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Oyotunji African Village is a village located near Sheldon, Beaufort County, South Carolina that was founded by Oba Efuntola Oseijeman Adelabu Adefunmi I in 1970. Oyotunji village is named after the Oyo empire, a pre-colonial Yoruba kingdom lasting from the 1300s until the early 1800s in what is now southwestern Nigeria. The name literally means βOΜ©yoΜ© returnsβ or βOΜ©yoΜ© rises againβ or βOΜ©yoΜ© resurrectsβ referring to the African Yoruba kingdom of Oyo, now rising in a new form near the South Carolina seashore.
Oyotunji village covers 27 acres (11 ha) and has a Yoruba temple which was moved from Harlem, New York to its present location in 1960. It was originally intended to be located in Savannah, Georgia, but was eventually settled into its current position after disputes with neighbors in Sheldon proper, over drumming and tourists.
HOW OBA EFUNTOLA ADEFUNMI I FOUNDED OYOTUNJI
During the slave trade era, many Africans were taken as slaves abroad. While going, some left with their culture and tradition which they continued within the foreign land where they found themselves. They continued with the culture and tradition of their fathers so as to maintain their identity.
The Yorubas in slavery are among the Africans that maintained their culture in the strange land and it was handed down to their children from generation to generation.
Many of their children, after the abolition of the slave trade, have married children of their former masters thus having children of mixed blood, that notwithstanding, they still carry on with their African culture in the foreign land since most of them cannot trace their root back to Africa.
The Yoruba culture has been one of the prominent and most celebrated one throughout the world till date. In the faraway United States of America, there is a Yoruba community named OΜ©yoΜ©tunji African Village. It is located near Sheldon, Beaufort County, South Carolina.
OΜ©yoΜ©tunji is regarded as North Americaβs oldest authentic African village. It was founded in 1970 and is the first intentional community in North America, based on the culture of the Yoruba and Benin tribes of West Africa.
It has survived 51years of sustaining the Yoruba traditional sociology and values in the diaspora. The village is named after the OΜ©yoΜ© Empire, and the name literally means βOΜ©yoΜ© returnsβ or βOΜ©yoΜ© rises againβ or βOΜ©yoΜ© resurrectsβ. The village occupies 27 acres of land.
OΜ©yoΜ©tunji was founded by His Royal Highness OΜ©ba (King) Waja, OΜ©funtoΜ©la Oseijeman Adelabu Adefunmi I.
Born Walter Eugene King on October 5, 1928, Oba OΜ©funtoΜ©la Oseijeman Adelabu Adefunmi I, a Detroit native, began studying Afro-Haitian and ancient Egyptian traditions as a teenager. He was further influenced by his contact with the Katherine Dunham Dance Troupe in New York City at the age of 20, an African American modern dance troupe that drew from many cultures within the African Diaspora.
August 26, 1959, OΜ©ba Waja became the first African born in America to become fully initiated into the OrisΜ©a-Vodoo African priesthood by African Cubans in Matanzas, Cuba, and became known as Efuntola Osejiman Adefunmi. After his return to the United States, he formed the Yoruba Temple in Harlem in 1960. The temple, committed to preserving African traditions within an American context, was the cultural and religious forerunner of Oyotunji Village.
He later traveled to Haiti where he discovered more about the Yoruba culture. Armed with a new understanding of the African culture, he found the order of Damballah Hwedo, Ancestor Priests in Harlem New York.
This marked the beginning of the spread of the Yoruba religion and culture among African-Americans. He later founded the SΓ ngΓ³ Temple in New York and incorporated the African Theological Arch Ministry in 1960. The SΓ ngΓ³ Temple was relocated and renamed the Yoruba Temple.
With the rise of black nationalism in the 1960s, King began to envision the construction of a separate African American nation that would institutionalize and commemorate ancestral traditions. In June of 1970, he fulfilled this vision with the creation of Oyotunji African Village.
It was during this time that he also established a new lineage of the priesthood, Orisha Vodoo, to emphasize the traditionβs African roots. Today, over 300 priests have been initiated into this lineage and the African Theological Archministry, founded by Oba OΜ©funtoΜ©la Oseijeman Adelabu Adefunmi I in 1966, now serves as the umbrella organization for the Village.
To further his knowledge of Yoruba culture, he traveled to Abeokuta in Nigeria in 1972 where he was initiated into the Ifa priesthood by the Oluwo of IjeΜ©un at Abeokuta, Ogun state, in August of 1972. He was later proclaimed AlaseΜ© (Oba-King) of the Yoruba of North America at OΜ©yoΜ©tunji Village in 1972.
In its early years, Oyotunji Village was home to as many as two hundred people. Today, its residential community consists of few African American families, governed by an oba (king) and the communityβs appointed council.
Each family is committed to the teachings of the Yoruba tradition, which include a religious understanding of the world as comprised primarily of the βenergiesβ of the Supreme Being Olodumare, the orisha deities, and the ancestral spirits. This religious world is maintained spiritually through rituals, chants, music, sacrifice, and annual ceremonies.
Oba Efuntola Osejiman Adefunmi passed away on Thursday, February 10th, 2005 at OΜ©yoΜ©tunji African Village in Beaufort County, South Carolina. Since Adefunmiβs death in 2005, the village has been led by his son, the fourteenth of twenty-two children of Oba Efuntola Osejiman Adefunmi, till date.
The OΜ©ba title is referred to as βOΜ©loΜ©yotunjiβ of OΜ©yoΜ©tunji.
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