Tag: oranmiyan

  • Oranmiyan chief Awofisayo bows out

    The President-General, Oranmiyan Worldwide, Prince Felix Awofisayo, has bowed out of the leadership of the group.

    Awofisayo announced his decision to call it quits while declaring open a one-day seminar on leadership skill for members of the group in Osogbo. He said he would, from time to time, offer useful pieces of advice that can assist the group.

    Oranmiyan Group is a political movement instituted in 2005 to canvass for Governor Rauf Aregbesola’s political ambitions.

    Awofisayo, who has been leading the group since its inception, said he had decided to quit to ensure that another leader emerges to inject fresh ideas into group to achieve its desired goals.

    He praised members of the group for the roles they played “in thwarting the efforts of ballot snatchers, thuggery and intimidation during the first and second term elections of Governor Aregbesola”.

    According to him, the group was vindicated that the state has undergone and still undergoing tremendous positive changes under the administration.

    “As a political movement, and during our journey, we fought insidious political battles and won fair and square.

    “You were the bedrock and vanguard of that just cause and I am very proud to have led the group through that turbulent period and share in your triumph and tribulations,” Awofisayo said.

    Acknowledging that during the past five years of the administration, there have been challenges, he noted that members of the group have actually contributed immensely to the development of the state in all aspects.

    He, however, stressed that the leadership training for the members aimed at motivating them to focus on the group’s original goals.

    The Oranmiyan boss added that it was also aimed at enhancing the capacity of members towards working in tandem with mission of Aregbesola’s government.

    In his address, one of the facilitators, Comrade Isa Aremu said the sustainability of the group should be paramount in the minds of members.

    He said the training would enable members to acquire necessary leadership skills to play significant roles that could enhance robust political engagement between the government and the people.

     

     

     

  • When Oranmiyan threw Ife into festive mood

    When Oranmiyan threw Ife into festive mood

    Visitors keep trooping to the  Oduduwa grove in Ile-Ife. For the tourists, it is to catch sight of the famous Oranmiyan staff, while the locals go there mostly to pay obeisance to the ancient icon that has become a monument, an existing reminder of the historical  Oranmiyan.

    It was in honour of the great man that the ancient city of Ile-Ife was in festive mood recently.

    The 2014 Oranmiyan  festival was a three-day event that combined celebration of culture, fun and  discourse on the historical figure, Oranmiyan.

    It kicked off with gbajure, the traditional procession to announce the ceremony. It was also an opportunity for the organizers and participants to obtain royal blessing from the Ooni of Ife, Oba Okunade Sijuade, Olubuse11.  There was also a festival arts display, all within the vicinity of the Palace of Ooni.

    The second day of the festival was aimed at imbibing the Yoruba sense of history and appreciation of traditional values into the youths. A leadership training was organized  for prefects of secondary schools in  Ile-Ife.

    Being a traditional festival, ayo olopon,  the Yoruba leisure game of wit and outmanoeuvring, took the centre stage.  Though a festival, it was an assemblage of people with their common patrimony coming to celebrate their ancestry.

    Dexterity in traditional drumming is a valued asset with the role the drums, in different shades and sizes, play in an African setting. The traditional drumming completion was also held on the second day. It was an event that attracted many enthusiasts to the palace at Enuwa.

    There was a special lecture delivered by the Alayemure of Ido-Osun, Oba Aderemi Adeniyi-Adedapo, titled  Oranmiyan: What is in a name?  The traditional ruler went down memory lane tracing the genealogy of Oranmiyan, his place in the Yoruba history and Ife as athe cradle of humanity.

    After the lecture, the traditional ayo olopon game continued. So also the dance and drumming b y the drummers who had thronged the palace for the event.

    The Ooni of Ife, in a special address, thanked the organizers of the  festival, Flabsy   Tours and the government of Osun State.

    The Ooni also called Yoruba people to always uphold the truth in narrating the history of Yoruba. His words: “We have seen so many turning their faces towards traditional institutions, looking for the truth to get satisfied about our history. What has been happening is that the more they do, the more they get confused and disillusioned because of the attitude of some traditional rulers particularly in Yorubaland. They wage wars over our history and I continue to wonder what their motives could be. I have also been tempted to say that  they desire to rewrite history.

    “We have read a number of chronicles on the Yoruba history, but disappointedly, many were self-serving, parochial and absolute deviation from the truth. It is indubitable that our histories, through our links from Ife to Ekiti, Ijebu, to Oyo, Ibadan, even those in the Diaspora, our oriki and Ifa mythology have proved that Ile Ife is the source. The stool of Ooni is created by Oduduwa, the first Ooni of Ife.

    “As elders, we need not bicker over issues like our history because truth comes from Olodumare and we should not be distorting it for posterity. We should not continue to wage war as our children would be confused and lose interest at the expense of the our future. Whether we like it or not, our lands shall remain, but all of us shall depart. We need to bequeath a history that is the truth so that the future generation and the people will have no argument against us.”

    Speaking on behalf of the festival consultants, Flabsy Travel and Tours Limited, the managing director of the company Mr. Abiodun Olabampe, thanked everybody for the support given to the festival which led to its success. He said his company would continue to work for greater cultural awareness among the people and also promote tourism in the state. He also used the opportunity to thanks corporate sponsors like Nutricima, Grand Oak and others that contributed in one way or the other to the success of the festival.

    He promised that next year’s edition would be bigger and better.

  • Aregbesola, Òrànmíyàn’s Chief of Staff

    Aregbesola, Òrànmíyàn’s Chief of Staff

    I had sworn that my first visit to Oshogbo would be to its world-famous Osun Sacred Grove. Instead, I attended a “mega” rally in the historic town of Iwo, one of many at which Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola is asking the Oshun people to renew his mandate as their governor. I had first taken notice of him for his spartan look which together with his beard halfway between shaggy and kempt, his ubiquitous white skull-cap, and his straight bearing spoke more of an ascetic, a hermit even, than of a governor-in-waiting. This was while he fought in the courts to claim his mandate wrongly awarded to his opponent. Then I took notice again after he had entered the State House in Oshogbo and President Jonathan was about to take his turn at the favourite pastime of our heads of state: increasing the already unbearable suffering of the people by removing a phantom subsidy on petrol. If I recall correctly, Aregbesola was the only governor that said no to the further enrichment of billionaire contractors at the expense of the people. I wanted to meet him then,  and it was only fitting that I should make his personal acquaintance at Freedom Park in Lagos, during the night of tributes to Mandela, led by Wole Soyinka, in November last year. I had heard that he was expected, but the evening had worn on a bit before he came in and walked sprightly to join Soyinka and Femi Falana, two tables removed from where I was seated with Odia Ofeimun, Kole Omotoso, and Tunde Babawale. Surprised that I had yet to meet Ogbeni, Ofeimun had led me to shake hands with the man. Seven months after that first encounter, there I was in Iwo to witness first-hand how he mixed the ingredients to fashion a political persona that is quite unlike any other in our contemporary political history.

    I set out from Oshogbo at about 11 AM with Mr Solagbade Amodeni, former Commissioner for Natural Resources in Ondo State, childhood friend of Ogbeni’s and now a voluntary political associate. His mission of gauging the level of preparedness and mood of the people for the rally coincides with mine. As early as Awo town, about 15 minutes from Iwo, we see buses, some screen-painted with campaign posters, ferrying supporters to the venue, small roadside crowds brandishing brooms, the symbol of Ogbeni’s party, the All Progressives Congress (APC). We arrive in Iwo just after noon and feel immediately the energy in the air. On Bowen University Road in the Oke Odo area, all feet, it seems, are heading to the township stadium (actually, only a fenced field), venue of the rally, about a kilometre away. A record store is blasting Aregbesola’s praise in Yoruba. Various tee-shirt groups, walking campaign posters: brown tee-shirts that say “’D’ Team proudly support (sic) Rauf,” red-and-black  shirts are the Progressive Torchbearers and say only “Rauf 2014 OK,” green shirts proclaim him “Oranmiyan — Yoruba Legend,” lemon-green shirts matched with baseball caps are “DeRaufs,” among many other political aso-ebi.

    Finally, we are at the venue, a third full, the crowd swelling by the minute. Sounds of competing talking drum groups, in uniforms, can now be heard underneath the amplified music of King Wasiu Ayinde Marshall, KWAM I, leading his fuji band to entertain the crowd. Brooms, banners and posters everywhere, and even more tee-shirt groups, among them a clutch of women in navy-blue shirts advertising Aregbesola’s “tablets of knowledge” programme with the slogan “Opon Imo, Empowering minds, Enriching lives.” I make my way towards the stage — two actually, one covered, with seats for dignitaries, and an open deck with the microphone stands. With the help of Amodeni, I am allowed past security and onto the speakers’ deck where I can more clearly see the crowd. To get there, I have to walk past the covered stage, at the back of which is a big banner announcing Ogbeni’s signature programmes: “O’Reap (rural enterprise and agriculture), O’Schools (rebuilding schools), O’Meals (balanced diet nutrition for pupils), O’Yes (employment). At the bottom of the banner, a sense of rhyme with O’seun! I climb up the speakers’ stage and scan the “stadium,” nearly half-full and quite agog by now. Someone cries “My in-law!” and I feel hands enveloping me from behind. It is Basiru Ajibola, one of the fearless tribunes of the NANS crusades for democracy and social justice in the eighties and early nineties, now Ogbeni’s Commissioner for Special Duties. I’m his in-law because he had the good sense to travel further down south to Igbide in Isoko South LGA to find his better half. As soon as he lowers his arms, someone else cries “Comrade!” and hugs me. It is Semiu Okanlanwon, another NANS veteran, now a special assistant to Ogbeni. I learn that Segun “Red Drum” Maiyegun, former NANS president, is in the fold too as a special assistant but duty has taken him elsewhere today.

    The atmosphere is getting more electric, a red helicopter is hovering above the thickening crowd, circling the vicinity in wide surveillance arcs, and there is very little time to reminisce — that must wait till after the rally. Basiru and Semiu dart off and I turn to read the banner on the wall at the back of the speakers’ stage. “Òrànmíyàn, Leekan si!” it says. “Òrànmíyàn, Once more.” It is a clever pun, as another banner more baldly asserts: “The Return of Òrànmíyàn.” Ogbeni as the reincarnation of the legendary son of Oduduwa whose fabled staff in Ife is probably the most treasured ancestral relic in Yorubaland. Ogbeni has even had the staff stitched onto the breast pockets of some of his shirts and wears it as a personal logo. If the fastidiously austere Aregbesola can be accused of self-regard, it would be in this appropriation of a hallowed ancestor, but I strain in vain for any outward sign of insincerity. I see, instead, the clever use of myth, blended with pop culture. For soon, Fadeyi Oloro, a popular Yoruba actor, famous for his roles as Ifa priest, comes on stage with his entourage, all in danshikis and blackened faces and hands, one of them carrying a basket of horns adorned with feathers, cowries, strips of red cloth; incantations follow. At their exit, pop culture takes the stage. KWAM I has left his band on a stage 50 meters away to join Sir Shina Peters (Afro-juju/Aregbesola, the difference is clear), Weird MC and Tony Tetuila for banter and photos with their fans among the technical crew and campaign and security teams. Then Peters, Tetuila and Weird MC perform. Back with his band, KWAM I leads sweeping-dance choruses in-between his colleagues’ acts: “Igbale ti m’owa, DEMO ni mo ti gba.” With this broom, I will sweep the reactionary party away, DEMO being a reference to S. L. Akintola’s Nigerian National Democratic Party which allied with the Northern People’s Congress in the First Republic to break the dominance of Awolowo’s Action Group in the old Western Region.

    More than three hours have passed since I entered the stadium. And now a loud buzz followed by faces turned en mass to the stadium entrance warn of Aregbesola’s arrival. He makes his entry to the tune of the song “Stand Up for the Champion” cued for the moment by the DJ. The stadium is now feverish with excitement. Ogbeni’s convoy is led in by a throng of jogging men, followed by a horse-rider, and then an aquamarine 24-seater bus, Aregbesola perched atop the sun-roof. He is dressed in his customary white skull cap, matched with ochre aso oke danshiki, sokoto and shoes. In his right hand is a broom with which he sweeps the air above the crowd. At the entrance to the stage, he dismounts and half-runs to the speakers’ deck to greet the crowd, not to speak yet, this time serenaded by KWAM I. Then he takes his seat on the canopied stage while Osun’s political worthies in the APC fold address the crowd: Isiaka Adeleke, the state’s first governor, now a senator; Senator Sola Adeyeye, the re-election campaign director; Najeem Salaam, speaker of the state house of assembly; Mrs Grace Titilayo Laoye-Tomori, the deputy governor, among others.

    At 4:55 PM, Ogbeni is introduced, right after his deputy has addressed the crowd. He dances onto the stage, broom in hand, to the pulsating beat of Skelewu. He begins his address with a Muslim chant that progresses into a call-and-response with his audience, then he goes through a long list of personalities and groups whom he greets. When he gets to “the great Nigerian students,” he departs from the formulaic “Mo ki” to salute them in the familiar idiom. “Great Nigerian students!” he hails them, and gets the obligatory response, “Great!” “Great gbogbo!!” Gbogbo!! “Great gbagba!!! Gbagba!!! Great gbogbo-gbagba!!!! Greeaaaat!!!! At which point the great Nigerian students in the crowd, all now mysteriously massed in front of him just behind the security fence, break into song. “There is victory for us. In the struggle for Africa, there is victory for us.” Now choirmaster, Aregbesola leads them on to fuller voice. “Forward . . .  ever! Backward . . .  never! In the struggle for Africa, There is viii-ctoo-ryyy for us!!” Then calling on the youths to resist any attempt to turn elections into military operations, to rig the vote, he raises another staple of student street protests. “How many people soldier go kill o?” They snatch it from his lips. “How many people soldier go kill!” “I say, How many people power go kill o?” Tempo rising higher, “How many people power go kill!! Aayyy, dem go kill us tire . . .” Slight of frame, were he in jeans, sweat-soaked tee-shirt, and a beret, he would pass for a 21-year-old student leader rousing his dare-devil comrades to confront tanks and rifles with stones! Very stealthily, Ogbeni works the crowd to a passionate affirmation of his re-election against any machination of the opposition party, brooms hoisted, fists clenched and raised, talking-drums in frenzied rhythms and KWAM I supplying fuji chants to every applause line.

    Ogbeni had been speaking for over half an hour to a rapturous crowd. Amodeni comes upstage to nudge me off the loud-speaker box where I am now seating to give my feet a little reprieve. He says we should leave “just before Aregbe finishes his speech and the crowd surges after him, hampering our exit.” I follow him. Many others have decided to avoid that scenario as well. Soon, we are back on Bowen University Road for the kilometre-long trek to where Amodeni’s car is parked. Under a large white canopy on the right side of the street, at about midway, is a gathering that will discuss the rally till the wee hours. We enter the car and have barely shut the doors than Ogbeni’s convoy is upon us.

    Crowds line either side of the road in the outskirts of Iwo, in Awo, in Ogbagba, down to the suburbs of Oshogbo, brandishing brooms and shouting, APC! Change! The students are in the convoy too. “Aluta Continua!!!” says the back of the white minibus in front of us, belonging no doubt to the Student Union Government of one of Osun’s tertiary institutions. Above the back bumper the bus declares, “One for all, all for one.” I turn to take in the countryside and when I return to the road I see that a different minibus, plate number “Aluta 003,” has replaced the previous one. “Aluta Intervention,” this one says under the roof before declaiming more loudly above its back bumper “TO HELL WITH OPPRESSION!” The heady defiance of student “governments” finds a perfect echo in the quiet revolution of the state government under Ogbeni’s charge. Or not so quiet, after all, given the exclamatory O’s of his programmes: O’Schools, O’Meals, O’Reap, O’Yes!

    Nineteen days after, Aregbesola’s brother governor in neigbouring Ekiti State shockingly loses his mandate to a former governor impeached on several grounds, including corruption, in an election that will be known to history by the unfortunate phrase “stomach infrastructure.” The very improbability of that victory gives the opposition in Osun, led once again by an aspirant under a heavy cloud of suspicion, high hopes. If what I witnessed before, during and after the Iwo rally is anything to go by, I doubt very much that it is not a highly misplaced hope. Aregbesola cuts the picture of a man totally immersed in his people and their history, one who comes from and is of the masses. Blessed with boundless energy, he is astonishingly reanimated in their midst to star in the “total” people’s theatre that each of his mega rallies truly is. I don’t believe in reincarnation but I would bet on Ogbeni’s return as Òrànmíyàn’s chief of staff!

  • Oranmiyan Tower that  secures lives, property

    Oranmiyan Tower that secures lives, property

    Since the construction and commissioning of the Oranmiyan Security Tower in the commercial district of  Ile-Ife, Osun State on December 9, last year, there has been no incident of bank robbery in the ancient town which incessantly plagued the financial institutions in the area and its environs in the past.

    The visionary initiative of the executive secretary of Ife Central Local Government, Dr. Taiwo Olaiya, no doubt, has enhanced the security of lives and property in the entire Ile-Ife town.

    Also, constructed behind the Security Tower is a modern Shopping Complex to support business in the area. The facility has offices and a canteen. Specifically, the canteen is to serve traditional dishes for the tourists likely to visit the place.

    A visibly elated Olaiya, no doubt, was impressed with the facility. He betrayed his joy at the commissioning when he revealed that the construction took after a similar facility in Washington DC in the United States of America.

    According to him, the edifice, which is about 140 feet high and occupying 15 feet square meters, is fortified with modern electronic multimedia equ-ipment, the best that could be found anywhere in Nigeria.

    With security officers, including regular and mobile police, men of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps, operating on different floors of the six-story tower, it is easy to monitor the heinous activities of the armed bandits. The security men are at their duty post on a 24-hour basis operating four shifts of six hours each.

    One of the floors is equipped with CCTV and communication gadgets that receive data from and monitor the infra-red four, three, two and uni-dimensional cameras placed on the rooftops and other strategic areas of the town like Ori-Olokun Roundabout, Ooni’s Palace Square, Sabo Junction, Fajuyi/More Junction, Ilesa Road, Obafemi Awolowo University frontage, Ibadan Road Axis, and Parakin Obalufe Scheme.

    Three giant LED TV screens are installed on the tower’s frontal three walls for promotions of the rich Ife/Yoruba cultural heritage and advertisements.

    The state governor, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, who was proud of the project at the commissioning, reiterated his adminis-tration’s commitment to effective security. He maintained that any good government must be committed to protection of the life of its people and property.

    Aregbesola said the project was another testimony of the unprecedented governance his administration has been superintending in Osun in the last three years. He said: “This is one of the greatest innovations by the local government to protect the lives and properties of our people in the source that is why it is irritating when they are comparing our government with Peoples Democratic Party’s government. They cannot match us in all ramifications. They were there for seven and half years and nothing to show for their stay in government. Some people are even insinuating that we cannot come to Ife comfortably they cannot match our popularity in Ife at all. They can never be popular than us because Ife as the source of Yoruba race is the source of the virtuous and every other good things therefore a killer, political bandit can never come from great Ife.”

    Just like many people have believed the Oranmiyan Security Tower and the Shopping Complex too will have direct, positive impact on the lives of the people of this city, the governor said that it would greatly enhance security of life and property, the shopping complex will further facilitate the flourishing of trade and business.

     

  • Ekiti Day holds in Lagos

    Ekiti Parapo, Lagos, will hold the third edition of the Ekiti Day celebration on November 9 at the Oranmiyan Hall of the Lagos Airport Hotel, Ikeja, by 11am.

    The Ekiti Day celebration is an annual event that brings Ekiti sons and daughters living in Lagos together to celebrate and honour Ekiti indigenes, who have distinguished themselves. It is also an occasion to raise funds for the development of the state.

    Those to be honoured at this year’s event include Bishop Peter Adebiyi; Otunba Kunle Olasope; Chief Deji Fasuan; Chief Sam Bolarinde; Dr. Olamide Orekunrin; Ms. Folakemi Fatogbe and Mr. & Mrs. Folu Ayeni. Former Ogun State Governor Aremo Olusegun Osoba will chair the event. Former Vice-President Atiku Abubakar is the chief launcher.

    Asiwaju of Ile-Ife Chief Alex Duduyemi and Chairman of the Lagos Island Club Prince Ademola Dada are special guests of honour.

    The Chief Host is Ekiti State Governor Kayode Fayemi.

  • Oranmiyan: Beyond the hosting right

    SIR: The raging controversy over the right to host the annual Oranmiyan festival between the Ooni of Ife and the Alaafin of Oyo could be said to be the continuation of the age long supremacy tussle between the two topmost thrones in Yorubaland. Beyond that, it shows the place of the legendry character among the Yoruba pantheons and it is an evident that our traditional leaders are living up to task as guardians of our culture, customs, traditions and heritage. Oranmiyan was a mythological personality credited with many extraordinary actions. He was believed to be the founder of the ruling dynasties and actually reigned in Benin, Oyo and Oko now Oke-ona Egba where he died and was a king of Ile-Ife all during his lifetime.

    Ife is qualified because Oranmiyan was a prince, a king and had his tomb and obelisk in Ile-Ife. Oyo on the other hand is qualified because Oranmiyan was the founder of Oyo and its throne. What applies to Oyo is also applicable to Oko. Consequently, celebrating Oranmiyan by the Oyo and Oko thrones is celebrating the founder’s day.

    In fact, veneration of the Oranmiyan could not be limited to the two cities or thrones. This is because Oranmiyan was taken by some Yoruba towns as a god of war that must be propitiated before venturing into war in the turbulent period in the Yoruba history.

    Beyond the annual festival, of greater imperative is how we can apply Oranmiyan’s political and organizational acumen and sagacity to solve our nation-building problem. For example, some of the political theories propounded by enlightenment philosophers in Europe in the 18th century like the concept of separation of powers, and checks and balances propounded by Jean Montesquieu (1689-1775), were the basis of the Oranmiyan’s innovations in government more than eight centuries earlier. Oyo Mesi, the council of state in Oyo Empire had its idea in separation of powers and checks and balances to prevent dictatorship and tyranny.

    The claimants to Oranmiyan have a great task at hand and one expects that subsequent celebrations should be more of intellectual brainstorming than cultural display and merrymaking.

    • Adewuyi Adegbite

    Apake, Ogbomoso.

  • Celebrating heritage of Oranmiyan

    The ancient town of Ile Ife in Osun State, is  one place that relishes its history as the cradle of the Yoruba race. According to Yoruba cosmogony, Ife was where the world began through the progenitor of the Yoruba race, Oduduwa.  The myth says Oduduwa  descended from heaven  through a chain with three items of creation. He  threw a handful of earth on the water, put a cockerel on the ground to scatter the earth to create the present  Ile Ife from where the world originated.

    The town has a rich culture with world renowned artefacts that date back to more than 500 BC.  A tour of the town affords one the opportunity to enjoy and appreciate its rich heritage. Starting from the palace of the Ooni at Enuwa area of the town, one sees monuments and artefacts that reinforce this history of Ife and by extension, the Yoruba race. It is in appreciation of the heritage bequeathed to them that the Ife people have decided to bring together tourism cum cultural activities that would increase the number of local and foreign tourists that visit the town. One of these festivals the town is currently working to bring the town to international prominence, and in the process, attract tourists and income, is the Oranmiyan festival (Odun Oranmiyan).

    The festival, which is being marketed and co-ordinated by Flabsy Travels and Tours, will hold from  September 26 to 28, 2013, in Ile-Ife.

    Speaking on the festival, Alhaji Bashir Awolorebo, a former federal minister, who said  Odun Oranmiyan is a cultural rebirth that will rally all Yoruba nation to promote the heritage of their forbearers, added that the organiser has taken the right step, and called on all and sundry to give the desired support to make the festival a success.

    The Lufe of Iremo-Ife, Oba Solomon Omisakin, said, “Ife is the source of all Yoruba nation and Oranmiyan, a war lord and king, played a dominant role at building a great empire within and beyond the Yoruba kingdoms.” He urged tourism  and culture promoters  to work together as one nation in order to promote the richness of Yoruba heritage.

    The Olu of Famia, Obalufe of Iremo-Ife, Akogun, described  Oranmiyan as a king and warrior of many kingdoms before ascending the throne of his father as the fourth  Ooni of Ife.

    He said:  ”Oranmiyan’s place is second to none in the history of Yoruba race.”

    The head of Flabsy said the Ooni has mandated him to  develop a sustaining concept for the festival. He mandated us to promote and let the world know that Oranmiyan deserves to be celebrated as a legend who expanded the Yoruba dynasties from Oyo to Benin and beyond.”

    According to him, “Our history is supposed to be a unifying factor and should not divide Yoruba people. Hence, Oranmiyan festival should be a bond to project our cultural diversity as derivable from a source and for a purpose ordained by Olodumare.

    “Therefore, Yoruba dynasties and the people are one and should be seen as one and totally committed to the sustenance of our cultural values, which is the vision and mission of the Ooni of Ife to see that we foster unity among the Yoruba dynasties and nation through her history.”

    Addressing the royal fathers present, he said: “Our royal fathers, we are here because you are there. The festival is your festival.  You are the owners of this land. We are to support you and make you happy by  sustaining and celebrating our heritage of which you are the custodians.”

    Talking about the Oranmiyan festival,  Mr Olabampe of Flabsy Travels and Tours, said that to make the event more coordinated, registration of participants for the traditional drumming competition and Ayo olopon will start on September 25, at the Ooni’s palace, Ile-Nla.

    “We are expecting 20 participants for the drumming and Ayo olopon competitions, with five finalists to go home with different prizes for their skill, cultural knowledge and promotion.”

    On the second day of the festival (Thursday September 26), chief priests and their family members will be in their white robe regalia to pay obeisance to the Ooni of Ife, Oba Sijuwade.

    However, the homage to the palace of the Ooni of Ife by the Chief Priests (Eredumi/Akogun) along with their families, will move in a procession for the opening of the grove.

    According to Olabampe, “this year’s celebration is coming with a special festival lecture, with theme, ‘Oranmiyan: What is in a name?’, to be delivered by a guest lecturer, Oba Adedapo Tejuoso, Osile Oke Ona,  Egba at Oduduwa Hall, OAU, Ile-Ife.

    “Later in the day, the participants would be entertained at the frontage of the palace where the kick-off of  the traditional drumming competitions and Ayo olopon will take place with the competitors slugging out with one another.

    Proposed judges for the drumming competition, according to Olabampe, include King Sunny Ade, Mr. Jimi Solanke and Chief Durojaiye Aremu, who are expected to select the best five drummers for the final round.

    “On Friday 27 September, we will be opening an exhibition of traditional wares, costumes and artifacts, which will be rounded off with the grand finale traditional drummers and Ayo olopon competitions.

    “On September 28, there will be a procession, led by Eredumi and Akogun around the town from the Oranmyan Staff to Lagere through Iremo to the palace and back to the Oranmiyan grove where different traditional groups and chiefs will pay homage to the Ooni of Ife,”Olabampe added.

    For the ancient town of Ile Ife, this is the time for cultural rebirth and time to make the world to stop, listen and experience their culture. For them, with the Oranmiyan, the fourth Ooni of Ife’s legacy all over the town, it is just proper that a festival in his honour should be put in place for the world to come and see.

     

  • Ife people celebrate Oranmiyan Festival

    Oranmiyan was one of the seven sons of Okanbi, the only child of Oduduwa, the progenitor of the Yoruba.

    The legend, Oranmiyan, despite being the grandson of Oduduwa was the pioneer Alaafin of Oyo. He was famed as a strong enigmatic leader who led his people into a path of greatness that lasted several centuries, leaving a heritage that lasts till today.

    After establishing Oyo, he left and conquered the Benin people and again founded the Benin Kingdom. After several wars and conquests, Oranmiyan returned to Ife, the cradle of the Yoruba and was the sixth Ooni of Ife.

    He later joined his ancestors. The place where the staff of Oranmiyan lies in Ile-Ife, Osun State is now a centre of tourist attraction. This great legend that has continued to shape the destiny of a race deserves to be celebrated as a unifying force for the Yoruba people. Oranmiyan is a unique name that has occupied a column of Yoruba history as a warrior, conqueror and legend.

    An organization committed to the development of Tourism in Nigeria, FLABSY Travels & Tours has received the approval of the Ooni of Ife, Alaiyeluwa Oba Okunade Sijuwade, to organize a festival which would bring all Ife indigenes and the entire Yoruba at home and in diaspora like Brazil, Trinidad and Tobago, Jamaica, Cuba, United States of America etc. together and use the platform of the festival to identify and bring to the fore a unique and binding tradition for the Yoruba people, utilise the platform to propagate Oranmiyan as a central figure in Yorubaland and explore all creative means to ensure that through the festival celebrations, Oranmiyan staff becomes a tourist haven, ensure that the festival is enlisted in the calendar of the Nigerian Tourism Development Corporation and the World Tourism Calendar, achieve a top-of-the-mind festival event for Odun Oranmiyan and create awareness for Ife indigenes at home and abroad use the platform to drive investment opportunity to Ile-Ife.

    The festival event would be devoid of Political affiliations or leanings such that every Yoruba man would be eager to attend yearly and attract corporate organizations that may use the festival opportunity to showcase their brands as well as compete for sponshorship of the festival to achieve optimum mileage and revenue generation.

    The significance of Odun Oranmiyan cannot be over-emphasized, as it is the festival that will unites the people together. It is also a celebration of a deity and warrior of the Yoruba. Therefore, FLABSY Travels & Tours is determined to celebrate Odun Oranmiyan 2013 in August 2013 so well that people will want to be associated with the annual festival not just as Ife people but as citizens of Osun and Yoruba in general. Oranmiyan is arguably the most deified of the whole Yoruba deities. He was only the Yoruba King that was confirmed to have established other towns, like Oyo and Benin, became their King and later returned to his abode and also became a King before his eventual transformation as denoted in the Oranmiyan Cenotaph.

    The Oranmiyan Cenotaph is a renowned tourist centre that has drawn million of visitors to Ile-Ife and has continued to do same. The name has appeared in many cultural and historical books. Oranmiyan is a religion to many in Yoruba land as it is being worshiped while they visit the Cenotaph to pay homage and reverence to the deity.