Yoruba culture Yoruba culture is in the West of Nigeria. It is famous for its works of bronze and sculptures. In Yoruba culture, particular attention is given to names. For example, the name of a new born child strictly depends on the history of the family and ancestors, so family traditions are strictly preserved. People of this culture eat moin-moin (steamed bean pudding), soups like ewedu, gbegiri, okra, egusi, and efo riro. The women can boast the full range of textile not only for festivities but also for everyday life. Yoruba people believe in reincarnation and pray for the essential goods in life, majorly, wealth, children, and immortality.
THE LONG JUJU SHRINE OF AROCHUKWU
There is a Temple Complex with a Chamber Presence of God in Igboland. It is a rare and surprising find. This is because the Igboland of Nigeria is a place where every traditional village or town has sacred structures built and spaces domesticated for tutelary spirits and other divinities, but none for God--Chukwu (The Great Spirit). In fact, in Igbo ontology, the absence of any religious architecture specifically built for Chukwu is based upon the Igbo belief that the Great Spirit, in relation to the other divinities or supernatural entities, is so incomprehensibly huge in size and incredibly multidimensional that the Igbo people do not even begin to contemplate building a house for him. Hence, it was quite astonishing to me to arrive at the dark Chamber Presence to which Igbo people in the past went, and some still go to feel the awesome presence of God. Historical Background In pre-colonial times, oblation and propitiation rites were p...

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