The Guardian (Nigeria)

Omotetobor­e and our vanishing African names

- Www. guardian. ng By Sunny Awhefeada To be continued tomorrow

GROWING up, whether it was in Kadu na, Ibadan, Evwreni or Ughelli, we were given indigenous names that reflected significan­ce and wisdom. Some of our names were influenced by hap penings and cultural nuances. A mere men tion of such names evoked memories, good or bad, of such happenings. The generation­s before mine had even more profound and significan­t names than ours. Parents, grandpar ents or whoever it was that gave names did so after reflection­s before settling for what was considered apt. Names were not just given. Names were telling and meaningful. As age and education endowed us with the capaci ty to interrogat­e things and infer meanings, we began to appreciate the depth, beauty and philosophi­cal character of indigenous names.

Many of us have come to see African names as part of the continent’s claim to cultural val idation in the vortex of postcoloni­al politics. In literature, philosophy, politics, sociology, anthropolo­gy, religion and other allied fields, names have assumed some measure of philo sophical elevation which foreground­s the Af - rican mind as rational and cultivated. Philol ogists will do well to evaluate the etymology, meaning and relevance of African names as part of scoring a point for the continent in the unending intellectu­al cum cultural squabbles for validation in humane matters between Africa and the West. It has become necessary to locate our indigenous names as cardinal to Africa’s variegated indigenous epistemolo­gy.

Many an African name is aesthetica­lly wrapped in poetic dignity. They are not only imbued with a high dose of artistic integrity, but they also exhibit the workings of a con scious and deliberate­ly cultivated mind. The naming practice among the Urhobo people of Delta State in Nigeria reflects the sublime tendency in the cultural and artistic prac tice of Africans. Among older folks and, far and in between, the younger generation are such names with meanings that are either literal or metaphoric­al. Although the flavor of such names is lost in translatio­n, their meaning even in a foreign language such as English still points to the circumstan­ces enabling the names. Such names like Adja rho ( flee to survive), Omavuaye ( they have been shamed), Diemiruaye ( what did I do to them), Ukochovwer­a ( may adversity pass me by), reflect existentia­l circumstan­ces that are mediated by the philosophi­cal equanimity the names evoke. In a world riven by strife and the acute belief in human induced spiritual catastroph­es, the Urhobos like other Africans seek reprieve and relief in naming practice as counter measures. Names thus become amours against the buffetings of life. There are names that are celebrator­y which speak to ideals and approximat­e the essence of the sunny side of life. The names Ukpegharov­we ( I am favoured by the year), Adarighofu­a ( the path of wealth is clean), Ighofimoni ( money/ riches befits kindred), reflect the feeling of exultation that comes with prosperity among the people. Many of such names abound. However, it was quite recently that I discovered a unique name that went against the grain of Urhobo naming practice. The name is Omotetobor­e literally interprete­d to mean “we now have a girl”. The matrix of naming in Urhobo does not overtly celebrate the female essence. A society that is moored on patriarcha­l anchors the Urhobo place a lot of premium on the male gender.

Only a few names, for example like the flat tering Omotekoro ( girl like gold) are given to the female child once in a rare while. The mar ginalizati­on of the female essence in naming is hinged on the primordial value placed on work and war, two domains where male hold sway. The tendency is also enshrined in Urho bo spirituali­ty. The gods and ancestors are largely depicted as male. The Urhobos when praying to their ancestors invoke Baba ( fa ther) and not Nene ( mother). This then gives the impression that Erivwin ( the abode of the dead) is peopled by only men.

The name Omotetobor­e has excited all those I mentioned it to and they all claimed it was their first time of hearing it. The “To bore” names in Urhobo manifest in Efetobore ( wealth has come) and Uvietobore ( royalty has come). Omotetobor­e therefore positively violates and subverts a practice that negated the female child. The dominant name which stands in contrast to Omotetobor­e is Omote johwo ( a girl is also somebody). Omotejohwo is a consolator­y name given by mothers to a daughter that was born after three or four or more daughters. In those days, many a man and his family would get anxious if the first two or three children were female.

The ex tended family was bound to encourage the man to “try another leg”, sleep with another woman to bear a male child. As the pressure mounts on the man, the wife is verbally and psychologi­cally assaulted by being reminded that she was an “ovwiemete”, bearer of girls. So, when the next child is a girl, she names her Omotejohwo ( a girl is also somebody) in consolatio­n. This played out in my extended family with my uncle’s wife.

My mother experience­d the opposite of the Omotejohwo syndrome. She gave birth to four boys following one another. She became the toast of the family as mother of boys. But that was not to last long. Soon after the fourth boy was born, she was accused that her giving birth to only boys was the reason why my father was not rich. My mother cried.

She was told in clear terms that she needed to give birth to a girl which will be Elohor ( blessing/ wealth/ good things). My mother’s name is Etarheri ( words of destiny) and, may be, her destiny heard those words and her next child was a girl. Whether she brought wealth or not is a topic for another day. My uncle’s wife’s or deal and my mother’s experience speak to the duality of societal expectatio­ns. The Urhobos have a name to underpin this tendency in Un uakpotovoo ( the mouth of the world does not say one thing), which speaks to how uneasy it is to satisfy social expectatio­ns.

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