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Re: Yoruba Commonwealth and Politics by Nobody: 1:34am On Nov 28, 2015 |
CabbieAC: I mean where real dons live. The place where Nas was dreaming about in "If rule the world", when he said, "Imagine smoking weed in the streets without cops harassing". Wayne Perry? The same Wayne Perry who was Alpo's shooter in DC - the vicious killer and head popper? Bwoi, I don't wanna go anywhere near where that type of nyggah stays - folks like that would blow ya head off for nothing. Erm, what do you think about Lagos chics though? |
Re: Yoruba Commonwealth and Politics by MayorofLagos(m): 1:37am On Nov 28, 2015 |
http://afkinsider.com/107430/yoruba-speakers-in-high-demand-in-londons-luxury-markets/ As wealth gets more evenly distributed across the world, Africa is following in China’s footsteps as a major source of luxury spending power. Nigerian tourists became the fifth biggest spenders in London in 2014 with a 50 percent increase in spending compared to 2013. Staff with a grasp of Yoruba are in high demand. The continued growth will put pressure on retailers in London and other markets to adapt to the needs of relatively new African consumers. Nigerians buy on average four times more than U.K. shoppers, PropertyMagazine reports. It is no longer enough to have Mandarin-speaking staff, according to the CBRE Luxury Retail 2015 report. Those with a grasp of Yoruba are also in high demand. It is also not about making specific purchases, says PropertyMagazine. Consumers want to engage with the authentic brand experience that makes them feel more valued. Retail space in Lagos is limited and high real estate costs on top of high import duties are slowing growth, LuxuryDaily reports. With its population of 13 million, the Lagos urban area is bigger than Paris with 15,500 people per square kilometer — more than double that of Shanghai. Most malls cater to mid-low income consumers, leaving luxury brands entering the market to opt for emerging high streets.
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Re: Yoruba Commonwealth and Politics by Nobody: 1:39am On Nov 28, 2015 |
I love this song.Shymm8x check this out Forget the basketball rapper at the beginning lol I saw Princessjanedoe and Modath vieiwing the thread .O ye ke gbadun ele yi Quimicababes you sef suppose enjoy am https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2UzlN0AbPgQ Are you saying I no fine reach so? Emi High Class, eyin Omo lepa Siringo Wo me and you was just a incident We can’t be sleeping together because we dream different Ah I’m even thinking that you’re still decent You’re irritating, inyama! I’m seeing vincent ehn My last boyfriend, it’s still recent, I was happy and love was a hingredient. So for me this dating thing is dead You broke my heart, you’re repeating all the things he said. 1 Like |
Re: Yoruba Commonwealth and Politics by Nobody: 1:42am On Nov 28, 2015 |
CabbieAC: I did....nice pic btw.I suppose you mentioned me because you want to know about Yoruba settlements or influence in Trinidad huh? |
Re: Yoruba Commonwealth and Politics by Nobody: 1:42am On Nov 28, 2015 |
shymm8x: Lmaooooooo No let laugh kill me abeg Yeah like I said some parts of Mushin are like that.You have to be dirty as well |
Re: Yoruba Commonwealth and Politics by Nobody: 1:44am On Nov 28, 2015 |
quimicababes: Not really but thank you for reminding me We're waiting for that Check out the zeynab song as well.She's from Benin republic |
Re: Yoruba Commonwealth and Politics by modath(f): 1:47am On Nov 28, 2015 |
Belmot: Leave ke !!! & allow some inconsequential mofos feel exhilirated that they killed this!! Hell effing nooo, laye kojo!! I planned to retreat into my shell & watch proceedings from afar but since the crew are not leaving, I dey gidigba like Iroko!! @Ilekehd , I can't go nowhere, I was doing same thing you are doing, except mine is by proxy, Ore mi lo bi omo ni ilu ti e n gbe, o n ba wa ra ikan ni eti dudu o wa n ya aworan fun mi ki n le approve awon nkan to fe ra.. A wa na ti ra awon nkan ti a need sugbon nitori sales, airline lo ma fi wa jeun pelu luggage.. 1 Like |
Re: Yoruba Commonwealth and Politics by Nobody: 1:47am On Nov 28, 2015 |
CabbieAC: I don't know, I just don't like the Yemi Alade chic. She doesn't look attractive to me with those big bones. PrincessJaneDoe is an interesting character - I wanna solve the mystery behind her. |
Re: Yoruba Commonwealth and Politics by Nobody: 1:48am On Nov 28, 2015 |
CabbieAC: I did check it out..though I don't understand one word..its a nice song...love the video |
Re: Yoruba Commonwealth and Politics by Nobody: 1:50am On Nov 28, 2015 |
CabbieAC: Bwoi, Wayne Perry was on a different level. The fact that Alpo, who was supremely good with his guns and vicious, feared him. That alone should tell you who Wayne Perry is. The guy too killing on the streets to Ionosphere. |
Re: Yoruba Commonwealth and Politics by Nobody: 1:51am On Nov 28, 2015 |
shymm8x: I was more interested in Falz's lyrics.That guy is a crase man You're on your own regarding the emboldened Mr Sleuth |
Re: Yoruba Commonwealth and Politics by Nobody: 1:53am On Nov 28, 2015 |
shymm8x: The thing is the Baba Alado is just the powerful guy.I don't think he carries guns.The guy is a mystery lol He's the Boss of those who carry guns.Some even said he's a cripple. |
Re: Yoruba Commonwealth and Politics by Nobody: 1:54am On Nov 28, 2015 |
CabbieAC: Loool. We need to solve the mystery behind "PrincessJaneDoe" together. Even the name is very fascinating - Jane Doe - me likey. |
Re: Yoruba Commonwealth and Politics by angiography(m): 1:56am On Nov 28, 2015 |
nduchucks:thanks bro... the ones being peddled by the so-called afenifere reads pathetically extraneous. modified.... whao...first time I agree with the indigbos...Ndibo, indigo (??) 1 Like |
Re: Yoruba Commonwealth and Politics by Nobody: 1:56am On Nov 28, 2015 |
CabbieAC: But how can a cripple have that many body counts? You just need to catch him slipping and blow his brains off. |
Re: Yoruba Commonwealth and Politics by modath(f): 1:58am On Nov 28, 2015 |
shymm8x: Thank God I'm not the only one, was beginning to feel like I'm a strange one cos people around me gat madt love for her... She may be entertaining & she does put in the work, but she isn't great, she's just there!!! Same way I don't get Korede bello, the hype is not commensurate to the talent... BTW, Yemi Alade's mama is Ibo.. I like her build though, she isn't really big boned like that, it is the thunder thighs thing.. |
Re: Yoruba Commonwealth and Politics by Nobody: 1:58am On Nov 28, 2015 |
Let's spice this up with sound from the Caribbean. Just for the ladies. Wayne Wonder. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NyfwImwoE3w |
Re: Yoruba Commonwealth and Politics by Nobody: 1:59am On Nov 28, 2015 |
shymm8x: Looool you and who dey solve mystery As for those who want to discuss serious issues,make una no vex for us ooo Its Friday night you know Even the minions are dancing.Make una dance |
Re: Yoruba Commonwealth and Politics by Nobody: 2:00am On Nov 28, 2015 |
shymm8x: Lmaooooo like I said, the guy's a mystery You can't even say ch!t about him in that part of Lagos |
Re: Yoruba Commonwealth and Politics by Nobody: 2:00am On Nov 28, 2015 |
modath: I've never listened to anything from Korede Bello, but I see on FP all the time. Might need to check him out. But Yemi Alade is brrrr to me. Her face isn't even my type of face, apart from her body. |
Re: Yoruba Commonwealth and Politics by angiography(m): 2:02am On Nov 28, 2015 |
CabbieAC:thanks Aareonakakanfo.... lol...I acted that cast when I was in secondary school perhaps that explains my the fondness I have for you (??) |
Re: Yoruba Commonwealth and Politics by Nobody: 2:03am On Nov 28, 2015 |
CabbieAC: Princess + Jane + Doe = triple threat but the identity gatts be protected by any means necessary. TGIF! Even my Ibadan chic is dancing. Duke of Ibadan chics! |
Re: Yoruba Commonwealth and Politics by Nobody: 2:04am On Nov 28, 2015 |
angiography: Loooool what was the play about? |
Re: Yoruba Commonwealth and Politics by Nobody: 2:05am On Nov 28, 2015 |
CabbieAC: Crippled shooter. |
Re: Yoruba Commonwealth and Politics by Nobody: 2:07am On Nov 28, 2015 |
shymm8x: [img]http://1.bp..com/-psSaCpk6VKY/UGM3edtIV8I/AAAAAAAADPE/BkC8uaKjoAg/s1600/michael-jordan-laughing.gif[/img] |
Re: Yoruba Commonwealth and Politics by MayorofLagos(m): 2:08am On Nov 28, 2015 |
Book Serial: Ile-Ife : City of 201 gods By Prof. Jacob Olupona In The Pivot of the Four Quarters, Wheatley indicates that no place in sub-Saharan Africa has such cosmic significance as the Yoruba city of Ile-Ife. Known as the City of 201 (or 401) Gods, Ile-Ife is the base of the entire Yoruba civilization and culture, and its significance goes far beyond the immediate geographical and national boundaries of Nigeria. The religious culture of Ile-Ife has influenced the development and growth of new African religious movements as far off as Brazil, the Caribbean, and the United States. Ile-Ife, a city of about half a million, is situated at the geographical centre of the Yoruba city-states. To the west lies Ibadan, the largest city in sub-Saharan Africa, and to the east lies Ondo, gateway to the eastern Yoruba city-states. Ile-Ife is about two hundred kilometres from Lagos, which was Nigeria’s coastal capital city for over a century. Pre-eminent sacred place Unlike the political, commercial, and administrative cities of Ibadan and Lagos, contemporary Ile-Ife is a ceremonial city par excellence; like the cities of Banaras, Jerusalem, and Mecca, in the people’s imagination it is the preeminent sacred place, beyond the secular and profane. I begin with Ile-Ife’s various sacred place names, because epithets vividly show the significance of sacred cities. Stephen Scully argues in his book Homer and the Sacred City that “human centers such as Troy are richly and complexly described through the epithets attached to them.” Citing an earlier study by Paolo Vivante, Scully contends that “city epithets, whenever they occur, bring out the essential aesthetics and contextual quality of place names.” These epithets serve “as a resource of power and a medium of signification in their own right.” They are “visual and concrete in nature, and thereby evocative of an essential and generic quality” of whatever they qualify. Ile-Ife’s inhabitants have conferred numerous sacred Yoruba names on their city. It has been called Ife Oodaye, “The Expansive Space Where the World Was Created,” referring to the cosmogonic myth asserting that ritual creation occurred in this very place, and as Ibi Oju Ti Mo Wa (Where the Day Dawns). In Yoruba creation myth, Ile-Ife is conceived of as the place where the sun rises and sets, the center of origin of the universe. Ile-Ife is also called Ife Ooye, the place of survival or the city of life, because, like Noah’s ark, it was a place of refuge from a primordial deluge that destroyed earlier settlements and left survivors to establish a new era. Various oral sources refer to Ile-Ife as the place where the 201 gods came down from heaven to live and interact with humans on earth. Quote: ” The unprecedented visit of an Ooni to Lagos was chilling to all the other Yoruba Oba, including the Alaafin of Oyo. Before this visit, it had been taboo for an Ooni to leave the city of lle-lfe. The other Yoruba Oba viewed the announcement of his journey with such great alarm and seriousness that they decided to vacate their palaces and stay outside their city for the duration of his visit until they could confirm his safe return.” |
Re: Yoruba Commonwealth and Politics by MayorofLagos(m): 2:09am On Nov 28, 2015 |
The imagined sacred city, findings of Western explorers, the Ile-Ife and ancient kingdom of Benin connection stories IFA: Divination Rituals and the New Yam Festival IN the first three chapters of this book, I alluded to the role of Ifa divination and Ifa priests in various rituals in the sacred city, especially those relating to the resolution of the conflicts between Oduduwa and Obatala. I will devote this chapter to the place of Ifa divination and the Ifa deity in regulating and managing the spiritual and social affairs of the city and will introduce the myths and rituals of Orunmila, also known as Ifa, the Yoruba god of divination; Ifa divinatory practices; and the religious, ethical, and thought systems espoused in the rich Ifa divination texts, otherwise known as ese Ifa or Ifa divination poetry. By analyzing certain related festivals of Ifa—Odun Egbodo Ooni (the King’s New Yam Festival), Odun Agboniregun (the Diviners’ New Yam Ceremony), and the annual Ifa Festival, together with the sacred narratives associated with them, I will show how the symbols and rituals of Ifa sanctify the sacred city. Ifa has a pivotal role in maintaining and legitimizing the Ooni’s sacred kingship and the lineage identity of Ifa devotees, particularly the Araba, the chief priest of Ifa, just as the sacred kingship legitimizes Ifa’s authority as the spokesperson for the 201 divinities of the Ile-Ife pantheon. IFA IN THEORY AND IN PRACTICE In traditional and contemporary Yoruba culture and society, the Ifa divination system occupies a vital role in ordering and regulating the social and moral order. In addition to providing a plausible theory and practice aimed at explaining and controlling events, space, and time, Ifa represents a boidy of deep knowledge that deals with the past, present and future all at once. The Babalawo or diviners memorize Ifa as poetic oral texts and recite them on appropriate occasions, especially during rituals to secure healing and good health for clients. As a prelude to examining the rituals and ceremonies of Ifa in Ile-Ife, it is useful to discuss the practice,logic and meaning of Ifa. The Ifa divination system of belief and ritual practices derives its authority in Ile-Ife from the sacred kingship and the lineage traditions of the diviners. The ritual and ceremonies discussed later in this chapter follow the archetypal format upon which Ifa beliefs and practices throughout Yorubaland, if not abroad, are based. The Yoruba consult Ifa diviners on a wide range of personal, social and religious matters: for example, before undertaking an important obligation such as marriage, travelling to a distant place, and whenever they are in doubt. They use divination in situations of serious illness, especially when the illness is prolonged. Below, I interpret the symbolic and metaphysical meanings surrounding an Ifa consultation. As in the consultation that my research assistant sought in the Araba’s house, a client visits a Babalawo to determine the cause of a problem, typically a physical ailment. The client sits on a mat in front of the diviner while the Babalawo lays out his divination paraphernalia, which consists of a divinatory chain of linked half nuts and a tray of yellowish pollen. The client takes a coin, touches his forehead with it, and whispers into it his prayer or request, asking Ifa to reveal the secret behind his problem and to find an appropriate solution. He places the coin in front of the diviner, touching his chain with the coin as if conveying the request to it. The diviner begins the session by invoking Ifa and reciting the words that begin this chapter. Ifa is showered with presents to assist in the process. The diviner requests that Ifa not mislead his client. The invocation also allows the diviner to pay homage to the spirit world, the ancestors, the great diviners before him, and the four directions of the Yoruba universe as he moves the chain to the front, back, left, right, and center of the tray, acknowledging all the relevant spiritual forces connected to the process. To cast the divination, the diviner holds the chain in the middle and throws it on the mat, making a “U” shape on the floor, so that four nuts fall on each side. The nuts will expose either convex or concave sides, thus displaying sixteen possible forms of the “signature” of Ifa. Each signature stands for an odu (divinatory sign or symbol), and each odu is linked to several verses of oral poems that interpret it. The diviner then recites the odu that appears in the divination castings. The client listens carefully, and after the recitation comments on whether any of the poems is relevant to his illness. At this stage the client may reveal to the diviner the nature of his inquiry. The diviner will interpret the text and, through further questioning, arrive at a definite cause of his client’s problem. The diviner will prescribe the appropriate remedy, usually a sacrificial ritual and the use of medicinal herbs. Ooni with the sacred crown. Although the most frequently employed form of divination involves the use of the opele chain, a more prestigious and elaborate form of divination, the ikin, involves the use of sixteen palm nuts. The diviner takes the palm nuts from a beautifully carved divination bowl into one hand. He then attempts to grab with his other hand most of the palm nuts in his first hand, leaving one or two. He marks the result of the exercise in the powder in the divination tray. When one palm nut is left in the other hand, the diviner makes two marks, and when two ikin are left, he makes one mark. When no palm nuts remain, he makes no mark. This process is done several times until the diviner can make four signs on each side of the tray. Each divination session produces an odu divination sign out of the 256 possible signs. The process of reciting the odu that appears to the client is similar to the above divinatory session with the opele. Below is an example of verses from an odu called Eji Ogbe, which explains how important divination practice is on earth. Ko sibi ti afefe ki i fe e de Ko sibi ti iji ki i ja a de A d’ifa fun Ojise Olodumare Eni ti Olodumare ran wa sile aye Eni ran’ni nise la a beru A ki i beru eni ta a je fun Olowo ori mi ko je t’Ikole orun bo wa s’Ikole aye Olowo ori mi o re’bi Kankan To fi n se gbogbo ohun ti o fe e se Eni to ba ko’ti ikun s’Ifa Eniyankeniyan to ni eni wo’fa o logbon lori Enikeni to ni eni n wofa n sese ibi O setan to fe e lo s’alakeji Ojo to jade nile koje pada wale omo Ebi iru won nii jese owo o won Enikeni o gbodo so pe Ifa o nii se e Ohun t’Ifa ba so nii fun babalawo lounje Eni to n’Ifa n puro o lere kankan. There is no place that the wind does not blow. There is no place that the hurricane does not blow. Who divines for the messenger that Olodumare the Supreme sends on an errand? He who sends you on an errand He [whom) only you will respect. Your Master never travels from heaven above. Your Lord does not go out visiting. Your Lord stays in one place and accomplishes everything he wants to bring about. Whoever refuses to obey the diviners’ words, Whoever says the client’s work is not good, Should be prepared to see Olodumare in heaven [i.e., be prepared to die]. When the enemy leaves his house, he will not return home. The family he leaves behind will have to take charge of his affairs. No one must doubt the stories of the diviners. The stories the diviners tell provide for their daily bread. The enemy who says the diviners are lying will make no progress in life. In this powerful narrative the heavenly Ifa commands his devotees to take the work of the diviners seriously and spells out consequences for disobedience. Ifa diviners see this passage as proclaiming the authority given to them by Orunmila to control, determine, and mediate the affairs of the living. The diviner’s role recalls that of the Holy Spirit, who according to Christ’s promise would guide the affairs of the world after Christ departed. The Logic and Meaning of Ifa African societies recognize two forms of divination: the mechanical and the mystical. The mechanical form involves manipulating divining instruments or objects to arrive at an appropriate answer and treatment for the client. The mystical form centers on possession by a deity and appeal to a deity. In discussing the !Kung or San divination system, Lorna Marshall has argued that mechanical forms of divination fall into the category of magic and “secular” rather than religious forms because they involve no communication with mystical powers. But although Ifa divination is primarily mechanical, the preamble to an Ifa divination session indicates that mystical powers in control of the cosmos are invoked. Ifa divination is also premised on the communication process between the diviner and the spiritual agencies responsible for proper divination performances. William Bascom remarked that the result is influenced by divine guidance. As in the divination process used by the Ainu of Japan, an invocation and prayer to the mystical forces precede the actual mechanical manipulation of the divinatory instrument. The invocation of Ifa provides an important clue to the logic of the divination mechanism. Here we focus on the Ifa divination performance for healing, and our exploration of its three stages – consultation, diagnosis, and sacrifice-must begin with the ritual invocation. It is a poetic ritual prayer addressed to the relevant cosmic powers (the gods, ancestors, spirits) that the diviners know could influence the outcome of the client’s diagnosis. The Ifa ritual invocation that I witnessed in 1991 was intoned as follows: The front of Ifa The back of Ifa, The right side of Ifa, The all-knowing on the left, the centre of Ifa, The centre of heaven From the dawn of the day to the setting of the sun, Never say it is good when the message is evil Never say it is evil when the message is good. Never speak in a voice of deceit! These lyrics are the diviner’s invocation to Ifa, spoken as a prayer to guide his consultation rightly so that an unequivocal truth may emerge. By his invocations, the diviner symbolically dramatizes the creation of the cosmos, the three layers of the Yoruba world. At the core of the divination is the idea that the universe and its events are guided by Ifa. He is the regulator of events in the universe (Agbayegun), and his divination process and activities bring order to a potentially chaotic universe. That spiritual order is symbolized by the regulating grid of the four cardinal points of the universe plus the centre, the fifth and the most central point. The five important axes of power are replicated in the Ifa divination tray, usually carved out of wood, which represents the universe. The circular tray is a replica or “reproduction, on the human scale, of the cosmos [and] of Creation itself. It is an imago mundi, an image of the original world order.” At times in the course of divination, the Babalawo may trace these axes in the yellow powder on the Ifa tray, indicating the connection between the four cardinal points and the center. The centre of the divining tray, like the centre of the world, is the link to the centre of heaven, the abode of the Supreme God (Olodumare) and the storehouse of sacred knowledge required to discover the “secrets” surrounding the client’s ailment, the hidden forces that have produced it. This is analogous to Victor Turner’s notion of the centre “out there;’ a place outside the immediate domain of the client, which nevertheless can be accessed through divination. The act of touching the divining chain or opele on the four cardinal points and then the center of the tray captures a complex religious symbolism. By this visually significant act, the tray becomes the earthly sacred centre from which the diviner makes present the heavenly centre and the ultimate storehouse of Ifa’s knowledge.” Lokoloko (palace guards) holding whips made of branches during the Olojo Festival Ifa divination connects the diviner’s probing act with the source of the client’s being, the ori (personal destiny). By this process, divination exposes the client’s destiny, the realities that influence his development, and the configuration of sacred powers that governs the world’s ceaseless transformations. CONVERSION AND THE NEW FACE OF MODERNITY IN ILE-IFE Today, in Ile-Ife and throughout Yorubaland, newer Pentecostal, evangelical, and “born-again” Christian movements that first emerged in the 1970s and 1980s are challenging the institution of the sacred kingship and the pluralistic order that has existed for over a century. These movements epitomize a new form of modernity encroaching upon Ile-Ife. Amid hundreds of evangelical Christian programs, revival meetings, open-air services, and nightly vigils taking place in the city, a newly emergent form of discourse is pushing evangelical Christian activities beyond the arena of the churches and private spirituality to public spaces, thereby directly challenging the orisa-based civil religion that has been in place. I should add that whereas in the Western world the crisis of modernity often connotes a struggle between religion and secularity, Ile-Ife’s current struggle over the negotiation of modernity concerns which form of religion will control its centre and civic life. This newer negotiation of modernity is driven by generally exclusivist religious movements whose theology subsumes the entire cosmos and its inhabitants under a single divine order, ruled over by a Supreme God. This theology renders implausible the older order, according to which there exists not only the sacred kingship but also a diverse range of spirits and ancestors. As a result, this shift of sacred power and authority-from rulers and principalities that inhabit the living world to a single divine order inhabiting an invisible world (called heaven) – creates significant tension between devotees of the orisa and members of the new, predominantly Christian, movements. In short, these new movements challenge existing assumptions about what it means to be human in the cosmos and how civil authority is to be understood. According to these new movements, all kings are simply human beings. Thus no king has any inherent religious or earthly authority that gives him power as head of the community, as the chief priest of the local civil religion. Central to this message is an emphasis on the personal salvation of individual converts. Moreover, unlike indigenous traditions, which were concerned with the temporal domain and a this-worldly proximate salvation, the new movements place significant emphasis on otherworldly salvation and benefits. Kings have become more concerned with their own personal salvation than with the proximate salvation of their people as a whole. Each individual is left to fight for his or her own salvation. Members of these new Christian movements are targeting the sacred authority of the Ooni, and Ile-Ife civil religion more generally, because they realize that debunking the legitimacy of the sacred canopy-the guardianship of religious pluralism-will make it possible to destroy all indigenous non-Christian Yoruba traditions. While this kind of exclusivity is often associated with the European and American missionary enterprises of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, I have shown that their accommodationist orientation actually tended to support a role for indigenously based Yoruba civil religion. Rather, native Yoruba are driving this second, far less tolerant, mode of conversion. Although the new Christian movements are part of a global effort to usher in a universal Christian moral and social order, the conversion tactics employed by native inhabitants of Ile-Ife are specifically adapted to their local context. These individuals are able to explore and exploit, to their advantage, their knowledge of the indigenous orisa tradition in order to turn that tradition against itself. They draw upon the indigenous tradition’s pragmatic orientation – its emphasis on religion’s use value – but claim that indigenous beliefs and practices no longer have such use value because they no longer meet people’s needs. Thus these new movements often blame disorderly events – particularly those perceived to be obstructing societal progress – on the continuance of traditional orisa religious practices and ways of life, which are regarded as “pagan.” Among these events are pestilence, natural disaster, famine, disease (especially the AIDS epidemic), and military coups, all of which are seen as signs of divine anger and Satan’s presence. Paradoxically, whereas indigenous religions have claimed that they were indeed performing rituals, engaging in calendrical ceremonies and holding festivals to explain, predict, and control natural phenomena, the new Christian movements have claimed that destructive natural phenomena and events are caused by the continuation of these very “pagan” rituals and festivals. Evangelical Christianity’s desire to trump indigenous religious symbols and practices has effectively devolved into a declaration of hostility and war against indigenous traditions. As the cultured despisers of indigenous practices, these new Christian movements aim at doing away with any forms of local knowledge, language, and ethos, even when they do not have any apparent religious connection. For example, by discouraging the use of vernacular liturgy and local dialects, members of these new movements aim to preach a universal message that is ultimately of global, rather than purely local, reach. 1 Like |
Re: Yoruba Commonwealth and Politics by Nobody: 2:10am On Nov 28, 2015 |
CabbieAC: Err, big aare, what are Yoruba chics from Kwara like, since that's where Princess Jane Doe is from? I don't think I've ever met any Yoruba person from in real life. But I know some "Yield" chic I used to chat to on here is from Kwara and she's quite intelligent. |
Re: Yoruba Commonwealth and Politics by Nobody: 2:12am On Nov 28, 2015 |
shymm8x: I've met a lllloooooot! Most of them are practising Muslims so they're reserved Sorry,you no go see chinchin.The hijab has covered it |
Re: Yoruba Commonwealth and Politics by Nobody: 2:13am On Nov 28, 2015 |
I've always wondered why Ijebus are the only Yorubas (or mostly) with "Odu" as the prefix to their Yoruba names, since "Odu" is part of Ifa and all Yoruba subgroups practise Ife opus. |
Re: Yoruba Commonwealth and Politics by Nobody: 2:14am On Nov 28, 2015 |
AareOnakakanfo vs MayorofLagos in a tabletennis match I'm the one by the right |
Re: Yoruba Commonwealth and Politics by Nobody: 2:17am On Nov 28, 2015 |
CabbieAC: Yield is a proper Christian - devout one. And I actually thought she was reserved till she went to war with some next chic. Bwoi, the ghetto side of her from living in Canada since she was a kid came out. Shyte, when I saw that - I kind of started liking her more. Then she went on a next rampage on some guy in the family section - that sealed it for me. Real arse chic right there. Anyway, what do they look like? Are they very pretty with crazy bodies? |
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Kenyans Are Far Behind Nigerians In Every Aspect – Fani-Kayode / Anambra light of the nation, eastern economy power house. / Enugu, The Pride Of The East.
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