1937. After earning his teaching certificate, he began teaching at the Bauchi Training College in 1942. In September 1946, he was offered one of seven scholarships for a year’s study at theUniversity of London's Institute of Education alongside Nigeria’s first and only prime minister, Alhaji Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa.
    Upon his return from England, Kano formed the Northern Teachers Association (NTA) in March 1948, the first successful regional organisation

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