Igbale Aiye community, said to be 450,000 years old, is in Apotoku, Ketu (Commune de Kétou), Republic of Benin.
Kétou
(Ketu) is said to have been founded by Ede, son of Sopasan and grandson of
Oduduwa, who ruled the Yoruba kingdom of Ile-Ife in present-day Nigeria.
Speaking
during the Convention of ‘The City-Headquarters of Humanism’ (Igbale Aiye),
organised by Africa-Cultures International Institute and the Government of
Republic of Benin, the state governors and Nobel Laureate, according to a
statement by Funmi Wakama, media aide of Governor Amosun, commended the vision
of Olofindji Akande, the promoter of Igbale Aiye project.
They
called for concerted efforts to promote African culture and values.
Amosun
promised to support the project in line with his administration’s vision to
promote the African culture. He said Ogun had been associated with many firsts
and “this project is first of its kind.”
Aregbesola
said further research should be carried out on the link between the Egyptian
Pyramids and Igbale Aiye.
For
his part, Soyinka said the Centre for Black Culture and International
Understanding had adopted the Igba Aiye initiative because of its historical
significance.
The
visitors were conducted round the relics of the 450,000-year-old underground
village said to host the first inhabitants of our planet world “where the
builders of the pyramids of Egypt came from.”
The
two governors and culture icon later planted banana trees to commemorate the
2013 Convention.
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