Ojude Oba Festival  -  Assault Of  The Culture Ignoramus 

Sun, Jun 30, 2024
By editor
8 MIN READ

Opinion

By Dr. Bisi  Olawunmi.

THE annual socio-cultural  Ojude Oba festival had the splendour and grandeur  of Ijebus on display  on Tuesday, 18th June, 2024  at Ijebu-Ode, the capital city of Ijebuland.  It was a nexus of  cultural and sartorial elegance, social grace and evocative dance steps  that has attracted indigenes as well as local and foreign tourists over the years. It was a signature tune event.  Ojude Oba is a tripartite celebration of the enduring Regberegbe ( age grades ) system, cultural identity  and Ijebu unity.  From its origin in the 1880s as an Islamic faithfuls’ Sallah homage to the Awujale of Ijebuland, the Ojude Oba festival has transformed  into an all-faiths, all indigenes  celebration.  I salute the Awujale of Ijebuland, His Royal Majesty,  Oba Sikiru Kayode Adetona, Ogbagba 11, for this transformative feat of socio-cultural engineering  that has hallmarked his remarkable 64-year reign, since ascending the throne of his forefathers in 1960.  It is a case of an iconic traditional ruler creating an iconic legacy.

The 2024 edition of Ojude Oba festival was estimated to have attracted about one million people  and several more millions of a global audience. Social media was agog in transmitting the grandeur of the occasion . As is usual, Ijebu-Ode experienced vehicular and human traffic gridlock , especially  in the city centre where the palace of the Awujale and the stadium hosting the event are located.

It is a measure of the economic derivative of the celebration that all hotels in Ijebu-Ode and environs were fully booked from Saturday 15th June 2024, through Ileya Day on 16th June , Ojude Oba Day on the 18th  to Wednesday 19th June, the day after. A friend who came for the Ojude Oba celebration had to return to Lagos same day because he could not secure hotel accommodation anywhere. Food and drinks vendors also made boom sales  catering to the teeming patrons of the celebration.

At the stadium venue of the celebration ,  opposite the palace,  the Awujale , Oba Adetona, was resplendent in the majesty of his royal regalia , supported by other traditional rulers in  Ijebuland , with the Ogun state governor, Dapo Abiodun, also an Ijebu, adorned in a designer native dress of sunshine colours that stood him out as a sartorial connoisseur.

But then, in all good things , there are a few contrary people sold on negativism . The 2024 Ojude Oba festival attracted such people who I describe as culture ignoramus. Charity, they say, begins at home, so I will start  with a writer , Pabiekun ( pen name ?) who claimed to be an Ijebu-Ode indigene  with an address at Aiyegbami street, in Ijebu-Ode.  He admitted not being in town for the celebration . The absentee indigene , in a social media post  titled :  Ojude Oba – The Day After , had declared   : “ for me , the annual Ojude Oba remains what it is, a fashion jamboree  of no consequence  to the welfare of the host and the environment”. He wondered why the Regberegbes would not offer scholarships, build health centres,  roads and boreholes.

Another  claimant to   Ijebu-Ode indigeneship , Wale Ajia, had lamented how Ojude Oba festival, given its ascendant prominence,  had eclipsed the community service mandate of Ijebu-Ode Development Association ( IDA )  Both, apparently, wrote from lack of knowledge. While  the Regberegbes  and IDA cannot be expected to shoulder the responsibilities of the local government and the state government in the costly task of building roads and hospitals,  the two entities have, within  their resources, provided  services to the community and for the upliftment  of indigenes.

A prince of Ijebu-Ode, who straddles both the IDA and the Regberegbes, Prince Yemi Odubena, provides illumination on the extent to which the activities of the two entities have been of positive consequence to  the welfare  of the people and the community.  Prince Odubena, who is the current General Secretary of the Regberegbe age grade – Bobajolu – and a former president of IDA  ( 1999-2001) had pointed out that  IDA facilitated  establishment two community microfinance banks in the town, had engaged in road rehabilitation and built two overhead water tanks for the two major markets in Ijebu-Ode – New Market and Oke Aje – to enhance sanitation health of the traders and their patrons  as well as boreholes, among other interventions. 

The IDA has had illustrious Ijebu sons as presidents, including Engr. R.O. Saka, my senior at Ijebu-Ode Grammar School, Dr. Segun Aranmolate, a plastic surgeon, and Dr. Fassy Yusuf (PhD),  a mass communication scholar, all of who made indelible  contributions to the town.

At the Regberegbe level,  Prince Odubena gave the example of Bobajolu age grade which  offers scholarships at secondary and tertiary levels,  provide loans, assist in the upliftment of members , support sick members in paying  hospital bills  and offer financial support to the families of deceased members. According to him, providing support is the general practice among all the Regberegbes, debunking the ignorant notion that the Regberegbes’  Ojude Oba  show-stopper is  just  about fashionista  extravaganza !!!

Upping the angst of the home boys, came a tempestuous character called Kemi Olunloyo , whose penchant is hugging controversies. Pugilism seems to be her brand  as she thundered in her social media post  : “ What the hell is Ojude festival ?  Empty  hype.” In her blind rage, she could not even get the name of the festival , Ojude Oba, right  but wrote Ojude- meaning ‘ita ( outside) So, it is therefore not surprising that she wrote like an  ‘omo ita’ ! ( street person )  Kemi Olunloyo had continued : “ Dapo Abiodun wants to make it ( Ojude Oba festival )  global.  A big joke. All I see is a bunch of stingy people “Ijebus” sitting down in a stadium  wearing all sorts of Aso Ebi.” It is obvious this character had worked herself  into a frenzy  and consequently lost the ability at rational  thinking and logical discourse. Gov. Abiodun  is on point in his desire to promote Ojude Oba festival as a global tourism event  and the joke is on Kemi Olunloyo. She apparently suffers from  myopia in not seeing the global tourism potential of Ojude Oba festival and had pontificated “ No one is interested in your excessive fashion parade”. She needs to be educated that tourism is about creating a niche and cultural glitterati,  which is  usually in abundant display at Ojude Oba festivals.,  can be promoted as a niche. I understand that  this self-promoting ‘activist’, ‘investigative journalist’ and consultant pharmacist was shipped to America at the tender age of 14  and she must have  lost touch with native culture, hence describing Ojude Oba festival’s elegance as hype. She probably belongs in the ranks of Culture Abolitionists some of who, on the cultural loony fringe, even call for the scrapping of the Obaship institution !!!

She peddled the false refrain  of Ijebus as stingy people but also accused  them of being extravagant spendthrifts. It is a contradiction in terms for a stingy person to also be a spendthrift and such convoluted notion can only be the product of a warped mind.  I always insist that Ijebus are not stingy but strict money managers and prudent spenders, who when they choose to spend, spend with gusto – with no apologies !

Sunday Tribune columnist, Festus  Adedayo, ( PhD) provided an intellectual  riposte to the angst of those inclined to cultural putdowns when in his column of June 23, 2024 captioned ‘ Ojude Oba, Durbar and Musawa’s African Grammy’ , he posited :  “ the glitz  and colours associated with the festival ( Ojude Oba ) place it outside the ranks of any  cultural festival in  Nigeria”. As pointed out by Dr. Adedayo , “ what Nigeria advertises to the world in Ojude Oba is cultural elegance and communal cohesion”. It is this cultural elegance that is being proposed as a tourism niche for Ojude Oba festival, just as major global tourism destinations have their niches.  For instance, Morocco, Africa’s top tourism destination with 13.2 million tourists in 2023, has its vibrant culture as its selling point; Egypt, second placed with 11.5 million tourists, has its ancient wonders of the Pyramid and the Valley of Kings as its attraction, while for eight placed Kenya – 2.6 million tourists – the premium is its wildlife safaris.  Nigeria,  ranked  68th  in the world tourism index, attracted only 518,000 tourists in 2021, the latest figure available by Worlddata.info .  This demands that Nigeria needs to create and promote a tourism niche and  a properly packaged  Ojude Oba festival, as a niche,  is a potential tourism money spinner, to tap into the goldmine of the  1.3 billion global tourists in 2023 that generated  revenues of USD1.4 trillion, according to the UN World Tourism Organisation ( UNWTO).

I was privileged to have been to some the world’s leading tourism destinations which have their specific niches, including Disneyworld in Orlando, Florida  ;  Hollywood in California, both in the United States ; Cancun in Mexico ;  the Safari in Kenya ;  Mauritius  ( Paradise Found ) the aquatic jewel in the Indian ocean ; the  historic Coliseum in Rome, Italy and London.

We need to appreciate and celebrate our culture as our niche contribution to global tourism and Ojude Oba festival is such a sellable cultural event.

Dr. Bisi Olawunmi, Senior Lecturer, Department of Mass Communication, Adeleke University, Ede, Osun State and former Washington Correspondent of the News Agency of Nigeria, is a Fellow, Nigerian Guild of Editors (FNGE)    08033647571 ; email : olawunmibisi@yahoo.com     

F.A

June 30, 2024                                       

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