Search results
Igbo religion is most present today in harvest ceremonies such as new yam festival (ị́wá jí) and masquerading traditions such as mmanwụ and Ekpe. Remnants of Igbo religious rites spread among African descendants in the Caribbean and North America in era of the Atlantic slave trade.
Religion. Igboland’s traditional religion is based on the belief that there is one creator, God, also called Chineke or Chukwu. The creator can be approached through numerous other deities and spirits in the form of natural objects, most commonly through the god of thunder (Amadioha).
At the heart of Igbo mythology is the belief in a Supreme God known as Chukwu, who is considered to be the creator of the cosmos as well as all the minor gods that make up the Igbo pantheon. Chukwu is an all-powerful, all-knowing divinity who transcends the multiplicity of gods in Igbo religion.
29 paź 2024 · Traditional Igbo religion includes belief in a creator god (Chukwu or Chineke), an earth goddess (Ala), and numerous other deities and spirits as well as a belief in ancestors who protect their living descendants.
1 sty 2020 · In African traditional religion, which the Igbo are involved, dream symbols serve as the vehicle through which religious meanings are conveyed and interpretations established to help clearer ...
The book makes a systematic and detailed analysis of Ofo ritual symbol, including its provenance, structural variations and functional range in the different sub-cultural zones of Igboland, and its dense meaning- content.
Igbo religion distinguishes between three types of supernatural beings: God, the spirits, and the ancestors. Ndigbo believe that there is only one supreme being, who is variously known in different parts of Igboland as Chukwu, Chineke, Ezechitoke, Osebuluwa or Obasi di n'elu.