Damilola

SALT

Salt is iyọ̀. It comes from the etymological root of “yọ̀,” which means sweet, glad, smooth, fluid. It also means SLIPPERY. It is from “yọ̀” that “ayọ̀” (joy) is derived. Yoruba names such as Ayodele, Ayodeji, Adedayo, etc, are names alluding to salt, sweetness and joy. Humans started enjoying salt at the beginning of time. We sweat when we exert ourselves physically and sweat contains salt. Babies also cry and tears contain salt. And sometimes the sweat finds its way to our tongue. Babies enjoy tasting salt from the tears they cry. Once we discovered the sweetness of salt from crying and sweating, we began …

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OJU

Oju: Sight, Vision, Light and Morning Ojú, eye, is the root of Ojúmọ́, meaning daylight. Ojúmọ́, which is Ojú+Mọ́ means Eye+clarity. Mọ́ also means “clean.” Interestingly, Mọ́ oju means to slowly close and open the eye, a socially-informed symbol of disagreement, dispute and variance. It is different from ṣẹ́jú (ṣẹ́+ojú), which means “to bat the eyes.” But when you mọ́ ojú, the process is like clearing the eye, which is what happens when you ṣẹ́jú or bat the eye. Ojú and Ojúmọ́ are like mother and child. You need the ojú to clearly see the ojúmọ́ (clear-eyed daylight) Yoruba people pray that Kí ojú u …

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Sugar and Sugarcane

Those familiar with the Oyo-speaking parts of Yoruba country would notice that these folks refer to sugar as Iyọ̀ọ-Ṣúgà. If they were strangers, it might confound them, because they would translate Iyọ̀ as salt, and wouldn’t understand why it is coupled with Ṣúgà, that is sugar. When folks say Iyọ̀ọ-Ṣúgà in those parts of Africa, they are not referring to salt in any way. They are simply describing the sweetness of sugar. Sugar was not known in that part of the world until it was introduced by Europeans. Ìrèké, or sugarcane, was available, but it was not processed into sugar; rather it was eaten raw …

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Ladies & Gentlemen!

“Ladies and gentlemen, mister honorable President,” the monkey whispers in his baritone voice into the mike. The large crowd of people fell totally quiet. The press reported there were at least one million party fanatics stuffed into the stadium built for only about two hundred thousand. You could hear a pin drop. Sixteen golden cobras crawled into the arena. Directly behind them were eight black mambas sliding in unison. Four gaboon vipers, their fangs venomously exposed, slithered in, following closely. Taking the rear was the Oxyuranus microlepidotus, the snake with the deadliest venom in the world. Its red-orange skin, beaded with silver threads, reflected the …

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Wisconsin, Madison, 1994. Naming ceremony

I was a college student. One of my Nigerian colleagues had just finished his Ph.D., and he returned to Nigeria. He had no idea that his girlfriend in Madison was pregnant. When he was contacted, he decided that he was not returning to the US. The pregnant girlfriend decided she was not going to Nigeria to join him. After the woman gave birth to a bouncing baby boy, she called me to give the boy a traditional Nigerian naming ceremony. We decided to meet at a bar downtown, just the three of us, including the baby. I wore my new knee-length leather jacket and had …

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