New Yam Festivals in Nigeria

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Language
  • Yoruba
  • Igbo
  • Hausa
MeaningLocal Wrestling
Region of originNigeria
Yam Festival
Language
  • Yoruba
  • Igbo
  • Hausa
Origin
MeaningLocal Wrestling
Region of originNigeria

Yam is a staple food in West Africa and other regions classified as a tuber crop and it is an annual or perennial crop.[1][2][3] The New Yam festival is celebrated by almost every ethnic group in Nigeria and is observed annually at the end of June.

Yam festival celebrants
Celebrants

To fully understand the New Yam Festival we must first understand the reason why the festival is celebrated in almost every state, town and city in Nigeria.[4]

History

Historically, Yam is considered one of the major or the most important crops in Nigeria as it is grown in mostly all the states, and whoever in a community has a barn of Yam, is listed among the wealthy sets of people in the community. Yam is counted to be more than just food. It is very well respected in Nigeria and is one of the major foods accepted as bride price when a man is seeking for a woman's hand in marriage.[5] The festival is mostly celebrated among the Igbo people due to different spiritual ideologies surrounding Yams, as told by ancestors through stories passed on until the current day.[6] Yams are annual crops, although they are sometimes regarded as perennial crops due to their life cycle. Therefore, New Yam Festival is celebrated annually, after new yams are harvested [7] The festival holds yearly to celebrate the beginning and end of a new season. Also, it is said to be a taboo to eat the new Yam before the celebration as it is a means of pleasing and appealing to the gods and spirit of harvest and god of the Earth and thanking them for a bountiful harvest. By so doing, the gods will be happy and will bring a better harvest in the new season.[8]

In Benin, Nigeria , It is fortunate that brief reports on the New Yam Festival as held in Benin centuries ago have survived: these are quoted by ROTH (1903: 76) writing shortly after the destruction of the Benin Empire. The first of these states that the ceremony was held at the beginning of the yam harvest, the king is presented with an earthenware pot, containing soil, and an old yam (i.e. one from the previous season) which he plants in the pot. During the dancing and merrymaking that follow, this pot is surreptitiously replaced by a similar one, containing a well developed new yam, which is later presented to the people, presumably as a sign of the king’s magical powers over the crops. The increase in size between the two tubers is held to indicate the magnitude of the harvest that may be anticipated.[9]

Celebrants

Communities

References

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