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Farming for Hope
Reverberating words of passion and devotion remain long after the man who utters them is gone. This is especially so, when these expressions are followed...
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Comments
NGEX welcomes and encourages reader comments. Permission to post reader comments is assumed, and we reserve the right to excerpt or edit for clarity any comments that are posted. We won't be able to publish all comments. And we can't vouch for the accuracy of posts from readers. Nickname or Name will be used to identify your post.
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CIBI IKE Trenton, New Jersey, USA November 08, 2010
Way to go girl ! Your article was quite enlightening and very well written. Thank you for your effort to bring awareness to this industry that you feel might be extinct and one that does not attract the attention of the powers that be.
Why should it, why would any industry that promotes indigeous Nigerian artifice be of any interest to the "Elites" ? There is not much money for them to pilfer as is so with the petro Dollar. The abundance of clay in Nigeria isn't very much utilized and by negligence, the few industries in existence might be no more.
Your piece is important because the local Gwari woman in this industry may not have a voice; you became a voice. You have helped shine the light on this industry, throw the blinders open for folks like me to know that Nigeria is an exporter nation in this. Keep up the good work and more grease to your elbow.
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