The social and cultural settings in Yorubaland literally exploded last Friday. It almost took the shine off the Oyo State government’s highly commendable inauguration of a 34.85 kilometre Oyo-Iseyin Road and the completed Ladoke Akintola University of Technology, Iseyin Campus. The highly disputatious ex-Nigerian president, Olusegun Obasanjo, was in his usual sabre-rattling element. At that event, he tongue-lashed Yoruba Obas in the most irreverent display of gross disdain for the traditional stools and institutions. As I write this, an inclement anger of the people, like a vulture, is feasting on Obasanjo on the social media. He is minute by minute being lacerated through all manner of insolent words. A group from Iseyin, where the tongue-lashing took place, even declared him persona-non-grata in the Oke-Ogun area of Oyo State.
The unkindest epithet given to Obasanjo as commentary on his Iseyin discourtesy to the Obas is the ar’obafin – disrespecter of the monarchy. It reminded me of Alukoro, a Yoruba movie starring Fuji singer, Saheed Osupa; a man who, to me, sings as if he is an incarnate of my musical idol, Ayinla Omowura. Osupa laces his songs with an effusion of language, culture, depth and native wisdom, which all answer to the profound musical calling of Omowura. In the movie, Osupa plays the role of Pela, a village bard. Strapping his agidigbo round his neck, with the musical instrument balanced on his belly, the flick begins with him instigating the townsfolk against one Ajisafe, who he alleges had an incestuous liaison with his daughter. In rousing them up, Pela lectures the people on the boomeranging effect of silence to evil – “t’a ba ni ko kan wa, yi o kan eni ti o kan, ti o pada wa kan wa”, he counsels.
Then, a scene in the movie shifts to the palace. The whole village is in attendance, as well as a man called Olowoporoku and his wife. Still in his luxuriatant voice and talent, Pela musically narrates Olowoporoku’s boldness in standing up to the monarchy headed by Oba Adewolu Adegoroye. He sings in denunciation of those who rise against the palace, which Yoruba approximates to rising against the whole town. Pela announces that the enemy of the palace has been put to shame with the quashing of the conspiracy against the king and that haters of the monarchy are persons of mean repute. He sings thus: “Ar’obafin, oju ti yin o/b’o je’yin le wa l’oni o/ab’Oba Adewolu… e l’aju le, gbogbo wa ni o s’oju…/ete kuku m’oni ete nwa, iyi m’eni iyi nba r’ode, eni ete mo’ra re l’awujo.”
Pela robes the king in the finest raiment. Oba Adewolu has a purity of character comparable only to the whiteness of a cattle egret (lekeleke) and Olowoporoku is considered not only as a mean character, but one whose moral standing is in the league of the filth of a pig. “Agberaga won a tun gbe’ra sanle, iru e ki s’eni iyi l’awujo…” Apparently, the script to disgrace Olowoporoku having been pre-arranged, a goat that is dressed in the exact apparel worn by Olowoporoku is brought to the palace. Pela then sings, asking the people to shout, “monkey” – obo – “E ma pe obo ni! (Obo ni!)… eni wo’so bi obo (obo ni!), o de fila bi obo (obo ni!), o nb’oba da’sa (obo ni!)… aso ki le ro, t’e nkile t’e nru gaga?/Aso t’e ro t’e npon gege, s’ohun l’ewure ti nwo yi o!” He ends the musical narration by telling the palace hater that very soon, all those in his class would forcibly realise the majesty of the king – “isenyi le o m’oba/eyin t’e nb’oba l’eyin…”
At Iseyin, as the crowd savoured the occasion, amid the effusive showering of praises on Obasanjo’s host, Governor Seyi Makinde, the man known for always provoking verbal balls of fire suddenly saunters into his familiar route. At the first occasion of the road inauguration, I was told that the invited traditional rulers sat when Obasanjo and his host arrived. When Obasanjo got up to address the crowd during the second event at the opening held at the University of Technology, and the larger crowd of traditional rulers still sat, something snapped in him and Obasanjo went into his usual tempestuous tirade. If he had talked to the Obas in very civil language, it would have gone down well with Yoruba people. Rather, the ex-president spat out poison like a venomous rattlesnake, talking down on the natural rulers like a teacher does to offending kindergarten pupils. Shaking his left hand like a salamander does its tail in a moment of extreme anger, Obasanjo then hectored on the rulers to stand up, “e dide!”, in the mode of a Garrison Commander at an army parade. His lips twitched awkwardly, and his countenance was like Sango, the god of thunder’s. He had earlier lectured the traditional rulers on giving honour to whom it is due.
The issue for determination in Iseyin on Friday was: Who was the Ar’obafin? The Obas who dishonoured Ijoba (government) by refusing to join the upstanding people to welcome the governor or Obasanjo who upbraided them in a language meant for slaves?
Like in many African societies, the Yorubas venerate their kings, almost to the point of idolatory. In the past, their kings were the incarnation of earthly sovereigns. They regulated peace and order, guaranteed harmonic social relations with their fellow beings and were the intercessor for the living with cosmic forces. The palaces where the kings lived, though owned by the whole towns, were the outward representations of the peoples’ reverence for their kings. They were always located in the sacred centres of the towns and surrounded by huge walls. The palaces’ importance was partly due to the fact that they were the places where decisions of the most importance concerning town life were deliberated upon and taken. It was where esoteric rituals were performed among a coterie of initiates.
Other kings who tasted the sour broths of the white colonialists were the Alake of Egba land, Oba Sir Ladapo Samuel Ademola, who ascended the throne on 28 May, 1920. He was the father of Justice Adetokunbo Ademola, the first indigenous Chief Justice of Nigeria at the granting of independence in 1960. After 27 years of being on the throne, his power was eroded after the violent protest of about 2,000 women against the colonial government’s native authority in 1947.
A number of weird lores and mores were curated to give the kings their aura of primus inter pares and dread. First, the title of an Alaafin of Oyo, for instance, symbolised his unlimited powers. He was “lord of the universe and life,” “the master of the land” and “companion of the gods,” as well as the Kabiyesi whose authority no one dares to contradict. He was a sacred ruler and the ideological and political centre of power of his people, who held a dimension of power that was awesome. A number of secrecies, mysteries and dread of things unknown and incomprehensible kept alive the oeuvre of sacredness of the traditional institution in him. He was the mythical intermediary between his people and the gods, and the link that connected the people with all the deities of the land, and in whom there was a fulfillment of the desires of the gods in the land of the living. The legitimacy of the king’s royal power emanated from the dread and mysteries that were erected round him. For instance, he must not see dead body. The belief that begot this was that, as one who symbolised and embodied life, and being a life-giving force himself, sighting a dead body detracts from that power. He was also reputed with magical powers that were beyond his subjects’. That is why, upon the enthronement of an Oba, all magic men were required to scramble over one another to donate their amulets and powers to him. This was because the king was believed to be linked with the spirits of his deceased predecessors. As king, his major obligation was the sustenance of the prosperity and fertility of the land, which he did by making sacrifices when required, engaging in innumerable annual rites, as well as magic rituals.
The life and death of Obas in Yorubaland were a testament to their assumed powers. According to Samuel Johnson, not less than 21, out of 36 kings that this respected Yoruba historiographer included in his dynastic list, died through excruciating violence. In Oyo Alaafin, not a single one out of the kings of the 17th century died naturally in a period regarded as the highest flourish of that kingdom. Indeed, fifteen of them, beginning with the 17th king Odarawu, were compelled to commit suicide as a result of sentences passed by the oracle. As a means of implanting the authority and veneration of their kings in their minds, palace griots, who were mainly custodians of the oral tradition of the people, narrated in poetic forms the official version of the history of their kingdoms, heroic feats of their kings and stories of warfare and conquest.
However, the conversation between Obierika and Okonkwo in Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart seems to sum up the calamity that befell traditional institution subsequently. Dissecting colonial incursion into Igboland and the various queer events that had transpired thereafter, while upset by the white man’s total and complete disregard for the Igbo cosmology and the people’s conception of justice, Obierika was stunned that the colonialists didn’t understand the people of Umuofia. Obierika says: “The white man is very clever. He came quietly and peaceably with his religion. We were amused at his foolishness and allowed him to stay. Now he has won our brothers, and our clan can no longer act like one. He has put a knife on the things that held us together and we have fallen apart.” This, to me, equates the calamity that befell traditional institution in Yorubaland, in the precursor to Friday’s disdainful discourtesy heaped on Yoruba traditional institutions by a man whose inscrutable contempt for the other person knows no bounds.
The white man indeed put a knife on the traditional institutions that held the Yoruba people together also. This began with the gale of exiles it unleashed on highly venerated and dreaded monarchical stools. Oba Akitoye of Lagos was about the first. He had ascended the throne of his forefathers in 1841 and attempted to end the inhuman trade in humans. In this bid, he aquired enmity with local slave traders, who contributed to his deposition and eventual exile. After the white men annexed Lagos in 1861 as a British territorial colony, it was time for recalcitrant kings who insisted on the supremacy of their thrones to be dealt with too. Thus, Ovonramwen Nogbaisi, the Oba of Benin, was equally chased off the throne and exiled to Calabar, alongside his two queens, leading to his eventual death in 1914.
Other kings who tasted the sour broths of the white colonialists were the Alake of Egba land, Oba Sir Ladapo Samuel Ademola, who ascended the throne on 28 May, 1920. He was the father of Justice Adetokunbo Ademola, the first indigenous Chief Justice of Nigeria at the granting of independence in 1960. After 27 years of being on the throne, his power was eroded after the violent protest of about 2,000 women against the colonial government’s native authority in 1947. Under the leadership of Mrs Funmilayo Ransom-Kuti, with the assistance of her sister-in-law, Eniola Soyinka, the women virulently protested against taxes for women. Prodded on by colonial disdain for traditional rulers, it was bye to the highly venerated Yoruba monarchy, as the women successfully chased Oba Ademola out of the palace.
Obasanjo’s shout down at the kings in Iseyin to stand up for representatives of government reminds me of the same call by the earlier mercurial deputy leader of the Action Group, Chief Bode Thomas. Born in 1918, Thomas was one of the most brilliant solicitors of Yoruba extraction in colonial Nigeria. In the company of Chief Rotimi Williams and Chief Remilekun Fani-Kayode, they had established the law firm, Thomas, Willams, Kayode and co. Bode Thomas was however far removed from the indigenous texture of the native Oyo town where he was born. He was also very haughty. So when in 1953, Thomas was appointed the Oyo Divisional Council Chairman, it was obvious that he would find his measure in the father of the recently deceased Alaafin of Oyo, Oba Adeniran Adeyemi II, who reigned on the stool from 1945 to 1954. On 22 November, 1953, the day the 35-year-old Thomas made his first appearance in council, just like the Iseyin Obas gathered at the Friday function, Thomas could not countenance why Alaafin Adeniran would sit while others stood for him. Like Obasanjo, he immediately expressed his disapproval of this act. He asked the Oba, who was then in his 60s, “Why are you sitting when I walked in, don’t you know how to show respect?” During one of my discussions with the late Alaafin Lamidi Adeyemi, he confirmed to me that his father merely rhetorically demanded if it was him who Thomas was barking at: Se’mi lo ngbo mo baun? And then commanded Thomas, to continue in his barking: Ma gbo lo baun! Oba Adeniran was to pay dearly for this as he was deposed and died in exile at Egerton, a mosquito-infested Guest House in Lagos. Thomas continued barking like a dog and passed on in the morning of the second day.
Why Obasanjo’s indecorous talk-down on the Iseyin Obas on Friday was unusual, was that he had always shown the way to go to all political office holders by publicly courtesying to monarchs. He recently, even at his over 80 years of age, prostrated to the Ooni of Ife who is younger in age than his first born. This is why, as I said earlier, if Obasanjo had not made a public ridicule of the Obas, he would have had the sympathy of the people.
As they say, since then, a lot of water has passed under the bridge. By the constitutions of Nigeria since the advent of colonialism, the palace has always been put under the subordination of political authorities. This has colossally eroded the respect, veneration and contributions of kings to society. As it is now, monarchs are under the subordination of local government chairmen, who can instigate their deposition. Respected veteran journalist, Lekan Alabi, sent out a video of an interview conducted by the NTA Ibadan, of which he was the producer and presenter, with the late Kano State governor, Alhaji Abubakar Rimi. Rimi was having a spat with the Emir of Kano, Alhaji Ado Bayero, during that period. In the interview, Rimi exploded: “The way you press and our political opponents (regard) the Emir of Kano is not the way we regard him. As far as we are concerned (thumping his chest) – we the elected government of Kano State – as far as I, the governor of Kano State, is concerned – the Emir of Kano is nothing, nothing, nothing but a public person… he is holding a public office… being paid from public funds and whose appointment is at the pleasure of the governor of the state and who can be dismissed, removed, interdicted, suspended if he commits an offence. And there is nothing unique about Ado Bayero, the Emir of Kano… believe me, if he commits any offence which will make it necessary for us to remove him, we will remove him and we will sleep soundly.”
In the explanation of their cosmogony, it is Yoruba’s belief that, as hot and red-eyed as Sango is, not only does it give respect to the blacksmithry and the forge, Ile Aro, it is not in his keel to strike it with its thunder. Why will Obasanjo, a man who has taught culture and tradition overtime, be the hot anvil that will consume the metal? Don’t Yoruba say that the reverse is unimaginable, in the saying that ina ewu kii jo ewu, ina ewiri kii jo ewiri? Indeed, that Friday event was a mortal blow on our traditional institutions.
Why Obasanjo’s indecorous talk-down on the Iseyin Obas on Friday was unusual, was that he had always shown the way to go to all political office holders by publicly courtesying to monarchs. He recently, even at his over 80 years of age, prostrated to the Ooni of Ife who is younger in age than his first born. This is why, as I said earlier, if Obasanjo had not made a public ridicule of the Obas, he would have had the sympathy of the people. First, he is far older than almost all the kings at the event and thus deserved their respect. Second, as Nigeria’s former leader, who was Head of State at a time many of them were in secondary schools, they should have shown him some measure of honour. Sitting down when an elderly person stands is disrespect of the first order in Yorubaland. I have also confirmed that protocol, especially since the constitutional de-robing of kings of their essences, has since demanded that kings should pay obeisance to political leaders, including even the chairman of their local governments, at public events. However, as they say, if you are sent a message as a slave, you should be knowledgeable enough to deliver it as a freeborn.
To be fair to Obasanjo, though the gradual loss of verve of traditional institutions in the country did not begin with him, he willingly offered himself as its pallbearer. Many of the traditional rulers on parade in Nigeria today wear such disreputable robes that no one in his or her true senses should pay them any regard. Nyesom Wike, as governor of Rivers State, publicly dressed down one of them. Today, the Yorubas do not venerate their kings any longer and do not see them as embodying their sovereignty. Rather than regulating peace and order in their domains, they are more of the disruptors of the peace therein. The palace has become a den of thieves and fraudsters, with many kings only seeking to maximise their pecuniary interests through the institutions. No esoteric rituals are performed in palaces any longer but cryptic deals of fraudulence, among a circle of fraudulent initiates, with the sacredness of traditional institution grossly destroyed. So, if Obasanjo talked down on them, he must have known that they were reverses of the natural rulers who deserved anyone’s respect.
I am actually interested in an aspect of the speech of Governor Makinde at the said event. On the vacant stool of the Alaafin, which is the subject of intense acrimony at the moment, Makinde said: “Those of you fighting over the Alaafin stool should stop. Those who have collected money from people should know that Alaafin stool is not for sale. It is too important to Yorubaland that we will not sell it. For those who have collected money, I will take them to the EFCC”.
The governor’s homily is a representation of what ails the traditional institution in Nigeria today. It has gone to the dogs. If it is possible for Makinde and the Oyo Mesi to recreate the profundity in tradition, language and culture of Yoruba people, panache and Yoruba leadership, which the late Alaafin, Oba Lamidi Adeyemi manifested while alive, we probably would have none of those Iseyin Obas lacking the courage to damn Obasanjo’s bark at them to stand up. Kabiyesi, Omo Alowolodu, Iku Baba Yeye Lamidi Adeyemi, would rather die than be led by the nose to surrender as Obasanjo led those kings on Friday.
Festus Adedayo is an Ibadan-based journalist.
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