User talk:Nheyyo01

Meet Ojise Isedale US Based Yoruba Cultural Champion.
Despite living the United States for over 30 year, Ojise Isedale,a Yoruba Cultural advocate and Biomedical Scientist,believes that the language with which a person prefers to think and reason, is the most important language for such person. According to him,'those that cannot reason in Yoruba, cannot truly benefit from the wealth of Yoruba Ancestral Values".

Whilst working in his Scientific professions, Ojise has done part time projects in Yoruba Interpretation and Translation in both private and Government Sectors in the United States for over 20 years. This includes the Local and Federal Government, like the School Districts and the US Department of Defense. He was at a time a Yoruba Language Instructor at the University of California, Los Angeles; where he taught Doctoral (PhD) students of different races. Some of these Scholars have gone to do research in Nigeria and other parts of Africa.

Ojise believes the only way he could have achieved these feats, considering he has no background in linguistics and have left Yoruba land since he was a teenager, was because Eledumare and the Ancestors enabled him. He is active in African Diaspora where he has been invited as Guest Speaker (both in English and Yoruba) at numerous events.Infact,he will be will storming the Obafemi Awolowo University,on 14th August,where he will be a Keynote Speaker at Institute of Cultural Studies Symposium. He was the Master of Ceremony during Ooni Ojaja's II visit to California in 2017. Ojise presently volunteers as Public Relations Officer of a Yoruba Organization in California, where he also serves as a mentor to Yoruba Youths.

Ojise is an advocate for Yoruba School Debates to be cajoled in all Primary and Secondary Schools in Yoruba speaking areas of Nigeria and Benin Republic. He believes other "back burner" but major African languages like Oromo, Igbo, Hausa, Twi, Shona, Zulu, etc should also be used in School debates. Yoruba School Debates with prizes/sponsorship by Government and Private sectors, will make Yoruba language more appealing to the Youth. This will promote fluency and a much needed sense of pride that undermines inferiority complex.

Ojise is an Advocacy Hobbyist who campaigns for the eradication of Inferiority Complex that he considers a disease, affecting all Black people world wide (not just Africans). On the subject of inferiority complex, it is better to quote resources on www.ojiseworld.com, where he wrote:

"Blacks are by a far margin, the most humiliated race of people on the planet, both historically and in the modern era. The most efficient solution to the humiliation is eradication of this multi-faceted complex disease. Some of us pay attention to the Economic challenge of Black race worldwide compared to peers, but with little attentiveness to why it prevails, long after Slavery and colonialism is over with. Many of us have been brain-washed, that we confuse Modernity with embrace of Imperialism. We have assumptions that "everything" Western and or Semitic (Judeo-Arabism) is Modern. We often embrace the worst of the Western values, and abuse our own lands, whilst we praise the "Holly lands" of the Middle East. African "educated" elites are often no better than the commoners.  Many of the elites plunder public purse to buy prime properties in London, New York, Paris, Emirates, etc.  Those who steal from their Mother's compound where they live, to invest in far away land's vacation homes, are not just greedy, they suffer from inferiority complex, indeed. There is a Yoruba saying that goes "Bi inu ęni ba ti ri ni obi nyan". A common expatiation of this phrase in English, is: Thought process is a precursor of Actions, Actions becomes Habits and Habits shapes our Destiny. So, in English, that concise Yoruba phrase means "Your Thought process determines your Destiny". People with inferior thought process, will collectively remain inferior, as if such inferiority is their destiny. Our mindset continues to prevail our historic humiliation.

Hence, to arrest the humiliation that Black people suffers worldwide, corrective actions is too little, breaking habits is too late; we have to synchronize our thought process favorably, before resultant Actions leads to Habits that shapes Destiny. Our Thought Process comes with consequential generational humiliation. If the Black race should want to rise, the present status quo of inferiority mindset is unacceptable". Ojise Isedale continues to call attention to what he considers Black people's inferiority complex.

Ojise Isedale continues to call attention to what he considers Black people's inferiority complex. May future generation continue towards it's worldwide eradication. Ase! Nheyyo01 (talk) 11:55, 15 February 2022 (UTC)