•Skulls, ancient cowries, even tortoise
Relics of normal life in time past are much sought after
in sacrificial preparations. Some of these objects and materials, to the
uninitiated, are very hard to come by. To the uninitiated, seeing a tortoise
could probably be at the zoo, but for those who indulge in sacrificial
practices, they know where exactly to go, they know the right market and they
know the right people to call on.
The traditional Oliha and Ekiosa markets in Benin City are the right places to go if one needs those rare animals, native chalks, coins and several other materials which have spent over two hundred years. Feathers of rare birds like ostrich, sparrow and even vulture, all of which have different connotations, as investigations revealed, you can get in these markets also.
Things that were hitherto used as means of exchange in
the days of old including cowries have now become ingredients of sacrificial
preparations. Invariably, earthen pots serve as vessel for the preparations.
Earthen pots are still very popular in Benin because they keep food steamy.
Local restaurants serve delicacies like black soup, banga soup or even pepper
soup in earthen pots. Whereas earthen pots play major role in the preparation
of several sacrifices performed by traditionalists, these sacrifices are kept
mainly in junctions because they believe that many legs cross such places.
The practice continues among Binis, according to a
resident. “The practice is still very relevant here, basically, because we love
our tradition which includes sacrifices”, he boasted. There was a time Bishop
Margaret Idahosa of Church of God Mission was asked to comment on the
proliferation of churches in Benin City, and she said, “Is it not better we
have that than the usual sacrifices we see in the streets?”
Investigations revealed some of the reasons people resort
to the agelong practice of sacrifice include protection, search for luck, down
turn in circumstance. Others do it to seek the face of the gods against
conditions such as bareness, stagnation or to even ward off evil or unpalatable
situations. On a collective note, individuals or groups gather to make
sacrifice like in cases of annual festivals such as the Igue festival in Benin
Kingdom or other customary or periodic ones.
Some of these sacrifices are believed to be capable of
appeasing the ancestors or the gods of the land. In other instances, sacrifices
have been made to bring or stop rain depending on the situation.
Situations have been seen in the past where celebrants
who have invested heavily in coming ceremonies including burial, birthday
parties, call traditionalists to offer sacrifice to avert rain during the
occasions. In such instances, curious observers can see at a corner of a big
party or event people making wood fire and pouring palm oil and local gin to
seek the face of the gods and avert rain. We have the Osun Oshogbo festival in
Osun State, the Olokun festival in the South-west and even in Rio De Janeiro,
Brazil, which all serve as pointer that people are still enmeshed in
sacrificial offerings, if not obligations. Elsewhere people sacrifice to
deities which they connect to, including Ogun, Olokun,Yemoja, all of which
investigations showed still have active priests watching as gatemen in their
(the gods) continuous existence.
To further buttress the import of these deities and
sacrifices in Benin Kingdom and even other parts of the country, the people of
Ikhuenebo in Uhumwonde Local Government Area of Edo State, recently, vowed
never to cede any of their shrines to the people of Iguomo. Iguomo had claimed
that the land, where over twenty shrines are located in Ikhuenebo community,
belongs to them. The chief priest of Ikhuenobo, Chief Enawakponmwhem Aighobahi,
who took Sunday Vanguard round the shrines, said they will rather die than give
up the shrines.
He narrated, “Our shrines were founded by Oba Ewuare the
Great who led Benin Kingdom from 1440-1473. Where I am standing now, Oba Ewuare
is the founder of this Okwuainebenaka shrine. This shrine is number two in the
hierarchy of all Okwaihe in Ikwe. We have been here since over one thousand
years ago, we are not strangers. You can see the structure of the shrine. I am
the Ohen; among the top 16 Ohen chief priests, I am the second in hierarchy.
The senior one is at Ewiekoyu.
I am a descendant of Ohiobonikwe on that lineage because
the title is hereditary. So it came to us as a shock that Iguomo community said
that the whole of Ikhuobo land belongs to them”.
One could see that the community had not relented in
their efforts to give the gods what belongs to them through daily sacrifices.
This observation led Sunday Vanguard to Kemwinkemwin market, as the line where
the sacrificial materials is called in Oliha and Ekiosa markets.
The visit was quite revealing. Sunday Vanguard went with
a Bini interpreter, Ogieva Oyemwenosa, because those who deal in these
materials are elderly women who are traditionalists and don’t speak English. It
was learnt that the materials are used for sacrifices both for good and evil,
while those who deal in them are also pure traditionalists who worship
different gods. Walking round Kémwinkémwin could be scary because you see the
skulls of monkey, owl, pigeon, sparrow, hyena, live tortoise and their skulls
too. Any customer around the line definitely came to buy one sacrificial object
or another. Foreigners also come from Europe and America to purchase these
things because Sunday Vanguard was informed that some white people also worship
Olokun (river goddess).
At the Kemwinkemwin line of Oliha market, 76-year-old
Madam Christianah Oliha explained some of the materials to Sunday Vanguard:
“What I am holding now are the Azáolokun, Adá and the Ebèn, used for
worshipping Olokun. This one is Uleko, someone that has had his bath with juju
is the one that wears it. I have taken that bath, so I am free to wear it.
What about native chalk. What is it used for?
“Native chalk (Orhue) is used for juju dance; it can be ground and eaten. When you grind it, you put it in your hand and use it to praise God. Whether you go to church or you serve juju, when you pour
it out in your hand, you add salt to it and you use it to praise God to guide you and your family.
“Native chalk (Orhue) is used for juju dance; it can be ground and eaten. When you grind it, you put it in your hand and use it to praise God. Whether you go to church or you serve juju, when you pour
it out in your hand, you add salt to it and you use it to praise God to guide you and your family.
What about cowries?
“Ikpigho (cowries) are used to worship Olokun. We use them for good things, we don’t throw them away. You can use them for Orunmila (god served with white clothes), you can use it for Sángo, and you can also use it to plant evil.
“Ikpigho (cowries) are used to worship Olokun. We use them for good things, we don’t throw them away. You can use them for Orunmila (god served with white clothes), you can use it for Sángo, and you can also use it to plant evil.
How long have these things been in existence?
“It has been long, over two hundred years. I grew up to
meet them. When I was growing up, Anini (Benin coin used those days for
transactions) was used to buy things. Initially, cowries were being used for
transaction. From the cowries, we started using Anini. It was the Anini that I
grew up to meet. From Anini, we moved to Ekpini. All of them are here. From
Ekpini, we started using Kobo. Cowries were used for transaction during the
time of my forefathers.
Alligator pepper
“It is used when one wants to perform a juju ceremony. Alligator pepper mixed with Afòr, native chalk (Òrhue) and ash (Emuè) is used to clean abomination. With native pepper, you use it to cleanse yourself before you start the juju ceremony. This is what was applicable in the days of old. You grind the native chalk, put your leg on it and count six, take it round your neck which signifies cleansing before entering inside for the main juju ceremony”.
Asked when she started the business, Madam Oliha explained that she was into yam and goat business before she “entered the juju properties (Kèmwinkèmwin) business and so far it has favoured me and my family”.
“It is used when one wants to perform a juju ceremony. Alligator pepper mixed with Afòr, native chalk (Òrhue) and ash (Emuè) is used to clean abomination. With native pepper, you use it to cleanse yourself before you start the juju ceremony. This is what was applicable in the days of old. You grind the native chalk, put your leg on it and count six, take it round your neck which signifies cleansing before entering inside for the main juju ceremony”.
Asked when she started the business, Madam Oliha explained that she was into yam and goat business before she “entered the juju properties (Kèmwinkèmwin) business and so far it has favoured me and my family”.
She continued: “This business has been good for me. It
has improved the life of my children, it has given me all I require in life.
People started the business before most of us, our mothers were in this market
before they died but today it is our turn. I have spent over 15 years in the
business”. Explaining some of the materials in her shop, she said: “This is the
head of a goat used for sacrifice. This is the head of a bush meat (Akwághá),
it can cure epilepsy. This is called Akwá. This one is medicinal; it can be
used to cure people suffering from pile and cough when burnt”. Asked what the
clothes in her shop represent, she said: “The red is for worshipping Satan or
Olokun. If you want to worship Olokun, it is the dark red that you will use to
sew a very big skirt and shirt (Bulukú). For Sango (god of thunder), you take
both the red and white. For Ogun, you add the red; black and white together in
sewing the skirt and shirt. The broken eggs are used for child bearing while
the native pot is used for bathing when performing juju, you can also use it
for cooking medicine”.When Sunday Vanguard tried to find out whether she goes
to church, she asserted: “I am not a Christian. I am a juju worshipper. Not
that I don’t believe in God, I do. A clean mind serves God. My intentions are
good toward men and women; I don’t feel hatred for anybody. I will not see a
rich man and be angry with him. I feel the pains of others and I will always
beg God to assist them. I am not a devil, I worship juju. My mind is even
cleaner than the so-called Christians who attend church every Sunday. Juju
worshipping is our tradition and you are punished when you do evil to an innocent
person”.
Jehovah’s Witnesses
At Ekiosa market, Kèmwinkèmwin blossoms too. Madam Rose Omorodion, who declared that she was a juju priestess, started by narrating the history of the market. According to her: “Ekiosa market started with the Jehovah’s Witnesses; this was where they built their church when they came to Benin and that is why it is called Ekiosa meaning God’s market. When they left, we came here and started selling provisions, yam, plantain, beans, rice and this our business also started. The market started like that before government came to build it for us; then it caught fire. We did not know what caused the fire but this is the second time they are building the market. This is the Kémwinkémwin line of Ekiosa market; it is a place where you can find the things of the old including the native pot (Ákhá).
At Ekiosa market, Kèmwinkèmwin blossoms too. Madam Rose Omorodion, who declared that she was a juju priestess, started by narrating the history of the market. According to her: “Ekiosa market started with the Jehovah’s Witnesses; this was where they built their church when they came to Benin and that is why it is called Ekiosa meaning God’s market. When they left, we came here and started selling provisions, yam, plantain, beans, rice and this our business also started. The market started like that before government came to build it for us; then it caught fire. We did not know what caused the fire but this is the second time they are building the market. This is the Kémwinkémwin line of Ekiosa market; it is a place where you can find the things of the old including the native pot (Ákhá).
The native pot can be used to worship Olokun which we
serve in the river. This one is the statue of the Olokun (displaying it to
Sunday Vanguard), called Aza. This one is the white man’s money while the other
one is the cowrie used for business transaction in the days of old. After the
cowrie, we had the coin. So we said the cowrie cannot be destroyed because of
its importance and we decided to keep it. This one is Unién. You can use it to
cook and it is also medicinal. This one is the statue of Sángo (Ukiisángo). The
other one here is Ekò. It is chewed when a man or woman’s stomach is hot,
especially pregnant women. We have the olden days knife used in the shrine of
Orumila. We use the tortoise to prepare serious juju medicine”.
Asked why she took to this trade which is against the
Christian faith, Madam Omorodion declared she had no apologies being a juju
priestess. “I am a real juju woman, a river goddess. So I can be called upon at
any time if Sango is troubling someone. I can heal the person. I can also deal
with people that are being troubled by the river, I can bath the person and it
will stop. Traditional healing of river spirit which is called Ogbanje by
others is better than what they do in churches.
If we traditionalists want to bath a child from the
river, we fetch some leaves, squeeze them together and use it to bath the
child. When I was a child, I used to die every day due to spirit. But when an
old man from Kokori was invited, he bathed me and showed me how to deal with
the river goddess after he said I am a goddess from the river. I became
okay and since that time I have never been sick and I am over 60 years now. I
have the powers today and that is why I help people with similar problem. Some
people come from abroad for help, I bath them and when they go back they are
never sick again.” Asked to react to the comment that the tortoise is a
powerful animal for rituals, she stated: “Yes. Even when a person is cursed by
Ogun to die, the tortoise can be used to relieve the person from that curse
because, since the tortoise is a tricky animal, the curse on that person is
averted by the tortoise”.
On her part, Madam Mary Erhese told Sunday Vanguard that
that the materials they sell also help in preparing rituals for Benin sons and
daughters who travel abroad. Her words: “There are mothers who come to us for
help for their children who travelled and have not reached their destination.
They will come to us to give them materials and, when we do, before one month,
that child will get to where he or she is going”.
Source:
Vanguard
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