You Searched For Ozoemena Nsugbe Aguleri Bu Isi Igbo - Highlifeng Guide
The browser tab sat open on Nneka’s laptop, the words glowing in the dim light of her Lagos apartment: “You searched for Ozoemena nsugbe Aguleri bu isi igbo - HighlifeNg”
“E muo gbara m aka… the spirit called me home.”
He leaned closer. “But before he died, he cursed them. He said, ‘Aguleri bu isi Igbo’ —Aguleri is the head of the Igbo nation. Without the head, the body wanders. And for a hundred years, we have wandered. Civil war. Endless arguments. No true leader.”
“Ozoemena Nsugbe, Aguleri bu isi Igbo...” The browser tab sat open on Nneka’s laptop,
Nneka didn’t know if she believed in curses or lost skulls or the “Head of Igbo.” But she realized that a search history is never random. It is a map of what we have forgotten. And sometimes, when you search for a forgotten name, the forgotten name searches back for you.
That night, Nneka sat in the hospital and played the song again on her phone, holding the speaker to her father’s ear. For the first time in three days, his fingers twitched. He opened his eyes and whispered, not to her, but to the song:
It was a praise song, but not for a living man. It was an oriki , a praise epithet for a hero. Nneka had grown up in Surulere, far from the dusty hills of Aguleri. She knew she was Igbo, but “Isi Igbo”—the Head of Igbo? That was not a nickname. That was a title of war. Without the head, the body wanders
She spent the next week digging through the digital graveyard of HighlifeNg, a blog dedicated to preserving forgotten vinyl records. She found comments under the song: “My grandfather said Ozoemena’s shrine is still there.” “The British feared him more than any king.” “They say his skull is buried under the new courthouse.”
The trail led her to Aguleri, a town clinging to the banks of the Omabala River. The elders at the palace of the Eze did not want to talk. But an old dibia (native doctor) named Okonkwo agreed to meet her under a silk-cotton tree.
A crackling Highlife song filled the room. The guitar was mellow, the horns distant, as if recorded in a different century. Then, a deep voice began to chant: Endless arguments
The dibia smiled. “Because your father is Ozoemena’s great-great-grandson. And the last line of the song says, ‘Nwoke a na-efu efu ga-alọta’ —The lost man shall return.”
“Why did my father search for this?” she asked.
Nneka felt a chill. The song wasn’t just music. It was a political manifesto encoded in melody.