Sunday, 19 January 2025

ILỌ ỤWA, IKỌ ỤWA, INYE ỌLỌỤWA NRI (Reincarnation & Feeding of the Reincarnate) REAL NENWE TRADITION? By Sai Nwenya

ILỌ ỤWA, IKỌ ỤWA, INYE ỌLỌỤWA NRI

(Reincarnation & Feeding of the Reincarnate) REAL NENWE TRADITION? 

                                                                                                       By Sai Nwénya.

Traditionally and generally speaking, Nenwe people believe in reincarnation. In our parlance, it is known as ịlọ ụwa and the process of ascertaining who is reincarnating is called ịkọ ụwa.

From the time a new baby is born in Nenwe, the iru ọmụgọ period (post natal period) starts. The ọmụgọ period lasts for seven native weeks (izu ésaa); after which a kind of divination is performed to know who has reincarnated the baby. Traditionally speaking, it is believed that the reincarnating person is just a dead member of the family who has come back to life. However, it is not all the members of a given family that are expected to reincarnate or come back to life hence Madụagwụ 2011 states: 'Nenwe people believe that some of their ancestors who lived good lives while on earth do reincarnate as children to some desired extended family members. IT IS IMPORTANT TO EMPHASIZE THAT ONLY THOSE AMONG THE ANCESTORS ADJUDGED TO HAVE LIVED LIVES WORTHY OF EMULATION ARE BELIEVED TO BE CAPABLE OF REINCARNATING'

THE PROCESS:

After the child's ọmụgọ period, the father or his representative (usually the oldest man of the family, in case the father is dead or on a far journey) looks for fresh and unadulterated palm wine, the container of which must not have touched the ground (méé dụga chi shi kee ye or méé ọhụ eruhu alị) and with an egg of a native fowl. With these two items, he proceeds to a diviner or fortune teller (nwa-dibe). Both the man and the diviner will then go to his Égwụ deity shrine. The diviner cuts some ogirishi leaves, spreads them before the Égwụ shrine and puts the egg on the shrine’s stone (nkpume  Égwụ)  or on the ogirishi lives. He then makes some invocations through which he prays the reincarnate not to delay in appearing. (That is, to appear in the mind of the child's father who is charged with the duty of calling the expected incarnates in their family lineage).

The diviner brings out his ugbe méé (native wine cup) from his bag into which the wine is poured. The business starts. As the diviner pours the wine on the egg, the baby's father mentions names; he is then given the egg to press. If the person so called is the one reincarnating, then the egg breaks into pieces but if not the egg remains as strong as a stone no matter the amount of pressure exerted on it. This process continues until the incarnating person is mentioned. Some get blistered thumps in the process, where the reincarnating person fails to appear on time.

Having done with the above process, the baby's father or his representative goes home with the egg pieces. On reaching the compound, he would make a small hole on the compound, bury the egg pieces and carries the baby, lifts the baby up as if giving a gift to someone on high and hugs the baby calling him or her by the reincarnates name. If it is any of the baby’s grandparents, he would call him or her: Nnem or Nnam, (my mother or my father). He then throws the baby up in jubilation and kisses it, praying that this time, his/her coming back to the world will be better than the previous. He prays for the baby's long life, prosperity, active and multiplicity of procreation and every other good thing that comes to mind.

Note:  In some cases the reincarnating person does not appear during the ịkọ ụwa process; due probably to the fact that the father does not remember to mention the reincarnating person. If it so happens, no worries, it is believed that the baby will grow up to 'unmask' himself/herself. According to  Nenwe belief, such a person when grown, not to maturity would one day say to his father, 'I am your father, your mother, your sister' etc. At such instance, the father would as well welcome the reincarnation and appreciate the revelation.

This kind of revelation is also taken to be real because it takes place at an age when the child is still below the age of reasoning, at a time it would not be seen or taken that he/she wants to be called so so and so person.

In traditional Nenwe, everything about ịlọ ụwa and ịkọ ụwa stops here. The next is just the calling of the reincarnated by the name of the reincarnate. If there is anything bad he did in his previous coming which he/she continues to do this time around, he/she goes by the name Ọkparụ-arụ-ụwa lambọ but there is always no known sacrifice or ritual performed to revert such.

INYE ỌLỌỤWA NRI

In Nenwe traditional religion, there is no ritual or sacrifice like inye ọlọụwa nri. That is something done to host, appease or appreciate one's reincarnate by the reincarnated person. The only way to show appreciation and done by one's parents not even by the person reincarnated is simply to lavish love on the reincarnated hence the proverb: 'mụ ala-ekweehu la nna m bịarụ m ụwa mụ atụgboo ye la nri' (I won’t, because my father reincarnated my baby; feed him/her to death).

The current practice of our youths performing some rituals and believing that they are hosting their reincarnate is quite alien to our traditional religion. It is simply borrowed from mainly Anambra part of the Igbo nation. However, most religious practices even those of the Christendom are borrowed. As long as one feels satisfied with them and does not afflict others with such practices, that becomes a part of one's article of faith and I have no quarrels with that.

Reference: . MADUAGWU M.O. In a foreword to The Glossary of Nenwe Names by Silas Nwanya P.v

nkoronenwe@gmail.com


PATRICE LUMUMBA 64 YEARS AFTER STILL HUNTS MANY



Symbol of resistance’: Lumumba, the Congolese hero killed before his prime

Sixty four years after his murder, the aborted legacy of Congo’s first prime minister Patrice Lumumba, still haunts many. By 

Shortly before noon on a Thursday in June 1960, 34-year-old Patrice Lumumba stepped up to the podium at the Palace of the Nation in Leopoldville (current-day Kinshasa) with a dream to unite his newly liberated country.

Standing before dignitaries and politicians, including King Baudouin of Belgium from which the then-Republic of the Congo had just won its independence, the first-ever prime minister gave a rousing, somewhat unexpected speech that ruffled feathers among th “No Congolese worthy of the name will ever be able to forget that it was by fighting that [our independence] has been won,” Lumumba said.

“Slavery was imposed on us by force,” he continued, while the king looked on in shock. “We remember the blows that we had to submit to morning, noon and night because we were ‘negroes’.”

With independence, the country’s future was finally in the hands of its own people, he proclaimed. “We shall show the world what the Black man can do when working in liberty, and we shall make the Congo the pride of Africa.”

But this was a promise left unfulfilled, as just six months later the young leader was dead.

For years murkiness surrounded the details of his killing, but it is now known that armed Congolese men murdered Lumumba on January 17, 1961, aided by the Belgians and with the tacit approval of the United States.

Sixty-four years on, Lumumba remains a symbol of African resistance, while many Congolese still carry the burden of his aborted legacy – whether they favoured

‘His death distressed me’

“When I learned of Lumumba’s death, I was shocked,” said 85-year-old Kasereka Lukombola, who lives in the Virunga quarter of Goma, in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo.

His gold-coloured Western-style house, unusual in this region, was built during colonial times and is a reminder of the vestiges of nearly 80 years of Belgian rule.

Lukombola was born during World War II, he said. “At that time, a Black man in Africa could not oppose the white settlers for certain reasons, including the colour of his skin and the fact that he was enslaved. Those who dared to challenge the whites were either imprisoned, beaten up or killed.”

He was 20 when Lumumba was killed. “I remember being in my village in Bingi [when I heard the news]. I regretted it, his death had distressed me. On that date, I didn’t eat, I had insomnia,” he said, adding that he still remembers it as if it were yesterday.

Lukombola accuses the Wazungu (a term meaning “foreigners”, but generally used for Belgian colonists) of having been behind the assassination.

“The Belgians were racially segregating the Congo, and Lumumba outcried against this. He encouraged us to fight tooth and nail to get rid of the colonisers,” he said.

“He had discovered certain plots by the colonists against us, the Congolese people. They wanted to enslave us forever. That’s when the Belgians developed a hatred against him, which led to his assassination.”

Lukombola believes that if Lumumba hadn’t been killed, he would have transformed the country into a veritable “El Dorado” for millions of Congolese, based on the vision he had for his people and the continent as a whole.

Tumsifu Akram, a Congolese researcher based in Goma, believes Lumumba was killed on the orders of certain Western powers who wanted to keep hold of Congo’s natural wealth.

“The decision to eliminate the first Congolese prime minister was taken by American and other officials at the highest level,” he told Al Jazeera.

Though Lumumba had friends both inside and outside the country, “as numerous as they were, his friends were not so determined to save him as his enemies were determined and organised to finish him off,” Akram said. “His friends supported him more in words than in deeds.”

Only a tooth remained

Just days after Lumumba delivered his June 30, 1960 Independence Day speech, the country began to fall into chaos. There was an armed mutiny, and then the secession of the mineral-rich province of Katanga in July. Belgium sent troops to Katanga. Congo then asked the United Nations for help, and although they sent peacekeepers, they did not deploy them to Katanga. So Lumumba reached out to the Soviet Union for assistance – a move that alarmed Belgium and the US.

In September, President Joseph Kasavubu dismissed Lumumba from government, something he ignored. Soon after, a military coup led by Congolese Colonel Joseph Mobutu (later known as dictator Mobutu Sese Seko) fully removed him from power. Lumumba was placed under house arrest, from which he escaped, only to be captured by Mobutu’s forces in December.

On January 17, 1961, Lumumba and two associates, Joseph Okito and Maurice Mpolo, were then taken to Katanga by plane – soldiers beat and tortured them on the flight and at their destination.

Later that day, all three were executed by a Katangan firing squad, under Belgian supervision.

Their bodies were at first thrown into shallow graves, but later dug up, hacked into pieces, and the remains dissolved in acid.

In the end, only one tooth of Lumumba’s remained, which was stolen by a Belgian policeman and only returned to Lumumba’s relatives in 2022.

In the years since the killing, Belgium has acknowledged that it was “morally responsible for circumstances leading to the death”. Meanwhile, information has also come to light exposing the US CIA’s involvement in a plot to kill Lumumba.

A ‘big mistake’?

At his home in Goma, Lukombola recounted all the “firsts” he’s lived through during his country’s complicated history, including taking part in the first municipal election of 1957 – in which he voted for Lumumba’s Congolese National Movement (MNC) party “because I was convinced it had a great vision for our country. It was out of a sense of pride,” he said.

He recounted being around during the riots of January 4, 1959; the proclamation of the Congo’s independence on June 30, 1960; the secession of Katanga and South Kasai between July and August 1960; and the joys of Zaire’s economic and political pinnacle in the mid-1960s.

Having lived through the reign of all five Congolese presidents, Lukombola understands the “enigma” that is the DRC and has seen how much it can change.

His only regret, he said, is that many historic events occurred after Lumumba had passed on. “If he were alive, he would restore us to glory and greatness.”

However, not everyone looks at Lumumba’s legacy with such awe and kindness.

Grace Bahati, a 45-year-old father of five, believes Lumumba is at the root of some of the misfortunes that have befallen the DRC and that the country continues to grapple with.

According to him, the first prime minister was too quick in wanting immediate independence for the Congo, while the country lacked sufficient intelligentsia to be able to lead it after the departure of the Belgians.

“Lumumba was in a hurry to ask for independence. I found that many of our leaders were not prepared to lead this country, and that’s unfortunate,” Bahati told Al Jazeera. “In my opinion, it was a big mistake on Lumumba’s part.”

Dany Kayeye, a historian in Goma, does not share this view. He believes Lumumba saw from afar that independence was the only solution, given that the Belgians had been exploiting the country for nearly 80 years and it was the Congolese who were suffering.

“Lumumba was not the first to demand the country’s immediate independence. The first to do so were the soldiers who had come from the second world war, having fought alongside the colonists,” Kayeye also noted.

But it was after Lumumba’s supposed “radicalisation” – when he was seen to be forging ties with the Soviet Union – that he found himself in Western crosshairs as they considered him as a threat to their interests during the crucial Cold War period, the historian said. Congolese like Mobutu Sese-Seko were then used in the manoeuvres against him.

“For a long time, the Congo had been envied because of its natural resources. The Belgians didn’t want to leave the country, and the only way to continue exploiting it was to anarchise it and kill its nationalists,” Kayeye explained. “It was in this context that Lumumba, his friends Maurice Mpolo, then president of the Senate, and Joseph Okito, then minister of youth, died together.”

‘He fought for justice’

Jean Jacques Lumumba is Patrice Lumumba’s nephew and an activist committed to the fight against corruption in the country.

The 38-year-old grew up in Kinshasa, raised by Lumumba’s mother and younger brother, but was forced into exile in 2016 for calling out corruption in the entourage of former Congolese president Joseph Kabila.

For him, his uncle remains a symbol of a fair and better Congo, and someone he draws inspiration from in his own activism.

“In my family, they tell me he was an atypical personality. He was quite frank and direct. He had a sense of honour and the search for truth from an early age right up to his political struggle,” Jean Jacques told Al Jazeera.

“He fought for justice and fairness. He himself refused corruption,” he added, calling corruption “one of the evils that characterise developing countries”.

“[Patrice Lumumba] wanted wellbeing and development … This is inspiring in the fight I continue to wage, for the emergence of the African continent.”

Jean Jacques feels Lumumba no longer belongs just to the DRC and Africa, but to all those who desire freedom and dignity around the world.

Although he never met his uncle, he is pleased that his memory and legacy continue to live on.

And although he came to a tragic and devastating end, for Jean Jacques, Lumumba’s demise is also something that has immortalised his name and the battles he waged.

African leaders should honour the memory of people like him and others who paid with their lives to build a “developed, radiant and prosperous Africa, ready to assert itself in the concert of nations”, the younger Lumumba said.

Lumumba’s ‘eternal’ legacy

More than six decades after Lumumba was killed, the DRC is in the midst of multiple crises – from armed rebellions to resource extraction and poverty.

Although it is a country of immense natural wealth, it has not found its way to the majority of Congolese people – something many in the country attribute to the continued exploitation by internal and external forces.

Daniel Makasi, a resident of Goma, believes that the colonialism Lumumba was so determined to fight, is still going strong – though it manifests in different ways today.

“Today, there are several forms of colonisation that continue through the multinationals that exploit resources in the DRC and that do not benefit ordinary citizens,” he told Al Jazeera.

He added that Africans need to channel the spirit of Lumumba to stop such neo-colonialism as far as possible, so they can enjoy the fullness of their natural wealth.

Lumumba was able to transform the country in a short space of time, making Congolese “prouder”, and that makes him “eternal”, Makasi said, urging people to follow his example.

Others also agree that future generations owe Lumumba an “immeasurable” debt for what he started.

“For me, Patrice Emery Lumumba is a symbol of resistance to imperialist forces,” said Moise Komayombi, another Goma resident, remembering the June 1960 Independence Day address that the Belgians considered a “vicious attack” but that inspires many Africans to this day.

“He inspired us to remain nationalists and protect our homeland against all forms of colonisation,” Komayombi said, reminding himself that Lumumba’s work is still not done.

source

Thursday, 9 January 2025

NATURAL EGGS HATCHING PROCESS BY HENS


Interesting facts of chicken egg fertility that you may not know.

 It is possible to have a rooster and a hen that are active but a hen can still lay eggs that are not fertile:


🧑‍🏫I know you may be wondering how, and here is the explanation.

Unlike other birds where you find partners, in chickens there is no courtship or romance. A rooster just forces himself on the hen. So what happens is when a rooster mates a hen, his injected semen is stored in numerous sperm storage tubules (SSTs) located in the area where the hen’s uterus joins the vagina. But this only happens provided the hen likes the rooster. If she doesn’t, she can squirt out the semen to avoid hatching his offspring. Therefore a hen may still proceed to lay eggs that are not fertile despite even mating with a rooster every day.


🧑‍🏫Even if the hen approves the rooster, some eggs may still not be fertile:


🧑‍🏫Since the sperm is released shortly after an egg is laid, and each egg takes approximately 25 hours to develop, an egg produced on the day of mating will not be fertile.


🧑‍🏫An egg laid the next day may or may not be fertile, depending on the timing. An egg laid on the third day definitely should be fertile.


🧑‍🏫So as you can see your hen can still have the first two or three eggs that are not fertile despite the hen and a rooster having mated.


🧑‍🏫You don't need a rooster everyday for the hen to continue laying fertile eggs:


🧑‍🏫The amount of time during which the hen will continue to lay fertile eggs depends on how much sperm fills the SSTs, which are capable of storing semen from multiple matings and multiple roosters.


🧑‍🏫Highly productive hens generally remain fertile longer than hens that lay at a slower rate. The average duration of fertility from a single mating is 10 to 14 days.

So it is possible that once your hen has mated with a rooster you can even take the rooster away and you can still have fertile eggs for the next 14 days.


🧑‍🏫For first time layers if a rooster has mated with a hen, all her eggs are not always fertile:


Generally speaking, a hen who has mated will be fertile between 7 and 10 days after. It takes that long for the sperm to reach the oviduct where eggs are made. So it is possible that after mating, your hen can still continue to lay eggs that are not fertile for the next 10 days. This is why it is encouraged that for hens that are laying for the first time it is better to eat the eggs for the first two or three weeks instead of attempting to hatch them.


🧑‍🏫 Not all roosters have fertile sperm:


🧑‍🏫This is a sad one. Just like in humans, even in chickens we also have roosters that are infertile.

Why? Who knows. It's maybe just something in his genes not working as it should. Again, very like the human condition. There's not always a rhyme or reason.


🧑‍🏫NB- This article has been compiled to help people understand why at time they may hear those who provide hatchery services referring to their eggs not having been fertile. We know some have been wondering why the eggs are said not to be fertile yet they have the recommended number of hens and roosters that are also active for that matter.


🧑‍🏫While the article has been compiled from various sources that we believe to be credible, it is only for general information. For specifics relating to one's flock we still recommend that farmers use the services of professionals.


Thank you for reading.

CTTO:  AgriHarvest Hub -Agriculturid

(COPIED)