07/10/2025
THE LEGEND OF PANG NAGAN HILL KURGWI
Long ago, when the Goemai people first settled the land, a great man named Kurgui Talmoep founded the town that would be called Nagan. His wife, Nna Ngan, gave her name to the land, and from her, the name lives forever.
Beside this settlement rose a mighty stone hill. The people called it Pang Nagan (the Stone of Nagan). From its heights, the land could be seen far and wide, and it became the heart of the community, both in strength and in spirit.
The hill was no ordinary place. It was home to the sacred Luu-Nmai, and to a powerful lion, known as Liit, whom the people believed was an ancestral guardian sent to defend them. This lion was unlike any other—it did not hunt the innocent, nor disturb those who came with good intentions. Hunters who sought game, healers who gathered herbs, and kings who came for cleansing were all safe under its watch. But anyone who climbed the hill with an evil heart never returned. The lion allowed no wickedness to be plotted upon Nagan soil.
Because of this, Pang Nagan became the sacred path of kingship. Every man chosen to be Long Nagan (King of Nagan) had to climb its stones for traditional purification before returning to the people as Kurgui, their ruler. The hill was a crown upon the land, a place where leadership met the spirits of the ancestors.
Generations passed, and as time brought change, the old ways began to fade. Houses spread near the hill, the Luu-Nmai grew silent, and the lion was seen no more. Yet, the memory endures. The hill still carries its ancient name, Pang Nagan, and even strangers call it in Hausa, Dutsen Pang Nagan.
To this day, when the sun sets on its stones, the people remember: this is more than a hill. It is a witness to their origins, a guardian of their past, and a symbol that their land has never been conquered, never been taken, and never will be erased.
Nagan Youth Movement Cares...✍️
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