Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 May 2014
As court musicians and specialists of the past, the Arókin of Òyó have been used as a source for Yorùbâ history, but their own views on the uses of historical information have not been investigated. For the first time a sample of these views is published here. It comes from an interview with a group of Arókin, in which they offered descriptions and other representations of the nature of their expertise. This evidence sheds light on how the Arókin have traditionally deployed historical precedent and accounted for historical innovation. They ground the resort to the past primarily on the social need to offer consolation (itùnû) to the ruler, i.e., to cool down his personal grief. It is from this that they derive the need to relate and assimilate events, so as to explain the meaning (itumòo) of present happenings. They emphasize, above the supplying of etiology and legitimation, the restoration of equanimity against grief and anger.
Arókin tradition compares the overwhelming power of song to the overwhelming power of grief. It stresses raw personal emotion as a cultural force, both as a source of disruption and as a trigger for efforts to make sense of the world with the help of the past, or with the help of newly-imported frames of explanation. The management of the king's (but also, in exceptional circumstances, of the people's) emotions requires history, and may require religious innovation. The king's grief at the loss of his children is liable to have violent, and culturally far-reaching, consequences. Despite obvious differences, this has significant points of contact with Rosaldo's account of the rage of the bereaved and “the cultural force of emotions” in connection with the Ilongot of northern Luzon, in the Philippines.
For Òjélàdé Martiniano Eliseu do Bonfim (1859-1942) and Dr. Cleonice de Assunção Alàkijà, of Bahia.
1. For investigations of the dialectic of “the past in the present” in Yorùbà culture see LaPin, D.A., “Story, Medium and Masque: The Idea and Art of Yoruba Storytelling,” (Ph.D., University of Wisconsin, 1977)Google Scholar, passim; Peel, J.D.Y., “Making History: The Past in the Ijesha Present,” Man n.s. 19 (1984): 111–32CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Law, R.C.C., “How Many Times Can History Repeat Itself? Some Problems in the Traditional History of Oyo,” International Journal of African Historical Studies 18 (1985): 33–51CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Barber, K., I Could Speak Until Tomorrow. Oríkí, Women, and the Past in a Yoruba town (Edinburgh, 1991), 14-16, 25–34.Google Scholar
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5. Johnson, Samuel, The History of the Yorubas (Lagos, 1921).Google Scholar On the persistence of Johnson's influence see Law, R.C.C., “How Truly Traditional is Our Traditional History? The Case of Samuel Johnson and the Recording of Yoruba Oral Tradition,” HA 11 (1984):esp. 195, 197Google Scholar; Peel, J.D.Y., “The Cultural Work of Yoruba Ethnogenesis” in Tonkin, E.et al., eds., History and Ethnicity (London, 1989), 198.Google Scholar
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9. See Law, , “How Truly Traditional,” 221n117.Google Scholar There is evidence of oríkí of òriṣà having survived better than the ìtàn about òrìṣà elsewhere in Yorùbàland; see Barber, , “Oríkí, Women and the Proliferation and Merging of Òriṣà,” Africa 60 (1990): 314–17.CrossRefGoogle Scholar On the complex relationship between history and oríkí, and between oríkí and the ìtàn explaining them, see Barber, , I Could Speak, 25–34.Google Scholar
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13. The evidence was independently recorded on three sets of tapes by (a) Dr. S.O. Babâyẹmí (now Alàyélúwà Ọba Akínrìnólà I, the Olúfi of Gbòngàn) and Dr. Ọ. Làyíwọlà, for the Institute of African Studies, University of Ìbàdàn; (b) M.R. Doortmont, then of Erasmus Universiteit Rotterdam; and (c) **K. Barber and myself (Centre of West African Studies, University of Birmingham). In the present paper, I am using the transcription and translation of the Barber/Moraes Farias tapes prepared by A. Ògúndíjọ of Obàfémi Awólówò University, Ilé Ifè. I wish to thank the present Alààfin, His Royal Highness Ọba Àlàájì Lamidi Ọlàyíwọlà Adéyẹmí III, the Arôkin, and all the above-mentioned university colleagues for their help. My greatest debt is to Karin Barber for her most valuable comments during the preparation of this paper. For other details of the interview with the Arókin, see Moraes Farias, “‘Yoruba Origins,’” 116-17, 145n1.
14. Ibid., 117, 122, 125; cf. Hethersett, , “Ìtàn Ọba Ṣàhngó” in Ìwé Kíkà Èkerin, 50–53.Google Scholar I thank my friend Robin Law for access to his copy of Hethersett's published texts.
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29. Béélò was quite different from our other interviewees, and appeared to be somewhat younger than the other Arókin who took the floor on that occasion. He had a flamboyant but engaging personality, and made a point of arriving slightly late to hear the speech made by the Alààfin before the interview, and of then saluting the ruler with a Kààbíyèsí! louder than all others. He distributed visiting cards of a kind—typed strips of paper with his name, profession, and al-ḥĀjj title, plus telephone number, home address in the Arà Òyó quarter, and post box. He died in a road accident while traveling to Lagos in the Alààfin's entourage. The epitaph on his tombstone is worth quoting for its reference to Ìkòyí origins, and for its combination of Muslim and traditional references in a quasi-Christian format: “In memory of our lovely father Alhaji Abdu Azeez Akanoo Beelo Lafiaji / alias Ayo n kolo, Aluṣẹkẹrẹ Alaafin Ọyọ, died 17th Dec. 1988, buried 20th Dec. 1988, (followed by oríkí): Ọmọ Alàjé Ọba, ọmọ Èṣó, ọmọ arówórà, aróòkòko, ọmọ ajèrè ṣèkèrè bi ẹni ń yọ ôwú tà, Àkànóò baba onínúre (Child of riches of the Ọba, child of the war captains [of Ìkòyí], child of one who has money to buy [things], purest indigo, child of one who makes profit out of the ṣèkèrè like someone spinning cotton and selling it, Àkànóò [his “oríkì name”], father with the good disposition), followed by: sùn un re o (sleep well!).”
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42. We were told that “Akúlúwé” is simply a nickname often given to slender girls.
43. In the song, the word ṣègèrè has high tone in the last ẹ because it is the subject of the verb ṣè. Otherwise, its tones are the same as in the word ṣèkèrè.
44. By definition the expressions translated as “dreadful bereavement” here, and as “shocking bereavement” in the next paragraph, refer to the death of people in their prime. The death of aged persons is not an occasion for mourning, but for joyful celebration of the defunct's achievements; see Morton-Williams, “Yoruba Responses,” 34.
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48. These are rhymes in which the phonemic similarity calls attention to the contrast in meaning—see Ducrot, O. and Todorov, T., Dictionnaire encyclopédique des sciences du langage (Paris, 1972), 246, 328.Google Scholar
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64. I thank my medievalist friend Chris Wickham for drawing my attention to this, and for other help. In modern Shīcī rauzeh (narrations) of the killing Imām Ḥusayn at Karbalā' (680 AD), the dead martyr falls from his horse but his body is held off the ground by the very arrows which killed him: see Thaiss, G., “Religious Symbolism and Social Change: The Drama of Husain” in Keddie, N.R., ed., Scholars, Saints, and Sufis: Muslim Religious Institutions in the Middle East Since 1500 (Berkeley, 1972), 356.Google Scholar
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