University Press Copublishing Division / Fairleigh Dickinson University Press
Pages: 204
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-1-61147-973-7 • Hardback • September 2016 • $117.00 • (£90.00)
978-1-61147-975-1 • Paperback • August 2018 • $53.99 • (£42.00)
978-1-61147-974-4 • eBook • September 2016 • $51.00 • (£39.00)
Arua Oko Omaka is lecturer at Federal University, Ndufu Alike, Ikwo, Nigeria.
List of Abbreviations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1The Colonial Design and Military Incursion
2The Gowon Regime and the Secession of Eastern Nigeria
3Humanitarian Impulse
4Joint Church Aid: Formation and Relief Organization
5The Relief War: Obstacles and Debates
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
About the Author
Arua Oko Omaka’s The Biafran Humanitarian Crisis, 1967–1970 is an important addition to the growing literatures on both the Nigeria-Biafra War and international humanitarianism. . . . Arua Oko Omaka’s book deserves a wide readership not only in African studies but in the fields of human rights and humanitarianism as well. It will appeal to the growing number of historians working through the legacies of the Nigeria-Biafra War and the history of international intervention in the 1960s and 70s, but it also speaks to current practitioners of humanitarianism. To that audience, Omaka offers a detailed case study of how good causes are made, mobilized, and instrumentalized.
— African Studies Review
While the Nigeria-Biafra civil crisis has for long captivated the attention of scholars, very little attention has been paid to the role played by human rights groups and churches in the conflict. With a plethora of sources unearthed from archives and depositories in North America, Europe, and Africa, The Biafran Humanitarian Crisis, 1967–1970 offers the reader a detailed account of the humanitarian intervention that saved the secessionist enclave from annihilation. The book is a rich fare on the religious, ethnic, cultural and the international dimensions of the war. It explores religion and genocide as important propaganda themes that influenced public opinion around the world. During the war, the Biafran leaders had alleged that the Nigerian dictatorship government was perpetrating genocide against its citizens through starvation and indiscriminate bombing raids. Many individuals and groups in Europe and North America perceived the war as a struggle in which the Muslim North was out to exterminate the Christian South. This allegation led to a global humanitarian response in which the aid organizations collaborated to send relief aid to Biafra. Dr. Omaka shows that humanitarian action was controversial and had no fixed meaning. The book is a powerful contribution to the historical scholarship on culture and global humanitarian intervention in a political conflict. Readers must salute the author for his intellectual depth and social vision in treating such a sensitive subject with fairness and wisdom.
— Raphael Chijioke Njoku, Professor of African History and Chair of Global Studies and Languages, Idaho State University
The Biafran Humanitarian Crisis, 1967–1970offers a fresh approach to the Nigeria-Biafra War, the humanitarian crisis that Biafra faced, the strategies Nigerian authorities employed to reinforce hegemony and mobilize other nations and resources against the Biafra war of independence, and the contradictions inherent in war-time humanitarian efforts.
— Chima J. Korieh, Marquette University
Drawing on multiple archival sources, Arua Omaka provides a refreshingly original and deeply analytical interpretative history of the humanitarian aspects of the Nigeria-Biafra War. This detailed study of the Joint Church Aid, a key international humanitarian actor in the conflict, offers new insights into one of the defining post-colonial conflicts of the twentieth century. The book marks an important contribution to modern African history and the broader scholarship on armed conflict and international humanitarianism.
— Bonny Ibhawoh, McMaster University, Canada
A half century had passed since the Nigerian civil war. Until Arua Oko Omaka’sThe Biafran Humanitarian Crisis it has been difficult to explain how deeply the humanitarian crisis of starvation moved a generation of Canadians even while the war in Vietnam filled in our media. Dr. Omaka has broken new ground with his blending of archival sources in several countries and his interviews. The scholarship is admirable; the narrative compelling. The hopes for decolonization, the Commonwealth link, and church ties made the Biafran stalemate a rallying point for Church-led relief humanitarian efforts. It is dispiriting to think that reports on atrocities world-wide have increased since then. This fine book recounts atrocities, but it balances them with insights into idealism and humanitarianism in a decade packed with events brutal as well as relatively innocent.
— John Weaver, Member of the Royal Society of Canada and Distinguished University Professor teaching in the Department of History at McMaster University
Library Journal Reviews' Top 20 Best Sellers in African History for April 2017