GUEST POST| DRUMS IN AFRICAN TRADITIONAL RELIGION BY OMITONADE IFAWEMIMO


In Yoruba culture, songs and dance have so much importance to religious worship and spirituality. All Orisas holds particular importance in dance and songs. And Worship in African Traditional Religion take the form of rites and ceremonies and include prostrating, praying, invoking, and making offerings. Sounding the bell or gong, singing, drumming, and dancing as occasion demands. Song and dance come up under liturgy. Liturgy therefore, is an important element of worship in African Traditional Religion.

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Ìlú Gangan Photo credit Google Image courtesy Ifawemimo

In Orisa Worship, the presence of dance as a way of reenacting spirituality and songs as a way of reverence to the power of Olodumare and Orisas are essential to the worship of Orisas. Each Orisa is identified with drum ensemble, songs and dance styles. Also, every Orisa has unique dance movement that reflects its attributes as we have different drums for each Orisa. That is, the musical instruments used for each Orisa is different. The musical instrument for Sango and Yemoja is bata, Ifa is for Agogo and other Orisas is Dundun.

Songs enhance emotional and physical participation in the act of worship and often lead to ecstatic experiences. During worship when the singing and dancing penetrate wholly into every being of the worshipper, spirit possession may follow and the possessed devotee may give message from the divinity (as a vehicle of communication btw us and orisa) lighter songs may occur during the ritual. Also certain songs dedicated to the divinities are song in their honour as occasion demand. These songs are rendered to show the qualities and nature of the particular divinity. The characteristics of the divinity are also revealed through songs rendered during worship. The officiating priests never forget the order in which they should be song.
     

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Bàtà drummers at Osun Grove - Photo credit Google Image courtesy Ifawemimo

Dancing on the other hand is no less prominent during worship than songs. There is therefore a place for dancing in the rituals especially during the sacred day worship and during the annual festival celebration. The dances take definite form, depending on the divinities to which the offerings are made. The dances which are ritualistic in nature is more emotional responses to the rhythm of music, they are symbolic and revealed something sacred. Most of the dance are fixed patterns and must be done correctly. Which foot goes forward first, which movement of the hand and body accompanying it, which turns are taken next, and how many times each component of the pattern is to be repeated; all these must be carefully observed.

In conclusion, When the musical instruments are played and danced to, it brings spiritual inspiration and relief to man.

Egbelade Omitonade Ifawemimo practices African Traditional Religion – Yemoja worshipperShe is a Yemoja priestess who is also versed in Ifa, Researcher, Theologian. A graduate of Obafemi Awolowo University where she studied Economics Education, Ile Ife, Osun State. Omitinade is from Ibadan, Oyo State, Nigeria.

She can be reached here @ifawemimo


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Two hundred years since the heroic Barbados slave rebellion


A post I have always wanted to read.

Repeating Islands

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An article by Christian Høgsbjerg for The Socialist Worker.

April 2016 marks the centenary of the Easter Rising in Dublin, a heroic uprising against the British Empire in its oldest colonial territory.

But this month also marks the bicentenary of an earlier and less well known heroic “Easter rising” against the brutality of imperial domination in another longstanding British colony.

This took place in Barbados in 1816, where it has come to be known as “the Bussa Rebellion” after one of its main leaders. “General Bussa” was an African-born slave who died in the rising and later became a national hero.

The Bussa Rebellion represented the first of a series of notable “late slave revolts” across the British West Indies which were central in finally forcing the British to end colonial slavery across its Empire in 1833.

It saw an uprising spread until over half of the island was engulfed…

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By adejokeiyabadan Posted in REBLOGS