Cultural Tragedy in Nigeria as Ilorin Muslims Forcefully Reject Public Performance of Yoruba Religious Activities

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Oluwatoyin Adepoju

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Jul 9, 2023, 8:54:19 PM7/9/23
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"Idol worship","paganism" were terms used by Muslims on Facebook in describing classical Yoruba religion in connection with the ongoing religious crisis in the Yoruba city of Ilorin as the public celebration of a festival of classical Yoruba spirituality was banned by the Emir of Ilorin as the Yoruba religion  devotee at the centre of the festival plans described herself as facing  threats from irate Muslims.

Why must so many Muslims, individuals and communities,  be recurrently associated by their adherents with determined ignorance, with refusal to recognize the spiritual impulse as central to humanity and Islam as only one of many such expressions?

Why? 

Why?

Why?

In a world in which the African faces such huge challenges, in a world in which, in the language of the Arab founders of Islam, the word for "Black person" is the same as the word for "slave", if what an Arab woman once told me is factual, Black Muslims in an African country are struggling to denigrate their own ancestors' achievements in spiritual quest in a city in which Islam was implanted through conquest spearheading Fulani imperialism, the Fulani themselves being Africans who could have been victims of the trans -Saharan slave trade run by the Arabs.

In a world in which various cultures are struggling to define their own contributions to civilization in the face of the dominance of Western civilization even as Asia rises in prominence by building on the Western example while sustaining it's own cultural achievements, vocal Muslims in and in connection with Ilorin are referring to classical Yoruba spirituality, and therefore classical African religions,  as "idol worship", denigrating it as paganism, the very spirituality that is the only one from Nigeria that has created any global impact, as represented by the work of writers and artists, from writer Woke Soyinka to Chinua Achebe, Sylvester Okigbo, Ben Okri and Nnedi Okoroafor and artists Victor Ekpuk, Bruce Onobrakpeya, Olowe of Ise and Lamidi Fakeye who have drawn on those cultures.

I am not aware of any Nigerian writer or artist who has achieved prominence beyond Nigeria through work inspired largely by Islam or Christianity, although I know of such figures from other African countries.

I can't describe the sadness I am feeling.


Cornelius Hamelberg

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Jul 10, 2023, 8:49:35 AM7/10/23
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It’s understandable that the Emir could have refused to allow certain Yoruba cultural or religious festivals to be celebrated within the precincts of his palace, or the area that his religious title confers on him as his dominion which he may perhaps regard as wholly or partly under his jurisdiction to administer as he please and we are to suppose that would entail some prominent sign boards, some signs of warning declaring e.g “Trespassers will be prosecuted: No Egugun dancing allowed beyond this point” 


So, please let’s be clear about this: When you say that “the public celebration of a festival of classical Yoruba spirituality was banned by the Emir of Ilorin”, do you mean that out of the blue he just said ” It’s banned” and it was ” banned” in Ilorin?


Does he have that authority over the God of the Yoruba religion and if so, who gave him that kind of authority? The Nigerian Government? 


What happened last year? Did such celebrations take place, or is it not an annual/ seasonal event?


Shouldn’t the would-be celebrants give advance notice of their intentions? I don’t think that in India the Hindus go around drumming and dancing with statues of  Lord Krishna and singing devotional songs to him outside the Mosque in Delhi, or that the Muslims or some other religionists would slaughter or sacrifice a cow right outside a Hindu Temple. That would be a provocation that would set in motion another cycle of retaliatory violence


You can imagine similar tensions being fomented in the Middle East should Jews invade/ trespass( violate Muslims’ sense of holy space….


Let’s be reasonable and live peaceably, please…


With regard to that you have to say in the paragraph beginning with ”In a world in which the African faces such huge challenges” etc which was really not helpful, I would like to kindly remind you of the Prophet of Islam,Sallallahu alaihi wa salaam’s LAST KHUTBAH ( sermon) which  was delivered on the Ninth Day of Dhul-Hijjah, 10 A.H. (632 CE) and in which  he so emphatically addressed the issue of racism


"There is no superiority for an Arab over a non-Arab, nor for a non-Arab over an Arab. Neither is the white superior over the black nor is the black superior over the white -- except by piety."

Oluwatoyin Adepoju

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Jul 10, 2023, 9:13:12 AM7/10/23
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Cornelius

When you have looked into the subject and provided answers to those qs  we can discuss further.

Thanks
Toyin

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Cornelius Hamelberg

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Jul 10, 2023, 12:16:31 PM7/10/23
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Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju,


You have pissed me off again and I too “can't describe the sadness I am feeling.


You are " not aware of any Nigerian writer or artist who has achieved prominence beyond Nigeria through work inspired largely by Islam or Christianity..."


 Really? 


Have you ever heard of the intellectual giant of a scholar known as Usman Dan Fodio ?


If you give me your postal address I will send you some of his books ( works) that have been translated into English. I esteem his most succinct “Handbook On Islam Iman Ihsan: Shaykh Uthman Dan Fodio” -not a word wasted, not a wasted word. For me, and hopefully, for many others too, it is a sourcebook of Maliki Fiqh, second only to al-Muwatta and it has a place of pride among my library of Holy Books…


Discuss further.


Who told you that I want to discuss the matter any further? With whom? The Emir of Ilorin? The Nigerian Religion Police?


It's not my problem, it's yours, or as a Nigerian would put it, speaking Big Nigerian English, " You ( Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju) have a problem"


Just as Joe Biden has a problem, in fact, m more than just one big problem: snubbed by Saudi Arabia, reviled by Iran, ridiculed and disdained by Israel, China, Russia, North Korea, and things could go horribly wrong on all those fronts guaranteeing that he doesn’t get re-elected 


Something for your imagination

Oluwatoyin Adepoju

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Jul 11, 2023, 6:03:11 AM7/11/23
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Great thanks for the offer. I'll send you my address.

Are you aware of any impact of Usman Dan Fodio beyond Nigeria?

I would like to know about it.

As for people identifying with him or his ideas  within Nigeria, it seems to be limited to Muslims.

Interfaith communication in Nigeria does not seem to be high, as far as I can see.

I'm sorry to say that Usman Dan Fodio's influence on the character of Northern Nigerian Islam is not likely to be inspiring to many non-Muslims and may be problematic for those Muslims who believe in a humanism embracing all, non-Muslims and the vulnerable in Islam.

The logic and style of Usman Dan Fodio's Islam, in it's conquest of the Hausa states, of Ilorin and seeking to move further into Yorubaland until it was stopped at the famous Battle of Oshogbo, if I got the name right, seems to be an ethos of conquest, of Fulani and Islamic  supremacist orientations forever projecting Islamic ascendancy even as it resists creative change within itself, thereby breeding a culture often defined by inhumanity, reverberating in massacres,   recurring incidence of Islamic terrorist groups and refusal to fully  accommodate other faith orientations as in the demonization and attacks on Christians and Yoruba traditional worshippers in Ilorin.

I expect there is much more to Northern Nigerian Islam but I understand those features I described as the most prominent from outside the regional expression of that the faith.

I am interested, though, in Dan Fodio's written statements of vision, which one could compare with the reality of his style of govt and his legacy, to understand the intersection of religious and political vision in theory and practice.

Thanks
Toyin



Cornelius Hamelberg

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Jul 11, 2023, 7:50:48 PM7/11/23
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Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju,


One of the foremost: Mohammad-Baqer Majlesi


Worthy of your holy library: Fear and Trembling 


Please indulge me. 


Talking about origins, there’s John’s idea that the Logos ( fairly Greek) “Became Flesh


Since you take great delight in the metaphysical and the abstract, you are of course aware of the Islamic concept of Nur Mohammadi. In Shia Islam  - as I understand it, Nur Mohammadi is an esoteric centrepiece. 


As you know quite well,  jihad didn’t originate with Shehu Usamn Dan Fodio.


JIHAD goes back to the original light of the Last Prophet, the beloved of Allah subhanahu wa ta’la, the seal of Prophecy, Muhammad, sallallahu alaihi wa salaam. 

 

Re - The impact of Shehu Usman ɗan Fodio


List of 14 flag bearers of Usman dan Fodio


You want to know if I am  “aware of any impact of Usman Dan Fodio beyond Nigeria?”


As a proud Nigerian, you shouldn’t be asking me, I should be asking you. Sadly, that’s how it is; some people are not proud of their own 


Without being too personal about it, I should ask you, are you aware of the reality known as ideas without borders? Ideas that can travel faster than the speed of light? Of course, you are. You are the unemployed astronaut who is still “Exploring Every Corner of the Cosmos in Search of Knowledge",  so just as some of the ideas of Immanuel Kant who never did any Jihad and never left Königsberg, the city of his birth somehow still managed to make an impression on Oluwatoyin over there in moonlit Lagos, so too there is no doubting The impact of Shehu Usman ɗan Fodio beyond Nigeria - just ask his publishers e.g Diwan Press and those who have translated his words into English and other languages.


I first heard about the great man from Jeff Holden ( an Englishman, lecturer in African History at the Institute of African Studies at Legon - mostly over bottles of alcoholic beverages at various venues in Accra, and from my Better Half who attended his seminars). From Ghana, fast forward to Shaykh Dr. Abdalqadir as-Sufi who Shehu Dan Fodio also impacted tremendously 

Cornelius Hamelberg

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Jul 12, 2023, 1:08:25 PM7/12/23
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Dear Oluwatoyin Adepoju,

I hope that this will soften your heart a little:


On Tuesday, 11 July 2023 at 12:03:11 UTC+2 Oluwatoyin Adepoju wrote:

Cornelius Hamelberg

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Jul 13, 2023, 8:02:01 PM7/13/23
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Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju,


From the very beginning, if only you had zeroed in on the essence, Isese, and what the Isese Festival is all about then from where would any reasonable opposition to such a celebration of Yoruba cultural tradition be coming from?


From the Vatican?


From Temple Square?


 I’m sure that long before August 20th the Emir will have lifted the ban, with the understanding that the celebration will be confined to the non-Muslim sections of Ilorin…


So true, so true :


The devil is in the details


Sometimes, too, there’s the method in the madness and this applied most fittingly to Apartheid South Africa. At least I remember reading a book entitled “South Africa: The Method in the Madness' about Apartheid South Africa. 


Since it was The Dutch Reformed Church that provided the theological and ideological basis of Apartheid, with regard to the main subject matter in this thread, a question arising is, what was the Apatheidist and e.g.the Dutch Reformed Church's attitude to traditional African religion? To add to the obscenity, during the Apartheid era were there any headlines such as “Botha’s Chief of Police bans Sangoma festival!” -or “ Botha’s Police Chief bans Chaka Zulu Celebrations' ?


Cornelius Ignoramus is only asking dumbass questions because he doesn't know the answers.


In Sierra Leone, the Church Missionary Society played an outstanding role in the education of  the Creoles in particular,  to the extent that in league with other missionaries zealots during the colonial era, no doubt to some extent, traditional African religions and the so-called “ Voodoo” / Voodoo as an African religion must have been demonised in tune with the Christian doctrine that “the Blood of Jesus” is the only way for any mortal’s salvation and that any other way is either incomplete ( such as Judaism) or false, such as any religion that is not Christian.


Through Christian missionary influence, in the Krio / Creole Language, all the masquerade / masked dancers such as Goboi, Egungun , Ojeh , Paddle,  Ejebu, Remi’s Lord a Mercy, Rainbow, and other hunting societies are called debul (devils), there’s even the kaka-debul, Isn’t that real demonization of African traditions or is it all just good fun?


https://www.jstor.org/stable/1145854


Of course, although according to the Nigerian Constitution Nigeria is still a so-called secular state, doesn’t mean that religious sensibilities can be violated with impunity. 


Paradoxically it is not the Christian authorities that are so adamant about banning African traditional spirituality, .maybe, because many Nigerian Christians are hopelessly compromised, culturally because  -so I’m told, they practise their Christianity side by side with traditional worship of the deity at their family shrine?


Short of declaring your own holy or unholy war, in discussing such matters or preaching your own gospel of  “tolerance” to Muslims such as the Emir of Ilorin, you have to fully acquaint yourself with what Muslims believe and then engage the Mulims’ main positions: Muslims are strongly opposed to whatever is deemed to be idolatry or idol worship, and secondly, Islam posits the period before the arrival of Islam in this case in Nigeria, as the period of Jahiliyyah


You say that there is no Interfaith communication in Nigeria to speak of; the fact is that when such dialogues take place elsewhere, it's the non-MUslims that wind up making all kinds of concessions to Islam… so where does that leave the non-Muslim?

 

For the time being, the current state of the Nigerian constitution 



On Monday, 10 July 2023 at 15:13:12 UTC+2 Oluwatoyin Adepoju wrote:

Oluwatoyin Adepoju

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Jul 14, 2023, 8:46:29 AM7/14/23
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thanks Cornelius.

Yoruba spirituality is the only ideology Nigeria has exported to the world, being the most influential form of African spirituality, as evident in Cuba and in North and South America.

Islam and Christianity are imports via the Middle East and secondly Europe with Christianity.

Islam  in Northern Nigeria and its Ilorin outpost  are not known to have developed  creative approaches to Islam  or Christianity that  uplift humanity beyond those religions'   sectarian limitations.

Outside Africa, Islam has inspired many who are not Muslims, as evident from the work of Rumi, Ibn Arabi and others who speak to the human condition within and beyond Islam. 

Inside Africa, one may readily invoke great works inspired by Islam that reverberate beyond the religion, such as Senegalese' Chiekh Hamodou Kane's Ambiguous Adventure , Malian Amadou Hampate Ba's A Spirit of Tolerance: The Inspiring Life of Tierno Bokar, the magnificent work of French-Senegalese artist Maimouna Gueressi, of Egyptian artist Fathi Hssan and more.

Can Islam in Nigeria's Muslim North and its Ilorin outpost, the bastions of Islamic exclusivity and triumphalism in Nigeria, point out their contributions to humanity along these or other lines?

Can they point out general cultural activities that speak to humanity beyond sectarian limitations as well as creative innovations taking Islam to a higher plane?

If I, in Nigeria, need to ask this question should I take seriously such claims as this?- 
''Muslims are strongly opposed to whatever is deemed to be idolatry or idol worship, and secondly, Islam posits the period before the arrival of Islam in this case in Nigeria, as the period of Jahiliyyah…''

The Yoruba spirituality which some Muslims on Facebook describe as idolatry in connection with the Ilorin situation is the most creatively influential ideology coming out of Nigeria, interpreted in terms of the sciences, philosophy, spirituality, the visual and verbal arts, on a global scale.

Has any writer from those regions whose work is based on Islam achieved anything near what has been achieved by Wole Soyinka, the world's first Black Nobel Laureate in Literature, whose work is deeply grounded in Yoruba spirituality?

Has any Nigerian writer from those regions whose work is based on Islam achieved anything near the achievement of Chinua Achebe, whose greatest works are central explorations of the congruent Igbo spirituality?

What is the level of exposition of Islam as developed in Nigeria's Muslim North and its Ilorin outpost  in relation to the sciences, as demonstrated in works demonstrating correlations between the Yoruba Orisha spirituality Ifa knowledge system and computer science and mathematics as well as works on Yoruba mathematics in general as done by Aimee Dafon Segla on Yoruba mathematics and astronomy?

What is the level of contributions of this regional brand of Islam to understanding  principles of symbolic interpretation of the world, as in Victor Ekpuk's work inspired by Nsibidi symbolism of the Ekpe esoteric order of Cross River?

Even in Nigeria, what expressions is this regional Islam best associated with in the general mind, in terms of their most impactful activities?

Is it recurrent physical, verbal and general attacks against non-Muslims and efforts to dominate them or is it efforts to demonstrate how Islam may unite everyone, even non-believers,  in terms of a shared humanistic vision?

Is it an association with danger, with blood shedding, with the elevation of religious belief over the value of human life, with providing ideological and institutional breeding grounds for religious terrorism, or is it the effort to dramatize Islamic principles of recognition of humanity as children of Allah, whose beneficence the Muslim should embody, inspiring people to seek fellowship within the beauty of such inspiring vision?

Which of these possibilities is the face of  Islam as practised in the Muslim North and its Ilorin outpost to Nigerians outside those regions?

Is this face such as to inspire non-Muslims to fellowship with Muslims in those regions and even to convert to Islam?

In the light of such questions, am I to take seriously  those who dismiss non-Abrahamic faiths when those making the dismissal have little elevating to offer humanity beyond their narrow sectarianism?

Its about time those who hold such bigoted ideas are told the truth about their self created marginal position in human civilization.

thanks

toyin







Oluwatoyin Adepoju

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Jul 14, 2023, 8:46:30 AM7/14/23
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Edited

thanks Cornelius.

Yoruba spirituality is the only ideology Nigeria has exported to the world, being the most influential form of African spirituality, as evident particularly in Cuba and in North and South America and its similarities with knowledge systems outside Nigeria, such as the Dahomean Fa.


Islam and Christianity are imports via the Middle East and secondly Europe with Christianity.

Islam  in Northern Nigeria and its Ilorin outpost  are not known to have developed  creative approaches to Islam that  uplift humanity beyond those religions'   sectarian limitations.


Outside Africa, Islam has inspired many who are not Muslims, as evident from the work of Rumi, Ibn Arabi and others who speak to the human condition within and beyond Islam. 

Inside Africa, one may readily invoke great works inspired by Islam that reverberate beyond the religion, such as Senegalese' Chiekh Hamidou Kane's novel Ambiguous Adventure , Malian Ahmadou Hampate Ba's A Spirit of Tolerance: The Inspiring Life of Tierno Bokar, the magnificent work of French-Senegalese artist Maimouna Gueressi, of Egyptian artist Fathi Hssan and more.

Can Islam in Nigeria's Muslim North and its Ilorin outpost, the bastions of Islamic exclusivity and triumphalism in Nigeria, point out their contributions to humanity along these or other lines?

Can they point out general cultural activities that speak to humanity beyond sectarian limitations as well as creative innovations taking Islam to a higher plane?

If I, in Nigeria, need to ask this question should I take seriously such claims as this?- 
''Muslims are strongly opposed to whatever is deemed to be idolatry or idol worship, and secondly, Islam posits the period before the arrival of Islam in this case in Nigeria, as the period of Jahiliyyah…''

The Yoruba spirituality which some Muslims on Facebook describe as idolatry in connection with the Ilorin situation is the only ideology Nigeria has been able to export to the world, and is likely to be the  most creatively influential ideology coming out of Africa, interpreted in terms of the sciences, philosophy, spirituality, the visual and verbal arts, on a global scale.

Has any writer from Nigeria's Muslim North and its Ilorin outpost   whose work is based on Islam achieved anything near what has been achieved by Wole Soyinka, the world's first Black Nobel Laureate in Literature, whose work is deeply grounded in Yoruba spirituality?

Has any Nigerian writer from those regions and whose work is based on Islam achieved anything near the achievement of Chinua Achebe, whose greatest works are central explorations of the congruent Igbo spirituality?

What is the level of exposition of Islam as developed in Nigeria's Muslim North and its Ilorin outpost  in relation to the sciences, as demonstrated in works demonstrating correlations between the Yoruba Orisha spirituality Ifa knowledge system and computer science and mathematics as well as works on Yoruba mathematics in general as done by Aimee Dafon Segla on Yoruba mathematics and astronomy in Yoruba thought?

What is the level of contributions of this regional brand of Islam to understanding  principles of symbolic interpretation of the world, as in artist Victor Ekpuk's work inspired by Nsibidi symbolism of the Ekpe esoteric order of Cross River?

Even in Nigeria, what expressions is this Islam of Nigeria's Muslim North and its Ilorin outpost   best associated with in the general mind, in terms of their most impactful activities?

Is it recurrent physical, verbal and general attacks against non-Muslims and efforts to dominate them or is it initiatives  demonstrating how Islam may unite everyone, even non-believers,  in terms of a shared humanistic vision?

Is it an association with danger, with blood shedding, with the elevation of religious belief over the value of human life, with providing ideological and institutional breeding grounds for  Islamic   terrorism, or is it the effort to dramatize Islamic principles of recognition of humanity as children of Allah, whose beneficence the Muslim should embody, inspiring people to seek fellowship within the beauty of such inspiring vision?


Which of these possibilities is the face of  Islam as practised in the Muslim North and its Ilorin outpost to Nigerians outside those regions?

Is this face such as to inspire non-Muslims to fellowship with Muslims in those regions and even to convert to Islam?

In the light of such questions, am I to take seriously  those who dismiss non-Abrahamic faiths when those making the dismissal have little elevating to offer humanity, locked as they are within their narrow sectarianism?

Its about time those who hold such bigoted ideas are told the truth about their self created marginal position in human civilization.

thanks

toyin
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