#TBT: Nigerians on Twitter Reminisce and Celebrate Their Country’s 55 Years of Independence

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Nigeria turns 55 today.

Africa’s most populous nation gained its independence from the United Kingdom Oct. 1, 1960. Nigerians on Twitter commemorated their independence day with a variety of celebratory tweets and insightful comments about how far the nation has come. 

The country has produced some of the world’s richest oil entrepreneurs. 

https://twitter.com/AfricaFactsZone/status/649664918585802753

Despite its reputation for corruption, Nigeria’s most recent presidential election in March, which saw Nigerians experience the nation’s first-ever democratic transition of power from one elected president to another elected president of a different party, has its citizens feeling very optimistic about the future. 

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https://twitter.com/akandeoj/status/649652932384804864

There was a joke about how first-generation black people living in the Diaspora who have parents from Nigeria will be claiming their Nigerian heritage extra hard today: 

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https://twitter.com/_umanta/status/649626914177482753

There’s the idea that Nigeria—and Africa in general—is all doom and gloom and wouldn’t be such a great place to live. But when you look at some of the problems first-world nations face, like the U.S. gun problem, as demonstrated by Thursday’s campus shooting in Oregon, it makes you remember that Nigerians have to get adjusted to America’s downsides, too. 

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https://twitter.com/ContactSalkida/status/649662725765791745

I think something like 1 out of every 4 people in Africa are Nigerian. Let’s face it: Nigerians have a superiority complex as a result, which some people find annoying, but try finding a Nigerian who cares. 

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https://twitter.com/EgusiFiend/status/649605101963771904

Plop your black child down in front of this educational cartoon that teaches kids about Nigeria’s independence. It's an episode from Bino and Fino, a brilliant cartoon series that wants black children to be proud of their African ancestry. It’s centered on a brother and sister who live in a modern-day city in sub-Saharan Africa. The series wants brown children all over the world to see themselves on television and learn more about their African heritage. 

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https://twitter.com/BinoandFino/status/649593588339314688

Google even joined in on the celebrations. 

https://twitter.com/okayafrica/status/649569345832648704

And this was especially dear to me (I’m a Ghanian-Nigerian-American). It’s a nod to the ongoing competition between two of the most dominant nations in Africa: Ghana and Nigeria.

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https://twitter.com/MrCocoyam/status/649610805583970304

Happy birthday, Naija.

For more of black Twitter, check out The Chatterati on The Root and follow The Chatterati on Twitter.

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Diana Ozemebhoya Eromosele is a staff writer at The Root and the founder and executive producer of Lectures to Beats, a Web series that features video interviews with scarily insightful people. Follow Lectures to Beats on Facebook and Twitter.

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