fbpx
Wikipedia

Odinala

Odinani or Odinala (Igbo: Ọdịnanị/Ọ̀dị̀nàlà), also known as Omenala, Omenana, Odinana, Ọmenani, Ọdịlalị, or Ọdịlala, are the traditional cultural beliefs and practices of the Igbo people of south east Nigeria.[1] These terms, as used here in the Igbo language, are synonymous with the traditional Igbo "religious system" which was not considered separate from the social norms of ancient or traditional Igbo societies. Theocratic in nature, spirituality played a huge role in their everyday lives. Although it has largely been supplanted by Christianity, the indigenous belief system remains in strong effect among the rural and village populations of the Igbo, where it has at times influenced the colonial religions. Odinani is a pantheistic and polytheistic faith, having a strong central deity at its head.[2][3] All things spring from this deity. Although a pantheon of other gods and spirits, these being Ala, Amadiọha, Anyanwụ, Ekwensu, Ikenga, exists in the belief system, as it does in many other Traditional African religions, the lesser deities prevalent in Odinani serve as helpers or elements of Chukwu, the central deity.[4]

Lesser spirits known as ágbàrà or árúsí operate below the other gods and higher spirits. These lesser spirits represent natural forces; agbara as a divine force manifests as separate arụsị in the Igbo pantheon. A concept of 'the eye of sun or God' (Anyanwu, Igbo: ányá ánwụ́) exists as a masculine and feminine solar deity which forms a part of the solar veneration among the Nri-Igbo in northern Igboland. Arụsị are mediated by Dibia and other priests who do not contact the high god directly. Through áfà, 'divination', the laws and demands of the arụsị are communicated to the living. Arụsị are venerated in community shrines around roadsides and forests while smaller shrines are located in the household for ancestor veneration. Deceased ancestors live in the spirit world where they can be contacted. Below the arụsị are minor and more general spirits known as mmúọ loosely defined by their perceived malevolent or benign natures. These minor spirits are not venerated and are sometimes considered the lost souls of the dead. Ancestor worship and the worship of various gods and spirits, form the main component of the traditional Igbo religion, standing in contrast with Abrahamic religions.[5]

The number of people practicing Igbo religion decreased drastically in the 20th century with the influx of Christian missionaries under the auspices of the British colonial government in Nigeria. In some cases Igbo traditional religion was syncretised with Christianity, but in many cases indigenous rites were demonised by Christian missionaries who pointed out the practice of human sacrifice and some other cultural practices that were illegal under the colonial government. Earlier missionaries referred to many indigenous religious practices as juju. Igbo religion is most present today in harvest ceremonies such as new yam festival (ị́wá jí) and masquerading traditions such as mmanwụ and Ekpe.

Remnants of Igbo religious rites spread among African descendants in the Caribbean and North America in era of the Atlantic slave trade. Igbo ọ́bị̀à was transferred to the British West Indies and Guyana as obeah and aspects of Igbo masquerading traditions can be found among the festivals of the Garifuna people and jonkonnu in the West Indies and North Carolina.[6][7][8][9]

Etymology Edit

Ọdịnala in central Igbo dialect is the compound of the words ọ̀ dị̀ ('located') + n (, 'within') + àla (the one god) [consisting of anu (E nu) above (the heavens) and Ala, below (the earth)].[10][11][12] Other dialectal variants include ọdịnanị, ọdịnana, omenala, omenana, and omenanị.[12][13] The word ọdịnala and all its variations is also associated with the culture and customary laws of the Igbo people. Many of the laws and culture were counterparts with religion such as taboos and laws concerning sacred spaces like a deities sacred forest. Since customary law is recognised in Nigeria, many in Igbo society find themselves syncretising these beliefs with other beliefs and religions.[citation needed]

Beliefs Edit

 
Entrance to the cave of the Ibini Ukpabi oracle at Arochukwu, 1900s.

Ọdịnala could loosely be described as a polytheistic and panentheistic faith with a strong central spiritual force at its head from which all things are believed to spring; however, the contextual diversity of the system may encompass various theistic perspectives that derive from a variety of beliefs held within the religion.[12][14][15][16][17][note 1] Chukwu as the central deity is classed among the ndi mmuo, 'invisible beings', an ontological category of beings which includes Ala the divine feminine earth force, chi the 'personal deity', ndichie the ancestors, and mmuo the minor spirits. The other ontological category consists of ndi mmadu, 'visible beings', which include ánụ́ animals, ósísí plants, and the final class ùrò which consists of elements, minerals and inanimate beings.[18] While various gods, the spirit class of Arusi, and ancestors are worshiped and prayed to; no sacrifices are given to Chukwu and no shrines and altars are erected for it.[18] If an Arusi is assigned to an individual, it becomes a chi, a personal guardian god/spirit.[19]

Complex animism builds the core concept of most traditional African religions, including Odinala, this includes the worship of tutelary deities, nature worship, ancestor worship and the belief in an afterlife. While some religions adopted a pantheistic worldview, most follow a polytheistic system with various gods, spirits and other supernatural beings.[20] Traditional African religions also have elements of fetishism, shamanism and veneration of relics.[21]

Nigerian American professor of indigenous African religions at Harvard University, Jacob Olupona summarized the many traditional African religions as complex animistic religious traditions and beliefs of the African people before the Christian and Islamic "colonization" of Africa. Ancestor veneration has always played a "significant" part in the traditional African cultures and may be considered as central to the African worldview. Ancestors (ancestral ghosts/spirits) are an integral part of reality. The ancestors are generally believed to reside in an ancestral realm (spiritworld), while some believe that the ancestors became equal in power to deities.[22]

The defining line between deities and ancestors is often contested, but overall, ancestors are believed to occupy a higher level of existence than living human beings and are believed to be able to bestow either blessings or illness upon their living descendants. Ancestors can offer advice and bestow good fortune and honor to their living dependents, but they can also make demands, such as insisting that their shrines be properly maintained and propitiated. A belief in ancestors also testifies to the inclusive nature of traditional African spirituality by positing that deceased progenitors still play a role in the lives of their living descendants.

Olupona rejects the western/Islamic definition of Monotheism and says that such concepts could not reflect the complex African traditions and are too simplistic. While some traditions have a supreme being (next to other deities), others have not. Monotheism does not reflect the multiplicity of ways that the traditional African spirituality has conceived of deities, gods, and spirit beings.[22]

Chukwuemeka Mbaegbu from the Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Awka, Nigeria, describes the Igbo religion's system as "Monopolytheism", referring to the belief in many distinct gods and spirits, but with one distant and unpersonalized supreme force, which resulted in the creation of everything, but is not a god per definition.[3]

Chi Edit

 
Interior of a chi shrine at Nkarahia, southern Igboland, 1900s.

In Odinani, the Igbo people believe that each person has their own personal spiritual guardian called Chi (or ḿmúọ́), appointed to them before and at the time of their birth. The Chi remains with them for the rest of their lives on Earth. A person's Chi is the personification of that individual's fate, which is credited for an individual's life's successes, misfortunes and failures. The Igbo believe that their success in life is determined by their Chi, and that no man can rise past the greatness of his or her own Chi. In this respect, the concept of chi is analogous to the concept of a guardian angel in Christianity, the daemon in ancient Greek religion, and the genius in ancient Roman religion.[18][23][24][25] Culturally, people are seen as the creators or makers of their own destiny.[19][26][27] The breath of life is in the heart, óbì.[27][23][24][28] Chi can be masculine and feminine. A Dibia can identify a person's chi through divination (ájà) and advise adherents of ways to placate it.[29][30] Éké is one's ancestral guardian spirit, but exists at the periphery of human life and remains a mystery to the people.[29] Households usually contain a shrine for veneration of the Chi, which could be focused on a tree. In marriage a woman takes her chi shrine along with all her belongings to her matrimonial home.[18] Around Nkarahia, in southern Igboland, there are the most elaborate chi shrines which are decorated with colourful china plates inset into the clay walls of the chi shrine building; the altars hold sacred emblems, while the polished mud benches hold offerings of china, glass, manillas, and food.[30] As a marker of personal fortune or misfortune, good acts or ill, chi can be described as a focal point for 'personal religion'.[18]

Cosmology Edit

The community of visible interacting beings and the cosmos is referred to as ụ̀wà, which includes all living things íhẹ́ ndi dị́ ńdụ̀, including animals and vegetation and their mineral elements which possess a vital force and are regarded as counterparts to invisible forces in the spirit world.[18] These living things and geomorphological features of the world therefore possess a guardian deity. Igbo cosmology presents a balance between the feminine and masculine, perhaps, with a preponderance of female representation in Igbo lore.[18] In Igbo cosmology, the world was divided into four corners by the high god corresponding to èké órìè àfọ̀ ǹkwọ́ which are the days of the week in the Igbo calendar regarded as market days.[31][32] The universe is regarded as a composite of bounded spaces in an overlapping hemispherical structure, the total spaces are referred to as élú nà àlà.[18] In one Igbo cosmological theory reported by W.R.G. Morton in the 1950s from an elder in Ibagwa Nike in northern Igboland, Chukwu sees that the sun travels across the world in the day time and then cuts into two in order for the moon to pass on a perpendicular route, and so the world is divided into four parts and four days.[31] The quarterly division of the earth and the days makes the number four sacred (ńsọ́) to the Igbo.[31][33] The élú nà àlà space is defined by two boundaries: élú ígwé, 'sky's limit' composed of heavenly bodies under the main forces of the 'masculine' sun and 'feminine' moon, and élú àlà, 'earth or lands limit' consisting of the four material elements of fire and air (masculine), and earth and water (feminine).[18]

 
Ogbo Obodo figures for the cult of Nkpetime, near Asaba, 1900s.

The pattern of two and four reoccur in Chukwu's creations.[33] The days correspond to the four cardinal points and are its names in Igbo, èké east, órìè west, àfọ̀ north, ǹkwọ́ south.[34] The Nri-Igbo claim the market days to have been introduced to the Igbo by their divine progenitor and king Eri in the 9th century after encountering the days as deities.[35] These Arusi are venerated as the primary or as a major deity under Chineke in parts of Igboland. In terms of hierarchy, some communities recognise èké as the head of these Arusi, while others prioritise órìè and ǹkwọ́ first after the high god.[35] Market days may have local deities representing the spirits in some places, in many southern Igbo towns Agwu is the patron of Eke, Ogwugwu the patron of Orie, Amadioha the patron of Afọ and Ala for Nkwọ.[31]

The Cosmos itself is divided into "four constituent complexes" known as Okike, Alusi, Mmuo, and Uwa. Okike is the event of "Creation", the Alusi are the lesser deities, Mmụọ are the spirits of the Ancestors and all other beings, and Uwa is the World.[36]

Justice Edit

Ọfọ and ogụ́ is a law of retributive justice. It vindicates anyone that is wrongly accused of a crime as long as their "hands are clean". It is only a person who is on the righteous side of Ọfọ-na-Ogụ́ that can call its name in prayer, otherwise such a person will face the wrath of Amadiọha (the god of thunder and lightning).[37] Kola nut is used in ceremonies honour Chukwu, chi, Arusi and ancestors and is used as a method of professing innocence when coupled with libations. The Igbo often make clay altars and shrines of their deities which are sometimes anthropomorphic, the most popular example being the wooden statues of Ikenga. Typically, only men are allowed to make representational figures of supernatural forces.[38]

Afterlife and reincarnation Edit

 
An Igbo, of Igbuzo heritage, traditional ceremony for deceased relatives Akwa-ocha (Otu-ogwu).[39]

The Igbo traditionally believe in an afterlife in the spirit world or dimension, where the deceased ancestors exist, and may influence the material world and their descendants. Ancestors are protectors and guardians of ones lineage, close friends and heritage, and may become to higher spirits (semi-gods), as in the case of many other traditional religions of the world.[40] Sometimes however, ancestors may reincarnate into families that they were part of while alive.[41] This is called ilọ-uwa. Reincarnation is seldom, but may happen occasionally, if a deceased person can not enter the spirit world for various reasons, or may be absorbed into a new-born if it would die immediately after birth.[42] Unlike in Hinduism, humans can only be reincarnated as humans.[41] Families hire fortune-tellers to reveal if the child harbours the soul or an aspect of an ancestor; the baby is sometimes named after this relative.[41] The personality of the ancestor is not identical to the child's but rather the concept establishes a vital relationship with the child and characteristics of the ancestor.[43] Other signs can be certain behaviors, physical traits, and statements by the child. A diviner can help in detecting if the child has reincarnated from an ancestor and may identify this ancestor. It is considered an insult if a male is said to have been reincarnated as a female.[44] An ancestor (or aspects of the ancestor) may be reincarnated in multiple people, in which case the reincarnations share a mortal bond; upon the death of one person, it is believed that the others may die a sudden death if they see the corpse.[40]

Ogbanje Edit

An ọgbanje is a reincarnating evil or revengeful spirit, that would deliberately plague a family with misfortune. In folklore, the ọgbanje, upon being born by the mother, would deliberately die after a certain amount of time (usually before puberty) and then come back and repeat the cycle, causing the family grief. This time period varies between minutes, hours, days and years. Female circumcision was sometimes thought to get rid of the evil spirit. Finding the evil spirit's Iyi-uwa, which is buried in a secret location, would ensure that the ọgbanje would never plague the family with misfortune again. The Iyi-uwa is a stone that the ọgbanje's way of coming back to the human world and is also a way of finding its targeted family. The stone is usually buried deep enough to not have been hidden by a child. The iyi-uwa is dug out by a priest and destroyed. Female ọgbanje die during pregnancies along with the baby, male ọgbanje die before the birth of a wife's baby or the baby dies. The child is confirmed to no longer be an ọgbanje after the destruction of the stone or after the mother successfully gives birth to another baby.[41]

Deities Edit

 
Shrine representation of the alusi Ifejioku.

The Arusi, who are also known as the Arushi, Anusi or Alusi by dialects (see Orisha, the Yoruba cognate), all spring from Ala the Earth goddess and Goddess of Fertility, who embodies the workings of the World. They are lesser deities in Odinani, each of whom are responsible for a specific aspect of nature or abstract concept. According to Igbo lore, these lesser deities as elements of Chukwu have their own specific purpose. They exist only as long their purpose does, thus many Alusi die off save for those who represent universal concepts. Some of the more notable male Alusi include: Amadioha the God of Thunder and Lightning, popular among the Southern Igbo; Ikenga the horned god of Fortune and Industry; Agwu the God of Divination and Healing; Njoku Ji the God of Yam, and Ogbunabali the God of Death. In southern Igbo dialects especially, ágbàrà is the term for these forces.[45]

Arusi manifest in natural elements and their shrines are usually found in forests in which they are based around specific trees. At shrines, íhú mmúọ́, an object such as a hung piece of cloth or a group of statues, are placed at an Arusi's group of trees to focus worship. Deities are described as 'hot' and often capricious so that much of the public approach shrines cautiously and are advised to avoid them at most times; priests are entrusted in the maintenance of most shrines.[29] Many of these shrines are by the roadside in rural areas. Tender palm fronds symbolize spiritual power and are objects of sacred power. Shrines are cordoned off with ọmu to caution the public of the deity's presence.[46] Larger clay modelings in honor of an Arusi also exist around forests and rivers. Other Arusi figures may be found in and around peoples' homes and the shrines of Dibia. Much of these are related to personal chi, cults, and ancestral worship.[47]

Ala Edit

External image
  Mabri: Art as Process in Igboland by Herbert M. Cole, a description of mbari

Ala (meaning 'earth' and 'land' in Igbo, also Ájá-ànà)[48][49] is the feminine earth spirit who is responsible for morality, fertility and the dead ancestors who are stored in the underworld in her womb. Ala is at the head of the Igbo pantheon, maintaining order and carrying out justice against wrongdoers. Ala is the most prominent and worshipped Arusi,[43] almost every Igbo village has a shrine dedicated to her called íhú Ala where large decisions are taken.[18] Ala is believed to be involved in all aspects of human affairs including festivals and at offerings. Ala stands for fertility and things that generate life including water, stone and vegetation, colour (àgwà), beauty (mmá) which is connected to goodness in Igbo society, and uniqueness (ájà).[18] She is a symbol of morality who sanctioned omenala Igbo customs from which these moral and ethical behaviours are upheld in Igbo society.[50] Ala is the ground itself, and for this reason taboos and crimes are known as ńsọ́ Ala ('desecration of Ala'), all land is holy as the embodiment of Ala making her the principal legal sanctioning authority.[18][50] Prohibitions include murder, suicide, theft, incest, and abnormalities of birth such as in many places the birth of twins and the killing and eating of pregnant animals, if a slaughtered animal is found to be pregnant sacrifices are made to Ala and the foetus is buried.[18] People who commit suicides are not buried in the ground or given burial rites but cast away in order not to further offend and pollute the land, their ability to become ancestors is therefore nullified.[27] When an individual dies a 'bad death' in the society, such as from the effects of divine retributive justice or breaking a taboo, they are not buried in the earth, but are discarded in a forest so as not to offend Ala. As in cases of most Arusi, Ala has the ability to be malevolent if perceived to be offended and can cause harm against those who offend her.[18][50]

 
The royal python is revered as an agent of Ala.

Within the earth's spherical limit, in a cosmological sense, is a designation of the 'earth's bosom' within, ímé àlà, a hemispherical base to the earth with an opening or 'mouth' at its highest point, ónụ́ àlà. This is composed of mainly deep dark sea water (ohimiri).[50] Ime ala is considered as the underworld.[18] Ala in addition to embodying nature, is the cosmic base on which the vault of heaven, ígwé, rests.[18] As the foundation of all existence, children's umbilical cords are saved and symbolically buried under a tree to mark the child's first sharing of family owned lands; this tree could either be an oil palm, bread-fruit tree, raffia palm, or plantain tree depending on the cultural region.[18] In some places, such as Nri, the royal python, éké, is considered a sacred and tame agent of Ala and a harbinger of good fortune when found in a home. The python is referred to as nne 'mother' in areas where the python is revered, it is a symbol of female beauty and gentleness. Killing of the python is expressly forbidden in these places and sanctions are taken against the killer including the funding of expensive human sized burials that are given to slain pythons.[18][43][51][52]

Amadioha Edit

Amadioha (from ámádí + ọ̀hà, 'free will of the people' in Igbo) is the Arusi of justice, thunder, lightning and the sky. He is referred to as Amadioha in southern Igboland, Kamalu, Kamanu, Kalu among the Aro and other Cross River Igbo people, Igwe among the Isuama Igbo and in northwestern Igboland, and Ofufe in certain parts of Igboland.[53][54][55][56][57] His governing planet is the Sun.[58] His color is red, and his symbol is a white ram.[59] Metaphysically, Amadioha represents the collective will of the people and he is often associated with Anyanwu.[60] He is the expression of divine justice and wrath against taboos and crimes; in oaths he is sworn by and strikes down those who swear falsely with thunder and lightning.[53] Amadioha shrines exist around Igboland, his main shrine is located at Ozuzu in the riverine Igbo region in northern Rivers State. While Anyanwu is more prominent in northern Igboland, Amadioha is more prominent in the south. His day is Afọ, which is the second market day.[61] In mbari houses Amadioha is depicted beside Ala as her consort.[62]

Ikenga Edit

 
A miniature abstract cylindrical Ikenga figure.

Ikenga (literally 'place of strength') is an Arusi and a cult figure of the right hand and success found among the northern Igbo people. He is an icon of meditation exclusive to men and owners of the sculpture dedicate and refer to it as their 'right hand' which is considered instrumental to personal power and success.[63][64] Ikenga is a source of encoded knowledge unraveled through psychological principles. The image of Ikenga comprises someone's chi ('personal god'), his ndichie (ancestors), aka Ikenga (right hand), ike (power) as well as spiritual activation through prayer and sacrifice.[65] Igbo cultures value of resourcefulness and individualism in society utilises the concept of Ikenga to regulate the relationship between individuality and family relations and obligations, as well as free will and industriousness balanced with destiny decided persons chi. Ikenga acts as a physical medium to the consciousness and emphasises individual initiative through reflection and meditation.[19] Success validates the Ikenga and the sculptures act as visual representation of a person's inner success, people give offerings in thanks to the Ikenga after providing energy to overcome any unwanted pre-life choices.[19] These choices are at the hands of the persons earth bound spirit, mmuo, who chooses sex, type, and lifespan before incarnation.[19] The successful Ikenga influenced the saying of well-being 'íkéǹgàm kwụ̀ ọ̀tọ́ ta ta' meaning that 'my Ikenga stands upright today'.[63] During festivals of Ogbalido or oriri Ikenga ('feast of Ikenga') sculptures of him may be paraded around a village or displayed at the village centre if too monumental to transport.[19] When a person does not become successful with hard work the Ikenga has 'fallen' and is seen as a sign of danger, if meditation and cajoling the Ikenga fails, the sculpture is 'thrown down' and broken which spiritually kills the Ikenga; a new one is carved to replace it.[19]

Ikenga figures are common cultural artefacts ranging for six inches to 6 feet high and can be humanistic or highly stylised.[19][63] There are anthropomorphic, architectonic, and abstract cylindrical Ikenga sculptures.[19] Ikenga is a symbol of success and personal achievement.[19] Ikenga is mostly maintained, kept or owned by men and occasionally by women of high reputation and integrity in the society. At burials, a man's Ikenga is broken into two with one piece buried with him and the other destroyed.[19][63]

Ekwensu Edit

This Arusi was adept at bargains and trade, and praying to Ekwensu was said to guarantee victory in negotiations. As a force of change and chaos, Ekwensu also represented the spirit of war among the Igbo, invoked during times of conflict and banished during peacetime to avoid his influences inciting bloodshed in the community, warriors set up shrines to Ekwensu to help war efforts.[43] This is based upon the finding of old shrines dedicated to the worship of the spirit,[66] as well as the recounting of old oral stories which depict the character of Ekwensu. Ekwensu was a bringer of violence and possessed people with anger.[53] Ekwensu holds the propensity of bringing misfortune and is regarded as an evil spirit in this sense.[43] Among the Christian Igbo Ekwensu is representative of Satan and is seen as a force which places itself opposite to that of Chukwu.[67] Ekwensu festivals are held in some Igbo towns where military success is celebrated and wealth is flaunted.[53]

Mmuo and minor gods Edit

Mmụọ is a broad class of minor gods and spirits or divinities manifesting in natural elements under the class of elder divinities with major cults. Feminine mmụọ inhabit earth and water and masculine mmụọ inhabit fire and air.[18] This class can be broken down by the Arusi, serviceable mmụọ, àgwụ are related to unusual and deranged human behaviours, these spirits interact with human in a capricious nature that often makes them dangerous.[18][68] Other cult deities exist around Igboland such as Njoku Ji, yam and fire deity overseeing agriculture, Idemili, 'the pillar of water', the female Arusi based in Idemili North and South who holds up the waters, and Mbatuku the 'bringer of wealth' or 'coming in of wealth'.[29][28] In addition to minor spirits there are evil wondering spirits of wrong doers called ogbonuke.[35]

Among the Mmuo are:

  • Mbatuku: spirit of wealth
  • Ikoro: drum spirit
  • Ekwu: heart spirit or spirit of the home
  • Imo miri: river spirit[69]
  • Okwara-afo: for Nkwerre people in Imo state is god of mercantile activities
  • Aju-mmiri: sea-goddess in Nkwerre is goddess of prosperity, fertility and general well-being.
  • Ogbuide: goddess of the water associated with the Oguta people.
  • Urashi and Enyija: god of the river
  • Ezenwaanyi/Owummiri: Female Water Spirit, Mermaid, Seductress

Practices Edit

Dibia Edit

 
A dibia from the early 20th century with tools of his practice including bells and a miniature Ikenga figure.

Dibia are the mystic mediators between the human world and the spirit world and act as healers, scribes, teachers, diviners and advisors of people in the community. They are usually consulted at the shrine of a communities major deity. Dibia is a compound of the words di ('professional, master, husband') + ọ́bị̀à ('doctoring, sciences').[9] The dibia are believed to be destined for spiritual work. The dibia sees the spiritual world at any time and interprets what messages being sent and sees the spiritual problems of living people. They are given the power by the spirit world to identify any alusi by name and the possible ways of placating and negotiating with the deity. Dibia are thought to be revealed to possess the power over one of three elements namely water (and large bodies of water), fire and vegetation. Dibia whose elements are vegetation can go on to become herbalists by their supposed instinctual knowledge of the health benefits of certain plants they are instinctually drawn to, fire element dibia can handle fire unscathed during their initiation, and water element dibia do not drown. Dibia can partially enter the spirit world and communicate this by rubbing chalk on one half of their face.[43] Dibia and obia practices were transported to the West Indies as a result of the Atlantic slave trade and became known as obeah.[8][9]

Afa divination Edit

The name of divination in Igbo derives from ígbá áfà or áhà meaning 'to name' coming from the diviners skill in rooting out problems hence naming them.[70] The dibia or ogba afa, 'interpreter of afa', is considered a master of esoteric knowledge and wisdom and igba afa is a way in which people can find out the cause of such things as misfortunes. The diviner interprets codes from àlà mmuọ the unseen by throwing divination seeds, cowries, and beads,[70][71][self-published source] or observing a divination board sometimes called osho which can be used in pronouncing curses on the evil.[72] In this way the diviner is endowed with special sight.[73] it is related the sciences of homeopathic medicine known as ọ́gwụ̀, a practitioner consciously picks to either of these abilities.[18] Animals that are special in divination and sacrifice include a white he-goat, a white ram, a tortoise and male wall gecko. These animals are prized for their rarity, price and therefore the journey taken to obtain. Chameleons and rats are used for more stronger medicines and deadly poisons, and antidotes can include lambs, small chickens, eggs, and oils.[18] Nzu is used in rites from birth to death and is used to mark sacred buildings and spaces.[18] Agwu Nsi is the Igbo patron deity of health and divination and is related to insanity, confusion, and unusual human behaviour which is linked to possession of Agwu by the diviner.[68][71][74][75] Agwu can be manifested by other alusi so that there could be images of a divination Ikenga or Ikenga Agwu for instance.[71]

Ancestral veneration Edit

 
A male ancestral figure.

Ndebunze, or ndichie, are the deceased ancestors who are considered to be in the spirit world, àlà mmúọ́.[76] In Odinani, it is believed that the dead ancestors are invisible members of the community; their role in the community, in conjunction with Ala, is to protect the community from epidemics and strife such as famine and smallpox.[45] Ancestors helped chi look after men.[30] Shrines for the ancestors in Igbo society were made in the central house, or òbí or òbú, of the patriarch of a housing compound. The patriarchal head of the household is in charge of venerating the patriarchal ancestors through libations and offerings, through this the living maintain contact with the dead. Only a patriarch whose father is dead, and therefore in the spirit world where they await reincarnation into the community, were able to venerate ancestors.[77] Female ancestors were called upon by matriarchs. At the funeral of a man's father there is a hierarchy in Igbo culture of animals that will be killed and eaten in his honor. Usually this depended on the rarity and price of the animal, so a goat or a sheep were common and relatively cheaper, and therefore carried less prestige, while a cow is considered a great honor, and a horse the most exceptional. Horses cannot be given for women.[78] Horses were more common among the northeastern Igbo due to tsetse fly zone that Igboland is situated in and renders it an unsuitable climate for horses.[79][80] Horse heads are traditionally decorated and kept in a reliquary and at shrines.

A number of major masking institutions exist around Igboland that honour ancestors and reflect the spirit world in the land of the living. Young women, for example, are incarnated in the society through the àgbọ́ghọ̀ mmúọ́ masking tradition in which mean represent ideal and benevolent spirits of maidens of the spirit world in the form of feminine masks. These masks are performed at festivals at agricultural cycles and at funerals of prominent individuals in the society.[81]

Kola nut Edit

 
An ókwá ọ́jị̀ bowl in the Chazen Museum of Art, Wisconsin.

Kola nut (ọ́jị̀, or ọ́jị̀ Ìgbò) offerings and prayers (ị́gọ́ ọ́jị̀, 'kola nut blessing', ị́wá ọ́jị̀, 'kola nut breaking') can be performed personally between one and his spirit or in a group in a form of a prayer or chant. The saluter addresses their personal god or chi as well as alusi and their ancestors.[18] These kola nuts are held in a special round bowl called ọ́kwá with a compartment at the centre of the bowl for condiments for the kola nut such as alligator pepper (or capsicum cayenne, ósẹ̀ ọ́jị́)[18] and ground peanuts. The bowl and kola nut rite is used to welcome visitors into a household.[82][83][84] After the prayer, the ceremony ends with the saluter sharing pieces of the kola with the group, known as ị́ké ọ́jị̀. The kola is supposed to cut by hand, but more recently knives have become acceptable. When the cola has three cotyledons, or parts, it is considered an ọ́jị̀ ìkéǹgà in some northern communities (going by other names in communities Ikenga doesn't operate) and is considered a sign of great luck, bravery and nobility. O wetalu oji wetalu ndu — 'one who brings kola brings life' is a popular saying that points to the auspiciousness of the kola rite.[84][85]

Architecture Edit

Mbari Edit

 
Scene in an mbari house, 1904.

Among a small area of the Urata-Igbo cultural area, near Owerri, there is a tradition of building votive monument houses called ḿbàrí primarily dedicated to the ágbàrà Àlà specific to the community and sometimes other community deities. The name joins the word ḿbà ('nation, town, society') + ('eat') in reference to the 'festival of life' held after its completion. These votive shrines are typically designed with four columns and a central volt, around the columns are modelled deities, spirits, and depictions of human life, the entire building built out of clay from termite mounds symbolically named ('yam') by the initiated spirit workers called ńdí m̀gbè. Ndi mgbe are secluded from the community for a couple of months during the rites of building the mbari to a deity. Mbari are requested by a deity who the diviner tells the community feels neglected and cannot feel pride in the face of other deities in the spirit world. A string of unusual and unfortunate events befalling the community is linked to the aggrieved deity. An mbari is commissioned and artists are chosen. After the completion of the mbari the spirit workers are reincorporated into the community and a feast is held for the opening of the mbari house where elders and the community come to exhibit the critique the expensive mbari. The mbari house is not a source of worship and is left to dilapidate, being reabsorbed by nature in symbolic sense related to Ala.[29][86]

Uto pyramids Edit

Before the twentieth century, circular stepped pyramids were built in reverence of Ala at the town of Nsude in northern Igboland. In total ten clay/mud pyramidal structures were still existing in 1935. The base section of a pyramid was 60 ft. in circumference and 3 ft. in height. The next stack was 45 ft. in circumference. Circular stacks continued, till it reached the top. The structures were temples for the god Ala/Uto who was believed to live at the top. A stick was placed at the top to represent the god's residence. The structures were laid in groups of five parallel to each other. Because it was built of clay/mud like the Deffufa of Nubia, time has taken its toll requiring periodic reconstruction.[87]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Benjamin Ray says of the position of African religions:

    But as we have seen, there are other elements [besides monotheistic ones] which tend towards polytheism or pantheism. What, we may ask, accounts for these different tendencies? As Evans-Pritchard and Peel suggest, they do not derive so much from different observers' standpoints as from the different standpoints within the religious systems themselves This, of course, does not mean that African religions consist of conflicting "system" (monotheism, polytheism, pantheism, totemism), which lack any inherent unity. Rather, the totality of elements in each religious system can be viewed from different internal perspectives according to different contextual alignments. What is misleading is to seize upon one perspective or tendency and make it the dominant framework. This may satisfy the observer's own theological preferences, e.g., monotheism, but only at the expense of over-systematizing the contextual diversity of African religious thought.

    Ray, Benjamin C. (1976). African Religions: Symbol, Ritual, and Community. Prentice-Hall. p. 53. ISBN 0130186228.

References Edit

  1. ^ Afulezy, Uju "On Odinani, the Igbo Religion" 27 November 2010 at the Wayback Machine, Niger Delta Congress, Nigeria, April 03, 2010
  2. ^ Nwauwa, Apollos O.; Anyanwu, Ogechi E. (24 October 2019). Culture, Precepts, and Social Change in Southeastern Nigeria: Understanding the Igbo. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1-4985-8969-7.
  3. ^ a b Mbaegbu, Chukwuemeka (4 March 2015). "A Philosophical Investigation of the Nature of God in Igbo Ontology". Department of Philosophy, Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Awka, Nigeria.
  4. ^ M. O. Ené "The fundamentals of Odinani", KWENU: Our Culture, Our Future, April 03, 2010.
  5. ^ M. O. Ené "The fundamentals of Odinani", KWENU: Our Culture, Our Future, April 03, 2010.
  6. ^ "Obeah". Merriam Webster. Retrieved 3 June 2010.
  7. ^ Chambers, Douglas B. (2009). Murder at Montpelier: Igbo Africans in Virginia. Univ. Press of Mississippi. pp. 14, 36. ISBN 978-1-60473-246-7.
  8. ^ a b Rucker, Walter C. (2006). The river flows on: Black resistance, culture, and identity formation in early America. LSU Press. p. 40. ISBN 0-8071-3109-1.
  9. ^ a b c Eltis, David; Richardson, David (1997). Routes to slavery: direction, ethnicity, and mortality in the transatlantic slave trade. Routledge. p. 74. ISBN 0-7146-4820-5.
  10. ^ M. O. Ené , KWENU: Our Culture, Our Future, April 03, 2010.
  11. ^ Ogbuene, Chigekwu G. (1999). The concept of man in Igbo myths. Peter Lang. p. 207. ISBN 0820447048.
  12. ^ a b c Echema, Austin (2010). Igbo Funeral Rites Today: Anthropological and Theological Perspectives. footnotes: LIT Verlag Münster. pp. 21, 48. ISBN 978-3643104199. Retrieved 4 April 2015.
  13. ^ Okwunodu Ogbechie, Sylvester (2008). Ben Enwonwu: the making of an African modernist. University Rochester Press. p. 161. ISBN 978-1580462358.
  14. ^ Ikenga International Journal of African Studies. Institute of African Studies, University of Nigeria. 1972. p. 103. Retrieved 26 July 2013.
  15. ^ Uzor, Peter Chiehiụra (2004). The traditional African concept of God and the Christian concept of God: Chukwu bụ ndụ-- God is life, the Igbo perspective. Peter Lang. p. 194. ISBN 3631521456.
  16. ^ Obiego, Cosmas Okechukwu (1984). African Image of the Ultimate Reality: An Analysis of Igbo Ideas of Life and Death in Relation to Chukwu-God. Peter Lang. p. 88. ISBN 3820474609.
  17. ^ Ebelebe, Charles A. (2009). Africa and the New Face of Mission: A Critical Assessment of the Legacy of the Irish Spiritans Among the Igbo of Southeastern Nigeria. Univiversity Press of America. p. 24. ISBN 978-0761845966.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Agbasiere, Joseph Thérèse (2000). Women in Igbo Life and Thought. Psychology Press. pp. 48–64. ISBN 0415227038.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Wiredu, Kwesi (2008). A Companion to African Philosophy. John Wiley & Sons. p. 420. ISBN 978-0470997376.
  20. ^ Kimmerle, Heinz (11 April 2006). "The world of spirits and the respect for nature: towards a new appreciation of animism". The Journal for Transdisciplinary Research in Southern Africa. 2 (2): 15. doi:10.4102/td.v2i2.277. ISSN 2415-2005.
  21. ^ Asukwo (2013). "The Need to Re-Conceptualize African Traditional Religion".
  22. ^ a b "The spirituality of Africa". Harvard Gazette. 6 October 2015. Retrieved 30 November 2020.
  23. ^ a b Udeani, Chibueze C. (2007). Inculturation as Dialogue: Igbo Culture and the Message of Christ. Rodopi. p. 35. ISBN 978-9042022294. Retrieved 4 April 2015.
  24. ^ a b Ndukaihe, Vernantius Emeka (2006). Achievement as Value in the Igbo/African Identity: The Ethics. LIT Verlag Münster. pp. 185–187. ISBN 3825899292. Retrieved 4 April 2015.
  25. ^ Opata, Damian Ugwutikiri (1998). Essays on Igbo World View. AP Express Publishers. p. 62. ISBN 9782001155.
  26. ^ Asante, Molefi K.; Nwadiora, Emeka (2007). Spear Masters: An Introduction to African Religion. University Press of America. p. 108. ISBN 978-0761835745. Retrieved 4 April 2015.
  27. ^ a b c Okoh, Michael (2012). Fostering Christian Faith in Schools and Christian Communities Through Igbo Traditional Values: Towards a Holistic Approach to Christian Religious Education and Catechesis in Igboland (Nigeria). LIT Verlag Münster. pp. 37, 58. ISBN 978-3643901682. Retrieved 4 April 2015.
  28. ^ a b Uzukwu, Elochukwu Eugene (2012). God, Spirit, and Human Wholeness: Appropriating Faith and Culture in West African Style. Wipf and Stock. pp. 63, 123. ISBN 978-1610971904. Retrieved 4 April 2015.
  29. ^ a b c d e Cole, Herbert M. (1982). Mbari: Art and the Life Among the Owerri Igbo. Indiana University Press. ISBN 0253303974.
  30. ^ a b c Talbot, P. Amaury (July 1916). "Some Beliefs of To-day and Yesterday (Niger-Delta Tribes.)". Journal of the Royal African Society. The Royal African Society. 15 (60): 307–308.
  31. ^ a b c d Ụkaegbu, Jọn Ọfọegbu (1991). "Igbo Identity and Personality Vis-à-vis Igbo Cultural Symbols". Pontifical University of Salamanca: 60. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  32. ^ Anyahuru, Israel; Ohiaraumunna, Tom (2009). Musical Sense and Musical Meaning: An Indigenous African Perception. Rozenberg Publishers. p. 56.
  33. ^ a b Morton, W. R. G. (1956). "God, man and the land in a Northern Ibo village-group". African Abstracts. International African Institute. 7–9: 15.
  34. ^ Isichei, Elizabeth Allo (1997). A History of African Societies to 1870. Cambridge University Press. p. 247. ISBN 0-521-45599-5.
  35. ^ a b c Chigere, Nkem Hyginus M. V. (2001). Foreign Missionary Background and Indigenous Evangelization in Igboland. LIT Verlag Münster. pp. 20, 56. ISBN 3825849643.
  36. ^ Onwuejeogwu, 1975: The Igbo Culture Area in "Igbo Language and Culture," F. Chidozie Ogbalu & E Nolue Emenanjo
  37. ^ Ejizu, Christopher I. (1986). Ofo: Igbo Ritual Symbol. Fourth Dimension Publishers. ISBN 9781562684.
  38. ^ T. Phillips (ed.) "Ceramic altar for the new yam harvest festival" 19 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine, BritishMuseum.org, London, April 03, 2010
  39. ^ Gugler, Josef; Flanagan, William G. (1978). Urbanization and Social Change in West Africa. Cambridge University Press. p. 82. ISBN 0521291186. Retrieved 4 April 2014.
  40. ^ a b Nwauwa, Apollos O.; Anyanwu, Ogechi E. (24 October 2019). Culture, Precepts, and Social Change in Southeastern Nigeria: Understanding the Igbo. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1-4985-8969-7.
  41. ^ a b c d Nnam, Nkuzi Michael (2007). Colonial Mentality in Africa. Hamilton Books. pp. 69–70. ISBN 978-1461626305.
  42. ^ Short, J.A.; Pedersen, O.; Kendrick, G.A. (October 2015). "Turf algal epiphytes metabolically induce local pH increase, with implications for underlying coralline algae under ocean acidification". Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science. 164: 463–470. doi:10.1016/j.ecss.2015.08.006. ISSN 0272-7714.
  43. ^ a b c d e f Udoye, Edwin Anaegboka (2011). Resolving the Prevailing Conflicts Between Christianity and African (Igbo) Traditional Religion Through Inculturation. LIT Verlag Münster. pp. 45–53, 104. ISBN 978-3643901163.
  44. ^ Newell, William Hare (1976). "Ancestoride! Are African Ancestors Dead?". Ancestors. Walter de Gruyter. pp. 293–294. ISBN 90-279-7859-X.
  45. ^ a b Ilogu, Edmund (1974). Christianity and Ibo culture. Brill. pp. 34–36. ISBN 90-04-04021-8.
  46. ^ Olupona, Jacob K.; Nyang, Sulayman S.; Kalu, Ogbu U. (1993). "Religion and social control in Igboland". Religious Plurality in Africa: Essays in Honour of John S. Mbiti. Walter de Gruyter. p. 118. ISBN 3110850079.
  47. ^ Nwauwa, Apollos O.; Anyanwu, Ogechi E. (24 October 2019). Culture, Precepts, and Social Change in Southeastern Nigeria: Understanding the Igbo. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1-4985-8969-7.
  48. ^ Isichei, Elizabeth Allo (1977). Igbo worlds: an anthology of oral histories and historical descriptions. Macmillan. pp. 27, 334. ISBN 0333198379.
  49. ^ Oriji, John (2011). Political Organization in Nigeria Since the Late Stone Age: A History of the Igbo People. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 44–48. ISBN 978-0230116689.
  50. ^ a b c d Ogbaa, Kalu (1995). Igbo. The Rosen Publishing Group. pp. 14–15. ISBN 0823919773.
  51. ^ Hodder, Ian (1987). The Archaeology of Contextual Meanings. Cambridge University Press. p. 73. ISBN 0521329248.
  52. ^ Ilogu, Edmund (1974). Christianity and Ibo Culture. Brill Archive. pp. 23–24. ISBN 9004040218.
  53. ^ a b c d Onunwa, Udobata R. (2010). A Handbook of African Religion and Culture. Dorrance Publishing. pp. 18, 40. ISBN 978-1434953964.
  54. ^ Jones, G. I. (2000). The Trading States of the Oil Rivers: A Study of Political Development in Eastern Nigeria. James Currey Publishers. p. 28. ISBN 0852559186.
  55. ^ McCall, John. Dancing Histories: Heuristic Ethnography with the Ohafia Igbo. Page 123
  56. ^ Oriji, John. Sacred Authority in Igbo Society. Page 115
  57. ^ Diala, Isidore. Ritual and Mythological Recuperation in the Drama of Esiaba Irobi. Page 101
  58. ^ Uchendu, Victor C. The Igbo of Southeast Nigeria. Page 96
  59. ^ Diala, Isidore. Ritual and Mythological Recuperation in the Drama of Esiaba Irobi. Page 104
  60. ^ Iwu, Maurice. Handbook of African medicinal plants. Page 320.
  61. ^ Patrick, Iroegbu. Igbo-Okija Oracles and Shrines, Development and Cultural Justice
  62. ^ Kleiner, Fred (2009). Gardner's Art through the Ages: Non-Western Perspectives. Igbo: Cengage Learning. p. 219. ISBN 978-0495573678.
  63. ^ a b c d Basden, G. T. (2013). Among the Ibos of Nigeria: 1912. Routledge. p. 45. ISBN 978-1136248498.
  64. ^ Cole, Herbert M. "Igbo Art in Social Context". University of Iowa Museum of Art. p. 6. Retrieved 4 April 2015.
  65. ^ Okere, Rose. "Ikenga In Traditional Igbo Society". Ngrguardiannews.com.[permanent dead link]
  66. ^ Agozino, Emmanuel. ‘Ekwensu:God of victory not devil’, Nigerian Compass, Nsukka, April 03, 2010
  67. ^ Bewaji, John A. I. (1998). "Olodumare: God in Yoruba Belief and the Theistic Problem of Evil" (PDF). African Studies Quarterly. University of Florida. 2 (1). Retrieved 4 April 2015.
  68. ^ a b Nwaorgu, Andrew E. (2001). Cultural symbols: the Christian perspective. T' Afrique International Association. pp. 92–95. ISBN 9780529020.
  69. ^ Slattery, Katharine "Religion and the Igbo People", Queen's University of Belfast, Belfast, April 03, 2010
  70. ^ a b Achebe, Nwando (2011). The Female King of Colonial Nigeria: Ahebi Ugbabe. Indiana University Press. pp. 54–55. ISBN 978-0253222480.
  71. ^ a b c Iroegbu, Patrick E. (2010). Healing Insanity: A Study of Igbo Medicine in Contemporary Nigeria. Xlibris Corporation. pp. 344–346. ISBN 978-1450096294.[self-published source]
  72. ^ Aguwa, Jude C. U. (1995). The Agwu deity in Igbo religion: a study of the patron spirit divination and medicine in an African society. Fourth Dimension Publishing. p. 108. ISBN 9789781563997.
  73. ^ Peek, Philip M. (1991). African Divination Systems: Ways of Knowing. Georgetown University Press. p. 200. ISBN 0253343097.
  74. ^ Iroegbu, Patrick; Gottschalk-Batschkus, Christine E. (2002). "Igbo Medicine Practitioners and Ways of Healing Insanity in Southeastern Nigeria". In Green, Joy C. (ed.). Handbook of ethnotherapies. BoD – Books on Demand. p. 157. ISBN 3831141843. Retrieved 4 April 2015.
  75. ^ Opata, Damian Ugwutikiri (2009). Ajija: an Igbo agent of death and destruction. Great AP Express. p. 28. ISBN 978-9788087748.
  76. ^ Chukwube, Okwuchukwu Stan (2008). Renewing the Community and Fashioning the Individual: A Study of Traditional Communal Reconciliation Among the Igbo. p. 30. ISBN 978-0549638605. Retrieved 4 April 2015.
  77. ^ Gomez, Michael Angelo (1998). Exchanging Our Country Marks: The Transformation of African Identities in the Colonial and Antebellum South. University of North Carolina Press. p. 129. ISBN 0807846945.
  78. ^ Ottenberg, Simon (2006), Toyin Falola (ed.), Igbo Religion, Social Life, and Other Essays, Africa World Press, p. 348, ISBN 1592214436
  79. ^ Spinage, Clive (2012). African Ecology: Benchmarks and Historical Perspectives. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 932. ISBN 978-3642228711.
  80. ^ Williams, Ian (2005). Riding in Africa. Ian Williams. p. 30. ISBN 0595373011.
  81. ^ Werness, Hope B. (2003). Continuum Encyclopedia of Native Art: Worldview, Symbolism, and Culture in Africa, Oceania, and North America. A&C Black. p. 145. ISBN 0826414656.
  82. ^ Idigo, Anthony Chike (2002). Oji: cola acuminata-Oji Igbo: the cornerstone of Igbo traditional ceremonies. Snaap Press. p. 26. ISBN 9780491732.
  83. ^ Ukagba, George Uzoma (2010). The Kpim of Feminism: Issues and Women in a Changing World. Trafford Publishing. p. 194. ISBN 978-1426924071. Retrieved 4 April 2015.
  84. ^ a b Eboh, Simeon Onyewueke (2004). African Communalism: The Way to Social Harmony and Peaceful Co-existence. Transaction Publishers. p. 143. ISBN 3889397158.
  85. ^ Udoye, Edwin Anaegboka (2011). Resolving the Prevailing Conflicts Between Christianity and African (Igbo) Traditional Religion Through Inculturation. LIT Verlag Münster. p. 142. ISBN 978-3643901163.
  86. ^ Cole, Herbert M. "Mabri: Art as Process in Igboland". University of Iowa Museum of Art. Retrieved 28 March 2015.
  87. ^ Basden, G. S(1966). Among the Ibos of Nigeria, 1912. Psychology Press: p. 109, ISBN 0-7146-1633-8

Further reading Edit

  • Umeh, John Anenechukwu (2007). After God is Dibia: Igbo cosmology, divination & sacred science in Nigeria. Karnak House. ISBN 978-1872596099.
  • Agbasiere, Joseph Thérèse (2000). Women in Igbo Life and Thought. Psychology Press. ISBN 0415227038.

External links Edit

  • An insight guide to Igboland's Culture, Religion and Language

odinala, this, article, about, traditional, spiritual, practices, igbo, people, their, traditional, cultural, practices, general, igbo, culture, odinani, igbo, Ọdịnanị, dị, nàlà, also, known, omenala, omenana, odinana, Ọmenani, Ọdịlalị, Ọdịlala, traditional, c. This article is about the traditional spiritual practices of the Igbo people For their traditional cultural practices in general see Igbo culture Odinani or Odinala Igbo Ọdịnanị Ọ dị nala also known as Omenala Omenana Odinana Ọmenani Ọdịlalị or Ọdịlala are the traditional cultural beliefs and practices of the Igbo people of south east Nigeria 1 These terms as used here in the Igbo language are synonymous with the traditional Igbo religious system which was not considered separate from the social norms of ancient or traditional Igbo societies Theocratic in nature spirituality played a huge role in their everyday lives Although it has largely been supplanted by Christianity the indigenous belief system remains in strong effect among the rural and village populations of the Igbo where it has at times influenced the colonial religions Odinani is a pantheistic and polytheistic faith having a strong central deity at its head 2 3 All things spring from this deity Although a pantheon of other gods and spirits these being Ala Amadiọha Anyanwụ Ekwensu Ikenga exists in the belief system as it does in many other Traditional African religions the lesser deities prevalent in Odinani serve as helpers or elements of Chukwu the central deity 4 Lesser spirits known as agbara or arusi operate below the other gods and higher spirits These lesser spirits represent natural forces agbara as a divine force manifests as separate arụsị in the Igbo pantheon A concept of the eye of sun or God Anyanwu Igbo anya anwụ exists as a masculine and feminine solar deity which forms a part of the solar veneration among the Nri Igbo in northern Igboland Arụsị are mediated by Dibia and other priests who do not contact the high god directly Through afa divination the laws and demands of the arụsị are communicated to the living Arụsị are venerated in community shrines around roadsides and forests while smaller shrines are located in the household for ancestor veneration Deceased ancestors live in the spirit world where they can be contacted Below the arụsị are minor and more general spirits known as mmuọ loosely defined by their perceived malevolent or benign natures These minor spirits are not venerated and are sometimes considered the lost souls of the dead Ancestor worship and the worship of various gods and spirits form the main component of the traditional Igbo religion standing in contrast with Abrahamic religions 5 The number of people practicing Igbo religion decreased drastically in the 20th century with the influx of Christian missionaries under the auspices of the British colonial government in Nigeria In some cases Igbo traditional religion was syncretised with Christianity but in many cases indigenous rites were demonised by Christian missionaries who pointed out the practice of human sacrifice and some other cultural practices that were illegal under the colonial government Earlier missionaries referred to many indigenous religious practices as juju Igbo religion is most present today in harvest ceremonies such as new yam festival ị wa ji and masquerading traditions such as mmanwụ and Ekpe Remnants of Igbo religious rites spread among African descendants in the Caribbean and North America in era of the Atlantic slave trade Igbo ọ bị a was transferred to the British West Indies and Guyana as obeah and aspects of Igbo masquerading traditions can be found among the festivals of the Garifuna people and jonkonnu in the West Indies and North Carolina 6 7 8 9 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Beliefs 2 1 Chi 2 2 Cosmology 2 3 Justice 2 4 Afterlife and reincarnation 2 4 1 Ogbanje 3 Deities 3 1 Ala 3 2 Amadioha 3 3 Ikenga 3 4 Ekwensu 3 5 Mmuo and minor gods 4 Practices 4 1 Dibia 4 1 1 Afa divination 4 2 Ancestral veneration 4 3 Kola nut 4 4 Architecture 4 4 1 Mbari 4 4 2 Uto pyramids 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksEtymology EditỌdịnala in central Igbo dialect is the compound of the words ọ dị located n na within ala the one god consisting of anu E nu above the heavens and Ala below the earth 10 11 12 Other dialectal variants include ọdịnanị ọdịnana omenala omenana and omenanị 12 13 The word ọdịnala and all its variations is also associated with the culture and customary laws of the Igbo people Many of the laws and culture were counterparts with religion such as taboos and laws concerning sacred spaces like a deities sacred forest Since customary law is recognised in Nigeria many in Igbo society find themselves syncretising these beliefs with other beliefs and religions citation needed Beliefs Edit nbsp Entrance to the cave of the Ibini Ukpabi oracle at Arochukwu 1900s Ọdịnala could loosely be described as a polytheistic and panentheistic faith with a strong central spiritual force at its head from which all things are believed to spring however the contextual diversity of the system may encompass various theistic perspectives that derive from a variety of beliefs held within the religion 12 14 15 16 17 note 1 Chukwu as the central deity is classed among the ndi mmuo invisible beings an ontological category of beings which includes Ala the divine feminine earth force chi the personal deity ndichie the ancestors and mmuo the minor spirits The other ontological category consists of ndi mmadu visible beings which include anụ animals osisi plants and the final class uro which consists of elements minerals and inanimate beings 18 While various gods the spirit class of Arusi and ancestors are worshiped and prayed to no sacrifices are given to Chukwu and no shrines and altars are erected for it 18 If an Arusi is assigned to an individual it becomes a chi a personal guardian god spirit 19 Complex animism builds the core concept of most traditional African religions including Odinala this includes the worship of tutelary deities nature worship ancestor worship and the belief in an afterlife While some religions adopted a pantheistic worldview most follow a polytheistic system with various gods spirits and other supernatural beings 20 Traditional African religions also have elements of fetishism shamanism and veneration of relics 21 Nigerian American professor of indigenous African religions at Harvard University Jacob Olupona summarized the many traditional African religions as complex animistic religious traditions and beliefs of the African people before the Christian and Islamic colonization of Africa Ancestor veneration has always played a significant part in the traditional African cultures and may be considered as central to the African worldview Ancestors ancestral ghosts spirits are an integral part of reality The ancestors are generally believed to reside in an ancestral realm spiritworld while some believe that the ancestors became equal in power to deities 22 The defining line between deities and ancestors is often contested but overall ancestors are believed to occupy a higher level of existence than living human beings and are believed to be able to bestow either blessings or illness upon their living descendants Ancestors can offer advice and bestow good fortune and honor to their living dependents but they can also make demands such as insisting that their shrines be properly maintained and propitiated A belief in ancestors also testifies to the inclusive nature of traditional African spirituality by positing that deceased progenitors still play a role in the lives of their living descendants Olupona rejects the western Islamic definition of Monotheism and says that such concepts could not reflect the complex African traditions and are too simplistic While some traditions have a supreme being next to other deities others have not Monotheism does not reflect the multiplicity of ways that the traditional African spirituality has conceived of deities gods and spirit beings 22 Chukwuemeka Mbaegbu from the Nnamdi Azikiwe University Awka Nigeria describes the Igbo religion s system as Monopolytheism referring to the belief in many distinct gods and spirits but with one distant and unpersonalized supreme force which resulted in the creation of everything but is not a god per definition 3 Chi Edit nbsp Interior of a chi shrine at Nkarahia southern Igboland 1900s In Odinani the Igbo people believe that each person has their own personal spiritual guardian called Chi or ḿmuọ appointed to them before and at the time of their birth The Chi remains with them for the rest of their lives on Earth A person s Chi is the personification of that individual s fate which is credited for an individual s life s successes misfortunes and failures The Igbo believe that their success in life is determined by their Chi and that no man can rise past the greatness of his or her own Chi In this respect the concept of chi is analogous to the concept of a guardian angel in Christianity the daemon in ancient Greek religion and the genius in ancient Roman religion 18 23 24 25 Culturally people are seen as the creators or makers of their own destiny 19 26 27 The breath of life is in the heart obi 27 23 24 28 Chi can be masculine and feminine A Dibia can identify a person s chi through divination aja and advise adherents of ways to placate it 29 30 Eke is one s ancestral guardian spirit but exists at the periphery of human life and remains a mystery to the people 29 Households usually contain a shrine for veneration of the Chi which could be focused on a tree In marriage a woman takes her chi shrine along with all her belongings to her matrimonial home 18 Around Nkarahia in southern Igboland there are the most elaborate chi shrines which are decorated with colourful china plates inset into the clay walls of the chi shrine building the altars hold sacred emblems while the polished mud benches hold offerings of china glass manillas and food 30 As a marker of personal fortune or misfortune good acts or ill chi can be described as a focal point for personal religion 18 Cosmology Edit The community of visible interacting beings and the cosmos is referred to as ụ wa which includes all living things ihẹ ndi dị ndụ including animals and vegetation and their mineral elements which possess a vital force and are regarded as counterparts to invisible forces in the spirit world 18 These living things and geomorphological features of the world therefore possess a guardian deity Igbo cosmology presents a balance between the feminine and masculine perhaps with a preponderance of female representation in Igbo lore 18 In Igbo cosmology the world was divided into four corners by the high god corresponding to eke orie afọ ǹkwọ which are the days of the week in the Igbo calendar regarded as market days 31 32 The universe is regarded as a composite of bounded spaces in an overlapping hemispherical structure the total spaces are referred to as elu na ala 18 In one Igbo cosmological theory reported by W R G Morton in the 1950s from an elder in Ibagwa Nike in northern Igboland Chukwu sees that the sun travels across the world in the day time and then cuts into two in order for the moon to pass on a perpendicular route and so the world is divided into four parts and four days 31 The quarterly division of the earth and the days makes the number four sacred nsọ to the Igbo 31 33 The elu na ala space is defined by two boundaries elu igwe sky s limit composed of heavenly bodies under the main forces of the masculine sun and feminine moon and elu ala earth or lands limit consisting of the four material elements of fire and air masculine and earth and water feminine 18 nbsp Ogbo Obodo figures for the cult of Nkpetime near Asaba 1900s The pattern of two and four reoccur in Chukwu s creations 33 The days correspond to the four cardinal points and are its names in Igbo eke east orie west afọ north ǹkwọ south 34 The Nri Igbo claim the market days to have been introduced to the Igbo by their divine progenitor and king Eri in the 9th century after encountering the days as deities 35 These Arusi are venerated as the primary or as a major deity under Chineke in parts of Igboland In terms of hierarchy some communities recognise eke as the head of these Arusi while others prioritise orie and ǹkwọ first after the high god 35 Market days may have local deities representing the spirits in some places in many southern Igbo towns Agwu is the patron of Eke Ogwugwu the patron of Orie Amadioha the patron of Afọ and Ala for Nkwọ 31 The Cosmos itself is divided into four constituent complexes known as Okike Alusi Mmuo and Uwa Okike is the event of Creation the Alusi are the lesser deities Mmụọ are the spirits of the Ancestors and all other beings and Uwa is the World 36 Justice Edit Main article Ogu na Ofo Ọfọ and ogụ is a law of retributive justice It vindicates anyone that is wrongly accused of a crime as long as their hands are clean It is only a person who is on the righteous side of Ọfọ na Ogụ that can call its name in prayer otherwise such a person will face the wrath of Amadiọha the god of thunder and lightning 37 Kola nut is used in ceremonies honour Chukwu chi Arusi and ancestors and is used as a method of professing innocence when coupled with libations The Igbo often make clay altars and shrines of their deities which are sometimes anthropomorphic the most popular example being the wooden statues of Ikenga Typically only men are allowed to make representational figures of supernatural forces 38 Afterlife and reincarnation Edit See also Igbo name nbsp An Igbo of Igbuzo heritage traditional ceremony for deceased relatives Akwa ocha Otu ogwu 39 The Igbo traditionally believe in an afterlife in the spirit world or dimension where the deceased ancestors exist and may influence the material world and their descendants Ancestors are protectors and guardians of ones lineage close friends and heritage and may become to higher spirits semi gods as in the case of many other traditional religions of the world 40 Sometimes however ancestors may reincarnate into families that they were part of while alive 41 This is called ilọ uwa Reincarnation is seldom but may happen occasionally if a deceased person can not enter the spirit world for various reasons or may be absorbed into a new born if it would die immediately after birth 42 Unlike in Hinduism humans can only be reincarnated as humans 41 Families hire fortune tellers to reveal if the child harbours the soul or an aspect of an ancestor the baby is sometimes named after this relative 41 The personality of the ancestor is not identical to the child s but rather the concept establishes a vital relationship with the child and characteristics of the ancestor 43 Other signs can be certain behaviors physical traits and statements by the child A diviner can help in detecting if the child has reincarnated from an ancestor and may identify this ancestor It is considered an insult if a male is said to have been reincarnated as a female 44 An ancestor or aspects of the ancestor may be reincarnated in multiple people in which case the reincarnations share a mortal bond upon the death of one person it is believed that the others may die a sudden death if they see the corpse 40 Ogbanje Edit Main article Ogbanje An ọgbanje is a reincarnating evil or revengeful spirit that would deliberately plague a family with misfortune In folklore the ọgbanje upon being born by the mother would deliberately die after a certain amount of time usually before puberty and then come back and repeat the cycle causing the family grief This time period varies between minutes hours days and years Female circumcision was sometimes thought to get rid of the evil spirit Finding the evil spirit s Iyi uwa which is buried in a secret location would ensure that the ọgbanje would never plague the family with misfortune again The Iyi uwa is a stone that the ọgbanje s way of coming back to the human world and is also a way of finding its targeted family The stone is usually buried deep enough to not have been hidden by a child The iyi uwa is dug out by a priest and destroyed Female ọgbanje die during pregnancies along with the baby male ọgbanje die before the birth of a wife s baby or the baby dies The child is confirmed to no longer be an ọgbanje after the destruction of the stone or after the mother successfully gives birth to another baby 41 Deities EditMain article Arusi nbsp Shrine representation of the alusi Ifejioku The Arusi who are also known as the Arushi Anusi or Alusi by dialects see Orisha the Yoruba cognate all spring from Ala the Earth goddess and Goddess of Fertility who embodies the workings of the World They are lesser deities in Odinani each of whom are responsible for a specific aspect of nature or abstract concept According to Igbo lore these lesser deities as elements of Chukwu have their own specific purpose They exist only as long their purpose does thus many Alusi die off save for those who represent universal concepts Some of the more notable male Alusi include Amadioha the God of Thunder and Lightning popular among the Southern Igbo Ikenga the horned god of Fortune and Industry Agwu the God of Divination and Healing Njoku Ji the God of Yam and Ogbunabali the God of Death In southern Igbo dialects especially agbara is the term for these forces 45 Arusi manifest in natural elements and their shrines are usually found in forests in which they are based around specific trees At shrines ihu mmuọ an object such as a hung piece of cloth or a group of statues are placed at an Arusi s group of trees to focus worship Deities are described as hot and often capricious so that much of the public approach shrines cautiously and are advised to avoid them at most times priests are entrusted in the maintenance of most shrines 29 Many of these shrines are by the roadside in rural areas Tender palm fronds symbolize spiritual power and are objects of sacred power Shrines are cordoned off with ọmu to caution the public of the deity s presence 46 Larger clay modelings in honor of an Arusi also exist around forests and rivers Other Arusi figures may be found in and around peoples homes and the shrines of Dibia Much of these are related to personal chi cults and ancestral worship 47 Ala Edit Main article Ala odinala External image nbsp Mabri Art as Process in Igboland by Herbert M Cole a description of mbariAla meaning earth and land in Igbo also Aja ana 48 49 is the feminine earth spirit who is responsible for morality fertility and the dead ancestors who are stored in the underworld in her womb Ala is at the head of the Igbo pantheon maintaining order and carrying out justice against wrongdoers Ala is the most prominent and worshipped Arusi 43 almost every Igbo village has a shrine dedicated to her called ihu Ala where large decisions are taken 18 Ala is believed to be involved in all aspects of human affairs including festivals and at offerings Ala stands for fertility and things that generate life including water stone and vegetation colour agwa beauty mma which is connected to goodness in Igbo society and uniqueness aja 18 She is a symbol of morality who sanctioned omenala Igbo customs from which these moral and ethical behaviours are upheld in Igbo society 50 Ala is the ground itself and for this reason taboos and crimes are known as nsọ Ala desecration of Ala all land is holy as the embodiment of Ala making her the principal legal sanctioning authority 18 50 Prohibitions include murder suicide theft incest and abnormalities of birth such as in many places the birth of twins and the killing and eating of pregnant animals if a slaughtered animal is found to be pregnant sacrifices are made to Ala and the foetus is buried 18 People who commit suicides are not buried in the ground or given burial rites but cast away in order not to further offend and pollute the land their ability to become ancestors is therefore nullified 27 When an individual dies a bad death in the society such as from the effects of divine retributive justice or breaking a taboo they are not buried in the earth but are discarded in a forest so as not to offend Ala As in cases of most Arusi Ala has the ability to be malevolent if perceived to be offended and can cause harm against those who offend her 18 50 nbsp The royal python is revered as an agent of Ala Within the earth s spherical limit in a cosmological sense is a designation of the earth s bosom within ime ala a hemispherical base to the earth with an opening or mouth at its highest point onụ ala This is composed of mainly deep dark sea water ohimiri 50 Ime ala is considered as the underworld 18 Ala in addition to embodying nature is the cosmic base on which the vault of heaven igwe rests 18 As the foundation of all existence children s umbilical cords are saved and symbolically buried under a tree to mark the child s first sharing of family owned lands this tree could either be an oil palm bread fruit tree raffia palm or plantain tree depending on the cultural region 18 In some places such as Nri the royal python eke is considered a sacred and tame agent of Ala and a harbinger of good fortune when found in a home The python is referred to as nne mother in areas where the python is revered it is a symbol of female beauty and gentleness Killing of the python is expressly forbidden in these places and sanctions are taken against the killer including the funding of expensive human sized burials that are given to slain pythons 18 43 51 52 Amadioha Edit Main article Amadioha Amadioha from amadi ọ ha free will of the people in Igbo is the Arusi of justice thunder lightning and the sky He is referred to as Amadioha in southern Igboland Kamalu Kamanu Kalu among the Aro and other Cross River Igbo people Igwe among the Isuama Igbo and in northwestern Igboland and Ofufe in certain parts of Igboland 53 54 55 56 57 His governing planet is the Sun 58 His color is red and his symbol is a white ram 59 Metaphysically Amadioha represents the collective will of the people and he is often associated with Anyanwu 60 He is the expression of divine justice and wrath against taboos and crimes in oaths he is sworn by and strikes down those who swear falsely with thunder and lightning 53 Amadioha shrines exist around Igboland his main shrine is located at Ozuzu in the riverine Igbo region in northern Rivers State While Anyanwu is more prominent in northern Igboland Amadioha is more prominent in the south His day is Afọ which is the second market day 61 In mbari houses Amadioha is depicted beside Ala as her consort 62 Ikenga Edit Main article Ikenga nbsp A miniature abstract cylindrical Ikenga figure Ikenga literally place of strength is an Arusi and a cult figure of the right hand and success found among the northern Igbo people He is an icon of meditation exclusive to men and owners of the sculpture dedicate and refer to it as their right hand which is considered instrumental to personal power and success 63 64 Ikenga is a source of encoded knowledge unraveled through psychological principles The image of Ikenga comprises someone s chi personal god his ndichie ancestors aka Ikenga right hand ike power as well as spiritual activation through prayer and sacrifice 65 Igbo cultures value of resourcefulness and individualism in society utilises the concept of Ikenga to regulate the relationship between individuality and family relations and obligations as well as free will and industriousness balanced with destiny decided persons chi Ikenga acts as a physical medium to the consciousness and emphasises individual initiative through reflection and meditation 19 Success validates the Ikenga and the sculptures act as visual representation of a person s inner success people give offerings in thanks to the Ikenga after providing energy to overcome any unwanted pre life choices 19 These choices are at the hands of the persons earth bound spirit mmuo who chooses sex type and lifespan before incarnation 19 The successful Ikenga influenced the saying of well being ikeǹgam kwụ ọ tọ ta ta meaning that my Ikenga stands upright today 63 During festivals of Ogbalido or oriri Ikenga feast of Ikenga sculptures of him may be paraded around a village or displayed at the village centre if too monumental to transport 19 When a person does not become successful with hard work the Ikenga has fallen and is seen as a sign of danger if meditation and cajoling the Ikenga fails the sculpture is thrown down and broken which spiritually kills the Ikenga a new one is carved to replace it 19 Ikenga figures are common cultural artefacts ranging for six inches to 6 feet high and can be humanistic or highly stylised 19 63 There are anthropomorphic architectonic and abstract cylindrical Ikenga sculptures 19 Ikenga is a symbol of success and personal achievement 19 Ikenga is mostly maintained kept or owned by men and occasionally by women of high reputation and integrity in the society At burials a man s Ikenga is broken into two with one piece buried with him and the other destroyed 19 63 Ekwensu Edit Main article Ekwensu This Arusi was adept at bargains and trade and praying to Ekwensu was said to guarantee victory in negotiations As a force of change and chaos Ekwensu also represented the spirit of war among the Igbo invoked during times of conflict and banished during peacetime to avoid his influences inciting bloodshed in the community warriors set up shrines to Ekwensu to help war efforts 43 This is based upon the finding of old shrines dedicated to the worship of the spirit 66 as well as the recounting of old oral stories which depict the character of Ekwensu Ekwensu was a bringer of violence and possessed people with anger 53 Ekwensu holds the propensity of bringing misfortune and is regarded as an evil spirit in this sense 43 Among the Christian Igbo Ekwensu is representative of Satan and is seen as a force which places itself opposite to that of Chukwu 67 Ekwensu festivals are held in some Igbo towns where military success is celebrated and wealth is flaunted 53 Mmuo and minor gods Edit Mmụọ is a broad class of minor gods and spirits or divinities manifesting in natural elements under the class of elder divinities with major cults Feminine mmụọ inhabit earth and water and masculine mmụọ inhabit fire and air 18 This class can be broken down by the Arusi serviceable mmụọ agwụ are related to unusual and deranged human behaviours these spirits interact with human in a capricious nature that often makes them dangerous 18 68 Other cult deities exist around Igboland such as Njoku Ji yam and fire deity overseeing agriculture Idemili the pillar of water the female Arusi based in Idemili North and South who holds up the waters and Mbatuku the bringer of wealth or coming in of wealth 29 28 In addition to minor spirits there are evil wondering spirits of wrong doers called ogbonuke 35 Among the Mmuo are Mbatuku spirit of wealth Ikoro drum spirit Ekwu heart spirit or spirit of the home Imo miri river spirit 69 Okwara afo for Nkwerre people in Imo state is god of mercantile activities Aju mmiri sea goddess in Nkwerre is goddess of prosperity fertility and general well being Ogbuide goddess of the water associated with the Oguta people Urashi and Enyija god of the river Ezenwaanyi Owummiri Female Water Spirit Mermaid SeductressPractices EditDibia Edit nbsp A dibia from the early 20th century with tools of his practice including bells and a miniature Ikenga figure Dibia are the mystic mediators between the human world and the spirit world and act as healers scribes teachers diviners and advisors of people in the community They are usually consulted at the shrine of a communities major deity Dibia is a compound of the words di professional master husband ọ bị a doctoring sciences 9 The dibia are believed to be destined for spiritual work The dibia sees the spiritual world at any time and interprets what messages being sent and sees the spiritual problems of living people They are given the power by the spirit world to identify any alusi by name and the possible ways of placating and negotiating with the deity Dibia are thought to be revealed to possess the power over one of three elements namely water and large bodies of water fire and vegetation Dibia whose elements are vegetation can go on to become herbalists by their supposed instinctual knowledge of the health benefits of certain plants they are instinctually drawn to fire element dibia can handle fire unscathed during their initiation and water element dibia do not drown Dibia can partially enter the spirit world and communicate this by rubbing chalk on one half of their face 43 Dibia and obia practices were transported to the West Indies as a result of the Atlantic slave trade and became known as obeah 8 9 Afa divination Edit The name of divination in Igbo derives from igba afa or aha meaning to name coming from the diviners skill in rooting out problems hence naming them 70 The dibia or ogba afa interpreter of afa is considered a master of esoteric knowledge and wisdom and igba afa is a way in which people can find out the cause of such things as misfortunes The diviner interprets codes from ala mmuọ the unseen by throwing divination seeds cowries and beads 70 71 self published source or observing a divination board sometimes called osho which can be used in pronouncing curses on the evil 72 In this way the diviner is endowed with special sight 73 it is related the sciences of homeopathic medicine known as ọ gwụ a practitioner consciously picks to either of these abilities 18 Animals that are special in divination and sacrifice include a white he goat a white ram a tortoise and male wall gecko These animals are prized for their rarity price and therefore the journey taken to obtain Chameleons and rats are used for more stronger medicines and deadly poisons and antidotes can include lambs small chickens eggs and oils 18 Nzu is used in rites from birth to death and is used to mark sacred buildings and spaces 18 Agwu Nsi is the Igbo patron deity of health and divination and is related to insanity confusion and unusual human behaviour which is linked to possession of Agwu by the diviner 68 71 74 75 Agwu can be manifested by other alusi so that there could be images of a divination Ikenga or Ikenga Agwu for instance 71 Ancestral veneration Edit nbsp A male ancestral figure Ndebunze or ndichie are the deceased ancestors who are considered to be in the spirit world ala mmuọ 76 In Odinani it is believed that the dead ancestors are invisible members of the community their role in the community in conjunction with Ala is to protect the community from epidemics and strife such as famine and smallpox 45 Ancestors helped chi look after men 30 Shrines for the ancestors in Igbo society were made in the central house or obi or obu of the patriarch of a housing compound The patriarchal head of the household is in charge of venerating the patriarchal ancestors through libations and offerings through this the living maintain contact with the dead Only a patriarch whose father is dead and therefore in the spirit world where they await reincarnation into the community were able to venerate ancestors 77 Female ancestors were called upon by matriarchs At the funeral of a man s father there is a hierarchy in Igbo culture of animals that will be killed and eaten in his honor Usually this depended on the rarity and price of the animal so a goat or a sheep were common and relatively cheaper and therefore carried less prestige while a cow is considered a great honor and a horse the most exceptional Horses cannot be given for women 78 Horses were more common among the northeastern Igbo due to tsetse fly zone that Igboland is situated in and renders it an unsuitable climate for horses 79 80 Horse heads are traditionally decorated and kept in a reliquary and at shrines A number of major masking institutions exist around Igboland that honour ancestors and reflect the spirit world in the land of the living Young women for example are incarnated in the society through the agbọ ghọ mmuọ masking tradition in which mean represent ideal and benevolent spirits of maidens of the spirit world in the form of feminine masks These masks are performed at festivals at agricultural cycles and at funerals of prominent individuals in the society 81 Kola nut Edit nbsp An okwa ọ jị bowl in the Chazen Museum of Art Wisconsin Kola nut ọ jị or ọ jị Igbo offerings and prayers ị gọ ọ jị kola nut blessing ị wa ọ jị kola nut breaking can be performed personally between one and his spirit or in a group in a form of a prayer or chant The saluter addresses their personal god or chi as well as alusi and their ancestors 18 These kola nuts are held in a special round bowl called ọ kwa with a compartment at the centre of the bowl for condiments for the kola nut such as alligator pepper or capsicum cayenne osẹ ọ jị 18 and ground peanuts The bowl and kola nut rite is used to welcome visitors into a household 82 83 84 After the prayer the ceremony ends with the saluter sharing pieces of the kola with the group known as ị ke ọ jị The kola is supposed to cut by hand but more recently knives have become acceptable When the cola has three cotyledons or parts it is considered an ọ jị ikeǹga in some northern communities going by other names in communities Ikenga doesn t operate and is considered a sign of great luck bravery and nobility O wetalu oji wetalu ndu one who brings kola brings life is a popular saying that points to the auspiciousness of the kola rite 84 85 Architecture Edit Mbari Edit nbsp Scene in an mbari house 1904 Among a small area of the Urata Igbo cultural area near Owerri there is a tradition of building votive monument houses called ḿbari primarily dedicated to the agbara Ala specific to the community and sometimes other community deities The name joins the word ḿba nation town society ri eat in reference to the festival of life held after its completion These votive shrines are typically designed with four columns and a central volt around the columns are modelled deities spirits and depictions of human life the entire building built out of clay from termite mounds symbolically named ji yam by the initiated spirit workers called ndi m gbe Ndi mgbe are secluded from the community for a couple of months during the rites of building the mbari to a deity Mbari are requested by a deity who the diviner tells the community feels neglected and cannot feel pride in the face of other deities in the spirit world A string of unusual and unfortunate events befalling the community is linked to the aggrieved deity An mbari is commissioned and artists are chosen After the completion of the mbari the spirit workers are reincorporated into the community and a feast is held for the opening of the mbari house where elders and the community come to exhibit the critique the expensive mbari The mbari house is not a source of worship and is left to dilapidate being reabsorbed by nature in symbolic sense related to Ala 29 86 Uto pyramids Edit Before the twentieth century circular stepped pyramids were built in reverence of Ala at the town of Nsude in northern Igboland In total ten clay mud pyramidal structures were still existing in 1935 The base section of a pyramid was 60 ft in circumference and 3 ft in height The next stack was 45 ft in circumference Circular stacks continued till it reached the top The structures were temples for the god Ala Uto who was believed to live at the top A stick was placed at the top to represent the god s residence The structures were laid in groups of five parallel to each other Because it was built of clay mud like the Deffufa of Nubia time has taken its toll requiring periodic reconstruction 87 See also EditCh i term in Chinese religions Godianism Igbo culture Ibo loaPortals nbsp Traditional African religion nbsp ReligionNotes Edit Benjamin Ray says of the position of African religions But as we have seen there are other elements besides monotheistic ones which tend towards polytheism or pantheism What we may ask accounts for these different tendencies As Evans Pritchard and Peel suggest they do not derive so much from different observers standpoints as from the different standpoints within the religious systems themselves This of course does not mean that African religions consist of conflicting system monotheism polytheism pantheism totemism which lack any inherent unity Rather the totality of elements in each religious system can be viewed from different internal perspectives according to different contextual alignments What is misleading is to seize upon one perspective or tendency and make it the dominant framework This may satisfy the observer s own theological preferences e g monotheism but only at the expense of over systematizing the contextual diversity of African religious thought Ray Benjamin C 1976 African Religions Symbol Ritual and Community Prentice Hall p 53 ISBN 0130186228 References Edit Afulezy Uju On Odinani the Igbo Religion Archived 27 November 2010 at the Wayback Machine Niger Delta Congress Nigeria April 03 2010 Nwauwa Apollos O Anyanwu Ogechi E 24 October 2019 Culture Precepts and Social Change in Southeastern Nigeria Understanding the Igbo Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 4985 8969 7 a b Mbaegbu Chukwuemeka 4 March 2015 A Philosophical Investigation of the Nature of God in Igbo Ontology Department of Philosophy Nnamdi Azikiwe University Awka Nigeria M O Ene The fundamentals of Odinani KWENU Our Culture Our Future April 03 2010 M O Ene The fundamentals of Odinani KWENU Our Culture Our Future April 03 2010 Obeah Merriam Webster Retrieved 3 June 2010 Chambers Douglas B 2009 Murder at Montpelier Igbo Africans in Virginia Univ Press of Mississippi pp 14 36 ISBN 978 1 60473 246 7 a b Rucker Walter C 2006 The river flows on Black resistance culture and identity formation in early America LSU Press p 40 ISBN 0 8071 3109 1 a b c Eltis David Richardson David 1997 Routes to slavery direction ethnicity and mortality in the transatlantic slave trade Routledge p 74 ISBN 0 7146 4820 5 M O Ene The fundamentals of Odinani KWENU Our Culture Our Future April 03 2010 Ogbuene Chigekwu G 1999 The concept of man in Igbo myths Peter Lang p 207 ISBN 0820447048 a b c Echema Austin 2010 Igbo Funeral Rites Today Anthropological and Theological Perspectives footnotes LIT Verlag Munster pp 21 48 ISBN 978 3643104199 Retrieved 4 April 2015 Okwunodu Ogbechie Sylvester 2008 Ben Enwonwu the making of an African modernist University Rochester Press p 161 ISBN 978 1580462358 Ikenga International Journal of African Studies Institute of African Studies University of Nigeria 1972 p 103 Retrieved 26 July 2013 Uzor Peter Chiehiụra 2004 The traditional African concept of God and the Christian concept of God Chukwu bụ ndụ God is life the Igbo perspective Peter Lang p 194 ISBN 3631521456 Obiego Cosmas Okechukwu 1984 African Image of the Ultimate Reality An Analysis of Igbo Ideas of Life and Death in Relation to Chukwu God Peter Lang p 88 ISBN 3820474609 Ebelebe Charles A 2009 Africa and the New Face of Mission A Critical Assessment of the Legacy of the Irish Spiritans Among the Igbo of Southeastern Nigeria Univiversity Press of America p 24 ISBN 978 0761845966 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Agbasiere Joseph Therese 2000 Women in Igbo Life and Thought Psychology Press pp 48 64 ISBN 0415227038 a b c d e f g h i j k Wiredu Kwesi 2008 A Companion to African Philosophy John Wiley amp Sons p 420 ISBN 978 0470997376 Kimmerle Heinz 11 April 2006 The world of spirits and the respect for nature towards a new appreciation of animism The Journal for Transdisciplinary Research in Southern Africa 2 2 15 doi 10 4102 td v2i2 277 ISSN 2415 2005 Asukwo 2013 The Need to Re Conceptualize African Traditional Religion a b The spirituality of Africa Harvard Gazette 6 October 2015 Retrieved 30 November 2020 a b Udeani Chibueze C 2007 Inculturation as Dialogue Igbo Culture and the Message of Christ Rodopi p 35 ISBN 978 9042022294 Retrieved 4 April 2015 a b Ndukaihe Vernantius Emeka 2006 Achievement as Value in the Igbo African Identity The Ethics LIT Verlag Munster pp 185 187 ISBN 3825899292 Retrieved 4 April 2015 Opata Damian Ugwutikiri 1998 Essays on Igbo World View AP Express Publishers p 62 ISBN 9782001155 Asante Molefi K Nwadiora Emeka 2007 Spear Masters An Introduction to African Religion University Press of America p 108 ISBN 978 0761835745 Retrieved 4 April 2015 a b c Okoh Michael 2012 Fostering Christian Faith in Schools and Christian Communities Through Igbo Traditional Values Towards a Holistic Approach to Christian Religious Education and Catechesis in Igboland Nigeria LIT Verlag Munster pp 37 58 ISBN 978 3643901682 Retrieved 4 April 2015 a b Uzukwu Elochukwu Eugene 2012 God Spirit and Human Wholeness Appropriating Faith and Culture in West African Style Wipf and Stock pp 63 123 ISBN 978 1610971904 Retrieved 4 April 2015 a b c d e Cole Herbert M 1982 Mbari Art and the Life Among the Owerri Igbo Indiana University Press ISBN 0253303974 a b c Talbot P Amaury July 1916 Some Beliefs of To day and Yesterday Niger Delta Tribes Journal of the Royal African Society The Royal African Society 15 60 307 308 a b c d Ụkaegbu Jọn Ọfọegbu 1991 Igbo Identity and Personality Vis a vis Igbo Cultural Symbols Pontifical University of Salamanca 60 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Anyahuru Israel Ohiaraumunna Tom 2009 Musical Sense and Musical Meaning An Indigenous African Perception Rozenberg Publishers p 56 a b Morton W R G 1956 God man and the land in a Northern Ibo village group African Abstracts International African Institute 7 9 15 Isichei Elizabeth Allo 1997 A History of African Societies to 1870 Cambridge University Press p 247 ISBN 0 521 45599 5 a b c Chigere Nkem Hyginus M V 2001 Foreign Missionary Background and Indigenous Evangelization in Igboland LIT Verlag Munster pp 20 56 ISBN 3825849643 Onwuejeogwu 1975 The Igbo Culture Area in Igbo Language and Culture F Chidozie Ogbalu amp E Nolue Emenanjo Ejizu Christopher I 1986 Ofo Igbo Ritual Symbol Fourth Dimension Publishers ISBN 9781562684 T Phillips ed Ceramic altar for the new yam harvest festival Archived 19 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine BritishMuseum org London April 03 2010 Gugler Josef Flanagan William G 1978 Urbanization and Social Change in West Africa Cambridge University Press p 82 ISBN 0521291186 Retrieved 4 April 2014 a b Nwauwa Apollos O Anyanwu Ogechi E 24 October 2019 Culture Precepts and Social Change in Southeastern Nigeria Understanding the Igbo Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 4985 8969 7 a b c d Nnam Nkuzi Michael 2007 Colonial Mentality in Africa Hamilton Books pp 69 70 ISBN 978 1461626305 Short J A Pedersen O Kendrick G A October 2015 Turf algal epiphytes metabolically induce local pH increase with implications for underlying coralline algae under ocean acidification Estuarine Coastal and Shelf Science 164 463 470 doi 10 1016 j ecss 2015 08 006 ISSN 0272 7714 a b c d e f Udoye Edwin Anaegboka 2011 Resolving the Prevailing Conflicts Between Christianity and African Igbo Traditional Religion Through Inculturation LIT Verlag Munster pp 45 53 104 ISBN 978 3643901163 Newell William Hare 1976 Ancestoride Are African Ancestors Dead Ancestors Walter de Gruyter pp 293 294 ISBN 90 279 7859 X a b Ilogu Edmund 1974 Christianity and Ibo culture Brill pp 34 36 ISBN 90 04 04021 8 Olupona Jacob K Nyang Sulayman S Kalu Ogbu U 1993 Religion and social control in Igboland Religious Plurality in Africa Essays in Honour of John S Mbiti Walter de Gruyter p 118 ISBN 3110850079 Nwauwa Apollos O Anyanwu Ogechi E 24 October 2019 Culture Precepts and Social Change in Southeastern Nigeria Understanding the Igbo Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 4985 8969 7 Isichei Elizabeth Allo 1977 Igbo worlds an anthology of oral histories and historical descriptions Macmillan pp 27 334 ISBN 0333198379 Oriji John 2011 Political Organization in Nigeria Since the Late Stone Age A History of the Igbo People Palgrave Macmillan pp 44 48 ISBN 978 0230116689 a b c d Ogbaa Kalu 1995 Igbo The Rosen Publishing Group pp 14 15 ISBN 0823919773 Hodder Ian 1987 The Archaeology of Contextual Meanings Cambridge University Press p 73 ISBN 0521329248 Ilogu Edmund 1974 Christianity and Ibo Culture Brill Archive pp 23 24 ISBN 9004040218 a b c d Onunwa Udobata R 2010 A Handbook of African Religion and Culture Dorrance Publishing pp 18 40 ISBN 978 1434953964 Jones G I 2000 The Trading States of the Oil Rivers A Study of Political Development in Eastern Nigeria James Currey Publishers p 28 ISBN 0852559186 McCall John Dancing Histories Heuristic Ethnography with the Ohafia Igbo Page 123 Oriji John Sacred Authority in Igbo Society Page 115 Diala Isidore Ritual and Mythological Recuperation in the Drama of Esiaba Irobi Page 101 Uchendu Victor C The Igbo of Southeast Nigeria Page 96 Diala Isidore Ritual and Mythological Recuperation in the Drama of Esiaba Irobi Page 104 Iwu Maurice Handbook of African medicinal plants Page 320 Patrick Iroegbu Igbo Okija Oracles and Shrines Development and Cultural Justice Kleiner Fred 2009 Gardner s Art through the Ages Non Western Perspectives Igbo Cengage Learning p 219 ISBN 978 0495573678 a b c d Basden G T 2013 Among the Ibos of Nigeria 1912 Routledge p 45 ISBN 978 1136248498 Cole Herbert M Igbo Art in Social Context University of Iowa Museum of Art p 6 Retrieved 4 April 2015 Okere Rose Ikenga In Traditional Igbo Society Ngrguardiannews com permanent dead link Agozino Emmanuel Ekwensu God of victory not devil Nigerian Compass Nsukka April 03 2010 Bewaji John A I 1998 Olodumare God in Yoruba Belief and the Theistic Problem of Evil PDF African Studies Quarterly University of Florida 2 1 Retrieved 4 April 2015 a b Nwaorgu Andrew E 2001 Cultural symbols the Christian perspective T Afrique International Association pp 92 95 ISBN 9780529020 Slattery Katharine Religion and the Igbo People Queen s University of Belfast Belfast April 03 2010 a b Achebe Nwando 2011 The Female King of Colonial Nigeria Ahebi Ugbabe Indiana University Press pp 54 55 ISBN 978 0253222480 a b c Iroegbu Patrick E 2010 Healing Insanity A Study of Igbo Medicine in Contemporary Nigeria Xlibris Corporation pp 344 346 ISBN 978 1450096294 self published source Aguwa Jude C U 1995 The Agwu deity in Igbo religion a study of the patron spirit divination and medicine in an African society Fourth Dimension Publishing p 108 ISBN 9789781563997 Peek Philip M 1991 African Divination Systems Ways of Knowing Georgetown University Press p 200 ISBN 0253343097 Iroegbu Patrick Gottschalk Batschkus Christine E 2002 Igbo Medicine Practitioners and Ways of Healing Insanity in Southeastern Nigeria In Green Joy C ed Handbook of ethnotherapies BoD Books on Demand p 157 ISBN 3831141843 Retrieved 4 April 2015 Opata Damian Ugwutikiri 2009 Ajija an Igbo agent of death and destruction Great AP Express p 28 ISBN 978 9788087748 Chukwube Okwuchukwu Stan 2008 Renewing the Community and Fashioning the Individual A Study of Traditional Communal Reconciliation Among the Igbo p 30 ISBN 978 0549638605 Retrieved 4 April 2015 Gomez Michael Angelo 1998 Exchanging Our Country Marks The Transformation of African Identities in the Colonial and Antebellum South University of North Carolina Press p 129 ISBN 0807846945 Ottenberg Simon 2006 Toyin Falola ed Igbo Religion Social Life and Other Essays Africa World Press p 348 ISBN 1592214436 Spinage Clive 2012 African Ecology Benchmarks and Historical Perspectives Springer Science amp Business Media p 932 ISBN 978 3642228711 Williams Ian 2005 Riding in Africa Ian Williams p 30 ISBN 0595373011 Werness Hope B 2003 Continuum Encyclopedia of Native Art Worldview Symbolism and Culture in Africa Oceania and North America A amp C Black p 145 ISBN 0826414656 Idigo Anthony Chike 2002 Oji cola acuminata Oji Igbo the cornerstone of Igbo traditional ceremonies Snaap Press p 26 ISBN 9780491732 Ukagba George Uzoma 2010 The Kpim of Feminism Issues and Women in a Changing World Trafford Publishing p 194 ISBN 978 1426924071 Retrieved 4 April 2015 a b Eboh Simeon Onyewueke 2004 African Communalism The Way to Social Harmony and Peaceful Co existence Transaction Publishers p 143 ISBN 3889397158 Udoye Edwin Anaegboka 2011 Resolving the Prevailing Conflicts Between Christianity and African Igbo Traditional Religion Through Inculturation LIT Verlag Munster p 142 ISBN 978 3643901163 Cole Herbert M Mabri Art as Process in Igboland University of Iowa Museum of Art Retrieved 28 March 2015 Basden G S 1966 Among the Ibos of Nigeria 1912 Psychology Press p 109 ISBN 0 7146 1633 8Further reading EditUmeh John Anenechukwu 2007 After God is Dibia Igbo cosmology divination amp sacred science in Nigeria Karnak House ISBN 978 1872596099 Agbasiere Joseph Therese 2000 Women in Igbo Life and Thought Psychology Press ISBN 0415227038 External links EditAn insight guide to Igboland s Culture Religion and Language G I Jones Photographic Archive Southeastern Nigerian Art amp Culture Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Odinala amp oldid 1179834418, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.