It has been observed that the use of Eshu - Igbo breed of cow for funeral rite has started resulting to confusion,misunderstanding and disunity in some families and communities in Nsukka cultural area of Igboland. It is for this purpose that this paper wants to show that this chaos negates the traditional Igbo belief and concept of death which circle around the belief in ancestral existence in the spirit world. The study made use of primary and secondary sources of information. Findings revealed that, the cow ritual is an expression of family bond which goes beyond the physical but extended to the dead parents, and also it is an effort to ensure harmonious relationshipwith the supramundane. However, in recent time some Christians started se...
This ethnography explores the traditional mortuary rites of the Nawfia, an Igbo group of Southeast N...
Death, within many African societies, is the spring board towards life re-incarnation. It is not per...
[From the introduction]: Why do some rituals disappear while others continue to be performed? Why do...
This paper describes the burial ceremony of the Surma-speaking Me'en of southwest Ethiopia as a co...
This study examined the use of death rituals as a native healing method in the Bukusu (Babukusu) com...
Michael P. Adogbo argued that religion and culture are intrinscally interwoven in the Urhobo mindset...
This study investigates the psycho-spiritual and cultural rationale behind the widowhood practices i...
peer reviewedIn Kabye society, the commonest sacrificial rites include a device that may prompt cele...
Burial rites are social affairs, and in Africa, political actors are cultural agents whose existence...
The study investigated the aetiology of Igbo cultural rites with the aim of highlighting the implica...
Achieving gender equality requires socio-cultural transformation; unfortunately, this has not happen...
The rambu solo ritual is a complex ritual involving elaborate burial and burial rituals. This compl...
Igbo socio-cultural practices delineate the region from other socio-cultural regions. The observance...
Numerous African Independent Churches have obviously taken the initiative of adapting the Christian ...
M. Th. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg 2015.The discourse on the dialectical relations...
This ethnography explores the traditional mortuary rites of the Nawfia, an Igbo group of Southeast N...
Death, within many African societies, is the spring board towards life re-incarnation. It is not per...
[From the introduction]: Why do some rituals disappear while others continue to be performed? Why do...
This paper describes the burial ceremony of the Surma-speaking Me'en of southwest Ethiopia as a co...
This study examined the use of death rituals as a native healing method in the Bukusu (Babukusu) com...
Michael P. Adogbo argued that religion and culture are intrinscally interwoven in the Urhobo mindset...
This study investigates the psycho-spiritual and cultural rationale behind the widowhood practices i...
peer reviewedIn Kabye society, the commonest sacrificial rites include a device that may prompt cele...
Burial rites are social affairs, and in Africa, political actors are cultural agents whose existence...
The study investigated the aetiology of Igbo cultural rites with the aim of highlighting the implica...
Achieving gender equality requires socio-cultural transformation; unfortunately, this has not happen...
The rambu solo ritual is a complex ritual involving elaborate burial and burial rituals. This compl...
Igbo socio-cultural practices delineate the region from other socio-cultural regions. The observance...
Numerous African Independent Churches have obviously taken the initiative of adapting the Christian ...
M. Th. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg 2015.The discourse on the dialectical relations...
This ethnography explores the traditional mortuary rites of the Nawfia, an Igbo group of Southeast N...
Death, within many African societies, is the spring board towards life re-incarnation. It is not per...
[From the introduction]: Why do some rituals disappear while others continue to be performed? Why do...