Ọrunmila Explained

Type:Yoruba
Other Names:Orunmila or Orunmilá; Orúnla or Orúla or Agbonniregun
Member Of:Orisha
Deity Of:Wisdom, Knowledge, Ifa Divination, Philosophy, Fate, Destiny, Prophecy, Civilization, Enlightenment, First Babalawo
Venerated In:Yoruba religion, Umbanda, Candomble, Santeria, Haitian Vodou, Folk Catholicism
Color:White, Yellow, Green
World:Yorubaland
Weapon:Opele
Gender:Male
Artifacts:
Siblings:Ọsanyìn
Region:Nigeria, Benin, Latin America
Ethnic Group:Yoruba
Parents:Alayeru and Oroko

Ọrunmila (also Ọrúnla[1] or Orúla in Latin America) is the Orisha of Wisdom, knowledge, and Divination, is the creator of Ifá and Babalawo concept. He is a high priest of Ifá.

Historical and literary sources

Following the categories developed by the Nigerian scholar Peju Yemaje, Orunmila is recognized as a primordial Orisha, an ara orun, one that existed before the creation of humanity and resides in Heaven, as opposed to irun-male or irunmole, sacred beings living on Earth.[2]

He is praise named "Igbákejì Olódùmarè" (second in command to Olodumare) and "Ẹlẹ́rìí ìpín" (witness of fate). Priests of Ifá are known as babalawos and Priestesses of Ifá are known as iyanifas.[3]

Orunmila is considered a sage, recognizing that Olodumare placed Ori (intuitive knowledge) in him as a prime Orisha. It is Ori who can intercede and affect the reality of a person much more than any other Orisha.[4]

Priesthood and initiation

Awo in every tradition study the 256 Odu; each Odu is traditionally considered to include stories and prayers that have been passed down from the time that Orunmila walked the Earth as a prophet.[4] [5] [6]

Some initiatory lineages have only male priests of Orunmila, while other lineages include female priestesses. The term "Awo", meaning "secret" is a gender-neutral title for an initiated priest of Orunmila. The debate surrounding gender is a result of diversity in the history of Ifá in various locations. In Latin America and some areas of West Africa, only men may become full priests of Orunmila, while in other regions of West Africa the priesthood is open to women. Ifá practitioners believe in duality in life: males exist because of the female essence and females exist because of the male essence, so every major rite or ceremony includes both genders.[7]

Every Ifá stanza has one portion dedicated to the issue of teaching the Iwa that Ifá supports. This Iwa, which Ifá teaches transcends religious doctrine, is central to every human being, and imparts communal, social and civic responsibility that Olodumare supports. Of great importance to this is the theme of righteousness and practicing good moral behavior.[8]

Resources

Notes and References

  1. Book: Bascom . William . Ifa Divination: Communication Between Gods and Men in West Africa . 1991 . Indiana University Press . 9780253206381 . ix . 1 April 2019 . en . Qrunmila is another name for Ifa, the deity.
  2. Book: Asante . Molefi Kete . Mazama . Ama . Molefi Kete Asante . Encyclopedia of African Religion . 26 November 2008 . SAGE Publications . 978-1-5063-1786-1 . https://books.google.com/books?id=uMv0CAAAQBAJ&dq=Orunmila++primordial+Irunmole&pg=PT707 . 11 June 2022 . en . Entry on Orisha.
  3. Chief FAMA Practitioners' Handbook for the Ifa Professional
  4. William R. Bascom: Ifa Divination: Communication Between Gods and Men in West Africa
  5. Adeoye, C. L. (1989). Ìgbàgbọ́ àti ẹ̀sìn Yorùba (in Yoruba). Ibadan: Evans Bros. Nigeria Publishers. pp. 285–302.
  6. Bàbálàwó Ifatunwase Tratados Enciclopédicos de Ifá (Colección Alafundé),
  7. Book: Abimbola, Kola. Yoruba Culture: A Philosophical Account . Paperback. Iroko Academics Publishers. 2005. 1-905388-00-4.
  8. Ifaloju, Iwòrì Méjì: Ifá speaks on Righteousness, (an extract from S.S. Popoola, Ifa Dida, Library, INC) 2011