Stop demonizating Urhobo culture under-Delta State University, DELSU Lecturers
TWO lecturers at Delta State University, DELSU, Abraka, Professor Christopher Orubu and Dr. Emmanuel Biri, have condemned the demonization of Urhobo culture under the facade of Christianity.
Both
lecturers, speaking at the first Ughievwen Cultural Carnival, staged at
Otughievwen, headquarters of Ughelli South Local Government Area, said the
trend was robbing Urhobo nation and Ughievwen Urhobo in particular,
economic oppor-tunities to sell its culture and heritage to the outside world.
Professor
Orubu stated that as a people, Ughievwen of Urhobo evolved with peculiar
cultural practices and heritage giving its sons and daughters a self- identity
that cannot be sustained by any borrowed culture.
He said:
”Our four pivots of chieftaincy, Adeh, Eboh, Igbun-Otor and Igbun-Eshovwin,
which have been handed down from generations have exclusive entertainment
carriages in various festivals, which were the envy of non-natives, who
throng the community from far and near to share in the fun.
“Today, in the name of Christianity, these
attractions are fast fading away. We demonize our culture on the notion that
they are fetish, but even the Pope has entered shrines, not of Christians, and
acknowledged the sense of faith in God by adherents of the deities worshipped
in such shrines.”
In a
separate lecture on The Past, Present and Future of the Ughievwen People,
Dr. Biri of the Department of Mass Communication, DELSU, said that some of the
core cultural values of Ughievwen Urhobo, being so demeaned in the land, were
being celebrated with growing global recognition in other climes.
Biri
asserted: “The Epha (celebration of bare breast maidens), which is
Urhobo’s appreciation of the purity in women, is gradually going into
extinction on the notion that it is fetish and obscene.
“But in
Swaziland, the same heritage has become an annual tourist attraction visited by
several people from around the world.
“In
Ughievwen, ancestral worship has also been condemned as demonic and fetish
whereas in Japan,the second largest economy in the world, ancestral veneration
remains a valued culture.
“Japanese,
including the most highly placed, go to venerate the graves of their dead
parents, decorating them with flowers.”
Chief Enyote
Gbogbo, who headed the team of organizers of the event, told Niger Delta
Voice: “The pains expressed by the DELSU scholars underpin the motivation
for originating the Ughievwen Cultural Carnival.
Gbogbo said:
“We noticed Ughievwen will have no sense of identity as a people if our
cultural values are being rubbished and discarded, no matter the excuses.
“To revive
the dying culture, we have decided to bring the various cultural celebrations
into one big annual carnival.”
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