Diaspora reconnection with homeland religion, cultural and heritage festival celebration

Author:

Umejei Aboshioke Lilian1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Howard College, University of KwaZulu Natal

Abstract

This study was undertaken to examine and gain better understanding of the impact that “modernization” or “urbanization” has on members of the diaspora community. Using the Osun Osogbo festival in Nigeria as a case study, the study examined the perception of these members of the Nigerian diaspora community to the festival, their notion of cultural tourism celebration and their desire to participate. The study explored these migrants’ reservations with celebration activities at the Sacred Grove during the festival. This exploratory study employed a qualitative research design based on in-depth interviews to elicit data. The target population were first-generation Nigerian migrants of Yoruba descent who live in South Africa. Findings from the migrants’ experiences revealed that their reluctance was due to their reservation on the spiritual or religious undertones attached to these spiritual festivals. Many of these returning migrants no longer desire to be identified with local religious or spiritual celebrations. By tapping into tourism and heritage, the study thus submits that, enhancing the relevance of the grove and the festival, as a tool to improve cultural and heritage tourism will best be achieved if religion can be separated from cultural celebrations.

Publisher

Africajournals

Subject

Philosophy,Religious studies,Archeology

Reference54 articles.

1. Adepoju, A. (2004). Changing configurations of migration in Africa, Migration Policy Institute.

2. Agbiji, O.M. & Swart, I. (2015). Religion and social transformation in Africa: A critical and appreciative perspective, Scriptura: Journal for Contextual Hermeneutics in Southern Africa, 114(1), 1-20.

3. Amusa, S. (2009). Oral Traditions and the History of Osogbo: A Study in Traditional Historical Preservation in Adegboyega Ajayi and S. Idowu Fabarebo, (eds.), Oral Traditions in Black and African Civilization (Lagos: Concept Publications for Centre for Black and African Arts and Civilization (CBAAC), 2009), 395-408.

4. Asiedu, A. (2005). Some benefits of migrants return visits to Ghana. Population, Space and Place 11, 1–11.

5. Atta-Asiedu, K.A. (2020). African Traditional Religions in Transition: Modernism, Globalization and African Indigenous Faiths in Context, Globalization and African Indigenous Faiths in Context, (July 29, 2020).

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