By Eneojo Herbert Idakwo
When His Royal Majesty, Mathew Alaji Opaluwa Oguche Akpa, ascended the revered throne of the Attah Igala and Chairman, Kogi State Traditional Council, the atmosphere across the Igala kingdom and indeed Kogi state was electrified with renewed hope, reverence, and aspirations. It was a moment that stirred deep emotions and invoked ancestral pride. Among the many dreams shared during his coronation, one stood out, the collective ambition to build a befitting, world-class palace for our king, a sanctuary worthy of the cultural, spiritual, and historical essence of the Igala nation.
That dream, inspired by some of our most notable sons and daughters, resonated powerfully across Igala land and in diaspora communities. For a moment, it seemed the collective consciousness of our people had awakened to an urgent call, to reclaim, rebuild, and reframe the image of our traditional monarchy in the eyes of the world.

But somewhere along the line, the dream dimmed. The fire waned. The vision was quietly abandoned, buried beneath the weight of bureaucracy, disinterest, or perhaps distractions that continue to erode our communal consciousness.
Today, we ask: how long shall a proud people delay in building a dignified seat for their supreme cultural authority?
The Palace as a Symbol of Collective Identity
The palace of the Attah is more than brick and mortar. It is the heartbeat of the Igala cultural identity, a physical embodiment of our history, unity, sovereignty, and pride. It is where royal decrees echo through time, where wisdom is dispensed, and where the soul of our people is nurtured and protected.
In every great kingdom across the world, the palace is not merely a residence for royalty, it is a powerful statement of the people’s civilization, their architecture, their artistic ingenuity, and their communal strength. The palace of the Attah Igala should be no less.
To continue to defer this noble dream is to tell the world, and worse, to tell ourselves, that we are content with mediocrity, with decay, and with forgetting the towering dignity of our royal heritage.
A Generational Responsibility
The responsibility to build a befitting palace for Gabaidu is not His Royal Majesty’s alone. It is our collective duty, every Igala man and woman, from Ankpa to Idah, Dekina to Ejule, and from Porthacourt to Abuja, Lagos, London, America, Germany, and beyond.
It is a generational mandate. Our ancestors built sacred groves and shrines with their bare hands to honour their gods and kings. Shall we, with all our education, access, influence, and global reach, fail to unite in building just one edifice of cultural pride?
Let us remember: a king without a palace is a people without honour.
More Than a Building, A Legacy
This project is not about bricks and design alone. It is about legacy, the kind of legacy that our children and grandchildren will inherit with pride. It is about giving the Igala Kingdom a majestic address that attracts global tourists, scholars, diplomats, and spiritual pilgrims. It is about hosting festivals, colloquiums, and state functions in a palace that radiates royal excellence.
For instance, in England, the
Buckingham Palace can be royally described as:
“The majestic seat of the British monarchy, Buckingham Palace stands as a timeless symbol of sovereign authority, royal tradition, and national identity, a resplendent architectural masterpiece at the heart of London, embodying the dignity, continuity, and ceremonial grandeur of the Crown.”
> “A regal bastion of elegance and power, Buckingham Palace is the enduring emblem of British royalty, a palace where history, heritage, and the majesty of the Crown converge in ceremonial splendour.”
Imagine a palace that merges ancient Igala architecture with modern luxury, built by the contributions of ordinary Igala people, teachers, market women, professionals, businessmen, artisans, and our diaspora champions. Imagine walking through the halls of that palace, knowing you played a part in its glory.
The Time to Act Is Now
We cannot continue to wait for a “convenient time.” The time is now. The same spirit that built churches, mosques, schools, and health centres across Igala land can rise to this challenge. A project management committee made up of trusted, transparent, and competent Igala sons and daughters can be set up. An accountability framework can be established, with regular reports to donors and the public. Online platforms can be launched for contributions and tracking. A thousand Naira from a million people is a billion Naira.
The unity of the Igala people is not in slogans. It is in action. If we cannot come together to honour our royal institution, what else can unite us?
Let us rise, from Abuja to Accra, from Kaduna to Canada, from Idah to Italy, and awaken the spirit of patriotism that once made Igala a kingdom feared, respected, and celebrated.
Let this call echo through every WhatsApp group, every town union, every Igala association, every youth forum, and every family chat, Let us build the Palace of the Attah Igala!
Let the children yet unborn bless our names.
Eneojo Herbert Idakwo, an
advocate for Igala Renaissance and development, writes from Abuja.
eneojoherbert@gmail.com
