Aka geru nwoke nge oruru ibe ya.
Every man must reach the stage that every man reaches. · Igbo Proverb
Our children were born abroad. Our grandchildren may never speak our language. Our fathers' names are fading from the land they built. UMUIGBO exists because we refuse to let that be the end of the story.
UMUIGBO is not a museum. Museums preserve what is already dead. This is a living encyclopedia — growing, breathing, contributed to by Igbo people on every continent — that ensures the language, the names, the folktales, the history, and the wisdom of Igboland survive the diaspora.
It was built by an Igbo father who has lived abroad for 24 years. Whose children were born on foreign soil. Who woke up one day and realised that the chain connecting his children to his father's father's name was one generation away from breaking — and decided to do something about it.
Umu — children of, descendants of, people of. Igbo — the people, the land, the language, the culture. Together: the children of Igbo people — wherever in the world they were born, however long they have been away, however many languages they now speak before they speak their own. This archive is for them. For you. For the ones who come after.
Eight volumes. Each dedicated to a pillar of Igbo heritage. Every volume grows as the community contributes. Every entry verified, credited, and permanently preserved.
"When I was sixteen, we used Ishinweke as a code word — to identify who truly belonged. Today, umuigbo.org is that same code word for the entire diaspora. We are putting our clans, our masquerades, our calendars, our names on the global map. No child of Igboland will ever again be left in historical limbo. Not on our watch. Not while this archive stands."
You are not alone. And you are not helpless. This archive belongs to all of us. Every name you submit, every village you document, every story you share — it becomes part of something permanent. Something your grandchildren will find.
Contribute to the ArchiveWhen a name is forgotten, something irreplaceable is lost from the world. When a village goes undocumented, a piece of human history disappears. UMUIGBO is fighting that disappearance — one entry at a time.