I heard the then government of Eastern region of
Nigeria tried to abolish the Osu caste practice. I think
the most it was able to do was stopping new
inductions into the Osu caste legion. There are 3 major
caste systems my dad said were common and very
bad he witnessed growing up and did his best to
comfort victims and made them feel they are humans
too. One is the Osu caste practice. This is the most
popular and common for reasons, the article below
generously explained.
The others are the Une and Ohu castes.
I have not yet understood what Ume is. The most
I know is bringing an Ume into the family, as may happen
in some marriages do, according to some traditional
belief, bring bad luck as evidenced
by miscarriages, death of babies and decline in family
wealth and peace as soon as an Ume is brought into
a family. Some believe it's better to marry an Osu than
living with an Ume.
An ohu is the mildest with least or minimal stigma than
Osu or Ume.
An ohu is a person sold into slavery that did not gain back
his freedom . Reasons for not gaining back his or her freedom from
his master includes none paying back the money
with interest charges during the sales, for the Igba
Ibe, ( lease ) type or the slave was so good, respectful and
hardworking that his master decided to adopt him,
give him ( settle him) with some land and economic
trees and making him enjoy free association with
the rest of his family. The Masters sometimes helped
them marry.
My family history does not have a record
of having any worker my grand father and his brother,
Duruh never paid and let go home at the end of
each work day. People that processed Palm and
Palm produce for
my dad and mom before Biafra were duly paid and
helped to marry before Biafran soldiers from Akwka,
as claimed by one of them that cared to talk to my
dad the day they came to dismantle my dads oil processing
mills , 12 of them, invaded, dismantled and hauled
the scraps away. It was in 1969.
On Osu caste
A vocal pastor in Aba, once preached for a month on the
evils any discrimination by an Igbo on another
Igbo on the bases
of that evil practice, Osu practice is is un - Christianly.
His audience pretended they understood him and
seemingly tried to know they would be hell bound
like the pastor promised if they discriminate against
any Osu or Ume or Ohu they know.
Few weeks later, an elder in elders meeting asked
the pastor if he would let his son marry a known
Osu. The pastor has a resounding "no" answer to
to the enquiry before the question landed.
I have witnessed some descendants of the ugly
practice trace their family history and home before
their ancestors were inducted into the bad the
institution is. They moved back and were given
back all their ancestral inheritance other people,
the so called diallas took over when their grand and
great grand fathers were chased out of town into the shrines
said to be protective of whoever pledges allegiance to
it .
They were fully welcomed back "home" and
made a part and parcel of every rights and
privileges enjoyed by diallas.
The guys among them got married to whoever
they wanted and they live happily thereafter.
There are countless ugly history behind some of the
inductions into the caste practice .
Apart from reasons of committing what a community
may call an abomination, thereby meriting death or
a choice to be cast to the shrines, usually near most
Igbo markets in the areas that practiced it, some
families that wanted to protect themselves from
invasion by stronger families did in fact chose to be
Osu than being let to be wiped out by a stronger family or village
or a rival family.
There is a well known case of that nature in a part
of Igbo I know. One dad noticed that all his family
men have been killed by an invading village seeking to grab
their lands . He was alive because he was
not home the day of the invasion. The stronger family
had more male kids and limited family land ownership.
They needed more lands to go around all their male
kids. The only way they thought to increase their
land ownership was to invade and kill off every male
in the other family that had more land but fewer male
kids.
This man came back and noted he was going to be
the only man living. He feared for his life, his kids and
his 3 wives.
His wives had already ran away with all their kids
the night the invaders came. They got a tip off from
a member of the invading family said to be friending
one of the wives.
The invaders came to take the man and he
fought back and took some heads . They ran and
came back
with greater army hired from Ndi izuogu.
The man knew the only way he could live was run
to the agbara and declare himself an Osu.
They chased him until he ran into the market, hugged,
shrine tree . They said, the tree symbolized the gods of the
osus and he was left alone. Kissing or bowing and
hugging the tree was a quick way of pledging allegiance
to Osu shrine.
His three wives learned of his ordeal. His first wife
refused to join his other 2 wives to live as Osus.
She became a girl friend to a powerful man from
the invading families. She was spared. She had only
one son who later died.
She went back to her father and lived free until death.
She had only that boy that died.
The other wives lived "free" and unhappy with their
husband in Osu kindred.
One of the kids, a young boy, then 12, during the
incidence grew up as an Osu. His dad and grand dad
already died and he decided never to marry so he
does not subject any child to his ordeal. He planned to
fight back even it it would take his life and he did.
He became 25 and decided to move back to their
ancestral home with every surviving members of his
family.
They moved back and he started reclaiming all the
vast lands and economic trees belonging to his family
that were shared among the invading families.
He got back a lot of them. The rest he could not get
lingered until the late 1980es when his own kids
were grown and able to finance a long stretch land
suit battle in the courts. Today, he has claimed back
every land and other of his ancestral family property
in the hands of the other village and families that
invaded them.
All of them are today living free and happy and marrying
Diallas , same way other none osus do.
A very practical man he was. He married 5 wives despite
every pages of the bible he read. He encouraged
his children to marry a minimum of 2 wives each citing
they can sacrifice their need for heaven for the
interest of the future of his family.
The idea of marrying more wives was for making
more kids so no other family would invade them
without a reasonable push back.
The story above was direct from my father and
confirmed by the man that took back his family to
his ancestral home. My dad helped plan their return
and fights to get back all they lost.
I once asked my mom why our house was too far
away from most houses in my village. She said my
grand father was a very dangerous warrior
commanding mercenaries he could recruit from Arondiuzuogu and other nearby towns such as Aguata.
He moved his family very close to the village that housed the caste people to give them protection . According to my mom and dad, some wicked diallas used to kidnap the osus and sold them out into slavery.
Mom told me grand pa used to have warriors parole
an Osu village in day and night time to give them protection.
Knowing Aguzie, my grand father, and Duru his brother
and how easily they chopped of the heads of anyone
daring my family and any human especially the Osus
and the ohus , no human ever tampered with any Osu
until both died. They lived very long.
End of this part of a story I like to tell for a reason.
All rights reserved.
The Osu caste system is Igbos original sin as sinful or
more sinful than the effects of slavey.
It's sad that the observance of the practice has
somehow continued in some Igbo villages despite
the invasion of our psyche by the bible.
I wish there is a way to abate it finally.
Sad, bad and too sad , the stigma the practice
and life the descendants of that inhuman acts is ,
for today's age.
Dan Akusobi.
NY
Sent from my iPhone