Monday 25 August 2014

Videos and Pictures from the 517 Edition of the Awankere (Okere Juju) Festival 2014 in Warri

This festival is celebrated in July but this years it was celebrated in August , and it has become the national festival of nigeria. 
Music, singing and dancing are all part of this celebration. During the festival, people sing to God and give sacrifices for a good harvest and for a steady Niger River. The first part of the festival is ritualistic and closed to the public, but the second part is a big party where people wear masks, it may interest you to know that the Okere Juju is the only masquerade in Nigerian culture that actually speaks and interacts with people.
Video of the Okoye[Okere Juju] Dancing



Like most African mythology this festival have two versions.One version is that its origin dates back to the later part of the 15th century when Ekpen, the Chief Warrior and founder of Okere introduced it, while the second version says that a certain woman, named Mogboruko went fishing along the Okere creek, near Ajamimogha and caught a strange object which is a symbol of Okiroro in her fishing basket on three different occasions. Most Okere people however tend to stick to the first version due to the great similarity between the Awere were festival of Benin and the Awere were ritual enactment, an integral part of Awankere festival. 
The masquerade and male participants of the festival holds "Ukpasha", the symbolic weep which represents the deity, Okiroro whose life is enacted during the Awankere festival. Community sources also explained that the staging of the festival during rainy seasons is due to the “therapeutic effect on all participants and spectators alike, as it washes off all sicknesses, ailments, curses and ill luck”.


Festivals as celebration of life is an integral part of our African existence.

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