Hoodlums on rampage during community festival,women lose freedom of movement
When women lose freedom of movement to tradition
terseer adamu (Review)
SOME call it Isemo, while others
call it Igbele but whatever it is called, the meaning is the same: An age-old
Yoruba traditional rite that imposes a restriction of movement on women at a
certain period or occasion. Depending on some factors, Isemo is an annual
tradition in some Yoruba-based communities observed to appease the gods and to
ward off impending danger.
At its inception in the olden days,
Igbele practice or observance was the exclusive preserve of the elders in the
community, though the youths were carried along for the purpose of instructing
them on the rules guiding the practice and its strict adherence in line with
the rigorous demand of tradition.
The practice restricts women in
every capacity regardless of race, tribe or position. On such occasions, women
are denied the freedom to move from one place to another and the erring ones
are made to face the wrath of the gods, including being ostracised, maiming or
loss of life as the event is totally a men’s affair. During this traditional
rite, which usually starts by midnight when residents have returned from work,
some men, especially the elderly, usually take position at strategic locations
to ensure that no unpleasant incident occurrs. This is said to account for why
the practice was widely accepted, especially in the light of the protection
extended to women while it lasts.
Isemo is usually accompanied by Oro’
or Eluku festival but the bottom line is that women are restricted in every
capacity as the organisers use the occasion to pray for the peace of the land
as well as security of lives and property, just as the gods are called upon to
fight the cause of the land.
Hijack by hoodlums
In days past when the practice held
sway under strict obervance, robbery, kidnapping, bombings were rare as perpetrators
of such acts dread the wrath of the gods. Nowadays, the reverse is the case, as
the occasion has been hijacked by hoodlums, especially in Lagos State. Believe
it or not, Igbele is now an avenue to perpetrate nefarious acts like
kidnapping, robbery, rape, theft, smoking of Indian hemp or drunkenness.
Apart from coming without prior
notice, Igbele has over the years been reduced to a notorious event during
which the hoodlums take the law into their hands, unleashing terror on their
victims. A case in point was in 2011 when some shops were burgled overnight
around Ebute in Ikorodu. Disturbed by the ugly development, the traditional
ruler had vowed then to deal with the culprits.
In an incident in August 2012, this
reporter and many other women slept on the road to avoid falling victim to
hoodlums masquerading as Igbele adherents at Igbogbo in Ikorodu. Also, on June
3, 2013, many Ikorodu women were forced to remain indoors, reason being that
Isemo was ongoing in Ikorodu town.
A couple of months back, some women
in Itire were forced to stay indoors when the community organised the Isemo
festival for the year 2013. The same applies to places like Egan, Ajah and
Ikorodu where women have raised alarm over the curtailment of their right to
freedom of movement.
And they are calling on government,
especially Lagos State Commissioner for Women Affairs, to intervene in the
matter.
Responding to Vanguard Metro’s
inquiring on the latest ‘’Isemo’’ that commenced in the Igbogbo area of Ikorodu
on Thursday August 22, 2013, many residents, spoke out angrily against it and
called on Lagos State government to ban it. A commercial driver Rilwan Adeolu,
lamented the fact that the practice usually patronage, wondering “why the Lagos
State government should allow such primitive practice to exist,’’
For Elizabeth Igbahor, Baliks
Mustapha and Modupeola Dagunduro: ‘’Our shops have been burgled on several
occasions; it is usually a time for hoodlums to feed fat.’’ Madam Adedayo
Tinuola, on her part, claimed she usually relocates to Maryland on such
occasions. ‘
Source: By Bose Adelaja
http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/08/isemo-when-women-lose-freedom-of-movement-to-tradition/
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