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Yoruba Quotes

Quotes tagged as "yoruba" Showing 1-9 of 9
Karen E. Quinones Miller
“Olofi made Oya . . . and then he realized he'd done and quickly made Oshun.”
Karen E. Quinones Miller

Habeeb Akande
“A religious person without no job is a dead person. (Iigbagbo ti koni ise oku ni. - Yoruba proverb)”
Habeeb Akande

Israel Morrow
“In Africa every human has a spark of divine nature, and sin does not separate us from it. We are cousins of God. Every person has multiple souls, including the souls of ancestors that reincarnate through us. The purest soul is called an ori, and a person who cultivates their ori can attain divinity.”
Israel Morrow, Gods of the Flesh: A Skeptic's Journey Through Sex, Politics and Religion

Cristina Garc铆a
“Santer铆a was traditionally an unacknowledged and underappreciated aspect of what it meant to be Cuban. Yet the syncretism between the Yoruban religion that the slaves brought to the island and the Catholicism of their masters is, in my opinion, the underpinning of Cuban culture. Every artistic realm--music, theater, literature, etc.--owes a huge debt to 蝉补苍迟别谤铆补 and the slaves who practiced it and passed it on, largely secretively, for generations.”
Cristina Garc铆a, Dreaming in Cuban

Israel Morrow
“In West African traditions, land belongs to the person who works it. Produce belongs to the person who grows it. Whatever is created belongs to the creators鈥攏ot to the God that created them, and certainly not to the colonist or slavemaster.”
Israel Morrow, Gods of the Flesh: A Skeptic's Journey Through Sex, Politics and Religion

Amanda Montell
“Pronouns aside, there are also some languages that are essentially gender-free, containing very few words that make reference to a person鈥檚 鈥渘atural鈥� gender at all. Yoruba, a language spoken in Nigeria, has neither gendered pronouns nor the dozens of gendered nouns we have in English, including son, daughter, host, hostess, hero, heroine, etc. Instead, the most important distinction in Yoruba is the age of the person you鈥檙e talking about. So, instead of saying brother and sister, you would say older sibling and younger sibling, or egbun and aburo. The only Yoruba words that make reference to a person鈥檚 gender (or sex, as it were) are obirin and okorin, meaning 鈥渙ne who has a vagina鈥� and 鈥渙ne who has a penis.鈥� So if you really wanted to call someone your sister, you would have to say egbon mi obirin, or 鈥渕y older sibling, the one with the vagina.鈥� When you get that specific, it makes our English obsession with immediately identifying people鈥檚 sexes seem just plain creepy.”
Amanda Montell, Wordslut: A Feminist Guide to Taking Back the English Language

Olawale Daniel
“We are educated for whatever sake. For Nigeria to move forward, we must stop comparison and ignore religious views in dealing with sensitive issues that can make or mar our Country's existence. Evil, evil is evil, coming from either of the geopolitical regions. We were humans before we choose our religion.”
Olawale Daniel

Olawale Daniel
“A religious person without a job is dead. (脤gb脿gb峄嵦� ti ko n铆铆 矛峁, 貌k煤 n铆. - Yor霉b谩 proverb)”
Olawale Daniel

Wole Soyinka
“We cannot see
The still great womb of the world -
No man beholds is mother's womb -
Yet who denies it's there? Coiled
To the navel of the world is that
Endless cord that links us all
To the great origin. If I lose my way
The trailing cord will bring me to the roots.”
Wole Soyinka, Death and the King's Horseman