Chief Sunday Inengite remembers the day the foreigners who had come to his village in Nigeria's Niger Delta struck oil.
"They made us be happy and clap like fools, dance as if we were trained monkeys," he says.
Years later, the 74-year-old now looks back on his youthful enthusiasm with sour regret.
"It smacks of wickedness, hard-heartedness," he says.
Mr Inengite was 19 years old when the foreign engineers came looking for oil in 1953.
"I was trying to know why they were all here, going into the forests and into the swamps."
"You see fish floating on the surface of the water, something we didn't know before."
"It may be difficult to make a catch that will be enough for your family for one day."
But the problem is not caused just by the oil companies.
The government gets tax and royalties on the oil the companies produce.
"I don't only blame the whites that came here, what about the government?" Mr Ingenite says.
"People in the government get nearly all the money from the economy."
Why don't people ask their leaders where their money is?
Groups of "boys" were armed by government during the 2003 elections.
Mr Ingenite says in his old age, he now understands what the militancy wants.
"We frowned at violence because we are very hospitable to those that come," he said.