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Reload this Page Yoruba as a Religon

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Yoruba Religion



Doctrines

Yoruba believe in a supreme being, in primordial divinities, and spirits that have been deified. God is known as Olodumare (the one who has the fullness of everything) and Olorun (the owner of heaven, the Lord whose abode is in the heaven above). Other names are also used that reflect the Yoruba belief that God has all the possible attributes of a person.
As the Supreme Being created heaven and earth, he also brought into existence hundreds of divinities, and the spirits (Orisa, or Imole, and Ebora). Other historical figures, such as kings, culture heroes, founders of cities, etc. were deified, and are invoked along with personifications of natural forces such as earth, wind, trees, river, lagoon, sea, rock, hills and mountains. As in other African societies, Yoruba also believe in the active existence of the deceased ancestors.



History

Traditionally, Yorubaland was constituted by semi-independent states governed by kings. Under those twenty or more kings, a greater number of subordinate rulers, at least 1000, were responsible for single towns and villages. Therefore there was never a political unity as such. The principal source of ethnic identity was language, which distinguished the Yoruba from the neighbouring traditions such as the Hausa speaking peoples.
All the principal Yoruba kingdoms claim a common origin from the city of Ile Ife. The royal dynasties are supposedly descended from a single ancestor, the first king of Ile Ife, who is usually named Oduduwa. During Oduduwa's lifetime, or soon after his death, his sons and grandsons are said to have dispersed from Ile Ife to found their own kingdoms. In several oral traditions, the founders of the principal kingdoms are presented as the children of Oduduwa specifically by his principal wife, Omonide or Iyamode.
While the history of Yoruba religion has been of a variety of traditional forms throughout the kingdoms, traders came into contact with Islam as early as the 17th Century, and Islam was established in Ketu before the 18th Century, so that between 1755 and 1780 (the reign of Oba Adele I) there were already Muslims in Lagos. While Christian missionaries arrived in Yorubaland by the middle of the 19th Century, Christianity spread rapidly, and independent churches such as Aladura sprang up throughout Yorubaland by the earlier part of the 20th Century.



Symbols

Yams are considered important symbols of thanksgiving by the Yoruba, whose main occupation is farming. As a result, even fishing communities offer new yams to the divinities before they themselves consume them. For example, the Eje festival is an annual event in Itebuu-Manuwa during which the Yoruba leader gives yams to Malokum (god of the sea), to the ancestors, and to other local spirits and divinities believed to be responsible for making the crops do well on the land.
In the case of divination (ifa), objects such as cowry-shells and palm nuts are used to allow the reading by a priest (babalawo) of possible influences by supernatural forces on a particular person. Therefore those objects symbolize the wishes of the supernatural world, specifically of Ifa himself, the wisest of all deities, and the chief counsellor of the supreme deity Olorun. Also the akoko tree (newboldia laevis) is regarded as a sacred tree, and a symbolic marker for sacred spots.



Adherents

No official figures available.



Headquarters/
Main Centre


South Western Nigeria, Oyo, Ondo, Ogun, Lagos and Kwara States, and a section of the Bendel State. Some Yoruba groups are also found in Togo and Benin.


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The faiths of the Yoruba peoples of Western Nigeria vary significantly from one part of the region to another; the same deity may be male in one village and female in the next, or the characteristics of two gods may be embodied in a single deity in a neighboring region; in the city of Ile Ife alone the trickster god is worshipped under three different names. These variations inevitably arose as the myths were passed by word of mouth; add to them the incorporation into the Yoruba faith of facets of outside religions, particularly Christianity and Islam, and understanding the faith becomes difficult indeed. The religions, however, share a similar structure, described by E. Bolaji Idowu as "diffused monotheism"; a single omnipotent creator-god rules over the universe, along with several hundred lower gods, each with a specific domain of rule.

Shango, the god Wole Soyinka refers to in his poem "Hunt of the Stone", occupies a major position in the pantheon of the Yoruba, although he holds a less important position in neighboring ethnic groups. Shango (also spelled Sango and Sagoe) creates thunder and lightning by casting "thunderstones" down to earth; wherever lightning strikes, priests search the surrounding area for the thrown stone. The Yoruba believe these stones have special powers, and they enshrine the stones in temples to the god. Shango has four wives, each personified by a major Nigerian river; his chief wife, Oya, is represented by the River Niger. One myth about Shango tells of when he was human and ruled as the fourth king of the ancient Yoruba capital of Oyo. He had a charm that could cause lightning, with which he inadvertently killed his entire family. In remorse he hanged himself, and upon his death he became deified. Although the "foremost national deity", according to some, the Yoruba do not consider him the most powerful or even the most important god; rather, his popularity may have resulted from attempts to ward off the frequent tornadoes that strike western Africa.

Curiously, the Yoruba never actively worship their all-powerful god, variously known as Olorun ("the owner of the sky") or Olodumare (roughly translates as "the almighty"), among many other names. Unlike Shango, who has dozens of shrines erected to him, Olorun has not a single shrine; the Yoruba never make sacrifices to him, and he has no priests. He plays much the same role as do the Judeo-Christian and Islamic gods-- he is "the creator of all things, the almighty and all-knowing, the giver of life and breath, and the final judge of mankind", according to Geoffrey Parrinder-- and yet the Yoruba apparently ignore him in their day-to-day lives. A theory explains that perhaps Olorun developed through the influence of early Islamic or Christian missionaries, as a simulacrum of the gods of those religions. This finds support in the argument that the Yoruba find the concept of an almighty God so overwhelming and remote that they cannot relate Olorun to their reality.

Some Yoruba legends have a pair of gods, Orishala (Obatala, Orisa-nla) and his wife Odudua, as supreme creating deities, either independent of almighty Olorun or preceding him. One legend has Olorun creating the world and then leaving Obatala and Odudua to finish up the details; other interpreters have considered Olorun and Obatala one and the same. Obatala, often a sculptor-god, has the responsibility to shape human bodies; the Yoruba consider the physically deformed either his votaries or the victims of his displeasure. Olorun, however, reserves the right to breathe these bodies to life. In some places, Obatala also rules over all of the orisha, or minor gods, as king, although still subordinate to Olorun. The orisha (of which Shango is one) traditionally number either four hundred one or six hundred one. The Yoruba explained to early missionaries that these minor gods descended from the single almighty god, just as Jesus was the son of the Christian god.

Among these orisha, the Yoruba see the god Ogun as among the most important. The god of war, of the hunt, and of ironworking, Ogun serves as the patron deity of blacksmiths, warriors, and all who use metal in their occupations. He also presides over deals and contracts; in fact, in Yoruba courts, devotees of the faith swear to tell the truth by kissing a machete sacred to Ogun. The Yoruba consider Ogun fearsome and terrible in his revenge; they believe that if one breaks a pact made in his name, swift retribution will follow. A legend that illustrates Ogun's importance tells of the orisha trying to carve a road through dense jungle; Ogun was the only one with the proper implements for the task and so won the right to be king of the orisha. He did not, however, care for the position, and it went to Obatala.

Some regions combine Ogun with the trickster god, Eshu. Eshu, or Legba as he is also known, has mistakenly been identified by Europeans with with the Devil in the past.

The Yoruba pantheon, however, has no evil gods; a more accurate comparison would be between Eshu and the Satan of the Book of Job, to whom God assigns the task of trying men's faith. One myth dealing with Eshu illustrates his mischieviousness: Eshu, posing as a merchant, alternately sold increasingly magnificent gifts to each of a man's two wives; the ensuing battle for the husband's favor tore the family apart. Surprisingly, Eshu also serves as the guardian of houses and villages. When worshipped in this tutelary position, his followers call him Baba ("father"). Eshu also serves as the god of Ifa, a sophisticated and complex geomantic divinatory tool which uses nuts, signs, and increasing squares of the number four to predict all facets of the future. Geoffrey Parrinder claims that Ifa is the "only instance of writing practised in modern times among the pagan and non-Islamic peoples." It has remained enormously popular, and still today many Yoruba do not make any major life decision without consulting it.

Shokpona, the god of smallpox, apparently became an important god in the smallpox plagues that were transmitted by various inter-tribal wars; the Yoruba also blamed Shokpona's wrath for high temperatures, carbuncles, boils, and other diseases that resemble small-pox symptoms. Shokpona once terrified some Yoruba so greatly that they feared to say his name; they used instead such names as Elegbana ("hot earth") and A-soro-pelerum ("one whose name it is not propitious to call during the dry season"). Priests of Shokpona wielded immense power; it was believed that they could bring the plague down on their enemies, and in fact the priests sometimes made a potion from the powdered scabs and dry skin of those who died from small-pox. They would pour the potion in an enemy's house or a neighboring village to spread the disease. Today, however, smallpox has been all but eradicated; the priests of Shokpona have lost power and the cult has vanished.

Some gods, such as Olokun, appear only in certain regions. Olokun ("owner of the sea"), alternately a god or a goddess, lives under the sea with his (or her) soldiers and mermaids; a popular legend tells of Olokun trying to conquer the earth by means of a great flood. The worship of Olokun occurs, predictably, in the southern coastal regions.

The Yoruba treat their ancestors with great respect, as might be expected in a culture with only oral records of the past, but anthropologists debate as to whether the rituals dealing with ancestry are religious in nature, or simply respectful. At least a few groups believe that ancestors, after death, become demigods, but only once they have assumed the persona of a true deity. This resembles another facet of the Yoruba faith, the phenomenon of possession, in which mediums take on the characteristics of one or another of the gods. The characteristics of each god are so well stereotyped that mediums as far off as Haiti loll back their heads and cross their legs in the same way when possessed by the lightning god.

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Post imported post - 04-02-07, 06:53 AM



Wole Soyinka on Yoruba Religion

A conversation with Ulli Beier

http://www.yoruba.org/Magazine/Summer97/File3.htm

for an easier understanding



There is too much European/Middle Eastern religion within this forum and not enough about African belief systems.

We all know that a Baptised slave was worth more than a heathern (spelling).

Lets get an understanding of our own Religions.


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Post imported post - 04-02-07, 02:07 PM

Thank you, Dada.


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Post imported post - 04-02-07, 04:31 PM

Interesting thread. I second 'YankeeJamaRican' in thanking you for bringing it to our attention.

Although I know little about Yoruba religion I have always found it interesting and would like to learn more about it. One aspect of Yoruba religion that I am particularly fascinated about is the preservation and integration of Yoruba culture and religion into Brazilian culture and Roman Catholicism. A documentary about the Bahia people of Brazil and their Yoruba culture was shown onthe 'Artsworld' channel (267) in December last year. It was really quite amazing to see how the descendents of Africans transported there as slaves had managed to preserve so much of their culture. And perhaps even more amazing to see Brazilians that looked 'white' siting the names of Yoruba deities as saint/god type figures that they also believed in.

One of themostinterestingparts of the documentary was where one of the interviewees compared the Portuguese imperialists with their couterpart British imperialists..... The Brits were more 'professional' about slavery and imperialism in that they took away the names, languages and cultures of the enslaved Africans transported to North America whereas the Portuguese were 'amateurs' in that they 'allowed' the Africans they enslaved in Brazilto keep their names and languages, hence the prominence of Yoruba culture and religion amongst them.


"Better than the cannon, it (colonialism) makes conquest permament. The cannon compels the body, the school bewitches the soul"... Cheikh Hamidou Kane.
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Post imported post - 04-02-07, 05:04 PM

nsogbu1562


That sounds like a great documentary, we don't really hear much about the vast number of slaves that went to Brazil.

I know that Yoruba is practiced there but did not know to what extent.


Are there any Yoruba within the Blacknet Community, not the tribal membership but in a religious context?


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Post imported post - 04-02-07, 08:26 PM

The Africans in my Puerto Rican side of family practice Santeria, I was raised knowing the Yoruban pantheon and seeing the syncretized images of Chango as Santa (Saint) Barbara & Eshu/Ellegua as San Lazaro etc.

Quite an eye opener when I've met West Africans and told them the Yoruban prayers I heard as a child.

I honor my ancestors in that they managed to preserve that connection albeit under the lash of Roman Catholicism.




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