The Biafran Humanitarian Crisis, 19671970

International Human Rights and Joint Church Aid

By (author) Arua Oko Omaka

Publication date:

30 September 2016

Length of book:

204 pages

Publisher

Fairleigh Dickinson University Press

Dimensions:

239x158mm
6x9"

ISBN-13: 9781611479737

This book focuses on the Biafran humanitarian crisis of 1967–1970 which generated a surge of human rights anxieties and attracted the attention of world humanitarian organizations. For the first time in recent history, different church groups and humanitarian activists around the world came together for the sole purpose of alleviating human suffering and saving lives regardless of theological differences, race, ethnic affiliation, nationality, and geographical distance. Despite their role in shaping the course and outcome of the conflict, most scholars of the Nigeria-Biafra War treat the humanitarian aspect of the war as a footnote, making it appear less important among other issues of interest in the conflict. Notable exceptions, however, include Joseph Thomson’s American Policy and African Famine, which focuses on American policy on the humanitarian aid, and Reverend Tony Byrne’s Airlift to Biafra.
This study underlines that the international humanitarian aid largely contributed to the internationalization of the war. The efforts of the churches from thirty-three countries which remain virtually unexplored was not just the first of its kind in the developing world but also the largest civilian airlift in history. While the paucity of scholarship on the humanitarian aspect of the Biafra war could be attributed to the newness of this field of enquiry, the increase in conflicts in different parts of the world has just opened humanitarian aid studies as a new frontier in academic study. This book is a masterful example of scholarship in this newly emergent field.
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.