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Austrian Artist Becomes Nigerian AncestorPosted on May 21, 2009
(Page 2) Adunni Olorisha came to be acclaimed as a champion of Yoruba traditional religion, especially in Oshogbo. According to an account given in a BBC interview, when she first made contact with the Yorubas, she found their traditional culture in decline and under threat of being wiped out by missionaries who branded it “black magic” or “juju.” She encouraged Yorubas not to give up their traditional ways, even though in many cases, not giving up traditional culture meant rejecting formal education. The schools were run by Muslim or Christian organizations that did not tolerate what they saw as pagan beliefs. One of her adopted children, Sangodare Gbadegesin Ajala, recalls Wenger’s lessons in decolonization. The young Ajala had badly wanted to acquire Western education, but his father was a staunch devotee of the traditional Yoruba religion who refused to let his children go to school and be baptized into Christianity, as was the practice in those days. So there was no chance of him being educated as long as he was under his father’s ward. He thought a white woman would understand his thirst for Western education and help him fulfill his dream. He therefore found his way into Wenger’s life and moved in with her. But he was in for the shock of his life. Six months after moving in, he asked Wenger if he could go to school. “She shouted: ‘No! You cannot go to school. They will turn you into a Christian and your life will be over!’” he remembers. Though Ajala never got that Western education, he is highly educated in the traditions of Yoruba spirit gods. He is today the high priest of Sango, the lightning god. And from this vantage position, he says he realizes how important it is that Yoruba traditions have been preserved. Advertisement Although Wenger is internationally famous for her oil paintings, batiks and drawings, she reinvented her art for the Orishas she had come to know and love. She and a group of local artisans and devotees built statues in the sacred grove to celebrate and immortalize the gods. Said Wenger, “We took the essence of the gods and made the icons from those feelings, by connecting to the soul of the materials and building the statues to the gods from that soul. It is sacred art, built under the orders of the gods. Every sculpture is a shrine in which the god is invited to live.” Wenger described the sacred grove of Oshogbo as “a refuge for homeless gods who have been abandoned by modern society.” Islamization and Christianization certainly ensured that the gods and indeed traditional religion were kept in the cooler by many who could not reconcile them with their newfound faiths. Contrary to what the missionaries believed and propagated, however, traditional African belief is overwhelmingly monotheistic. There may be spirits and ancestors (very much like Christian angels and saints) guiding the affairs of the living, but there is only one God. Early missionaries got this all wrong and delighted in cataloging legions of “heathen gods” worshipped by “animist Africans.” But Wenger found a meeting point between the Orishas and the new religions. She argued that “Orisha is merely a name which represents the supernatural forces which are basic expressions of life. It doesn’t matter what you call it. It is a ‘sacred force’ that represents the experience of life that informs human beingness. As with all religions, there is no true way to explain it along rational lines without leeching it of its meaning and intensely personal quality. You are a part of it and it is a part of you. You may, as so many have done, push it aside, but it remains in you, in all of us.” She took great pains to try to get those who were torn between their traditional religion and their new faiths understand this. Every Yoruba town had sacred groves that were sanctuaries or ceremonial homes for the gods. Christianization and Islamization had gradually eaten into the traditional religion, all but wiping out the groves. The Oshogbo grove was a lucky exception, all because of an Austrian woman. Without Wenger’s art and devotion, the virgin forest may well have been built over and lost forever, like so many others in Nigeria. With the “New Sacred Art,” as the efforts of Wenger and her fellow artists came to be known, she transformed the sacred groves of Osun-Oshogbo into a garden filled with statues. Art historian Okwunodu Ogbechie describes them as “modernist sculptures inflected by the Gesamtkunstwerk aesthetics of late-modern Viennesse art, most famously concretized by the visionary artist Friedensreich Hundertwasser.” According to Ogbechie, “It is hard to explain the overall impact of these sculptures. They have to be seen to be understood.” This may be because they are beyond art. The grove was also beyond an ordinary forest to Wenger, as those who sought to gentrify it soon found out. Said Wenger, “Because the place is crowded by homeless gods, the spirits in the forest are strong.” She put everything on the line to protect the grove and its “homeless gods,” on one occasion lying in front of a bulldozer to prevent the trees and sculptures from being destroyed by a man who bought the grove and wanted to build a house there. The sacred grove was later designated a national monument by the Nigerian government through the National Commission for Museums and Monuments. The icons that Wenger built for the gods and the other materials in the grove also were classified as antiquities. The ultimate recognition of Wenger’s devotion to the grove and the tradition it represents came when the Osun grove was designated a world-class tourism site on the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization’s World Heritage List in 2005. Wenger’s efforts were crowned when she was named “Member of the Federal Republic,” a national honor in Nigeria. Wenger’s physical form will be sorely missed at the Osun-Oshogbo festival this year. The festival, held to worship the river goddess, takes place at the sacred grove every August and attracts thousands of devotees and tourists from all over the world. Over the years, Wenger came to be known as a personification of the spirit of the river goddess and the moving force behind the festival. It is certain that libations will be poured to the spirit of Adunni Olorisha at the festival. Many devotees will also send their supplications to Olodumare (God) and Osun (the river goddess) through her. Indeed, Suzanne Wenger “is not dead. She has only become an Orisha. She only slept, she didn’t die.” New and Improved CommentsWe are launching a major overhaul of our comments section. 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By Dayo Laoye, May 27, 2009 at 12:49 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
I read your story on Iya ADUNNI OLORISA with admiration.The examplary life she lived is comendable,for she upheld our culture and tradition.I pray and pour libation for her soul to be calming and that Mother Earth-ILE-should receive her.Adunni,Iyalorisa b’odorun o s’orun re!ma je okun ma je ekolo oun ti won ba nje l’ajule orun ni o maa bawon je-ASE!-DAYO LAOYE,painter,Chicago,Il. USA.
Report thisBy george berreman, May 22, 2009 at 2:50 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
This is the real deal , living your whole life in spirit and art. Loved the photos of the grove.
Report thisBy NYCartist, May 22, 2009 at 10:15 am Link to this comment
Nice to have something that really envelops you for a long part of life. Good story. I went to the link for the sacred grove, now I shall explore her art images online.
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